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A51846 A second volume of sermons preached by the late reverend and learned Thomas Manton in two parts : the first containing XXVII sermons on the twenty fifth chapter of St. Matthew, XLV on the seventeenth chapter of St. John, and XXIV on the sixth chapter of the Epistle of the Romans : Part II, containing XLV sermons on the eighth chapter of the Epistle to the Romans, and XL on the fifth chapter of the second Epistle to the Corinthians : with alphabetical tables to each chapter, of the principal matters therein contained.; Sermons. Selections Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677. 1684 (1684) Wing M534; ESTC R19254 2,416,917 1,476

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may be answerable to the dignity of so great a Lord and Husband 3. Others think an habitual Readiness will serve the turn They mind present duties but do not enliven them by the remembrance of the coming of the Lord or they have not done their main work and therefore take more liberty about the World than others and a greater liberty in the delights of sense and therefore we have that caution Luk. 21.24 Take heed to your selves lest at any time your hearts be overcharged with surfeiting and drunkenness and the cares of this life and so that day come upon you unawares That will make you wither and contract deadness and drowsiness hinder your comfort and peace and that chearful testimony you may give for God to others as Peter's question Lord speakest thou to us or to all Luk. 12.41 4. Many are ready but think themselves unready It concerneth them to study Gospel Grounds of Comfort and Peace if they can endure the Touch-stone though not the Balance Where there is a sincere bent of heart to please him there is a Law of Liberty Jam. 2.12 a Law of Liberty not for the carnal but the sincere not a Law of Tryal but of Gospel liberty We now come to the Third thing in the Text And the Door was shut The shutting the door noteth the Impossibility of getting our Condition altered when the day of Grace and Tryal is once over There is a twofold Door 1. Janua Misericordiae ad Ignoscendum the door of Christs Pity and Mercy to returning sinners Mat. 7.7 Ask and it shall be given you seek and ye shall find knock and it shall be opened unto you And Joh. 6.37 Him that cometh unto me I will in no wise cast off But then this Door is shut 2. Janua Gratiae ad Convertendum there is the Door of Repentance and Conversion but there is no Repentance when we are in termino They may have a sense of their misery but their habitual hatred to God remaineth they that have wittingly and wilfully rejected his Counsel remain so still The fire of Hell doth not soften but harden them their Self-love may make them sensible of their pain Reasons First His Love to his People Though Christ waiteth long for the Preparation of the Wicked yet he will not alwaies delay the desire of the Godly Secondly His Justice 'T is fit that they that live so long in their Unbelief and disobedience of the Counsels and Precepts of the Gospel should at length find this dispensation continued who grow unteachable and hardened in their negligences Psal. 95.7 8. To day if you will hear his voice harden not your hearts VSE Is to press us to begin with God betimes You that are young take warning this day do not think there is time enough hereafter You that are old do not think it is too late nor be ashamed to begin now 1. The present time is the only opportunity of Salvation or embracing the offer of Gods Grace Heb. 3.7 Psal. 95.7 Oh do not reject his Counsel 2. Love is impatient of delay if we could Hope to prevail with you that way 3. When the Angels sinned the Lord immediately shut the door against them to us he hath given leave Acts 11.13 14. and space to Repent Rev. 2.21 Let us not receive the Grace of God in vain 2 Cor. 6.1 SERMON IX MATTH XXV v. 11 12. Afterwards came also the other Virgins saying Lord Lord open to us But he answered and said Verily I say unto you I know you not IN these Words we have two Branches 1. The Supplication of the Foolish Virgins vers 11. 2. The Answer of the Bridegroom vers 12. In the First consider the time when it was These Foolish Virgins came afterwards when the Door was shut Secondly The Blandishment and Compellation here used Lord Lord. First For the Time when it was These Virgins came afterwards when it was too late They should have knocked and cryed for mercy before the door was shut Isa. 55.6 Seek the Lord while he may be found call upon him while he is near Otherwise our Cries are but howlings the fruit of our discontent rather than our own choice Heb. 11.5 'T is said of Enoch that he pleased God If we would live with God in a blessed Estate hereafter we must please God ere we depart hence This is the time of Grace or Gods Patience Luk. 2.14 Peace upon Earth good will to men and 2 Cor. 6.1 2. This is the time of labour and service Eccl. 9.10 Judgment findeth us as Death leaveth us Eccl. 11.3 Then we are in termino When this life is ended all opportunities of doing good end with it Corn doth not grow in the Barn but in the Field therefore we had need to work now seek Grace now be instant with God now Joh. 9.4 I must work the work of him that sent me while it is day the night cometh wherein no man can work And now that is not only while life lasteth but instantly Secondly Here is the Blandishment and Compellation used Lord Lord So Mat. 7.21 Not every one that saith unto me Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdom of Heaven but he that doth the will of my Father which is in Heaven And ver 22. Many will say to me in that day Lord Lord. 1. Here is a Title of honour given to Christ by Hypocrites and 't is ingeminated The Title of honour given to Christ is due to him Joh. 13.13 Ye call me Master and Lord and you say well for so I am But the Title must be verified by suitable practice Men may delight to be flattered with the Title of Lord Lord by those that inwardly bear them no reverence but Christ who knoweth the Heart will not be pleased with those glorious Titles when your Hearts give your Tongues the lie Luk. 6.46 Why call you me Lord Lord and do not the things that I say As they cryed Hail King of the Jews when the Soldiers mocked him Many often entitle Christ to their party take upon them to be his Disciples in words but the Kingdom of God standeth not in word but in power But these served their Master more with Mouth than with Heart therefore Christ doth not accept of them nor approve of them for his Servants They call Christ Lord but obey the Devil are lead and governed by the flesh disobedient to Christs Counsels and Precepts I hear Lord Lord but what means the bleating of the Sheep and the lowing of the Oxen Therefore 't is in vain to use this honourable Title to move pity in the Judge 2. They ingemminate it to shew the Ardency of their desires and earnestness to have Christ for their Lord. Now first or last every knee shall bow to Christ they are forced to fly to him now in their extremity and pressures of misery Though men will not come to Christ for Grace yet they will come to him for Glory Now they cannot come because busied
as our Surety he is to receive a Law Secondly Let us consider the VVords in the Moral Sense and Accommodation and then in this Plea which Christ maketh when he was about to die we may observe these Circumstances 1. What he says I have glorified thee 2. Where Vpon Earth 3. How I have finished the Work thou hast given me to do Doct. They that would die comfortably should make this their great Care to glorify God upon the Earth and finish the Work which he hath given them to do in their several Stations and Relations Here I shall shew I. What it is to glorify God upon the Earth c. II. Why this should be our chief Care III. That when we come to die this will be our Comfort I. What it is to glorify God upon Earth c. Here First Quid What it is to glorify God Secondly Vbi Vpon the Earth Thirdly Quomodo By finishing the Work which he hath given us to do First Quid I have glorified thee God is glorified actively and passively 1. Passively which noteth the Event which cometh to pass by the Wisdom and over-ruling of God's Providence and so all things shall at length glorify God in the Event Psal. 76.10 Surely the Wrath of Man shall praise thee In the Septuagint it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shall keep Holy-day the fierce endeavours of his Enemies do but make his Glory the more excellent So our Lye and Vnrighteousness may commend the Truth and Mercy of God Rom. 3.5 7. Pharaoh was raised up for God's Glory As the Valour of a King is discovered by the Rebellion of his Subjects the Skill of the Physician by the desperateness of the Disease But this is no thanks to them but to God's Wise and Powerful Government it will not lessen their Fault and Punishment A wicked Man may say in the end I have been an Occasion that God hath been glorified 2. Actively we glorify God when we set our selves to this Work and make this our End and Scope that we may be to the praise of his glorious Grace Some learn their School-fellows Lessons better than their own they would have God glorified but look to others rather than to themselves We would have God glorified but do not glorify him are more careful of Events than Duties We are ready to ask Lord what wilt thou do for thy great Name but do not consider our own Engagement How shall I glorify God But what is it thus actively to glorify God Answ. 1. To acknowledg his Excellency upon all Occasions Psal. 50.23 He that offereth Praise glorifieth me Praising him for his Excellencies and declaring the Glory of his Attributes and Works is one way of glorifying him God's glorifying of us is effective and creative ours declarative and manifestative he calleth the Things that are not as though they were but we do no more but say things to be what they are and that far below what they are We declare God to be what he is and are a kind of Witnesses to his Glory He is the efficient and sole Cause of all the good that we have and are and bestows something upon us which was not before This declaring the Glory of God is expressed by two words Praise and Blessing● Psal. 145.10 All thy Works shall praise thee O Lord thy Saints shall-bless thee Praise referreth to his Excellency Blessing to his Benefits both must be done seriously and frequently and with a deep impression of his Goodness and Excellency upon our Hearts Every Address we make to God tendeth to this that God may have his due praise understandingly and affectionately ascribed to him Repentance and broken-hearted Confession giveth him the Praise of his Justice the exercise of Faith and running for Refuge to the Grace of the Gospel doth glorify his Mercy Thanksgiving for Benefits received his Benignity and Goodness petitioning for Grace his Holiness 2. By a perfect Subjection and Resignation of our Wills to his Will It is Work glorifieth God more than Words Verbal Praises if destitute of these they are but an empty prattle Job 31.20 If his Loins have not blessed me and if he were not warmed with the Fleece of my Sheep So 2 Thess. 1.11 12. Wherefore also we pray always for you that our God would count ye worthy of this Calling and fulfil all the good pleasure of his Goodness and the Work of Faith with Power That the Name of our Lord Jesus Christ may be glorified in you and you in him Many speak good Words of God but their Hearts are not subject to him 〈◊〉 the Devil carried Christ to the top of an high Mountain but with an intent to bid him throw himself down again So many think to exalt God in t●eir Professions and Praises but they dishonour him in their Lives God is most glorified in the Creatures Obedience and submission to his Laws or Providence 1. To his Laws when we study to please him in all things Col. 1.10 That ye may walk worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing being fruitful in every good Work and increasing in the Knowledg of God It is a great Honour to a Master when his Servants are so ready and willing to please him I say to one Go and he goeth to another Come and he cometh to my Servant Do this and he doth it Mat. 8.9 It is said of Abraham God called him to his Foot Isa. 41.2 He went to and fro at his command If God said Go out of thy Country Abraham obeyed 2. To his Providence It is an honour to him when we are contented to be what God will have us to be and can prefer his Glory before our own Ease his Honour before our Plenty And so it was with Christ John 12.27 28. Now is my Soul troubled and what shall I say Father save me from this Hour but for this cause came I to this Hour Father glorify thy Name that satisfied him so God might be glorified So Paul Phil. 1.20 Christ shall be magnified in my Body whether it be by Life or by Death As a Traveller takes the Way as he findeth it so it will lead him to his Journeys end We must be as a Die in the Hands of Providence whether the Cast prove high or low we are still upon the Square 3. We glorify God rather by entertaining the Impressions of his Glory upon us than by communicating any kind of Glory to him and so we glorify him when we grow most like him when we shew forth his Vertues 1 Pet. 2.9 Ye are a chosen Generation a royal Priesthood a holy Nation a peculiar People that ye should shew forth the Praises of him who hath called you out of Darkness into his marvellous Light The Children of God are a Glass and Image wherein the Perfections of God are visibly held forth his Perfections are stamped upon us that all that see us may see God in us But alas most of us are but dim Glasses shew forth little
content with it God is the Master of the Scenes and appoints which Part to act We must not prescribe to Providence at what rate we will be maintained nor what we will do but keep within the Bounds of our Place If you do any thing that is not within the compass of your Calling you can have no warrant that it pleaseth God Christ would not intermeddle out of his Calling Luke 12.14 Man who made me a Judg or a Divider over you Vzzah's putting his Hand to the Ark cost him dear If Troubles arise we cannot suffer them comfortably we are out of God's way Most of our late Mischiefs came from invading Callings as there are Confusions in Nature when Elements are out of their Places God is glorified and served in a lower Calling as well as in an higher Poor Servants may adorn the Gospel of God our Saviour in all things Tit. 2.10 Answ. 2. With Patience digest the Inconveniences of your Calling Affliction attendeth every state and condition of Life but we must go through chearfully when in our way and place 4. This Work must be finished and perfected we must be working till God call us off by Death or irresistible Providences We must persist hold out in God's Way without Defection Rev. 2.10 Be thou faithful unto the Death I will give thee a Crown of Life Get the Gift of Perseverance happy are they that have past such a tempestuous Sea with safety He was a foolish Builder who laid the Foundation of a stately Fabrick and was not able to finish it O when this is done we may resign up our selves to the Mercy of God 2 Tim. 4.7 8. I have fought a good Fight I have finished my Course I have kept the Faith Henceforth is laid up for me a Crown of Righteousness which the Lord the Righteous Judg shall give me at that day and not to me only but unto them also that love his appearing It is an excellent thing after such a dangerous Voyage to come safe to Shore How sweet is it to enjoy our past Lives and yield up our Spirits to God saying Lord I have made it my study to glorify thee Isa. 38.3 Remember now O Lord I beseech thee how I have walked before thee in Truth and with a perfect Heart and have done that which is good in thy sight Others Souls are taken away but yours are resigned II. Why this should be our great care 1. This is the End why all Creatures were made Rom. 11.36 For of him and through him and to him are all things When God did make the World he did not throw it out of his Hands and leave it alone to subsist of it self as a thing that had no further relation to him but so guides it and governs it that as the first production and continued subsistence of all things is from himself so the ultimate Resolution and Tendency of all things might be to him The whole World is a Circle and all the Motions of the Creatures are circular they end where they began as Rivers run to the place whence they came All that issueth out of the Fountain of his Goodness must fall again into the Ocean of his Glory but Man especially If God had made us to live for our selves it were lawful But Prov. 16.4 The Lord hath made all things for himself all things are made ultimately and terminatively for God but Man immediately Creatures are made immediately for us and submit to our Dominion or are created for our use 2. From God's Right and Interest in us Rom. 14.7 8. For none of us liveth to himself and no Man dieth to himself For whether we live we live unto the Lord and whether we die we die unto the Lord whether we live therefore or die we are the Lord's We are his and therefore for him All that you have is God's and by giving it to you he did not divest himself of his own Right God scatters his Benefits as the Husbandman doth his Seed that he may receive a Crop His Glory is not due to another He made us out of Nothing and bought us 1 Cor. 6.19 20. Ye are not your own ye are bought with a Price therefore glorify God in your Body and in your Spirit which are God's If we had any thing our own we might use it for our selves 3. We shall be called to an account Luke 19.23 Wherefore then gavest not thou my Mony into the Bank that at my coming I might have required my own with Vsury We must give an account what honour God hath had by us in our Relations as Magistrates Ministers Masters of Families Servants Husbands Wives Parents Children What Honour by our Estates Relations c. We are obliged so deeply by preceding Benefits that if there were no account to be given we should be careful to use all things for his Glory Oh but much more when there will be so strict and severe an Account The Lord of those Servants will reckon with them What we enjoy is not Donum a Gift but Talentum a Talent to be improved for our Master's Use. Beasts are liable to no Account because they have not Reason and Conscience as Man hath and are meerly ruled with a Rod of Iron they are to glorify God passively but we are left to our choice and therefore must give an account 4. Because of the great Benefit that cometh to us by it God noteth it and rewards it He noteth it Joh. 17.10 And all mine are thine and thine are mine and I am glorified in them Our Redeemer speaketh well of us behind our Backs and maketh a good Report of us in Heaven And he rewards it in the day of his Royalty Christ will not be ashamed of his poor Servants Mat. 19.28 Ye which have followed me in the Regeneration when the Son of Man shall sit in the Throne of his Glory ye also shall sit upon twelve Thrones judging the twelve Tribes of Israel 5. The End enobleth a Man and still the Man is according to his End Low Spirits have low Designs and a base End is pursued by base Actions Mat. 6.22 23. The Light of the Body is the Eye if therefore thine Eye be single thy whole Body shall be full of Light But if thine Eye be evil thy whole Body shall be full of Darkness Men are properly such as the End that they aim at he that pursueth any worldly Interest or earthly Thing as his End is Earthly he becometh himself Earthly the more the Soul directeth it self to God the more God-like their Inclinations are above the base things of this World Psal. 17.14 From Men of the World which have their Portion in this Life and whose Belly thou fillest with thy hid Treasures The Noblest Soul is for the Noblest Object others do but provide for the Flesh they drive on no greater Trade they may talk of Heaven wish for it rather than Hell when they can live no longer but their Lives are
want and we mutually communicate to one another our benefits As divers Countries have divers Commodities and one needeth another one aboundeth with Wines some have Spices others have Skins and Commodities in other kinds that by Commerce and Traffick there might be Society maintained among Mankind So God in his Church hath given to one Gifts to another Grace to maintain an holy Society and spiritual Commerce among themselves 1. VSE Is to perswade us to imploy our several Talents for God be they more or less none are to be idle 2 Tim. 2.6 Stir up the Gift that is in thee First If we have but one Talent God expects the improvement of it Adam in Innocency had his work appointed him by God Secondly Those that have the greatest Gifts should not contemn those that have few or less and those that have few not envy others that have more but be mutually helpful one to another acknowledging the Wisdom and Goodness of God in all that we have 'T is a base Spirit that would shine alone or set up one Gift to the prejudice of another Let no man glory for all things are yours 1 Cor. 3.21 He that laid the World in Hills and Valleys would not have all Champion and smooth ground Prov. 17.15 2. VSE Give your selves and all that is yours to God Nothing is more reasonable than that every one should have his own therefore let us consent to Gods propriety and absolutely resign our selves to the will dispose and use of our Creatour but first our selves and then what is ours SERMON XII MATTH XXV v. 16 17 18. Then he that had received the five Talents went and traded with the same and made them other five Talents Likewise he that had received two he also gained other two But he that had received one went and digged in the Earth and hid his Lords Money THis is the second part of the Parable We have heard of the Masters Distribution now we shall hear of the Servants Negotiation how they employed the Talents received There was a disparity and inequality in the Distribution so in the Negotiation Two of the Servants used their Talents well the third traded not at all but went and digged in the Earth and hid his Lords Money Among them that used their Talents well there was a difference but still with proportion to what they had received He that had received five Talents made them other five And he also that had received two gained other two Doct. I. That those that have received Talents must trade with them for Gods Glory and the Salvation of their own Souls and the good of others Doct. II. In Trading our Returns must carry proportion with our Receipts Doct. III. Among those that have received Talents all are not faithful for one hid his Lords Money For the first Point Doct. I. That those that have received Talents must trade with them for Gods glory and the Salvation of their own Souls and the good of others I shall first explain the Point and then prove it First For the Explication or Illustration I will enquire 1. What things are to be be accounted Talents 2. What it is to trade with them 3. To whom the gain and Increase redoundeth First What are these Talents In the general all the things God hath instrusted us with or any thing that may help to promote the glory of God Reason Health Strength Time Parts Interests Power Authority Wealth the Mercies of his Providence Afflictions Ordinances Means of Grace yea Grace it self All these are vouchsafed to us freely by God and may be improved for his glory There is none of us but have had many advantages and opportunities put into our hands of glorifying God and promoting our own and others Salvation Of all it may be said Prov. 17.16 Wherefore is there a price in the hand of a fool to get wisdom seeing he hath no heart to use it Reason and Parts are a Price put into your hands so is Time and Strength so are Riches and Power so are Ordinances and Providences and indeed all the Blessings of this life God must be gainer and also your selves In a spiritual sense he must have a share in your Time Strength Wealth and Power and you must gain by every Ordinance and every Providence something whereby you may be more fitted to glorifie his name and to do good in your generation But more particularly Talents may be referred to two Heads dona sanctificantia and administrantia Graces helps and saving Gifts 1. Dona sanctificantia Sanctifying Gifts or the Graces of the Spirit these are highest and are called the true Riches Luk. 16.11 If therefore ye have not been faithful in the unrighteous Mammon who shall commit to your trust the true riches To be trusted with an Estate is not so great a trust as to be trusted with Grace This is a Gift more precious and should not lye idle God trusts ordinary men with common Gifts before he trusts them with Grace When we suspect that a Vessel is leaky we try it first with Water before we fill it with Wine God expecteth more honour from New Creatures than he doth from all the World besides that they should do more good in their places Partly because they have new obligations by Redemption 1 Cor. 6.20 You are bought with a price therefore glorifie God in your Bodies and Souls which are Gods You are twice bound and a double Obligation will inferr a double Condemnation if we answer it not And Partly because by Regeneration they have new dispositions they are more fitted to glorifie God and do good to others Eph. 1.12 That we should be to the praise of his Glory Their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 their New-being fitteth them to honour God They serve mainly for this very use and therefore this Duty of trading for God lyeth first and most upon them Wherefore hath God created them a-new in Christ Jesus but to glorifie his name and admire his Grace and live answerable to his Love and to bring him into request among all about them Mat. 5.16 Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorifie your Father which is in Heaven They that are eminent for the profession of Godliness and are set as lights in the World or a City upon an Hill these should bring much Honour to God and provoke others to do so as the Stars which are the shining part of Heaven draw eyes after them if they should be eclipsed they set the World a wondring so should they shine as lights in the midst of a crooked Generation Phil. 2.15 or as the Star that shined at Christs Birth conducted the Wise men to him so should they by their Profession and practice lead others to Christ. 2. Dona Administrantia Subservient Helps Now these are of several sorts First Either Gifts of Nature both of the Mind and of the Body Of the Mind as promptness of Wit clearness of
God hath in us God hath not only an interest in us but a dominion over us which an Inferiour cannot have over a Superiour so that we are Gods more fully than he can be ours Now a trust accepted and broken afterwards involveth us in the greater Crime I am Gods and will be Gods and would I could do more for his glory as a Christian in general as a Husband or Wife or Father or Child or Servant I will more honour God in my place 4. The Fruit Comfort and Excellency of the thing trusted is most seen in the use 'T is true of all sorts of Talents take the lowest outward subservient helps Wealth Power and Honour A man doth not see the comfort and use of Wealth so much in any thing as when he doth imploy it for God If he hoard it up he hath it only for shew if he layeth it out to cloath his back or to feed his belly he doth but make himself a more honourable sort of bruit Beast all the while he is sowing to the flesh or Sacrificing to his God the Belly or offering up a Meat-offering or a Drink-offering to Appetite But how sweet is it when we have opportunities of doing more for God! then he seeth the use of Wealth indeed it giveth him advantages of service and a more diffusive Charity Ordinances the worth of them is most known in the use and improvement not when we resort to them out of custom and fashions sake but use them as means to do our Souls good So for Gifts as Wells are the sweeter for draining so gifts are improved by using So Graces of the Spirit Gods most precious gifts should not lye idle 2 Cor. 6.1 We beseech you receive not the Grace of God in vain In short you do not taste the true sweetness of Wealth when gorgeously attired your Tables plentifully furnished and you glut your selves with all manner of fleshly delights but in feeding the hungry cloathing the naked that satisfieth the Mind and Conscience of them that do it as you do not reap the increase of Corn by scattering it in the Sand but casting it into a fruitful Soil VSE 1. To press us to this Negotiation For if these things be so we should all rouze up our selves and say What honour hath God by my Wealth my Parts my Honour and greatness my Place and Office what protection to his cause what Relief and Comfort to his People 1. Consider 'T is our business in the World Now every one should ask for what end he was born and continued in the World so long Our Lord Jesus Joh. 18.37 saith To this end was I born and for this cause came I into the World that I should bear witness unto the truth Every one is sent into the world for some end for surely God would not make a Creature in vain We did not come into the VVorld meerly to fill up the number of things as Stones and Rubbish nor to grow in bulk and stature as the Plants nor to enjoy pleasure without remorse as the Beasts God would never then have given us those higher faculties of Reason and Conscience For what end did I come into the VVorld but to glorifie God in my place to act that part in the VVorld which the great master of the Scenes appointed to me Why do I live here What have I done in pursuance of my great end Most men live as Beasts eat and drink and sleep and die and there 's an end of them they never asked in good earnest for what purpose they came hither 2. Every one is trading for some body the Devil or the Flesh regarding his Makers glory or his own Satisfaction There is no medium now which are you doing trading for Heaven or Hell 3. Consider how much you are intrusted with Look within you without you round about you and see how much you have to account for the faculties of the Mind the Members of the Body your Time Health Honour Estate lifted up to Heaven in Ordinances Mat. 11.23 Much given Mat. 12.48 and Neh. 1.11 Now improve all for God 4. Talents are encreased the more employed We double our gifts by the faithful use of them He that had five Talents gained other five and he that had two other two The more Grace here the more Glory hereafter If they be not employed they are lost How many poor blasted withered Christians may we find by slacking their Zeal and for want of diligent exercise But on the contrary as the Widows Oyl encreased in the spending and the Loaves multiplyed in the breaking in Christs Miracle and the right Arm is bigger and fuller of Spirits than the left So Grace that decayeth by difuse groweth by exercise The Corn sown bringeth in the increase 5. We must give an account at last to God Luk. 19.23 He will demand his own with usury VVhat honour hath God had by us as Ministers Magistrates Masters of Families Husbands and VVives Parents and Children Masters and Servants Beasts are not called to an account for they have no Reason and Conscience as Man hath VVhat will you say when God shall reckon with you what you have done with your Time Strength and Estates If an Ambassador that is sent abroad to serve his King and Countrey should return no other account of his negotiation than I was busie at Cards and Dice and could not mind the Imployment I was sent about or a Factour I spent roiotously that which I should have spent in the Mart or Fair will this pass for an excuse 6. VVhat a sad thing is it to have Gifts for this end to leave us without excuse as the Gentiles have the light of Nature Rom. 1.20 and Christians the light of the Gospel Joh. 15.22 If I had not come and spoken to them they had not had sin but now they have no cloak for their sin Others have the VVord preached to them Mat. 24.14 And the Gospel of the Kingdom shall be preached in all the World for a witness to all Nations compared with Mat. 13.9 know that a Prophet hath been among them have advantages and opportunities but no heart to use them only that God may be clear when he judgeth 7. VVe improve the Stock of Corruption left us by Adam why not the Gifts given us by Jesus Christ This fire needeth no blowing of it self it breaketh out into a flame and shall not we stir up our selves that we may be more useful In imploying our Gifts three things are necessary Prudence Fidelity and Industry 1. Prudence This is necessary for a Steward or Factour Luk. 12.42 Who then is a wise and faithful Steward whom the Lord shall make Steward over his houshold Now there is a twofold Wisdom a Wisdom that is not from above and a Wisdom that is from above Jam. 3.16 17. The first is earthly sensual devilish it either serveth for earthly profits or to give content to the flesh or to affect dominion and
be opened therefore when we are about to do any thing unworthy say as he Acts 19.40 We are in danger to be called to an Account for this day uproar there being no Cause whereby we may give an Account of this Concourse so should you We that are to give an Account how careful should we be how we use our Time Health Strength Understanding Authority Wealth and other Blessings of God The commonness of these Notions maketh them to lose their Life and Influence Therefore we should especially act Faith in Believing and urging the Soul with this Account Secondly 'T is particularly described and there 1. Of the Servants Allegation 2. The Masters Approbation 1. The Servants Allegation vers 20 and 22. The two first Servants came chearfully to their Account as having discharged their Duty faithfully and with all diligence improved the Talents received Not that in the day of Judgment good men shall make any Narrations of what they have done they need not for Christ shall do it for them they rather wonder that any thing that they have done is taken notice of as in the 37 th verse of this Chapter but all this is spoken after the manner of men and to keep up the Decorum of the Parable if it signifieth any thing it signifieth the Confidence of a good Conscience and what Comfort and boldness it breedeth in the day of our Accounts Doct. That a faithful Discharge of our Duty will give us Comfort and Boldness when our Lord cometh to reckon with us 1. There is a Confidence and Comfort that ariseth from a good Conscience or from Sanctification as well as Justification In the inward Court Conscience is one of the Witnesses as well as the Spirit of God Rom. 8.16 and much Comfort ariseth from its Testimony 2 Cor. 1.12 This is our rejoycing the Testimony of our Conscience A Carnal man is ashamed of the Grounds of his rejoycing and what it is that keepeth his Heart merry but a Godly man can own the Causes of his joy which are in the first place the Blood of Christ Rom. 5.11 We joy in God through our Lord Jesus Christ by whom we have received the Atonement next the Testimony of his Conscience concerning his sincere walking But if a man can live with these Comforts can he dye with them 2. The Review of a well-spent life is a great Comfort in Death Our Lord Jesus at the end of his days when he was to go out of the World John 17.4 saith I have glorified thee upon Earth and finished the Work thou gavest me to do Hezekiah when that sad Message was brought to him that he must die and not live Isa. 38.4 that comforted him upon his Death-bed Remember now O Lord I beseech thee how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart and have done what is good in thy sight So the Apostle Paul when he drew nigh his end 2 Tim. 4.7 8. saith I have fought a good fight I have finished my Course I have kept the Faith Henceforth there is laid up for me a Crown of righteousness which the Lord the righteous Judge shall give me at that day Oh 't is a blessed thing if we can have this Comfort when Conscience puts off all Disguises and the everlasting Estate is at hand and we are immediately to appear before the Lord to remember then that we have been careful to please and honour God and done his work how sweet is it 3. In the Day of Judgment their works follow them into the other World Rev. 14.13 Their Wealth doth not follow them but the Conscience of having done well abideth with them Conscience is Heaven or Hell to us in Hell it maketh up a part of the Worm that never dyeth so in Heaven it giveth us Confidence 1 John 2.28 and 1 John 4.17 That we may have boldness in the day of Judgment Works are not Meritorious and have no causal influence upon our Salvation yet they have the full place of an Evidence and so may wonderfully Comfort and embolden our Hearts VSE Let us labour to get this Evidence The time of Death is a time that will rifle all our false Hopes You are in your Health and Strength now but how soon you may shoot the Gulph you know not we are hastening into the other World apace When you are immediately to appear before God you will have other thoughts of the World to come and the necessity of Preparation for it than you have now that which will comfort you now will not comfort you then you must look that the Devil will then be most busie to tempt and trouble you and as now he prejudiceth you against the Precepts of the Gospel so then against the Promises of it all your worldly Comfort then will fail and have spent their Allowance and become to you as unsavoury as the white of an Egg. Will this Comfort you that you have sported and gamed away your precious time that you have fared of the best and lived in Pomp and Honour Oh no But this will comfort you I have made it my business to glorifie God I have been Faithful in my place have gotten some Evidence of the Love of God It is not Riches or Greatness or any Earthly Advantage will do you good Oh 't is a Cutting Thought to the Careless and Negligent Now I must give an Account of every day and hour I have spent in this World The Improvement of every Opportunity will be called for Then all your Vanities and carnal Pleasures will be smart upon you and vex your Souls with the grievous Remembrance of them Well then can you in any measure look back upon the Discharge of your Duty There are two Extreams First Some are Presumptuous and Confident because they are not gross Sinners but what have they done for God The sluggish and unprofitable Servant was cast into utter Darkness he did not mispend his Talent but yet he did not improve it The Tree that bringeth forth no Fruit is hewen down though it did not bring forth bad Fruit. 'T is not a Negative Religion will comfort thee but a Positive and a Fruitful one You are no Drunkard no Adulterer no Prophane Person but have you been at work for God Secondly Others are Pusillanimous and Diffident because they do not arrive at the Eminency and Perfection of the highest David had other Worthies besides the first three There were two faithfull Servants one brought five Talents the other two Now the middle is of those that can see in themselves more Zeal than Formality more Grace than Corruption that for the main have made it their business to Honour God though conscious to many Weaknesses and Defects yet throughout Grace gets the upper hand according to the degrees of Grace received they are faithful with God 2. The Masters Approbation Well done thou good and faithful Servant The Faithful Servants are well accepted by Christ. First He entertaineth them
God He that rewarded the Picture and shadow of duty as in Ahab 1 Kings 21.29 the first offers of it in his Servants Isa. 32.5 that regarded the returning Prodigal Luke 15.20 Isa. 65.24 whose Bowels relent presently who hath promised to reward a Cup of cold Water given for Christs sake Mat. 10.42 and that our slender Services should receive so great a Reward that beareth with his peoples weakness that spareth them as a man spareth his only Son by their failing surely he is not harsh and severe 4. These Prejudices are very Natural to us and therefore should be regarded by all This appeareth partly by the first Fall of Man Prejudice against God was the fiery dart that wounded our first Parents to death The first Battery that Sathan made was against the perswasion of Gods goodness and kindness to man he endeavoured to make them doubt of it by casting jealousies into their minds as if God were harsh severe and envious in restraining them from the Tree of Knowledge and the fruit that was so fair to see to Gen. 3. If once he could bring them to question Gods goodness he knew other things would succeed more easily for the sense of the Creators goodness was the strongest bond by which the Heart was kept to God And partly because still the Devil seeketh to possess us with this conceit that God is harsh and severe and delighteth in our ruine and casteth jealousies into our heads as if God did infringe our just Liberties by the restraints of his Law And we have the same impatiency of restraints which they had and the Flesh being importunate to be pleased we are apt to find out excuses And as the naughty Servant condemneth his Master when he should beg pardon so such is the perverse disposition of Man when we should confess our fault we will abuse God himself as Adam Gen. 3.12 The Woman thou gavest me gave me and I did eat This monstrous conceit of God we further by observing his injuries as we count them rather than his benefits We take notice of Afflictions but not of daily Mercies David had much adoe to hold his Principle Psal. 73.1 2. Truly God is good to Israel even to such as are of a clean Heart But as for me my feet were almost gone my steps had well nigh slipt These thoughts are very incident to us VSE Oh then when we set our Hearts to Religion let us take heed of slavish fear And if so take heed with what thoughts of God you are leavened and that you do not draw a monstrous and horrid Picture of him in your minds Oh look upon him as full of Grace and Mercy ten thousand tim● more inclined to do good than any Friend you have in the World The Devil governeth the dark parts of the World by slavish Fear but God governeth by Love To this end consider 1. That in his Word God representeth himself by Mercy and Goodness rather than any other Attribute Mercy is natural to him he is the Father of Mercies 2 Cor. 1.3 God is not merciful by accident but by Nature The Sun doth not more naturally shine nor the Fire more naturally burn or Water more naturally flow than God doth naturally shew mercy 'T is pleasing to him Micah 7.18 Jam. 2.13 Mercy rejoyceth over Judgment Punitive acts are forced from him but gracious acts drop from him of their own accord like Life-honey Nay God is Mercy it self 1 Joh. 4.8 God is Love It cannot be said of a man that he is Learning and Wisdom though learned and wise But God is not only loving but Love and infinite Sea of Love without Banks and Bounds It was well observed of Oecolampadius That men were taught amiss to know the Nature of God by vulgar Pictures and Representations For their fashion was then to picture God in some fair and beautiful form and the Devil in some foul ugly shape Puerorum major pars nescit quid sit Deus quid sit Sathan But he adviseth Parents if they would teach their Children to know what God is they would first teach them to know what Goodness is and Justice is what Mercy is what Bounty and Loving-kindness is per illas enim propriè quid Deus sit discimus Again If they would know what kind of Creature the Devil is they should first know what Malice is and Filthiness and what Villany and Treachery is for Sathan is a Compound of all these The best Picture that could be taken of the Devil would be by the Characters of Malice Falshood and Envy But God is Justice it self Goodness it self Mercy it self as it is expressed in Scripture 2. In Christ who is the express Image of his Person Heb. 1.3 Now Christ disdained not the Company of Sinners went about healing Sicknesses and Diseases and doing good His Miracles were acts of Relief not done for Pomp and Ostentation 3. In his Providence Act. 14.17 He left not himself without witness in that he did good and gave us Rain from Heaven and fruitful seasons filling our hearts with food and gladness SERMON XV. MATTH XXV v. 26 27. His Lord said unto him Thou wicked and sloathful Servant thou knewest that I reaped where I sowed not and gathered where I have not strawed Thou oughtest therefore to have put my Money to the Exchangers and then at my coming I should have received mine own with Vsury HEre is the Masters Reply to the Servants Allegation In the words we have two things 1. An Exprobration of his Naughtiness and Sloth 2. A Retortion of his vain Excuse upon his own head If thou knewest c. Not as if the Lord did grant it to be true that the sloathful Servant had alleadged but his own Opinions and Conceits were enough to convince him 1. Here is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Concession For Dispute sake be it as thou hast said 2. The Inference Thou oughtest therefore to have put my Money to the Exchangers that at my coming I might have received my own with Vsury The Argument is returned upon himself The Bankers and Usury here mentioned are only by way of comparison and can no more be urged to justifie the putting Money to use than Behold I come as a Thief can justifie Theft or that Parable Luke 16. should justifie Fraud and Injustice the unjust Steward did wisely Non servi fraudem sed prudentiam c. Parables are not taken from those things that de jure ought to be done but de facto are done Therefore I shall not interpose any Judgment of mine upon this occasion as to that case whether any putting Money to use by lawful yea or no only observe That Christ will have his own with Usury some improvement he expects when he cometh First I begin with the Exprobration 'T was a sharp but well deserved Reproof if the bad Servant had feared this aforehand it might have been better with him shame is the fear of a just Reproof Mark the
far from the Kingdom of God they approve things that are good but they have no mind to take hazard and lot with Christ. 5. If there should be a Profession there is no Power The Net draws bad Fish as well as good There are mixtures in the Church Many revere Godliness but were never acquainted with the Virtue and Power of it Many have an excellent Model of Truth and make a Profession as plausible and glorious in the World as possibly you can desire yet they never knew the Virtue of this Religion it never entred into their Heart 1 Cor. 4.20 For the Kingdom of God is not in Word stands not in plausible Pretences but in Power 1 Thess. 1.5 For our Gospel came not unto you in Word only but also in Power You know the State of Men were represented by Christ in the Parable of the two Sons Mat. 21.28 29 30. A certain Man had two Sons and he came to the first and said Son go to work to day in my Vineyard He answered and said I will not but afterwards he repented and went And he went to the second and said likewise And he answered and said I go Sir and went not Oh there be many that say I will go that pretend fair that are convinced so far as to make a Profession yet never bring their Hearts seriously to addict themselves to God to walk in his Ways and keep his Charge there is no real change of Heart no serious bent of Soul towards God 6. If there be some real Motions as there may be in temporary Believers for we must not think all is Hypocritical yet it is not intire Mark 6.20 Herod did many things and heard John Baptist gladly His Heart and his Profession went a great way together till he was to part with his Bosom-Lust John was safe till he touched upon his Herodias then Conviction grows furious and he turneth into a Devil Therefore take heed of meer Conviction Vse 4. To press the Children of God to express such Fruits of their Union with Christ that they may convince the World Christ prays not only that the World may be convinced but that it might be by those that are real Members of his Mystical Body that they may have a Hand to further it What are the Fruits of the Mystical Union that you may convince the World 1. Love and mutual serviceableness to one another's Good When we live as Members of the same Body that have a mutual care for one another then we shall bring a mighty Honour and Credit to Religion and can with Power give Testimony to the Truths of Christ. Acts 2.44 And all that believed were together and had all things common When Christians were of One Mind and Heart they had all things common O it is a mighty convincing thing when all those that profess Godliness labour to carry on the same Truths and Practices Divisions breed Atheism in the World The Lord Jesus knew it and therefore he prays Let them be all one c. that the World may believe that thou hast sent me We never propagate the Faith so much as by this Union Divisions put a great stop to the progress of Truth When contrary Factions mutually condemn one another it is a wonder any are brought off from their vain Conversations The World is apt to think there is no such thing as Religion and one sort is no better than another they see the World cannot agree about it therefore they stay where they are 2. Holiness and Strictness of Life and Conversation there is a convincing Majesty in it natural Conscience doth homage to it where ever it findeth it Therefore live as those who are taken up into Fellowship with God through Christ. Herod feared John Baptist Why because he was a strict Preacher No but because he was a Just Man Mark 6.20 When you live thus holily and accomplish the Work of Faith with Power then the Lord Jesus is glorified in you 2 Thess. 1.11 12. 3. When you can contemn the Baits of the World and Allurements of Sense this is a mighty Argument to convince the World that you have higher and nobler Principles you are acted by and better Hopes you are called to Tho you have not divested and put off the Interests of Flesh and Blood for you are not Angels yet you can be faithful to God and Christ. The World admireth what kind of Temper Men are made of 1 Pet. 4.4 They think it strange that you run not with them into all excess of Riot They have the same Interests and Concernments and yet how mortified how weaned are they from those Things which others go a whoring after sure they have a felicity which the World knoweth not of they dread and admire this tho they hate you 4. A Chearfulness and Comfortableness in the midst of Troubles and deep Wants when you can live above your Condition take joyfully the spoiling of your Goods Heb. 10.34 and bear Losses with an equal mind for you are not much troubled with these Things then you live as those that are called to a higher Happiness 5. To be more faithful in the Duties of your Relations The Fruits of the Mystical Union run to every part of the Spiritual Life None commend their Religion so much as those that make Conscience of the Duties of their Relations that they may carry themselves as becomes Christians Husbands and Wives Parents and Children Masters and Servants So poor Servants make the Doctrine of the Lord Jesus Christ comely Tit. 2.10 That ye may adorn the Doctrine of God our Saviour in all things And the Apostle saith Men that do not obey the Word may without the Word be won by the Conversation of their Wives 1 Pet. 3.1 Worldly Men have been much gained by the Lives of Religious Persons Thus you propagate the Truth by carrying your selves usefully in your Relations This hath been ever the Glory of Religion as it was in the Primitive Times Austin makes this Challenge Vbi tales Imperatores c. Let all the Religions in the World shew such Emperors such Captains such Armies such Managers of Publick Treasury as the Christian Religion The World was convinced there was something Divine in them O! it is pity the Glory of Religion should fall to the ground in our days and that the quite contrary should be said none such careless Parents as those that seem to be touched with a sense of Religion None so disobedient to Magistrates none such disobedient Children to Parents as those that seem to be called to Liberty with Christ Therefore if you would honour Christ and propagate the Truth keep up this Testimony and convince the World 6. A Constancy in the Profession of Faith You should live as if Christ and you had one common Interest Sure they believe Christ was sent from God and able to reward them else why should they sacrifice all their Interests for his sake It is said Rev. 12.11 The
you Jer. 44.4 O do not this abominable thing that I hate Conscience calleth to you as Davids heart smote him it is time to stop then Is this becoming your solemn Vow Will it consist with the Love of God Vse 4. It puts us upon Self-reflection Do I know that my Old man is crucified with Christ There is a knowledge of Faith and a knowledge of spiritual Sense 1. Have you experimentally felt the power of his Death Phil. 3.10 That I may know him and the power of his resurrection and the fellowship of his sufferings being made conformable unto his death Is the body of sin destroyed or at least considerably weakened 2. Whom do you serve God or Sin Have you changed Masters Are you as free from sin as before from righteousness And do you as much for God as before for sin Rom. 6.19 20. As ye have yielded your members servants to uncleanness and to iniquity unto iniquity even so now yield your members servants to righteousness unto holiness For when ye were the servants of sin ye were free from righteousness SERMON VI. ROM VI. 7 For he that is dead is freed from sin THE words are a Reason to prove what was asserted in the former Verse Two things were there asserted 1. That their old man is crucified with Christ. 2. That therefore we must not serve sin This the Apostle proveth This Reason is taken from the Analogy between Death natural and spiritual He that is dead naturally is freed from the Authority of those who formerly had power over him humane slavery endeth with death in the grave the servant is free from his master Job 3.19 Death levelleth the ranks of persons and the imperious Lord and Master hath no more priviledge than his vilest slave and servant So he that is dead to sin is delivered from the power of sin acting formerly in him For he that is dead is freed from sin In the words 1. A Subject 2. A Predicate 1. A Subject He that is dead A man may be said to be dead properly and naturally or improperly and metaphorically First Properly and naturally when the Body is deprived of the Soul Jam. 2.26 The body without the spirit is dead Secondly Improperly and metaphorically for Death spiritual and this either with respect to Unbelievers who are said to be dead in sin Eph. 2.1 You hath he quickened who were dead in trespasses and sins And vers 5. Even when we were dead in sins hath he quickened us together with Christ. And therefore when we come out of that estate we are said to pass from death to life 1 Joh. 3.14 Or with respect to Believers who are dead to sin Col. 3.3 For ye are dead Real Believers are dead not in sin but to sin the Dominion and Reign of it being broken though it be not totally subdued This is here intended 2. The Predicate Is freed from sin The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Vulgar hath justificatus est à peccato Beza with many of the Ancients liberatus est Our Translation hath both in the Text freed in the Margine justified Whether you take one or the other word it importeth deliverance from the yoke and dominion of sin so as not to obey its motions and commands For the Apostle doth not speak here of the Forgiveness of sin but the Abolition of its power and dominion for it is brought as a Reason why those whose Old man is crucified with Christ should not serve sin and the word justified is the rather used because one justified and absolved by his Judge is also released and set free from his bonds so are we Doctrine That freedom from sin is the consequent of our dying with Christ. I shall handle 1. The Nature of this Freedom from Sin 2. The Degree to which we attain in this Life 3. The value of this Benefit 4. How it is the Consequent of our dying with Christ. I. The Nature of this Freedom from Sin I told you before it is an exemption from the Dominion and Reign of Sin 1. We quit the evil disposition and temper of our Souls we are dispossessed of every evil habit Our first work is to put off the habit and then the act ceaseth The Apostle telleth us 1 Pet. 2.11 12. Dearly beloved abstain from fleshly lusts that war against the soul. Having your conversation honest among the Gentiles c. In vain do we lop off the branches till the root be first deadned The life and reign of sin lyeth in the prevalency of our lusts within all outward sins are but acts of obedience to the reigning lust 2. We renounce our former course of living after the Habits we are free from the Acts we do not and durst not to live in sin the former conversation is cast off as well as the former lusts Eph. 4.22 That ye put off concerning the former conversation the old man which is corrupt according to the deceitful lusts Sin must not break out in our conversations for it is but a deceit to think we have quelled the lust when the acts appear as frequently and easily as they did before A change of heart will be made manifest by a change of conversation So 1 Pet. 1.14 As obedient children not fashioning your selves according to the former lusts in your ignorance They must not shape and mould their actions and endeavours according to the sinful motions of their corrupt Nature So 1 Pet. 2.12 Having your conversation honest If sin be weakened in the heart the fruit of it will appear in the conversation Now this Freedom is expressed by a word that signifieth Justification and fitly 1. Because of the Nature of Justification in which there are two Branches liberatio à poenâ and acceptatio ad vitam The punishment incurred by the Fall is poena damni and poena sensûs the loss and the pain Both may be considered as in this life or the life to come To begin with the highest and most dreadful part of the punishment the loss of Gods eternal and blessed Presence or the Fruition of him in Glory Mat. 25.41 Depart ye cursed The pains are those eternal Torments which are appointed for the wicked when they shall fall immediately into the hands of an angry and offended God Heb. 10.31 It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God But in this life we must also consider the loss and pain The pains are all those miseries and afflictive evils which came into the World by reason of sin The loss is loss of Gods Image that Threatning Thou shalt dye the death Gen. 2.17 implied spiritual death as well as temporal and eternal Now we are justified when we are freed from punishment and among other punishments from the punishment of loss when God giveth us the blessing which sin had deprived us of As for instance when he giveth us the sanctifying Spirit this is called a receiving the Atonement Rom. 5.11 We had forfeited it by
instruments of Righteousness unto God Secondly Among other the means required by God there are these two things to be considered Fear of Falling and the Danger of Backsliding 1. Fear of Falling Heb. 4.1 Let us therefore fear lest a promise being left us of entring into his rest any of us should seem to come short of it 1 Pet. 1.17 Pass the time of your sojourning here with fear Phil. 2.12 Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling Fear is careful and solicitous what Fear is this a Fear of Caution 1 Cor. 10.12 Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall Of Reverence Jer. 32.40 I will put my fear in their hearts that they shall not depart from me 2. The Danger of Backsliding is often represented to Believers to increase their caution as Christ said to his own Disciples Joh. 15.6 If a man abide not in me he is cast forth as a branch and is withered and men gather them and cast them into the fire and they are burned The danger of Apostasie is represented to them to confirm their standing or laid before them to make them afraid of defection So Heb. 10.26 27. If we sin wilfully after we have received the knowledge of the truth there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins But a certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation which shall devour the adversaries 3. The Promise and Exhortation go together that we may carry an even hand between Despair and Presumption Compare vers 12. Let not sin therefore reign in your mortal bodies that ye should obey it in the lusts thereof with the Text Sin shall not have dominion over you we must not presume because of the filthiness of our hearts and the number of the snares that are still before us we must not despond because of the unchangeableness of Gods Covenant-love Let us improve the Grace we have received that we may continue in it The Act is ours but the Help is Gods To sin upon a confidence that we are sure to persevere is to cease persevering and to fall away because we are sure not to fall away which is a contradiction Vse of Information It informeth us 1. No Doctrine is so sound but a corrupt heart will abuse it therefore as much as in us lies we must prevent these mis-interpretations 2. How prone sinful men are to take all occasions to indulge liberty to sin being naturally bent to Licentiousness they pervert Christs holy Doctrine to this end 3. With what abhorrence we should entertain any thing that lessens the necessity of the Creatures subjection to God or doth befriend sin or inticeth you to make light of Obedience yea though this should be done with the most glorious pretences of Grace it is but Poison ministred by a Perfume 4. What caution and watchfulness we should use over our own thoughts and inferences Every one draweth one Conclusion or other from the Gospel What use do you make of it Many that will not say so that we should sin because we are not under the Law but under Grace are apt to think and do so And since it is natural to us we should be provided of a remedy 1. Let every Sacred Truth be digested into holy Love and Practice Love 2 Cor. 8.1 2. Knowledge puffeth up but charity edifyeth And if any man think that he knoweth any thing he knoweth nothing yet as he ought to know Practice 1 Joh. 2.4 He that saith I know him and keepeth not his commandments is a lyar and the truth is not in him When Truth is turned into Love it is turned into a new Nature and deeds discover the reality of our opinions more than words 2. Let no mystical Truth be set up to avoid Gods unquestionable natural Right to govern his Creature or to infringe the Rights of the Godhead as to set up Christ against the Moral Law as if that were abrogated and if no Law no Transgression no Sin no Duty no Judgment no Punishment no Reward 3. Do not set up Christ against Christ Heb. 5.9 And being made perfect he became the Author of eternal Salvation to all them that obey him Do not set up his Merits against his Law he is Saviour but to those that obey him SERMON XVII ROM VI. 16 Know ye not that to whom ye yield your selves servants to obey his servants ye are to whom ye obey whether of sin unto death or of obedience unto righteousness IN this Verse the Apostle proveth that it is unreasonable and absurd to conclude That we may sin because we are not under the Law but under Grace Why Because it destroyeth the state to which we pretend for men cannot be under Grace that serve sin He proveth it by a general Maxim evident by the common Reason of Mankind Know ye not that to whom ye yield your selves servants to obey his servants ye are c. So that in the words we may observe two things 1. A general Maxim evident by the Light of Nature 2. The Application of it to the matter in hand 1. The general Maxim That whatsoever or whomsoever a man voluntarily obeyeth he maketh it or him his proper Lord and Master There take notice of the evidence of it Know ye not q. d. you may easily know this by the common course of affairs of the World Here four things are evident First That omnis servus est alicujus Domini servus that every Servant hath some particular Lord and Master Secondly That the interest of this particular Lord and Master is grounded upon some special Title Thirdly This Title as matters are carried in the World is either voluntary Contract or Consent or plain Conquest getting another into his Power By voluntary Contract one is a Servant that bargaineth with another to serve him either wholly that selleth himself as a Slave or in part for such services and ministeries the one is Servus a Bondman or a Slave the other is Famulus an Attendant or Apprentice not absolutely but for such a time and for such ends By Conquest 2 Pet. 2.19 While they promise themselves liberty they themselves are the servants of corruption for of whom a man is overcome of the same is he brought into bondage Fourthly Where a Master hath such a legal Title every Servant is bound to obey his Master Aristotle maketh it the property of a Servant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to live not as himself listeth but as his Master pleaseth All these things are plain and obvious to every mans understanding 2. The matter of it there are two things observable 1. Yielding our selves to obey 2. Actual Obedience 1. Consent To whom ye yield your selves servants to obey his servants ye are as a man contracts with another to serve him 2. The Act His servants ye are to whom ye obey whether there hath been a formal Contract yea or no. He that actually obeyeth another is to be accounted his Servant and becometh his Servant The first Notion
the time of my departure is at hand but this is forced 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rather implyeth sheep destined to the shambles The similitude importeth partly the contempt of the enemies they made no more reckoning of them than of sheep Zech. 11.4 5. Feed the flock of the slaughter whose possessors slay them and hold themselves not guilty That is they care no more for their death than they do for the killing of a sheep 2. It noteth their own imbecility they had no power to resist as Matth. 10.16 Behold I send you forth as sheep in the midst of wolves sheep have no power or means to preserve themselves 3. Their meekness they did no more resist than sheep Isa. 53.7 He was oppressed and he was afflicted yet he opened not his mouth he is brought as a lamb to the slaughter and as a sheep before the shearers is dumb so he opened not his mouth Doctrine Such as resolve upon the profession of Christianity must prepare to give their life for the maintenance of it when God calls them thereunto This seemeth hard But 1. Christ requireth it of all Luke 14.26 If any man come to me and hate not his father and mother and wife and children and brethren and sisters yea and his own life he cannot be my disciple 'T is too late for us to interpose for an aba●ement when the terms are thus fixed by Christ himself So our Lord when he openeth the Doctrine of self-denial he sheweth it must extend to life Matth. 16.24 25. He that saveth his life shall lose it There is nothing so near to us as life nothing which nature doth so highly value and tenderly look to and so unwillingly let go many that can yeild in other points cannot yeild in this but then they are not sincere with God for you must not look upon it as a note of excellency but the disposition of those who have the lowest measure of saving grace as appeareth by these clauses If any man will come after me and he cannot be my disciple You will say What can the strong and eminent Christian do more than part with life This is not the difference between the strong and the weak Christian that one can part with a few things for Christ and the other can part with all no all must part with all not this that one can part with his ease profit and credit and the other can part with his life no both must part with life The difference is not in the things to be parted with but in the degree of the affection the strongest Christians can die with greater zeal love readiness joy and so bring more honour to God by their death than weak Christians do who offer up themselves to God with greater reluctancy and unwillingness 2. Such have been the tryals of Gods children in all ages as the instance is brought from the godly who lived under the Law-dispensation Now if the Saints of old endured such hard things and tribulation even unto death Then it followeth 1. 'T is no strange thing 1 Pet. 4.12 Beloved think it not strange concerning the fiery tryal as if some strange thing had happened unto you Our taking the ordinary case of the godly for a strange thing is that which doth disturb and distemper us none wondreth at a bitter Winter coming after a sweet Summer or a dark night succeeding a bright day because 't is an ordinary thing so here 2. Then 't is no grievous thing but such as the people of God have endured when they had not the advantages that we have A double advantage we have above the Saints of the Old Testament 1. They had not such a pattern of self-denyal as we have and that is the death of Christ which teacheth us to obey God at the dearest rates Matth. 10.24 The Disciple is not above his Master nor the Servant above his Lord. Christ is a pattern of sufferings and to look for exemptions from them is to expect to be better dealt with than he was we tread upon no step of hard ground but what Christ hath gone there before us and his steps drop fatness left a blessing behind him to sweeten the way to us So Heb. 12.1 2 3. Look to Jesus the author and finisher of our faith who for the joy that was set before him endured the Cross despised the shame and is sate down at the right hand of the throne of God For cons●●●r him that endured such contradiction of sinners against himself lest you be wearied and faint in your minds Jesus is propounded as our example he endured cruel pains in his body and bitter sorrows in his soul deserted by God contradicted by men yet he bore all patiently and undauntedly this is the copy and pattern which is set for our imitation that we may not sink under our burdens 2. The other advantage They had not such a clear discovery of eternal life as is now made to us in the promises of the Gospel 2 Tim. 1.10 Since the appearance of our Lord Jesus Christ Life and Immortality is brought to light in the Gospel 'T was but sparingly revealed then and to appearance the Covenant ran more in the strain of Temporal promises but now Christ hath struck a thorough light into the other world and clearly tells us that great is our reward in Heaven and therefore we may rejoice if men persecute us Matth. 5.11 12. we will do so if we believe him Who would not permit another to take down a shed if we did believe that he would build a Palace for us at his own cost and charges The reward is so far above the suffering that certainly now we should more willingly submit to be killed all the day long and counted as sheep for the slaughter if the people of God did so heretofore upon those few glimmerings which they had about eternal life certainly they had not such a clear prospect into the other world nor such a visible demonstration of the certainty of it as we have by the Resurrection and Ascension of our Lord Jesus Christ. 3. To manifest the truth and reallity of our graces of our faith in Christ and love to him and hope of Salvation 1. To shew our faith which is such a trusting our selves in Christs hands that we are willing to part with all even life its self for his sake this is called a believing to the saving of our souls Heb. 10.39 Sense saith Save thy self Faith saith Save thy soul Heb. 11.35 They accepted not deliverance looking for a better Resurrection when stretched out by torture like the head of a drum 2. To shew our love Nothing can or ought to separate us from the love of Christ God alloweth us to love life but he will be loved better for his loving kindness is better than life Psal. 63.3 now the greatest things must be greatly loved and then is our love tryed when the blackest dispensations cannot draw us from God
Christ Jesus Eph. 2.10 It concerns you to ask why am I made To what use and purpose do I serve but to glorify God and admire his Grace and to live answerable to his love and in a thankful obedience to his Precepts and to promote his Kingdom and Interest in this world By Regeneration we have new faculties and dispositions the great effect of grace is to beget a tendency towards God to restore and incline the heart of man to his proper end to know the end distinguisheth a man from a Beast but to choose the end and seek the end distinguisheth one man from another to make Gods glory the chief scope and end of all our lives and actions is the great fruit and effect of grace Naturally we are either ignorant or mindless of our great end and the way that leadeth to it All of us are gone astray like lost Sheep Isa. 53.6 and Psa. 14.2 They are all gone out of the way Or that path which will lead us to the end for which we were created And naturally we spend our time in serving our lusts and are taken up with other business have no heart nor leisure to live unto God and for God but imploy our Souls only to please our Bodies and to serve and please the senses and are slaves to all the Creatures who by original institution were put under mans feet But now Christ died to bring us to God 1 Pet. 3.18 And by his Spirit doth change the heart that we may be to the praise of his glorious grace Eph. 1.13 Not only as passive objects but as active instruments Indeed there is objectively a greater impression of God upon the new Creature than there is upon any thing else which hath passed Gods hand This work sets forth more of his Attributes of his Goodness Wisdom and Power than all things else The very being of the new Creature sets forth more of the praise of God to all beholders though the man himself were silent yet the work would speak for its self But we are not speaking of that now how the new Creature objectively and passively sets forth the praise of God but how as active instruments they should glorify God both in word and deed not only as the praise of his glory is to be manifested in them but as it is to be manifested and intended by them having renewed faculties to inable them how they should live unto God and bring forth fruit unto God Yea besides the renewing of their natures they have the actual influences of his grace And therefore since they have all from God they should use all for him and live to the glory of God whose grace inableth them to do every thing 'T is by the grace of God they are what they are and therefore it is for the glory of God that they do what they do All the fruits of Righteousness wrought in them are by Jesus Christ to the praise and glory of God Phil. 1.11 Gods glory and not any by respect must be the main scope and end of the new Creature Otherwise he perverts the influences of grace and would serve himself of the supply of the Spirit 3. We by the providence of God are disposed in all our relations for this end that we might have some sphear wherein to glorify God Some as Magistrates some as Ministers some as Masters some as Servants so that the glorifying of God concerneth every man in all that he doth in all that relation wherein God hath placed him Every man is sent into the world for some end for no wise Agent worketh at random God hath made nothing in vain but hath assigned to every Creature it s own use and operation To do a thing to no purpose will not agree with the wisdom of a considering man Therefore God who is a God of Judgment hath certainly in every work of his some scope end Therefore every man hath his service imployment if he were made for nothing then hath he nothing to do in the world Surely life and reason was given us for something not meerly to furnish and fill up the number of things in the world as stones and rubbish do nor meerly to grow in stature as life was given to the plants to grow bulky or increase in length and breadth nor meerly to tast sensitive pleasures as that is the happiness of the Beasts to injoy pleasures without remorse God gave man those higher faculties of reason and conscience to manage some profitable work and business for the glory of his Creator and his own eternal happiness And by some honest labour and vocation as Instruments of Gods Providence to serve their Generation Acts 13.26 the world was never made to be a Hive for Drones and idle ones if any man might be allowed to be idle and serve for no use then God would make one rational Creature in vain and one member would be useless in the Body Politick We see in the Body Natural there is no member but hath its function and use whereby it becometh serviceable to the whole All have not the same Office that would make confusion but all have their use either as an Eye or as an Hand or as a Foot or as a Sinew or as a Vein or as an Artery so in humane Society no Member may be useless they must have one function or another wherein to imploy themselves otherwise they are unprofitable burdens of the Earth Every man more or less hath some relation which he is to improve for the glory of God and the good of others Every one hath his Talent which must not be hid in a Napkin he is accountable to God for that state of life wherein God hath set him The Mediator hath his work and he giveth up his account to God John 17.4 I have finished the work thou gavest me to do The Courtier hath his work Neh. 1.11 The Lord shew me favour in the sight of this man for I was the Kings Cupbearer He useth this as an Argument that he had improved his place for God The Minister hath his work 2 Cor. 1.20 For all the promises of God in him are yea and in him Amen to the glory of God by us And Heb. 13.17 Obey them that have the rule over you and submit your selves for they watch for your Souls as they that must give an account The Master and Parent his work and he is to glorify God as a Master and Parent The Parent is to bring up his Children in the nurture and admonition of the Lord Eph. 4.6 The Master hath a Master in Heaven Eph. 6.9 The Servant his work Titus 2.10 'T was well said of Epictetus the Heathen if I were a Nightingal I would sing as a Nightingal or if I were a Lark I would pear as a Lark but now I am a Man I will glorify God as a Man and praise him without ceasing if a poor Man I will glorifie him by my patient
in graces as they incline me to God In Jesus Christ as he bringeth me to him and fits me for him Now these things being so I must rowse up both these more to regard the Glory of God that it may influence and govern their actions Consider these motives 1. God will have his Glory upon you if not from you for he is resolved not to be a loser by the Creation of man For he made man for himself and the wicked for the day of evil Pro. 16.4 And Levit. 10.3 And before all the people I will be glorifyed God will have his Glory that 's certain he will have the Glory of his Justice in the day of wrath and evil If not the Glory of his Grace and Holiness in the day of his patience and mercy Therefore he will be gloryfied by you or upon you Some give him Glory in an active some in a passive way if he have not the Glory due to his Command he will right himself in the course of his providence How sad that will be Judge you For then we shall serve for no other use but to set forth the Glory of his vindictive Justice 2. He taketh notice of it and is well pleased with it when we glorify him here in the World 'T is one of Christs pleas for his Disciples John 17.10 Father I am glorifyed in them He is an Advocate in Heaven for those who are Factors for his Kingdom here upon Earth which is a comfort to all those who sincerely set themselves to promote the Glory of God and the good of the Church The more our endeavours are to Glorify God and Christ the more confident we may be of Christs mediation that he is negotiating our cause in Heaven 3. We shall be called to an account what we have done with our time and talents and interests and opportunities Luk. 19.23 He will require his own with usury what honour he hath by our gifts and graces estate or esteem relations and services how glorifyed as Magistrates Ministers Parents Masters Husbands Wives Children Servants Beasts are liable to no account because they have no reason and Conscience they are ruled by a rod of iron to Glorify God in their kind passively We are left to our own choice therefore we should mind it seriously If you do not ask your selves why you came into the World what will you answer at your appearance before Gods Tribunal Job 31.10 When he shalt rise up what shall I answer him I beseech you consider what you will say when the master returneth and taketh an account of your dispensation you were sent into the World for this business to serve the Lord What will you say when you cannot shift and lye Will this be an answer I spent my time in serving my own lusts I was drowned in Worldly cares never thought of pleasing God or glorifying God As if an Embassadour that is sent abroad to serve his King and Country should only return this account of his negotiation I was busied in Courtships and Cards and Dice and could not mind the Imployment you sent me about Or as if a Factor that is sent to a mart or fair should stay gusling in an Inn or Ale-house and there spend all his money which was to be imployed in traffique Oh what a dreadful account will poor Souls make that have spent their time either in doing nothing or nothing to purpose or that which is worse than nothing that will undo them for ever 4. How comfortable it will be at death when you have minded your business and seriously made it your work to live to God And can say as our Lord John 17.4 Father I have glorifyed thee upon earth I have finished the work thou hast given me to do Oh the comfort of a well spent life to a dying Christian 2 Tim. 4.7 8. I have fought a good fight I have finished my course I have kept the Faith henceforth there is laid up for me a Crown of Righteousness which the Lord the Righteous Judge shall give me at that day and not to me only but unto them also that love his appearing Or as Hezekiah Isa. 38.3 R●member Lord I beseech thee how I have walked before thee in truth with a perfect heart I have been careful for matter manner and end to Glorify God by a constant obedience to his Holy will Now on the other side what thoughts will you have of a careless and mispent life when you come to die Many beguile themselves and do not think of the end of their lives till their life comes to be ended And then they howl and make their moan usually when they lye a dying they cry out of this World how it hath deceived them and how little they have fulfilled the ends of their Creation Partly because their Conscience puts off all disguises and Partly because present things are apt to work upon us and when the everlasting estate is at hand the Soul is troubled that it did no more think of it before Oh 't is better to be prepared than to be surprized think of your last end betimes 'T is lamentable to begin to learn to live when we must dye These end their life before they begin to live You are in your health and strength now but we are all hastening a pace into the other World But when God summoneth by sickness and you are immediately to appear before God what have you to say for your selves The Devil will then be busy to tempt and trouble us and all other comforts fail and have spent their allowance and are as unsavory as the white of an egg Will this comfort you that you have sported and gamed away your precious time That you have fared of the best and lived in pomp and honour Ah no but this will be a cordial to your hearts that you have made Conscience of honouring and glorifying God and have been faithful in your place in promoting the Churches good Therefore if hitherto you have been pleasing the flesh idleing and wantonning away your precious time say the time past is more than enough 1 Pet. 4.3 I have long too long walked contrary to my great end been dishonouring God and destroying mine own Soul 't is high time to remember and seek after God 5. Consider what a full reward abideth for those that live unto God and in all things regard his Glory 1 Sam. 2.30 Those that honour me I will honour And John 12.26 If any man serve me him will my Father honour In the issue you will find that self-denyal is the truest self-seeking That those who are contented to be any thing for the Lords Glory need not seek another pay-master God will Glorify you if you Glorify him Gods glorifying is effective and creative ours is but declarative He calleth the things that are not as though they were We do no more than call things to be what they are and far below what they are we declare
united to Christ partake of his Divine Spirit who doth sanctify the Souls of his people and doth mortify and master the strongest corruptions and raise them to those inclinations and affections to which nature is an utter stranger Th Impressions left upon the Soul by the Spirit may be seen in the three Theological graces which constitute the new Creature mentioned 1 Cor. 13.13 But now abideth Faith Hope and Charity And 1 Thes. 5.8 Putting on the brest-plate of Faith and love and for an helmet the Hope of Salvation And elsewhere Faith Love and Hope Now the operations of all these graces imply a new and strange nature put into us 1. Faith which convinceth us of things unseen and to live in the delightful fore-thought of a World to come 2 Cor. 4.16.17 18. For this cause we faint not but though our outward man perish yet the inward man is renewed day by day For our light afflictions which are but for a moment work for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of Glory While we look not to the things which are seen but at the things which are not seen for the things which are seen are temporal but the things which are not seen are eternal Now will there not be a manifest difference between a man that is governed by sense and one guided and influenced by Faith Certainly more than there is in a man that delighteth in ordering the affairs of Common-Wealths and a child that delighteth in moulding clay-pies So for Love A Child of God is so affected with the goodness that is in God and the goodness that floweth from God in the wonders of his Love by Christ and the goodness we hope for when all the promises are fulfilled that all their delights desires and endeavours are after God Not to be great in the World but to injoy God Psal. 73.25 Whom have I in Heaven but thee And there is none upon earth I desire besides thee And therefore can easily overcome fleshly and Worldly Lusts and such inclinations as the rest of the World are mastered with Well then a Christian ingrafted into Christ loseth all property in himself and is freed from self-love and that carnal vanity to which it is addicted Then for hope the strong and constant hope of a glorious estate in the other World will make us deny the flesh go through all sufferings and difficulties to attain it Acts 26.6 7. And now I stand and am judged for the hope of the promise made of God unto our Fathers unto which promise our twelve tribes instantly serving God day and night hope to come And so by consequence a man acteth like another kind of Creature then the rest of men are or than he himself was before 2. The state of the Gospel calleth for it For it is a change of every thing from what it was before all things are new in the Kingdom of Christ and therefore we should be new Creatures also In the Gospel there is a new Adam which is Jesus Christ a New Covenant a new Paradise not that where Adam injoyed God among the Beasts but where the Blessed injoy God among the Angels a new Ministry new Ordinances and therefore we also should be new creatures and serve God not in the oldness of the letter but the newness of the Spirit Rom. 7.6 We are both obliged and fitted by this new state since we have a new Lord a new Law all is new there must be also a new creation for as the general state of the Church is renewed by Christ so every particular believer ought to participate of this new estate 3. The third Argument shall be taken from the necessity of the new creation 1. In order to our present Communion with God the new creature is necessary to converse with an holy and invisible God earnestly frequently reverently and delightfully For the effects of the new creature are life and likeness Those that do not live the life of God are estranged from him Eph. 4.18 Adam was alone though compassed about with multitude of Creatures Beasts and Plants there was none to converse with him because they did not live his life Trees cannot converse with Beasts nor Beasts with Men nor Men with God till they have some what of the same nature and life sense fits the Plants reason the Beasts so grace fits Men. So for likeness conformity is the ground of Communion Amos 3.3 How can two walk together except they are agreed Our old course made the breach between God and us Isa. 59.2 But your iniquities have separated between you and your God and your sins have hid his face from you that he will not hear And our new life and likeness qualifieth for Communion with him 1 John 1.6 7. If we say we have fellowship with him and walk in darkness we lye and do not the truth but if we walk in the light as he is in the light we have fellowship one with another An holy creature may sweetly come and converse with an holy God 2. In order to our service and obedience to God Man is unfit for Gods use till he be new moulded and framed again Observe two places Eph. 2.10 We are his workmanship in Christ Jesus created unto good works Every creature hath faculties sutable to those operations which belong to that creature So man must be new created and new formed that he may be prepared fitted and made ready for the Lord. You cannot expect new operations till there be a new life The other place is 2 Tim. 2.21 If a man purge himself from these he shall be a Vessel of honour sanctified and meet for the Masters use and prepared unto every good work There is a mass of corruption which remaineth as a clog upon us which maketh us averse and indisposed for the work of God and the Soul must be purged from these lusts and inclinations to the vanities of the World before 't is meet prepared and made ready for the acts of holiness Here must be our first care to get the heart renewed many are troubled about this or that duty or particular branches of the Spiritual life First get life its self for there must be principles before there can be operations and in vain do we expect strengthning grace before we have received renewing grace This is like little Children who attempt to run before they can go Many complain of this and that corruption but they do not groan under the burden of a corrupt nature as suppose wandring thoughts in prayer when at the same time the heart is habitually averse and estranged from God as if a man should complain of an aking tooth when a mortal disease hath seized upon his vitals of a cut finger when at the same time he is wounded at the heart of deadness in duty and want of quickening grace when they want converting grace as if we would have the Spirit blow to a dead coal complain of infirmities and incident
he discovereth both an excellent Notion and a most prefound and solid 〈…〉 The last Discourses on 2 Cor. 5. look like a Cygnea-cantio Whether they were some of his last 〈…〉 we cannot tell nor can we judge it from the Subject he being a person who was dying daily and never so 〈…〉 with his Earthly Tabernacle nor possess'd of so weak a Faith as to the House in the Heavens as either 〈…〉 the former should stand longer than should be for the glory of God or himself kept from the latter 〈…〉 It pleased God not to surprize him with death but to let him see it at some distance making its 〈…〉 him before it gave him the fatal word of Arrest Thou will Reader find some things once and again spoken to as the Text led him but in such a 〈…〉 Phrase that they have much new in them Had this eminent Person lived to have supravised his own Note 〈…〉 might possibly have added or altered something We have seen no reason to do it but given thee his Not 〈…〉 they were under his hand onely when not able to read some words in his Notes we were forced to add a 〈…〉 or two for clearing the sense Now Reader what shall we say to thee but onely to quicken thee to bless God for this Milk from the 〈…〉 when thou canst not have it from the Breasts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thus Dr. Manton thô dead yet 〈…〉 God give thee and us an hearing Ear and an understanding Heart We have thus line upon line and span● upon Precept Let us not be barren and unfruitful We commend these Labours and thy Soul to 〈…〉 Blessing Subscribing our selves Thine Affectionate Servants in the Work of the Gospel William Bates Iohn Collinges Iohn Howe Aug. 1. 1684. ADVERTISEMENT A Practical Exposition of the Lords Prayer Octavo By Tho. Manton D. D. Sold by Jonathan Robinson at the Golden-Lion in St. Pauls Church-yard 1684. SEVERAL SERMONS UPON The Twenty Fifth CHAPTER OF S t. MATTHEW SERMON I. MATTH XXV 1 2. Then shall the Kingdom of Heaven be likened unto ten Virgins which took their Lamps and went forth to meet the Bridegroom And five of them were wise and five were foolish ' T WAS Christs manner to Instruct by Parables partly for the greater evidence and force while heavenly things are represented to us in such Notions as we do best understand and partly to teach us the Art of holy Chymistry or extracting spiritual advantages out of obvious Occurrences and Occasions Now Parables are of two sorts Argumentative and Representative First The Argumentative Parables are such wherein some notable Reason is couched or Ground is layd for some excellent encouragement in our Converse with God by shewing what falleth out among men In these Argumentative Parables the parts of the Parable are not to be strained but the scope and Parable it self is to be regarded As in the Parable Luke 18. of the unjust Judge the scope is to be regarded but not the parts strained as if God were to be compared to an unjust Judge And that famous Parable Luke 11.8 concerning success in Prayer where there is Argumentum à minori ad majus an Argument from the less to the greater though he will not rise and give him as he is his friend yet because of his Importunity he will rise and give him And those passages of giving good things to our Children If ye being evil know how to give good things to your Children how much more shall your heavenly Father give good things to them that ask him Secondly The other sort of Parables which I call Representative yields us a notable delineation of some Heavenly matter by laying the Scene of it among Earthly affairs for God is faign to lisp to us in our own dialect and speak as we can understand This and the next Parable are of this sort The Occasion of it was thus Our Lord had been discoursing of the dangerous state of the latter times and therefore presseth to Watchfulness and timely preparation This he doth by three Parables First By the good Man of the House watching against the coming of the Thief Matth. 24.42 43. By the Parable of the Servant misbehaving himself in the absence of his Lord Matth. 24.45 to the end And now the third time by this Parable of the Virgins Still in the close of all he repeateth his Charge of Watchfulness not so much because of the difficulty of the matter as because of our dulness We cannot often enough be put in mind of Vigilancy and diligence in preparing for the coming of the Lord so great is our sloath and drowsiness and non-attention to the great affairs of our Souls Now these three Parables though they come to one effect yet have their special use The first of these concern all the second the Officers of the Church the third the Members First The good man of the House watching against the coming of the Thief speaketh thus much If men watch to avoid a temporal inconvenience much more should we watch to eschew eternal Destruction The diligence of the men of the world in worldly things upbraydeth and condemneth our negligence in heavenly things The Parable of the unfaithful Servant that put off the thoughts of his Masters coming and therefore eateth and drinketh with the drunken and beats his fellow-Fellow-servants is a notable warning to the Officers of the Church that they do not abuse the Power of the Keyes and inhaunt with the wicked and discourage the godly and blast them with Censures and stirre up the displeasure of the Magistrate against their faithfull and painfull Brethren in the Ministry A Drunkard shall find more favour with them than one that is mindful of his Lords coming and would keep punctual to the Orders and Institutions he hath left before he went Now least the Members of the Church should want their admonition besides a warning to the Officers in the Second Parable here is a warning to the Members in this third Parable to watch and be ready that they be not surprized In the wise Virgins is represented the comfortable fruit of Watchfulness in the foolish the sad effects of Security Then shall the Kingdom of Heaven be likened c. In the words we have First The thing compared The Kingdom of Heaven Secondly The Comparison it self shall be likened to ten Virgins Who are 1. Described by their Quality or state Virgins 2. By their Number Ten. 3. By their Rank or distribution five wise and five foolish 4. By their work or Employment they went forth to meet the Bridegroom 5. Their Preparation for that Work they took their Hand-Lamps Before I explain these Circumstances I must a little acquaint you with the Custom of the Jews to which allusion is here made The Weddings of those times were kept by Night in which the Bridegroom and his Company were by certain Virgins fetched in and conducted to the Bride with Lamps in their hands and Songs
mouth keep the door of my lips I do observe there First That unadvised and passionate Speeches do easily drop from us in our Troubles especially in our Persecution Secondly That a godly conscientious Man is very tender of these as of all evil He that would live in Communion with God for the present and hope to appear with comfort before him hereafter is sensible of the least thing that tends to Gods displeasure and Gods dishonour This is the true spirit of one that will be owned by Christ at the last day Thirdly There is no way to prevent being provoked to Impatience and rashness of Speech or any evil but by keeping a VVatch and renewing our Obligations to God Fourthly VVhoever would keep a VVatch must call in the aid and assistance of Gods Grace Lord set a VVatch upon the door of my lips SERMON XI MATTH XXV v. 14 15. For the Kingdom of Heaven is as a Man travelling into a far Countrey who called his own Servants and delivered to them his Goods And unto one he gave five Talents to another two to another one to every one according to his several ability THE particle for sheweth that this Parable hath some connection with the former We have but two great Affairs in the World the one to promote Gods glory the other to save our own Souls Or in other words To be faithfull to God and wise for our selves This latter was taught us in the former Parable the wise and provident Virgins made sufficient preparation for their reception into the Nuptial Feast The other faithfulness to God in employing our Gifts Talents and Opportunities for his glory is taught in this Parable Therefore the drift of it is to set us all a-work in our Places and Callings for the Glory of God that we may look Christ in the Face at his Coming For the Kingdom of Heaven c. In which words we have First The Person trusting A Man Who is here represented 1. As a great Lord and Master that hath Servants of his own and several Gifts to bestow upon them at his pleasure In Luke 't is A certain Nobleman who went into a far Countrey to receive for himself a Kingdom Luk. 19.12 In Mark Chap. 13.34 A great Master of an house who entrusts his Servants with his goods till his return 2. He is here considered as travelling into a far Countrey Christs ascending into Heaven is thereby intended for Gifts are the fruits of his Ascension Secondly The Persons intrusted He called his own Servants and delivered to them Not only Ministers and Officers of the Church are meant though they especially but all Christians who are Christs Servants employed by him in one state of life or other Thirdly The things intrusted his Goods they are bona things good in their nature and they are dona gifts freely given and delivered to us and not meerly given They are Talenta Talents not things meerly given as we give Money to a Beggar but as we give an Estate to a Factour As they are bona they must not be despised as dona Gifts they call for Thankfulness as Talents for Faithfulness The Jewish Talent was an hundred Eighty one pound ten shillings Now these Talents are Ordinances Opportunities Estates Gifts Graces all that we have received from God Either dona Administrantia or Sanctificantia Helps and Means and Opportunities to glorifie him which are the Occasions or the Graces of the Spirit which are the Dispositions to make us so to doe Fourthly The Variety observed in the Distribution To one five to another two to another one Which difference expresseth the divers kinds of Gifts and the measure and the degree in which they are bestowed Though all have not equal measure yet every one hath some Gift and some measure something that is peculiar to himself whereby he may be usefull Fifthly The Rule which is observed in the Distribution to every one according to his ability As in the Parable the wise Master knoweth every Servant according to his prudence and skill so in the Explication of the Parable every man is gifted and employed by Christ according to his natural Receptivity The Eye hath its office as an Eye and the Hand as an Hand and the Foot as a Foot I shall not pursue every minute Circumstance but only touch upon those things which are most remarkable First Observe then Doct. 1. That Christ Iesus is the great Lord and Owner He is so represented here with respect to Persons and Things Persons Those that received the Talents are called his own Servants and the several Gifts and good things bestowed upon them are called his Goods and these dispensed according to his sovereign will and pleasure to one more to another less Concerning Christs being a Lord and Owner let me give you these Observations First The Power of Christ as an Owner and free Lord is to be distinguished from his power as a Governour and Ruler As a free Lord he hath mercy on whom he will have mercy As a Governour and Ruler so he judgeth the World in righteousness or according to the Law or stated Rule which he hath given of his Will With respect to the one 't is not in him that willeth or in him that runneth but in God that sheweth mercy But with respect to the other so run that you may obtain Compare Rom. 9.16 with 1 Cor. 9.24 for God that is arbitrary in his Gifts is not arbitrary in his Judgments His Law and the Precepts of it is the Rule of our Duty but in the Sanction of it 't is the Rule of Gods Process But as an Owner he discovereth his Sovereignty and Dominion as a Ruler or Judge his Justice or Righteousness All acts and matters of free favour are dispensed by him as a Lord but matters of right and wrong come before him as a Judge The Good man of the House pleaded ill I may do with my own as it pleaseth me Mat. 20.15 that belongeth to a Supream Owner Besides his being an Owner goeth before his being a Ruler and is the foundation of it For his absolute Propriety in us giveth him a legislative power over us to dispose of us or command us according to his own will He may give his Creatures what Rules he pleaseth and order them to what ends he thinketh good and bind them to observe his Order upon what terms he will I am the Lord Lev. 18.1 2 3 4 5 6. Therefore before the course of Government established between him and the World he is first considered as an Owner Secondly This Power and Ownership accrueth to Christ by a double Title jure Creationis Redemptionis 1. By right of Creation Ezek. 18.4 Behold all Souls are mine He hath a right to dispose of Man and all the rest of his Creatures as being all of them the works of his hands He that gave them their Beings when they were not and still supporteth them now they are hath an undoubted
of having and possessing all things so made and framed by him Amongst men whosoever maketh any thing by his own proper Art and labour and of his own stuff must needs have a full right to it and a full power to dispose of it yet no Workman ever made any thing without some matter but God made all things without matter praeexisting and therefore surely his right is greater Wherefore God is called not only the Maker of Heaven and Earth but the Possessor Gen. 14.19 God is the great Proprietor and in a sense the only Proprietor that hath dominium propriè dictum Gold and Silver are mine Hag. 2.8 And Hos. 2.9 I will return and take away my Corn and my Wine in the season thereof Psal. 50.10 His are the Cattle upon a thousand Hills yea The whole Earth is the Lords and the fulness thereof Psal 29.1.16 All is Gods in whatsoever hands it be the Lord hath need of him is Argument enough Now this doth mightily increase our confidence check our usurpations quicken us to faithfulness that the great Owner may not be deprived of his right 3. He hath a Right of using and disposing all things thus in his possession according to his own pleasure Reason will tell us that the use benefit and utility of any thing belongeth to him whose it is so God is the sole disposer of all things As he made them for himself so he governeth them ultimately and terminatively for himself some things immediately all things ultimately By whom and for whom all things were made Prov. 16.4 All the conditions of men Riches Poverty Health Sickness Ease Pain Life Death Now this Right of disposing of us is of great use to keep us in a quiet subjection to Gods Laws and Providence without murmuring or repining We cannot say to him What makest thou or Why doest thou thus Isa. 45.9 'T is enough God did it But to apply the whole 1 VSE It serveth to check many sins All mischief and disorder cometh from looking upon our selves as Proprietaries and Owners and not considering who hath the great Interest in us Surely were these Truths well digested and thought of by us 't would work a great cure upon Mankind 1. That nothing we have is our own 2. That whatsoever is given us by God is given us for his service to be done to him 3. That to this Lord of ours we must be answerable who will one day call us to an account Or will you take one of them if all be too many to be remembred by you and that one implyeth all the rest Ye are not your own but are bought with a price If a man did think of this My heart is not my own 't is Gods and he must have it he would not fill it with the dross of evil thoughts My time is not my own my Tongue my Wit my Language 't is not my own Would the Prodigal waste his Estate so vainly reprove him and he will tell you I spend but my own The Covetous man saith Shall I take my bread and my water and my flesh and give it to men that I know not 1 Sam. 25.11 How easily might you perswade him to Charity could you convince him 't is anothers Goods and to be laid out when the Lord hath need of it It would check our pride to consider who made us to differ 1 Cor. 4.7 Alas Master 't was borrowed as Elisha's Servant told his Master A Groom is proud of his Masters Horse They are proud of that which is none of theirs that are proud of their Parts and proud of their Estates Yea it would check our spirtual pride when we have done any thing for God or suffered any thing for God or given any thing for Gods sake 1 Chron. 29.12 13 14. Of thine own have we given thee for all is thine 2 VSE Is to press us to more faithfulness in Gods service to serve him more with our Parts Time Strength Wit Wealth Power and Interest All the good things that God hath given us are God's still Now you should give unto God the things that are Gods You are Robbers if you lay not out all that you have according to his will and for his Glory But First Give your selves to the Lord 2 Cor. 8.5 and then other things will come in the more easily You are his already you cannot add to Gods Right yet it may add to the Obligation bind you more strongly to subjection and obedience Oh then in the first place become his Servants and Vassals avouch God to be your God Deut. 26.17 Thou hast avouched this day the Lord to be thy God Wicked men give up themselves to the Lord but 't is by constraint All that the Lord hath spoken we will do But Oh that they had an Heart Deut. 5.28 29. Secondly Having given your selves to the Lord give other things to him A Christian layes himself and all his Interests and Capacities at Jesus Christs feet that he may make an advantage of every thing for God Zech. 14.20 In that day there shall be upon the b●lls of the horses Holiness unto the Lord. Yea every Pot in Jerusalem and 〈◊〉 shall be Holiness unto the Lord. We have received nothing from our selves and herefore we should improve all we are and have for God Thirdly The 〈◊〉 of our dedication will be known by our use if hard at work for God and 〈◊〉 be the business of our lives Phil. 1.21 To me to live is Christ. 'T is not enough negatively that our Gifts be not employed against Christ as weapons of unrighteousness but positively for God that he gets something by every Relation and Acquaintance Neh. 1.11 Prosper I praey thee thy Servant this day and give him mercy in th● sight of this man for I was the Kings Cup-bearer He improved his place for God when he was in it God hath made many great and rich but what doth the Lord get by them are they more useful Some have wit but do not consecrate it to Jesus Christ have power interest and great place but they do not honour God thereby Though they profess to give up themselves to God yet in the use of themselves there appeareth no such matter They use their Tongues as their own Hearts as their own VVealth Strength and Interests as their own Therefore you should keep a constant reckoning how you lay out your selves selves for God Undertake nothing but what will bear this Inscription upon it Holiness to the Lord. Put this Question to your selves Can I dedicate this to the Lord Eccl. 2.2 What doth it Secondly In the Parable this man the Owner is represented as travelling into a far Countrey and undertakes there to receive a Kingdom and disposing of all his Interests till his return This noteth Christs Ascension into Heaven and the Point will be Doct. II. That Christ at his departure appointed every man his Work and at his Ascension gave Gifts unto men to be employed for
his Glory till he come again There are two Things offered in the Parable and in the Point 1. His Appointing every man his Work as the man disposed of all his matters till his return Christ hath given order how every man according to his Ability and Calling should employ himself till he come again We read Act. 1.3 how Christ before his Ascension instructed his Disciples in all things pertaining to the Kingdom of Heaven that is in all the Duties of Rulers and Ruled Teachers and Taught the Ordinances Laws and Institutions of his Kingdom the Duties and Priviledges of the Subjects thereof what Immunities they enjoy what Obedience they must perform This was his last charge before his departure now we are to keep his Charge as we will answer it to him at his Coming 1 Tim. 6.13 14. I charge thee in the sight of God who quickeneth all things and before Christ Jesus who before Pontius Pilate witnessed a good Confession that thou keep this Commandment without spot unrebukeable until the appearance of our Lord Jesus Christ. 'T was needful that Christ should go from us for a while for he would not govern the World by Sense but by Faith Now he will make tryal of our faithfulness and diligence during his absence and therefore having appointed us our work he withdraweth He will come again to take notice not only of the malice of his Enemies against his People and Interest but also of the coldness and negligence of his own Servants and Domesticks 2 Thes. 1.8 He shall come in flaming fire rendring vengeance upon them that know not God and obey not the Gospel nay if not flatly disobedient yet if evil sloathful Servants 2. His giving Gifts Gifts were given at Christs Ascension when he took his Journey then he bestowed his Goods to his Servants As Elijah let fall his Mantle when he was translated so did Christ bestow his Gifts and the Graces of his Spirit Eph. 4.8 He ascended up on high and gave gifts to men There is a three-fold reason of this First The bestowing of the Spirit was necessary to supply the want of his bodily presence John 16.7 Nevertheless I tell you the truth it is expedient for you that I go away for if I go not away the Comforter will not come unto you but if I depart I will send him unto you While Christ was with them the Spirit was not given but when his bodily presence was removed then cometh the Comforter God will not with-hold what is useful If he take away outward Comforts he will give us the Spirit Secondly 'T was fit he should Enter upon his Kingdom before his Members participate so largely of his Fulness John 7.38 Before his Incarnation Grace was given upon trust therefore more sparingly afterwards coming in the flesh the Disciples were dull in comparison of what they were when the price was paid He was entered into possession of his Dignity had taken actual possession of his Kingdom then he powreth out the Gifts and Graces of the Spirit that the Glorious Estate of his Church and Subjects might not go before but come after the Glorious Estate of their King and Head Thirdly To shew that in his Exaltation he is still mindful of his Servants As soon as warm in the Mediatorial Throne he sendeth down Gifts and Graces Act. 2.33 Being at the right hand of the Father exalted he hath shed forth this which ye now see and hear Presently he beginneth to shew for what reason he is gone to Heaven powerfully to apply the work of Redemption 1 VSE Hath Christ appointed to men their Work it should quicken us to keep the Charge of the Lord. Gen. 50.16 Thy Father did command before he dyed If we have any respect to the memory of our Lord departed from us any Expectation of his coming again so let us be faithful in the work appointed us to do He instructed his Apostles in all the Duties and Priviledges of the Kingdom of God and they have instructed us and you must answer it to Christ at his coming therefore be diligent in glorifying God in your places 2. As he gave Gifts Look upon Christ as Exalted at the right hand of God to dispense the Gifts and Graces of the Spirit for the bringing about the Salvation of all that come to God by him It 's said 2 Kings 2.9 10. That if Elisha should see his Master ascending he should have his Spirit doubled upon him 'T is true here if by Faith we look to Christ ascended his Spirit in some measure will come upon us we have free Liberty and Access to him to enjoy him for ever 3. The Master in the Parable giveth not the same Measure of Talents to each Servant Christ giveth not a like measure of Grace to every one but to some more to some less as he thinketh Expedient here are five Talents and two Talents and one Talent given to each Servant as there was a different measure given to Timothy and Demas Doct. III. That it pleaseth the Lord to dispense his Gifts variously among his People to some more to some fewer Talents See this is often inculcated in the Scripture Rom. 12.6 Having then Gifts differing according to the Grace given to us 1 Cor. 7.7 Every man hath his proper Gift one after this manner another after that God giveth to every one in the Church a measure and Portion of Gifts as it pleaseth him So 1 Cor. 12.11 All these things worketh one and the same Spirit which is the proper Seat of this Doctrine So Eph. 4.7 To every one of us is given Grace according to the Measure of the Gift of Christ. So 1 Pet. 4.10 As every one hath received the Gift so minister the same one to another as good Stewards of the Grace of God I have brought all these Scriptures to shew you that this is a thing worthy to be taken Notice of and seriously improved by us I shall give you some Observations concerning this Diversity and Variety 1. That every one hath some Talent or other to improve for God He that had least had one and the least gift is compared to a Talent there is none of Gods People but they have received some Gift from him which being rightly employed may make them useful for the Glory of God and the good of others if not in the higher and more publick Office yet as Wives Children Servants Titus 2.10 Every one hath his Service and Opportunity to do something for God all offered to the Tabernacle Gold or Silver or Brass or Chittim-wood or Goats-hair or Badgers-skins So as Christ went to Jerusalem some strowed the way with garments others cut down branches some cryed Hosanna that was all they could do 2. That there is a great Diversity in the Talents which we have The Lord doth not give all to one nor to all alike 1 There is a diversity of Employments and Offices The Apostle telleth us Rom. 12.4 All Members have not
an Acqu●efcency in Gods Providence though our Talents be not so large 2. Let it quicken those that have received greater Gifts than others to do so much the more good with them you are more bound and that which God will accept from others he will not from you If you have many Ordinances and means of Improvement you should get the more Grace Heb. 6.6 7. and Mat. 11.22 23 24. You are deeper in the State of Condemnation if you do not bring forth Fruit proportionable to the means of Salvation if greater Abilities you must give God the more Glory if a greater Estate you must be richer in good Works 1 Tim. 6.7 8. For you to shut up your Bowels 1 John 3.17 How dwelleth the Love of God in you Potentes potenter cruciabuntur Mighty shall be the Destruction of the Mighty if we have greater Mercies there is greater Duties and greater Duties greater Sins and greater Sins greater Judgments Surely if men had any Sense of their Accounts those that have much to answer for would have more Trouble Doct. III. Among those that have received Talents all are not alike Fruitful I shall handle the Point with respect to the Context we have in hand 1. Though but one be mentioned yet the Number of Vnfaithful ones is very great In Parables the Scope must be regarded Now the general Scope is to shew that as the Virgins are not all admitted so all the Servants of the House not accepted in the Parable Indeed two of the Servants are Faithful one unfaithful We cannot conclude thence that the Number of those that used their Talents well should be greater than of those that hid them or neglected the Improvement of them as in the former Parable that the Number of the Foolish shall be just equal with the Number of the Wise or in the Parable of the Wedding Garment that but one shall come to the Gospel-feast unprepared No the Ornament of that Scheme and Figure which Christ would make use of to signify his mind required it should be so expressed For since our Lord to avoid Perplexity and Confusion would mention but three Servants 't was fit that one should be an instance of eminent Faithfulness and Service another of Service in a lower degree that the meanest may not be discouraged and the other should represent the unfruitful ones Now Experience sheweth they are more than one to two yea more than ten to one much the far greater Number Oh how few are there even of those that hold much from God that return him ought of Love and Service The Idle and Unprofitable ones are found every where in all Ranks and Conditions of men 2. Observe He that had but one Talent is represented as the Vnfaithful One and that with good Advice If the Example of Reprobation and Punishment had been put in the Servant that had five Talents or two Talents we might have thought that men of eminent Gifts Rank Quality and Employment in the Church shall be called to an Account and punished for their Neglect No but as our Lord hath laid it it reacheth his full Scope and Purpose For in the instance of the Servant that had but one Talent those that had five and two may easily know how much sorer Punishment shall light upon them if he that had least be called to such a strict Reckoning for his Non-improvement However this we may observe That he that had the least Gift was Unfaithful to be sure those that have most Spiritual gifts do usually improve them and the rest are left without Excuse 3. Observe His Crime is he went and digged in the Earth and hid his Lords Money Men dig in the Earth to find Metals and Talents not to hide them there Mark 't is not said he did imbezzle his Talent as many waste their Substance in riotous Living quench brave parts in excess sin away many precious Advantages of Ordinances and Education and powerful Convictions No he did not imbezzle his Talent but hid it Mark again he did not Misimploy his Talent as some do their Wealth others their Wit to scoff at Religion or to put a Varnish on the Devils Cause their Power to Oppress and crush the good The precious Gifts that many have are like a Sword in a mad-mans hand they use them to hurt and mischief No no such thing is charged upon this evil and naughty Servant 'T is Fault enough to hide our Talents though we do not abuse them That you may conceive of this I shall shew you 1. His Sin in hiding his Lords Money 2. What may be the Cause of it in those that imitate him First 'T was a Sin Partly because 't was against the command of his Master In Luke 19.13 He gave them a Charge Occupy till I come Partly because 't was against the end of the Distribution of the Talents to keep Money unprofitably by us is a loss 't was made for Commerce so were Gifts given us to profit withall scattered into several hands to bring in some encrease to the Lord and Owner Partly because 't was against the Example of his Fellow-Servants who were industrious and careful to comply with their Charge 2 Cor. 9.2 Your Zeal hath provoked very many And partly as his Obedience and Account would have been easier as 't is more easie to give an Account of a small Sum than a greater as there is less Trouble less Danger so his Refusal is less excusable And partly as 't was an Abuse of his Masters Patience 't was long e'er he called him to a Reckoning God will bear long with us in Infancy Childhood and Youth but he will not bear alwayes if we do not bethink our selves at last our Account is hastened and God will suffer idle Servants no longer to have an Opportunity of Promoting his Glory the good of others and their own Salvation Secondly What may be the Causes of such like Unfaithfulness Men are taken off from Improving their Talents First Sometimes by a sloathful Laziness and should that hinder us especially us that are Servants to God what man can endure an idle Servant though he should not whore and steal yet if he do not his work you put him away Every thing in the World costs Diligence and shall not we be diligent in our Masters Work How will men labour for a small Reward in the World and is not Heaven worth our most industrious Care shall not we be hard at work 1 Cor. 15.58 The Reward is still propounded to the diligent 1 Cor. 3.8 Every man shall receive his Reward according to his own Labour 2 Cor. 9.6 He that soweth sparingly shall reap sparingly Idleness is its own Punishment An idle man is a Burden to himself like a man buryed alive When 't is Morning would God it were Evening He Contracts Distempers a Key seldom turned rusts in the Lock standing Pools are apt to putrify David when he was idle fell into those foul Faults An idle
man can think of nothing but the Delights of the Flesh and so becometh a ready Prey to Sathan Oh then shake off Laziness and the ease of the Flesh God is at work John 5.17 the Creatures are at work the Sun is alwayes going up and down Secondly Another Cause is a Foolish Modesty and Pusillanimity Oh this should not be We should not like Saul hide among the Stuff when God calleth us forth to some Employment for his Glory 1 Sam. 10.22 or with Moses draw back when Opportunity is offered us to be useful in our Generation Exod. 4.20 God can help the stammering Tongue and will bless mean Gifts when you sincerely obey his Call Thirdly Self-love Phil. 2.21 All men seek their own things not the things of Jesus Christ. Many care not how it goeth with Chrsts Matters if their particular go right they serve their own worldly Ease Profit Credit Pleasure Fourthly Distracting Businesses or love to the World this is digging in the Earth and hiding our Talent indeed 2 Tim. 4.10 Demas hath forsaken me and embraced the present World Fifthly Fear of Danger if publickly Active for God some are so Cowardly that they are Brow-beaten with a frown cannot venture a lesser Interest cannot bear a Scoff or a disgraceful Word therefore sneak loath to own what they are or to do for Christ and his despised Cause this is not a Christian Frame Phil. 1.28 In nothing terrifyed by your Adversaries which to them is a Token of Perdition but to you of Salvation and that of God It looketh like Christs Business he speaketh of Endeavours to propagate the Faith of Christ and to gain men to embrace the Gospel VSE Let us see if we be found in the Number of the Faithful or Vnfaithful A negligent Ministry a Gallio a careless Magistrate an idle Master of a Family a sloathful Christian is like the Servant in the Text You have your use whether you be in a publick or private Station let us be faithful if but one Talent the smallest gifts must not lye idle but be seriously exercised for Gods glory if but one your Temptations are the less Private men are not exposed to such Dangers as publick Persons It will Aggravate your Negligence if when less is required you are found idle Oh therefore shake off the ease of the Flesh that loathness to be troubled with the faithful Discharge of your Duty SERMON XIII MATTH XXV v. 19 20 21 22 23. After a long time the Lord of those Servants cometh and reckoneth with them And so he that had received five Talents came and brought other five Talents saying Lord thou delivered'st me five Talents behold I have gained besides them five Talents more His Lord said unto him Well done thou good and faithful Servant thou hast been faithful over a few things I will make thee Ruler over many things Enter thou into the joy of thy Lord. He also that had received two Talents came and said Lord thou delivered●st unto me two Talents behold I have gained other two besides them His Lord said unto them Well done thou good and faithful Servant thou hast been faithful over a few things I will make thee Ruler over many things Enter thou into the joy of thy Lord. WE now come to the Third part of the Parable The 1. We called the Distribution 2. The Negotiation 3. The Account This Account is First Spoken in the General vers 19. Secondly More Particularly described and set forth There we shall take notice First Of the Reckoning with the good Servants Secondly With the bad one In the Passages that concern the good Servants you may take notice of the Servants Account and the Masters Approbation The account of the first Servant is in vers 20. of the second in vers 22. the Masters Approbation in vers 21 23. He entertaineth both the Servants with the same countenance and the same words 1. I begin with the general intimation of the Account ver 19. Where the Time 1. When he cometh After a long time 2. His Work what he will do when he cometh He reckoneth with his Servants First For the Time I. Doct. There is a good space of time between Christs Ascension and second coming Q. But why is this last reckoning so long delayed A. Not from any unreadiness in Christ he is ready to judge if we be ready to be judged 1 Pet. 4.5 But 1. There is a Reason on the part of the good and that is that the Number of the Elect may be gathered who live in several Ages and places and it requireth some time and pains to work upon each Soul of them for not one of those must perish 2 Pet. 3.9 And after they are converted there must be some time allowed to exercise their diligence They must have a day to work in John 9.4 and to try their Faith and Patience in Rev. 6.11 They should rest yet for a little season untill their fellow-servants and their Brethren that should be killed as they were should be fulfilled A certain number are enrolled for Sufferings as well as for Heaven many of which had not obtained their Crown as the High-priest tarryed within the Vail till his Ministration ended As long as there is need of Christs Intercession he deferrs his second coming 2. On the wickeds part 't is necessary they should have a time of Improvement that they may be left without excuse Rom. 9.22 What if God willing to shew his wrath and to make his power known endured with much long-suffering the vessels of wrath fitted to destruction 'T is for the glory of God that he should take them when ripe Then the Angel thrusts in his sickle Rev. 14.15 Therefore they have longer time of prospering in their sinful wayes 1. Let us not make an ill use of this either to deny or doubt of his Coming as those 2 Pet. 3.3 or of slackening or putting off your Preparation as the naughty Servant Mat. 24.48 49. But let us wait with patience and hold out to the very last Saul held out till Samuel was even ready to come and so forced himself to offer Sacrifice whereby he lost his Kingdom 1 Sam. 13.8 9. If he had stayed a little longer Samuel had come So many grow weary of doing and suffering and miscarry in the very Haven We wait in ordinary things Jam. 5.7 8. Be patient therefore Brethren unto the coming of the Lord. Behold the Husband-man waiteth for the precious fruit of the earth and hath long patience for it until he receive the early and latter rain Be ye also patient stablish your hearts for the coming of the Lord draweth nigh His hastiness cannot alter the seasons so we in improving our Interests and employing our Talents should not faint Gal. 6.4 And be not weary in well doing for in due season we shall reap if we faint not 2. Let us shame our selves that having so much time we have done so little work Our Master hath tarryed
long and given us a large space of time wherein to employ our selves but what have we done for his glory Alas either we do nihil agere or male agere or aliud agere either we do nothing or nothing to the purpose or that which is worse than nothing which will undo us for ever Oh what thoughts will we have of a careless and mispent life when we come to die Many do not think of the end of their Lives till their lives be ended and then they moan and bewail themselves when they lye a dying Oh rather think of your last end and great account betimes 'T is lamentable to begin to live when we must die Quidam tunc incipiat vivere cum desinendum est they end their lives before they begin to live Therefore if hitherto you have been pleasing the flesh idling and wantoning away your precious time say 1 Pet. 4.3 Let the time past suffice I have been long enough dishonouring God and destroying my own soul hath my Master tarryed so long and shall I still abuse his patience This is an holy and right use of this delay Secondly His Work what he will do when he cometh He reckoneth with his Servants Doct. II. Those that have Talents must look to reckon for them For though he be long first yet at length the Lord cometh 1. Consider the certainty of this Account his Wisdom Justice Goodness and Truth require it His Wisdome requireth it for no wise man would put hi● Goods to trust and never look after them more and shall we imagine that the wise God would send reasonable Creatures into the World and furnish them with excellent Gifts and Endowments and never consider how they imploy themselves Is man Gods Servant then certainly he is liable to an account You had never come into the World but for this business to serve and please God For God maketh nothing in vain but all things for himself Prov. 16.4 And do you think that after you are made for this end you may live as you lift and never be called to a reckoning So absurd a thought cannot enter into the heart of a reasonable man Eccl. 11.9 Rejoyce O young man in thy youth and let thy heart cheer thee in the days of thy youth and walk in the wayes of thy heart and in the sight of thine eyes But know thou for all these things God will bring thee to judgment Man would be but a sort of Beast if he had no other end of his Actions but to eat and drink and sleep and no other account to give surely the most wise God would not have given us such excellent faculties in vain He fitteth all Creatures for their use Every Workman fitteth his work for the end for which it serveth so God hath made Man for some end and use And Gods Justice requireth it that it should be well with them that do well and ill with them that do ill In the World it is not so his Servants are very often abused while doing their work most faithfully the World thinks them mad hateth them They that neglect their own work beat their Fellow-servants therefore the honour of his Justice requireth they should be called to an account 1 Pet. 4.5 Who must give an account to him who is ready to judge the quick and the dead There is not a thought in wicked mens Hearts nor a word in their Mouths contrary to God and his People but he taketh notice of it and will exact an account thereof a strict and impartial account of all their hard speeches And the Goodness of God requireth it His goodness to the World in general the World would be a Wilderness and Men like ravenous Beasts if there were not some Bridle and awe of a World to come upon them but every one that had power would prey upon others but that there is an higher Judge God hath appointed a supream Tribunal where Causes are judged over again otherwise those that have power enough to do mischief would be under no restraint But 't is goodness to his people whom he hath set a work and therefore hath appointed a day when he will give them their wages his goodness will not permit that they should be any losers by God their love and obedience to him that deny themselves their own affections and interest for his sake Therefore certainly the great God of Recompences will come and call the VVorld to an account that the faithfulness of his Servants may appear with praise and honour This is a supream Truth Heb. 11.6 That he that cometh to God must believe that he is and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him And his Truth requireth it 't is laid at pledge in the VVord that 's the proper ground for Faith to build upon Now there we have not only Gods VVord but Gods Oath Rom. 14.10 11. For we must all stand before the judgment seat of Christ. For it is written As I live saith the Lord every knee shall bow to me and every tongue shall confess to God There we have plentiful evidence 2. 'T is a personal Account Rom. 14.12 So then every one of us shall give an account of himself to God VVe should not look to others what they be and do As to our selves we must give an account of our selves our life our heart our own thoughts words and actions 'T is personal partly because every one must give his Account apart not every one shuffled together and in gross but every Servant apart and severally first he that had five Talents then two then one And partly because every one unavoidably must answer for himself Here we may have our Attorney or Advocate to appear for us in Court but there every one for himself every man must in person give an Account of his own fidelity 3. 'T is an Impartial Account every one without exception Revel 20.12 I saw the Dead both small and great stand before God Small and great King and Peasant they shall all one day be called to an Account whether Faithful or no. None so high as to be exempted from this Account none so mean as to be neglected in it he that received five Talents and he that received one both gave an Account The poor Beggar is not left out nor the King excused 4. 'T is a particular Account God will not take our Accounts by the heap and lump but there is a narrow search into all our Hearts and Ways the the great thing is What we have done in that place and Relation where God hath set us our Stewardship Luke 16.2 But that 's not all we are to give an Account of every Action Eccles. 12.14 For God shall bring every work into Judgement Every idle Word must be Accounted for Mat. 12.36 All the time we have spent degrees of Grace we received what we have done proportionable to our Trust five for five two for two 5. 'T is an exact
with Praise Verse 21.23 Secondly With Preferment and Advancement Thou hast been faithful over a few things I will make thee Ruler over many Thirdly With Joy Enter into the Joy of thy Lord. Doct. That at Christs appearing faithful Servants shall not only be commended but gloriously Rewarded 1 Pet. 1.7 That your Faith may be found unto Praise Honour and Glory at the appearing of Christ. 1. There is not only verbal Commendation but real Remuneration Glory and Honour put upon them as well as Praise ascribed to them 1. Praise because he shall then commend their Faith before men and Angels Revel 3.5 I will confess his Name before my Father and his Angels 2. There will be a solemn Owning and honouring of them when all the Holy Angels shall be present Oh what a Favour is it to be commended of God! 2 Cor. 10.18 For not he that commendeth himself is approved but whom the Lord commendeth When they had finished the Tabernacle all was viewed and approved by Moses Moses blessed them Oh what is it to be blessed and commended by the Son of God in that great Assembly of the whole world 2. Here is Preferment and Advancement to a higher place in the Family Christ will preferr them as men do their Servants Mat. 24.47 Make him Ruler over all his Goods These Expressions are taken from the greatest Honours a man can do his faithful Servants in the world 1 Kings 12.20 As Jereboam was made Ruler over all the charge of the House of Joseph so will Christ advance his Servants to high Dignity sometimes expressed by setting them upon Thrones Revel 3.21 giving them Crowns 1 Pet. 4.13 2 Tim. 4.8 That Antithesis is to be regarded few things and many things All things are few in comparison of Heaven our works our Gifts our Sufferings the Reward is far above all these Rom. 8.18 For I reckon that the Sufferings of the present time are not worthy to be compared with the Glory that shall be revealed in us 2 Cor. 4. ●7 For our light Afflictions that are but for a moment work for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of Glory 'T is all little that we do or suffer 't is little that God hath done for us in this world in comparison of what he will do for us there Here is the Earnest that is but a small part of the whole summ 3. The next Expression is Enter into the Joy of thy Lord. Here Christ slideth into the thing signified by the Parable as afterward in assigning Punishment unto the unfaithful Servant Verse 30. Cast him into outer Darkness where shall be Weeping and Gnashing of Teeth Here is Joy and the Joy of the Lord and faithful Servants are said to enter into it First The Estate of the blessed is a State of Joy which ariseth partly from the Beatifical Vision partly from their own Blessedness and also the blessed Company 1. The Beatifical Vision or the Vision of God Psal. 16.11 In thy presence is fulness of joy and at thy right-hand Pleasures for evermore There is a mighty complacency that we take now in seeing knowing loving and being beloved of God What can be found in the Creature is but a drop to the Ocean in comparison of that a Believer findeth in God himself God is to them an overflowing Fountain of all Felicity But there is Gaudium Viae and Gaudium Patriae Here it admits of increase and decrease but there the Soul is so filled that it cannot receive any more Psal. 17.15 As for me I will behold thy face in righteousness I shall be satisfied when I awake with thy likeness God maketh out himself in the utmost latitude As to the wicked he stirreth up all his wrath Here he punisheth by the Creature and so doth not put forth all his power as a Gyant striking with a straw cannot put forth his strength In Heaven the Soul shall be filled with unspeakable joy and delight What Delight is to the Sense that Joy is to the Mind Three things are necessary to Delight A Faculty or Power of the Soul capable of pleasure and then the thing it self which being brought to the Mind doth stir up delight As in bodily things Colours Fruits Tasts pleasure consists in the near Union and Conjunction of these things The more noble the Faculty the more excellent the Object the nearer the Conjunction the greater the Delight and Pleasure Now in Heaven our Faculties are perfected God is the Subject and there is a near Conjunction Oh what embraces between him and the Soul 2. In their own glorified Estate 1 Pet. 4.13 Rejoyce in as much as ye are partakers of Christs Sufferings that when his Glory shall be revealed ye may be glad also with exceeding joy So Jude Now unto him that is able to keep you from falling and to present you faultless before the presence of his glory with exceeding joy The fulness of our joy is suspended till then that we may long much for that day 'T will be a glad day to all Faithful ones Joy 't is quies animi in bono adepto there is an aggregation of all good for Soul and Body If the hope of this blessed Estate breedeth joy what will enjoyment what will Fruition do if a glimpse or taste be so sweet what will the full enjoyment be Rom. 5.2 In deep troubles yet we rejoyce in hope of the glory of God 1 Pet. 1.8 Whom having not seen ye love in whom though now ye see him not yet believing ye rejoyce with joy unspeakable and full of glory Their Hearts are now and then filled with such a joy as they can hardly contain and keep within doors when they have but a well-grounded hope or assurance of the full possession of it 3. In the Company of the Blessed 'T is comfortable to meet with the Saints of God now though it be but in a Mourning Duty but the Communion of Saints there is quite another thing they are our everlasting Companions they are free from all sin and weakness Heb. 12.23 Especially 't will be a delight to them whom we have been a means to bring home to God 1 Thes. 2.19 20. For what is our hope or joy or crown of rejoycing are not even ye in the presence of the Lord Jesus Christ at his coming for ye are our glory and joy And Phil. 2.16 That I may rejoyce in the day of Christ that I have not laboured in vain nor run in vain The Glory that shall be put upon gracious Souls at the day of Judgement will add to the Glory and joy of those faithful Ministers by whose labours they have been gained to God Secondly 'T is called the joy of the Lord That is either provided by him called my joy by Christ Joh. 15.11 This by way of Purchase Allowance and Gift dignified as one of those whom the Lord delighteth to honour Esth. 6.6 or such as he himself possesseth Jesus Christ himself had his joy
yet Gods merciful Justice respecteth the degree of our Service Heb. 6.10 God is not unrighteous to forget your work of Faith and labour of Love 'T is an act of remunerative Justice according to the New-Covenant The higher Service hath an ordinability to the greatest Reward 4. God doth in this world give the greatest Blessings to those that do most eminently glorifie him therefore signal Faithfulness is eminently rewarded in the World to come as God promiseth to make a Covenant with Phineas because he was zealous for God to make an atonement for the People Numb 25.13 This the rather holdeth good because the Rewards of the Old Testament were a kind of Figure of Eternity 5. In the Punishment the●e are degrees therefore in the Reward God will punish men differently more or less according to the rate of their sins we read of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 more tolerable So he will reward men more or less according to the different degrees of their faithfulness So Mat. 11.21 22. It shall be more tolerable for Tire and Sidon in the day of Judgment than for you So Luk. 12.47 48. we read of many Stripes and few Stripes 'T is true the Reward is not of debt yet there is an Equity observed in his Bounty 6. The Glorified State of the Saints in all probability suiteth with all the rest of the Creation There is a difference and disparity in every thing else Among men in the World in Wisdom and Rank and Quality and Riches In the Church some have meaner some larger Gifts There are degrees among the Devils we read of Beelzebub the Prince of the Devils Among Angels there are Arch-Angels Principalities Powers Thrones Dominions So 't is likely among the Saints 7. The Profit It encourageth to Godliness This inequality of Rewards giving greater things to those that do more and be more faithful than to imagine that they who sow more sparingly shall reap as plentifully as those that sow liberally It is a great damp to all worthy dealing and signal excellency that all shall fare alike but it quickneth us to our utmost activity to remember that as our work is our Reward will be VSE Is to quicken us to be more faithful to God for these Considerations 1. Heaven being the perfection of Holiness if you do not desire more degrees of Holiness you do not desire Heaven it self 1 Joh. 3.2 3. Behold now ye are the sons of God and it doth not appear what we shall be But we know that when he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is And every man that hath this hope in him purifieth himself as he is pure 2. 'T is gross Self-love to go as near the brink of Hell and Destruction without falling into it and to beat down the price of Salvation as low as we can and he that will do nothing more than what is simply necessary to Salvation will never be faithful with God To save the stake of their Souls they will serve God as little as they can SERMON XIV MATTH XXV v. 24 25. Then he which had received the one Talent came and said Lord I knew thee that thou art an hard man reaping where thou hast not sowed and gathering where thou hast not strawed And I was afraid and went and hid thy Talent in the Earth Lo there thou hast that is thine WE have seen the Account and reception of the faithful Servants We now come to the Masters Reckoning with the unfaithful one The Order is observable First He rewardeth the faithful Servants and then punisheth the careless and negligent His own Nature inclines him to Reward he doth good and sheweth Mercy out of his own Self-inclination but our Sins force him to punish And mark he that had received one Talent is called to an account as well he that had received more That no man may think to be excused for the meanness of his Gifts and place 'T is true he giveth an account for no more than he hath but for so much as he hath he must give Account Christians that have five or two Talents must give an Account for five or two But Heathens that have but one Talent the light of Nature give an account for one The Apostle telleth us That as many as have sinned without the Law shall perish without the Law but as many as have sinned in the Law shall be judged by the Law Rom. 2.12 Every one according to the Dispensation they have lived under The Apostle intimateth a distinction of two sorts that are to be judged 2 Thes. 1.8 In flaming fire taking Vengeance on them that know not God and that obey not the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. Those that have great parts and great opportunities will not be accepted with the same Improvement that others are that have fewer neither from the same person will God accept a like Service when sick as when well but according to their abilities and opportunities he doth expect Well but let us see what Account he bringeth that had but one Talent The Parable offereth First The Servants Allegation or Excuse Secondly The Masters Answer or Reply We are now upon the former and there 1. The remote Cause of his neglect his prejudice against his Master Lord I knew thou art an hard man reaping where thou hast not sowed and gathering where thou hast not strawed 2. The Effect of this Prejudice and so the next and immediate cause of this neglect I was afraid 3. His Negligence and unfaithfulness it self in bringing his Talent without Improvement I went and hid thy Talent in the Earth and lo there thou hast what is thine 1. In the Prejudice Christ impersonateth our natural thoughts and the secret workings of our minds we dare not say so but many think so as if God were an hard and morose Master whom 't is impossible to please The Servant in the Parable had as little cause for his pretence as we have for our hard thoughts of God He knew the contrary if he would consult his own experience he might have found his Master to be good and kind who had taken him into his Family intrusted him with a Talent waited long for his Improvement But this is the nature of man Self-love will rather blame God than acknowledge our own Fault and Sin tax his Severity than confess its own Negligence 2. In the Servants being afraid Christ would teach us that ill Opinions of God beget Pusillanimity and slavish fear And Lastly In his Non-improvement but rendring the Talent as he received it That Pusillanimity or slavish fear and sloath go together or those that are afraid of God will never do him Hearty service I cannot handle all the Points that will arise from this Paragraph yet I shall discuss one that will take in the Substance and Effect of all And that is Doct. That slavish Fear is a great hinderance to the faithful discharge of our Duty to God
3.6 compared with Gen. 18.12 He will own a Pearl on a Dunghil the least Act of sincere Obedience though there be many failings But I must return 3. The usual ill thoughts of God are these three 1. That He is rigorous in his Commands 2. Niggardly and tenacious in his Gifts and helps of Grace 3. And as to Acceptance that he is hard to please and easie to offend All these may be gathered out of the words of the unfaithful Servant and all these lye deep in the Hearts of men against Gods Sovereignty 1. Hyppocrites accuse God of Tyranny in his Laws as if he dealt hardly with his Creatures to leave them with such affections in the midst of the Snares and Temptations of the present Life and requiring such Duty from them Certainly all that God hath required of us is holy just and good conducing not only to his Glory but to the Rectitude and Perfection of our Natures man would not be man if such things were not required of him so that if we were in our right wits and were left to our own Option and Choice we would preferre Subjection to such Laws before Exemption and freedom Micah 6.8 Are Justice Temperance Chastity Piety Patience Gives and Fetters to Humane Nature We cannot be without these and preserve the Nobleness of our being and the good of humane Societies 'T is true this lower World furnisheth us with many Temptations to the contrary but these Temptations work not by constraining Efficacy but only by inticing Perswasion and have we not more earnest Perswasions to love God and please God Are not God and Christ and Heaven more lovely Objects than all the Pleasures and Profits and Honours of the World These things do not force the will but draw your consent and surely God hath propounded more lovely things in his Covenant to draw this consent from them The great fault is in our Lust 2 Pet. 1.4 As the Poyson is not in the Flower but in the Spider 2. He accuseth God as backward to give Grace and help our Impotency and as if he did require more than he giveth This is obvious and express in the words of the naughty Servant Reaping where thou hast not sowen and gathering where thou hast not strawed But this also is an unjust charge for God requireth nothing but according to the Talents received Now he needeth not take any thing from the Creatures for he giveth all he had one Talent and God expected the Improvement but of one Let men try to the utmost and see if they have cause to make this Complaint they will find that the way of the Lord is strength to the upright Prov. 10.29 and that all these jealousies are but a slander against Gods Government Why do you complain that he would reap where he hath not sowen Is it because you would have God force you to be good whether you would or no and by an absolute constraining Power drive you out of your flesh-pleasing course Consider how unbeseeming it is the Wisdom of God that men should be holy and good by Necessity and not by Choice Vertue would then be no vertue not a moral but a natural Property as burning is to Fire And it were no more praise-worthy to mind Heavenly things than it is for a Stone to move downward 'T is true God must make make us willing but willing we must be now there is no such thing on your parts when you wilfully refuse the hopes God offereth Acts 13.46 Since ye put away the Word of God from you and judge your selves unworthy of eternal life lo we turn to the Gentiles At least you do not apply your hearts to work with God or frame your doings to turn to him as 't is in the Prophet you do not improve Means and Mercies and Providences and Helps vouchsafed And will you after all this think God a Pharaoh that requireth Brick and giveth no Straw Here 't is verified Prov. 17.3 The foolishness of man perverteth his way and his heart fretteth against the Lord. We usually ruine our selves and then complain that God giveth no more Grace But do not we justifie this conceit of wicked men when we say God requireth Duty of the fallen Creatures who have no power to perform it I answer 1. We must so maintain God's Goodness as still to keep up his Sovereignty and right of Dominion Man had power which was lost by his own default but God doth not lose his Right though Man hath lost his Power Their Impotency doth not dissolve their Obligation A Drunken Servant is bound to the Duty of a Servant still 'T is against all reason the Master should lose his right to command by the Servants default A prodigal Debtor that hath nothing to pay yet is liable to be sued for the debt without injustice God contracted with us in Adam and his obedience was not only due by Covenant but by Law and immutable right not by positive Law only or Contract And therefore he hath a right to demand Obedience as the fruit of Original Righteousness 2. 'T is harsh men think to answer for Adam's fault to which they were not conscious and consenting But every man will find an Adam in his own heart the Old Man is there wasting away the relicks of natural light and strength and shall not God challenge the debt of Obedience from a proud prodigal Debtor We are found naked yet we think our selves cloathed poor yet we think our serlves rich and to have need of nothing Therefore God may admonish us of our Duty demand his right to convince us of our Impotency and that we may not pretend we were not called upon for what we owe him Man is prodigal we spend what is left lose those relicks of Conscience and moral Inclinations which escaped out of the ruines of the fall 3. God requireth it that we may acknowledge the Debt and confess our Impotency being practically convinced thereof and so humbly implore his Grace 4. God is still offering recovering Mercy and never forsaketh any but those that forsake him first 1 Chron. 18.9 If thou forsake him he will cast thee off for ever 2 Chron. 5.2 If you forsake him he will forsake you Did you improve your selves and beg Gods Grace and carry on the Common work as far as you can then 't were another matter He that useth Gods means as well as he can he lyeth nearer to the blessing of them than the wilful despiser and Neglecter of them Unsanctified men may do less evil and more good than they do Therefore if they neglect the means they are left inexcusable not only as originally disabled but as wilfully graceless So that no such prejudice can lye against God he offereth grace and power and men will not have it 3. The third Prejudice is That he is hard to please and easily offended As if he did watch advantages to ruine and destroy the Creature Oh! No This cannot be thought of
Faith and Patience we have in one place Heb. 6.12 That ye be not sloathful but followers of them who through Faith and Patience inherit the Promises They inherited the Promises that is the things Promised If we propound to our selves such a divine and noble end as those great and glorious things that are offered in the Promises we must use the means they had Faith so must we have they had Patience and we must be Patient First By Faith we are not to understand Confidence and relyance upon Gods Promises a probable humane Faith and Hope will not be sufficient but a firm adherence to Gods Word whatever falleth out we are sure to have enough in the Promise We must have Faith because the things Promised are invisible rare and excellent far above the power of the Creature to give The Promise is a firm and immutable foundation of our Hope we should rejoyce in it as much as if the thing Promised were in hand In God I will rejoyce in the Lord I will praise his Word or praise his Word 'till the thing Promised cometh to be enjoyed Faith 't is the substance of things hoped for Secondly For Patience Heb. 10.36 For ye have need of Patience that after ye have done the will of God ye might receive the Promise And we must have Patience because the things hoped for are to come and at a great distance Rom. 8.25 But if we hope for that we see not then do we with patience wait for it Besides we shall meet with many Difficulties Oppositions and Tryals all which must be overcome many things must be done many things must be suffered and we must make our way through the midst of dreadful Enemies before we can attain our End Further our Desires are vehement and we long for enjoyment which is yet to come therefore we must be patient that we may quietly wait Gods leisure Rom. 2.7 To them who by patient continuing in well doing seek for glory honour and immortality eternal life Thirdly The next Grace is Love Where there is Love there will be Labour Heb. 6.10 For God is not Unrighteous to forget your work and labour of Love 1 Thes. 1.3 Remembring without ceasing your work of Faith and labour of Love and patience of Hope Revel 2.3 4. And hast born and hast patience and for my names sake hast laboured and hast not fainted Nevertheless I have somewhat against thee because thou hast left thy first Love And Love is said to endure all things 1 Cor. 13.7 'T was Love made Christ to suffer Hunger and Weariness and to forbear to refresh himself for the good of Souls 't was Love made him endure the bitter Agonies of the Cross Love puts strength and life into the Soul addeth wings and feet to the Body spareth no pains nor cost Keep up this Grace and you have an over-ruling bent upon your hearts 2. VSE If spiritual Sloath be so great an evil let the Children of God take heed of it when first it beginneth to creep upon their Spirits As when they begin to Pray without Affection or fervour of Spirit to Meditate of divine things without any sense affection or fruit when they find it difficult to withdraw from carnal Company or vain Discourse and are hardly perswaded to return unto themselves and to consider their wayes and can freely let loose their thoughts and words to all manner of vanity and their Comfort is rather sought in the Creature than in God they can rarely speak of others but 't is in reflecting upon them rather than themselves when Reproofs grow burthensom and are not entertained as an help but as an injury when they give up themselves to carnal Sports and take a license for vain Recreations and so fly from the labours that are profitable and necessary for their Souls health their Zeal languisheth their Duties are not so frequent nor the means of Grace used with life vigour and affection but they are more coldly affected towards them a satiety and fulness creepeth upon them they do not so solicitously avoid the causes of sin begin to indulge the Body or the bodily life to have more admiring thoughts of the Honours and Pleasures and Profits of the World either neglect or quench the motions of the Spirit All these are the effects of a remiss Will or a fainting Heart that beginneth to tire in the wayes of God 3. VSE It serves to justifie God in his Judgments upon the careless and negligent though they be not grossely Dissolute and Prophane There is more Contempt of God in neglecters than you can at first be sensible of Hypocrites complain of the severity of God the rigour of his Law the grievousness of his Judgments they should rather complain of the naughtiness of their own Hearts they are convinced of more Duty than they are willing to perform and they are not willing because they follow after a few paltry Vanities which is a great dishonour to God 'T was not the austerity and rigidness of the Master in requiring Improvement that hindred the increase of his Talent but his own baseness being wedded to sensual delights They say The wayes of the Lord are not equal but their hearts are not right with God Secondly I come now to the Retortion of his vain Excuse upon himself The damned can have no just Complaint against God they are apt to murmur and lay their defects upon the rigidness of Gods Government or Gods Providence but in the issue the blame will light upon themselves even the things they alledge make against them He was convinced the Master expected Increase therefore he should have done what he could Luk. 19.22 Out of thy own Mouth I will condemn thee So 't is here mens Consciences convince them they ought not to live in Idleness and if they have a Master the thought of their Account should inforce them if not their own Inclination especially if a severe Master Grand the Sinners supposition it bindeth the Duty upon him and so he cuts his Throat with his own Sword as they said of Job Chap. 15.6 Thine own Mouth condemneth thee thine own lips testifie against thee Doct. No excuse shall serve the unfaithful and sloathful Servant at the day of Iudgment Let a Man deceive himself now and please himself with these Pretences as he will all his Excuses shall be retorted upon him and made matter of his Condemnation For the Judge is Impartial and Omniscient his Eyes cannot be blinded nay he can open your own Consciences and so overwhelm you with the Evidence and Conviction of your Sins that you shall have nothing to say As in the 22 th of Matthew The Man was speechless when arraigned But because the excusing Humour is very rife and many things serve the turn now which will not bear weight then I shall a little handle this Matter of Excusing In the general an Excuse is an Apology or vain Defence whereby the Sinner seeketh to palliate his
is opposite to the Feast these two Places Matth. 8.12 and Matth. 22.13 shew And here when the good Servants enter into the Masters Joy or sit down and feast with him then is the naughty Servant cast into utter Darkness that is shut out of the Communion of the blessed Spirits who in the Place of Happiness have Eternal Joy and cast into the Dungeon of Hell Secondly Let us consider it as 't is doleful Where shall be weeping and gnashing of Teeth Their Estate shall be sad and they shall have a bitter Apprehension of it Their Apprehension is expressed by two things their Sorow and Indignation 1. Their desperate tormenting Sorrow 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Weeping This Dolour shall arise from the inexplicable Torments of Body and Soul 2. Their Indignation or Vexation Gnashing of Teeth 'T is a Token of Indignation and Impatience as Act. 7.54 When they heard these things they were cut at the Heart and gnashed on him with their Teeth I shall explain it more by and by Two Points will arise hence 1. Doct. That Hell is a Place and State of unexpressible Torments 2. Doct. That Vnprofitableness is a damning Sin The Vnprofitable Servant is condemned though he did not waste his Master's Goods yet because he did not increase them There is no Treachery laid to his Charge no Riot and wasteful Profusion no Opposition to his Fellow Servants to vex or hinder them in their Work We hear nothing of this laid to his Charge but he neglected to do that which is good For the first Point That Hell is a Place and State of unexpressible Torment The Argument may seem harsh and ingrate but this is part of the Doctrine that we must unfold See the Commission of the Ministers of the Gospel Mark 16.16 He that believeth shall be saved and he that believeth not shall be damned 'T is Gospel-Preaching to warn Men of Damnation we must curse as well as bless And this Part of Doctrine hath its Profit as well as the more comfortable 1. To those that are Carnal to rouse them out of their Security If Men did believe the Torments of Hell they would not sin as they do Sermons of Hell may keep many out of Hell Ne fugiamus Sermones de Gehenna ut Gehennam fugiamus John startled many by pressing them to flee from Wrath to come And 't is God's usual course to bring to Heaven by the Gates of Hell 2. To God's Children Partly that they may know what they have escaped to be the more thankful to their Redeemer We were all involved in this Condemnation and 't is the Lord's Mercy that we are as Brands plucked out of the burning Zech. 3.2 A Child of God is a Fire-brand of Hell quenched Ephes. 2.3 'T was the Pity of our Lord Jesus to rescue us 1 Thess. 1.10 'T is a Part of a Christians Heaven to think of Hell The Miseries of this Life commend Heaven to us much more the Torments of Hell We know Good the better by the opposite Evil As the Israelites when they looked back and saw the Egyptians tumbling in the Waters it heightned the Deliverance and made them the more sensible of their own Safety And partly to warn them and quicken them to their Duty This Motive alone would beget slavish Fear and compulsory Obedience but mixed with others it doth Good We need this Discipline as long as we are in the World We are Flesh as well as Spirit Adam in Innocency needed to be threatned and told of Death Paul saith 1 Cor. 9.27 I keep under my Body and bring it into subjection lest that by any means when I have preached to others I my self should be a Cast-away If so sanctified a Man as Paul much more we And Rom. 8.13 If ye live after the Flesh ye shall die but ye through the Spirit do mortifie the Deeds of the Body ye shall live 'T is one of the Saints Motives And partly because they that cannot endure to hear of such Discourses discover much of the Guilt and Security of their own Hearts As Ahab said of Michaiah He prophesieth nothing but Evil So Men say of many of the Preachers of the Gospel that yet speak with Tenderness and Compassion He preacheth nothing but Hell and Damnation Presumption is a Coward and a Run-away but Faith meeteth its Enemy in open Field Psal. 13.4 Though I walk through the Valley of the Shadow of Death yet I will fear no Evil. It supposeth the worst it can encounter the greatest Terrors but a false unsound Peace is a tender thing loath to be touched cannot endure a few sad and sober Thoughts of the World to come as sore Eyes cannot endure the Light I shall only speak of this dreadful Place and Estate as it cometh under the View of this Text leaving a more full Discussion of this Point to the 41. Verse of this Chapter First That there is an Hell or Everlasting Torments prepared for the Wicked 'T is good to prove an hated Truth strongly Now 't is so that there is an Hell if God or Man or Devils be competent Witnesses in the Case God hath ever told the World of it and his Witness is true In the Old Testament but sparingly because the State of the World to come was reserved as a Discovery fit for the Times of the Gospel 2 Tim. 1.10 yet there God speaketh Deut. 32.22 of a Fire kindled in his Ange● that shall burn to the lowest Hell God's Wrath is represented by Fire which is an active Instrument of Destruction and the Seat and Residence of it is in the lowest Hell So Psal. 11.6 Vpon the Wicked shall he rain Snares Fire and Brimstone See more Verse 41. Secondly Let us see it described here I. As a dismal State Cast them out into utter Darkness That is 1. Shut them out of the Feast And 2. Cast them into the Dungeon of Hell There they shall be deprived of all Consolation and Joy and Happiness As 1. Of the Sight of God the Company of the good Angels and Blessed Spirits To which Loss there is added the most inexplicable Torments of Body and Soul which is exceeding great And 't is a dreadful thing to be deprived of the Light of God's Countenance to be banished out of his Presence The Disciples wept when Paul said Ye shall see my Face no more Act. 20.38 What will the Damned do when he shall say Depart ye cursed as 't is in the 41. Verse Here in the Loss all are equal but not in the Pain all alike depart from God they all lose Heavens Joyes the favourable Presence of God and the Sight of Christ the Company of the Blessed and their Abode in those happy Mansions in Christ's Fathers House Hell is a deep Dungeon where the Sun shine of God's Presence never cometh God is summum Bonum the chiefest Good and in the other World omne Bonum All in All All things there are immediately from God Rewards and Punishments
not that is as yet He laid aside the person of a Judge then and took on him the Office of a Saviour to offer and purchase Mercy that was his proper Errand when he came first into the world So Luk. 9.56 The Son of man is not come to destroy mens lives but to save them And to comply with that end he cast a veil upon his Glory and endured the enmity and contradiction of the world but now 't is otherwise so that the scandal of his first estate is fully taken off 2. He appeareth in this great Glory to beget a greater Reverence and Fear in the hearts of all those that shall be Judged by him He telleth them aforehand That the Son of man will come in great Glory and Majesty To daunt and quell the haughty minds and proud conceits of the Potentates Oppressors and great ones of the Earth who often abuse their Power to wrong and violence Eccles. 5.8 If thou seest the Oppression of the poor and the violent perverting of Judgement and Justice in a Province marvel not at the matter for he that is higher than the highest regardeth and there be higher than they Here is swaying and swaggering and bearing high upon the thought of their Title and greatness but there they and all their greatness and power shall meet with a Judge that is able by the breath of his mouth to consume them What meaneth the Insolency of the Mighty the Pride of the great Heroes of the Earth that swell and grow haughty with their greatness to look and speak so big Nothing is so profitable to allay the excesses of Power or to fortifie us against the fears of it as the consideration of this mighty Judge who will review all matters and cause the great men of the Earth to tremble Power is an unwieldy thing apt to degenerate and to put men upon unwarrantable practices therefore it needeth to be allayed and ballanced with the consideration of a greater power Alas all the Power and Glory of the world is but a Fancy a vain Pageantry if compared to Christs Power and Glory what is their Authority to his their Splendour to his their Guard to his Nothing can excuse them this Judgment must and shall pass upon them 3. For the Comfort of his People for Christ is a pledge and pattern of what shall be done in them in all things he must first it Rom. 8.29 And we are made conformable to his Image and likeness All Priviledges come to us not only from Christ but through Christ He as Mediator is the first Possessor Are we Elected he was Elected first My Elect Servant Isa. 42.1 Are we Justified so was he as our Surety 1 Tim. 3.16 Justified in the Spirit Are we Sanctified First he received the Spirit of Holiness are we Glorified so was he Col. 3.4 When Christ who is our life shall appear we shall appear with him in Glory 1 Joh. 3.2 We shall be like him for we shall see him as he is There will be a manifestation of the Sons of God Rom. 8.19 First the first-born then all the rest of the Brethren yea we participate of his Judicial Power The Saints shall not only be judged but be Judges 1 Cor. 6.2 3. The evil Spirits a long time ago had their Punishment but then their solemn Doom The Saints shall sit down with him as Justices upon the Bench here the Saints judge the World by their Doctrine and Conversation there by their Vote and Suffrage There is the Relation between Christ and the Church of Wife and Husband Vxor fulget Radiis Mariti as the Husband riseth in honour so doth the Wife Of Head and Members when the Head is Crowned all the Members are cloathed with Honour His Mystical Body shares with him that there may be a proportion in the Body He is the Captain of our Salvation and he will dignifie and reward his Souldiers Heb. 2.10 David when he was Crowned at Hebron his followers were made Captains of thousands Captains of hundreds and Captains of fifties Masters and Servants my Servant shall be where I am he will put marks of Honour and Favour upon all his Servants here they were disgraced with him suffered with him sleighted with him then they shall be glorified with him for still there is a likeness we must be contented to lye hid 'till he be publickly manifested to the world for we have all our Blessings at second hand So much for the first thing His Personal Glory Secondly His Royal Attendance And all the holy Angels with him Chrysostom saith The whole Court of Heaven removeth with him surely there are many of them Jude 14. The Lord cometh with ten thousand of his Saints to execute Judgment on all to convince all that are ungodly 'T is likely these Angels will put on some visible shape for the greater Glory and Majesty of Christs appearing For as he will appear in a Body upon his glorious Throne so will his Legions round about him whose Order Power and formidable Hosts must some way or other be seen of the wicked for their greater terrour Their attendance upon Christ seemeth to be for these Reasons 1. Partly for a Train to make his Appearance the more full of Majesty We find Angels waiting upon Christ at his Ascension and so at his return to Judgment Publick Ministers of Justice are made formidable by their attendance and Christ will come as a Royal King in the midst of his Nobles And 2. Partly that by their Ministry the work of the day may be the more speedily and powerfully dispatched They are to gather the Elect from the four winds Math. 24.31 The Angels that carried their Souls to Heaven shall be imployed in bringing their bodies out of the Graves Luk. 16.22 Carried by Angels into Abrahams bosom They are still serviceable about the Saints this is the last Office they perform to them they are as it were under Christ Guardians of their Bones and Dust Now to the wicked they are to bind the Tares in bundles Math. 13.41 that they may be burnt in the fire They force and present wicked men before the Judge be they never so obstinate they are witnesses they attend upon Congregations 1 Cor. 11.10 In Assemblies there is more Company meets than is visible Devils and Angels meet there the Devils to divert your minds as soon as they begin to be serious to catch the good word out of your Heart and Angels observing you here should be no indecency so in your ordinary Conversations they are conversant about you and then for Execution no sooner is Sentence pronounced but executed As Haman's face was covered and he led away to Execution as soon as the King had but said the word Thus the Scripture in a condescention to our Capacity representeth to us the Ministry of Angels in that great and terrible day We can better understand the Operations of Angels than of God himself they being nearer to us in
if in want we would relieve him Christ is so nearly conjoyned with his Servants that in their Afflictions he is afflicted in their Comforts he is comforted he looks upon it as done to him The Godly of old time thought themselves much Honoured if they could get a Prophet or an Apostle to their Houses Heb. 13.1 Be not forgetful to entertain strangers for thereby some have entertained Angels unawares Here 's Christ himself will you refuse him who is Heir of all things 3. 'T is the great Question Interrogated by him at the great day of Accounts 'T is not Have you Heard have you Prophesyed have you Eat and Drank in my Presence But have you Fed have you Cloathed have you Visited We are one day to come to this Account and what sorry Accounts shall we make So much for Pleasure for Riot for Luxury for Bravery in Apparel and Pomp in Living and little or nothing for God and his People As if a Steward should bring in his Bill So much spent in Feasts in Rioting in merry Company when his Masters House lyeth to ruine the Children starved and the Servants neglected We are very liberal to our Lusts but sparing to God A man that expecteth to be posed is preparing himself and would fain know the Questions aforehand Christ hath told us our Question SERMON XXIII MATTH XXV v. 37 38 39 40. Then shall the Righteous answer and say Lord When saw we thee an Hungred and fed thee and Thirsty and gave thee Drink When saw we thee a Stranger and took thee in and Naked and Cloathed thee Or when saw we thee Sick and in Prison and came unto thee And the King shall answer and say unto them Verily I say unto you In so much as you have done it unto one of the least of these my Brethren ye have done it unto me WE have handled the Sentence and the Reason The Reason is amplified in some Parabolical passages which contain a Dialogue or interchangeable Discourse between Christ the King and his Elect Servants In which you may observe First Their Question verses 37 38 39. Secondly Christ's Reply and Answer verse 40. Not that such formal words shall pass too and fro at the day of Judgment between the Judge and the Judged but only to represent the matter more sensibly and in a more lively and impressive way to our minds First For their Question certainly 't is not moved 1. By way of Doubt or exception to the Reason alleadged by the Judge in his Sentence there being a perfect Agreement and harmony of mind and will between them Neither 2. Out of Ignorance as if they knew not that Christ was so much concerned in their works of Love done to his Children for his sake for this they knew aforehand that what was done to Christians is done to Christ and upon that account they do it as to Christ and such Ignorance cannot be supposed to be found in the glorified Saints 3. Some say the Question is put to express an holy wonder at what they hear and see and no question Christ will then be admired in his Saints 2 Thes. 1.10 And three Causes there may be of this wonder 1. Their humble sense of their own Nothingness that their Services should be taken notice of and rewarded that he should have such a respect for their mean offices of Love which they little esteemed of and had no confidence in them 2. The greatness of Christs Condescention that he should have such a care of his mean Servants who were so despicable in the world 3. The greatness of the Reward Christ shall so incomparably above all that they could ask or think reward his People that they shall wonder at it This sense is pious taken up by most Interpreters I should acquiesce in it but that I find the same question put by the Reprobates afterwards vers 42 43 44. they use the same words therefore I think the words are barely Parabolical brought in by Christ that he might have occasion further to declare himself how they fed him and cloathed him and what esteem he will put upon works of Charity and to impress this truth the more upon our minds that what is done to his People is accepted by him as if it were done to his Person However because the former sense is useful I shall a little insist upon it in this note Doctrine That when Christ shall come to Reward his People they shall have great cause to wonder at all that they see hear and enjoy 1. They shall wonder at the Reason alleadged They that are holy ever think humbly of their own works and therefore considering their no deservings their ill-deservings they cannot satisfie themselves in admiring and extolling the rich Grace of their Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ that he should take notice of any thing of theirs and produce it into Judgment see how they express themselves now Psal. 143.2 Enter not into Judgment with thy Servant Non dicit cum hostibus tuis So Psal. 130.3 If thou shouldest mark Iniquity O Lord who shall stand So 1 Cor. 4.4 For I know nothing by my self yet am not I thereby Justified Isa. 64.6 But we are as an unclean thing and all our Righteousnesses are as filthy rags This thought they have of all they do and their minds are not altered then for this is the Judgment of Truth as well as of Humility Luk. 17.10 When we have done all we are unprofitable Servants Their Lord hath taught them to say so and think so they did not this out of Complement And for their works of Mercy they were not to let their left hand know what their right hand did Math. 6.3 'T is a Proverb that teaches us that we should not suffer our selves to take notice of what we give in Alms nor esteem much of it as if there were any worth therein and therefore when Christ maketh such reckoning of these things their wonder will be raised they will say Lord when saw we thee an hungry or athirst Their true and sincere Humility will make them cast their Crowns before the Throne saying Thou art worthy O Lord to receive glory and honour Lord 't is thy Goodness what have we done The Saints when they are highest still shew the lowest signs of Humility to their Redeemer and confess that all the glory they have they have it from him and are contented to lay it down at his feet as holding it by his Acceptance and not their own Merit they have all and hold all by his Grace and therefore would have him receive the Glory of all 2. They shall wonder at the greatness of Christs Condescention and hearty Love to his Servants though poor and despicable for in the day of Judgment he doth not commemorate the Benefits done to him in Person in the dayes of his Flesh but to his Members in the time of his Exaltation he doth not mention the Alabaster box of precious Oyntment poured
is only reckoned to the Sanctified Though all Mankind have the same Nature come of the same Stock yet He that sanctifieth and they that are sanctified are all of one for which cause he is not ashamed to call them Brethren There the Relation holdeth of both sides Christ is born of a Woman and They are born of God Joh. 1.13 and so he is a Kinsman doubly Ratione Incarnationis suae Regenerationis nostrae as Macarius He taketh part of Flesh and Blood partaketh of Humane Nature and we are made Partakers of a Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 And Matth. 12.47 48 49 50. Then one said unto him Behold thy Mother and thy Brethren stand without desiring to speak with thee but he answered 〈◊〉 said unto him that told him Who is my Mother and who are my Brethren And he stretched forth his Hand towards his Disciples and said Behold my Mother and my Brethren For whosoever shall do the Will of my Father which is in Heaven the same is my Brother and Sister and Mother Secondly Now I shall shew you in the next place what a Priviledge this is I shall shew you 1. What Condescension there is in Christs part that he should count the least of his people not only for his own but for his Brethren The Apostle saith He is not ashamed Heb. 2.11 We are said to be ashamed in two Cases 1. When we do any thing that is filthy As long as we have the Heart of a Man we cannot do any thing that hath filthiness in it without shame Or 2. When we do any thing beneath that Dignity and Rank which we sustain in the World The former Consideration is of no place here the latter then must be considered Those that bear any Rank and Port in the World are ashamed to be too familiar with their Inferiours yet such is the love of Christ towards his People that though he be infinitely greater and more worthy than us yet he is not ashamed to call us Brethren 'T is said Prov. 19.7 All the Brethren of the Poor do hate him If a Man fall behind hand in the World his Friends look askew upon him but Jesus Christ though he be the Eternal Son of God by whom he made the World the Splendour of his Fathers Glory and the Brightness of his Person the King of Kings and Lord of Lords and we be poor vile and unworthy Creatures yet he disdaineth not to call us Brethren notwithstanding our Meanness and unworthiness and his own Glory and Excellency Divines observe that Christ never gave his Disciples the Title of Brethren but after his Resurrection before Servants little Children Friends were their usual Designations but then he expresly calleth them Brethren Joh. 13.13 14. Ye call me Lord and Master for so I am And Joh. 12.26 If any Man serve me let him follow me and where I am there shall my Servant be Friends Joh. 15.15 I have called you Friends But after the Resurrection the Style of Brethren is very frequent Mat. 28.10 Go tell my Brethren I go into Galilee And Joh. 20.17 Go to my Brethren and tell them I go to my Father and your Father And at the last day he giveth this Title to all the Elect that are put at his right Hand Quest. But what is the Reason of this Answ. Though the Ground were laid in the Incarnation when Christ naturalliz'd himself to us and became one of our own Line yet he doth expresly own it after his Resurrection and will own it at his coming to Judgment to shew that his Glory and Exaltation doth nor diminish his Affections towards his People but rather the Expressions thereof are enlarged He still continueth our Brother and will do so as long as our Nature remaineth in the Unity of his Person which will be to all Eternity 2. That it is a Real Priviledge to us 't is a Title of great Dearness and Intimacy 't is not an idle Complement for there is cause and reason for it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All Mankind coming of one Father and being made of one Blood are Brethren and Christ reckoneth himself among us and assumeth the Relation proper to his Nature especially when we get a new Kindred by Grace 'T is not an empty Title but a great and Real Priviledge not a Nominal Titular Relation to put Honour upon us but to give us Benefit Rom. 8.17 and for the present assureth us of his tender Respect VSE I. It comforts us against the sense of our own Unworthiness Though our Nature be removed so many degrees of distance from God and at that time polluted with Sin when Christ glorified it and assumed it into his own Person yet all this hindred him not from taking our Nature and the Title depending thereupon Therefore the sense of our Unworthiness when 't is seriously laid to Heart should not hinder us from looking after the Benefits we need and which are in his power to bestow upon us This Term should revive us Whatever serves to to our Comfort and Glory Christ will think it no disgrace to do it for us This may be one Reason why Christ biddeth them tell his Brethren I am risen Mat. 28.10 The poor Disciples were greatly dejected and confounded in themselves they had all forsaken him and fled from him Peter had denyed him and forsworn him what could they look for from him but a sharp and harsh Exprobration of their Fear and Cowardise But he comforts them with this Message Go tell my Disciples and Peter that I am risen The fal'n Man is not forgotten Peter was weeping bitterly for his fault but Christ sends him a comfortable Message Go tell Peter I am risen Secondly The next thing that I shall observe is Doct. That what is done to his People to the least of them Christ will esteem it as done to himself 1. It holdeth true in Injuries Isa. 63.9 In all their Afflictions he was afflicted and the Angel of his Presence saved them in his Love and in his Pity he redeemed them And Act. 9.4 And he fell to the Earth and he heard a Voice saying unto him Saul Saul why persecutest thou me Christ was wronged when the Saints were wronged He is above Passion but not above Compassion The Enemies of the Church have not Men for their Enemies but Christ himself When they are mocked and scorned Christ is mocked and scorned 2. It holdeth also true of Benefits The least Courtesie or Act of Kindness shewed to them is shewed to Christ that which is done in Christ's Name and for Christ's sake is done unto Christ You do not consider the Man so much as Christ in him The Apostle saith they received him even as Christ Jesus Gal. 9.14 that is in his Name and as his Messenger 2 Cor. 5.10 and Luk. 10.16 He that heareth you heareth me and he that despiseth you despiseth me as a King is resisted in a Constable armed with his Authority As when we go to God
Dangers they may pluck Joint from Joint but they cannot pluck the Soul from Christ that is once really implanted into him 2. Observe That Eternal Life is Christ's Gift It is not the Merit of our Works but the Fruit of his Grace Rom. 6.23 The Wages of Sin is Death but the Gift of God is Eternal Life through Jesus Christ our Lord. It is good to observe how the expression is diversified Sin and Death are suited like Work and Wages but Eternal Life is a mere Donative not from the Merit of the Receiver but the Bounty of the Giver Works that need Pardon can never deserve Glory Grace in us runneth as Water in a muddy Channel the Child hath more of the Mother It is true there is a concurrence of Works but not by way of Causality but Order God will first justify then sanctify then glorify Justification is the Cause and Foundation of Eternal Life and Sanctification the Beginning and Introduction of it and we have both by Christ. The first is obtained by Christ's Blood the second wrought by his Spirit See Ephes. 2.8 9. By Grace ye are saved through Faith and that not of your selves it is the Gift of God Not of Works left any Man should boast The Instrument of Salvation is Faith which requireth a renouncing of Works and Faith also is of Grace The Papists to excuse the gross Conceit of Merit say our Works do not merit but as they come from the Grace of God and are washed with the Blood of Christ. But neither Salve will serve for this Sore 1. It is not enough to ascribe Grace to God all Justitiaries will do so the Pharisee said God I thank thee I am so and so You confound the Covenants when you think we may merit of God by his own Grace God maketh us Righteous by Grace and if by the exercise of it we deserve Life Adam under the Covenant of Works must then have been said to be saved by Grace because he could not persevere in the use of his Free Will unless he had received it from God 2. Nor as dyed in the Blood of Christ because Faith disclaimeth all Works as to the Act of Justification and there is no Merit if it be of Grace Learn then to admire Grace with Comfort and Hope Merit-Mongers are left to be confuted by Experience Surely Men that cry up Works seldom look into their own Consciences Let them use the same Plea in their Prayers they do in their Disputes Give me not Eternal Life till I deserve it Lord let me have no Mercy till I deserve it Or let them dispute thus when they come to dispute with their own Consciences in the Agonies of Death then Optimum est inniti Meritis Christi 3. Observe The Gifts that God is wont to give are not earthly Riches worldly Power transitory Honours but Eternal Life This was the great End for which he was ordained by the Father Many come to Christ as that Man Luke 12.13 Master speak to my Brother to divide the Inheritance with me He looked upon him as aliquem magnum one furnished with great Power fit to serve his Carnal Ends such fleshly Requests are not acceptable to our Mediator The Lord loveth to give Blessings suitable to his own Being He liveth for ever and he giveth Eternal Life to the Elect. Learn then how to frame your Requests Say I will not be satisfied with these things Remember me with the favour of thy People O visit me with thy Salvation that I may see the good of thy Chosen that I may rejoice in the gladness of thy Nation that I may glory with thine Inheritance Psal. 106.4 5. 4. Observe From the Expression Eternal Life Our Estate in Heaven is expressed by Life and Eternal Life This is a term frequently used to signify the glorified Estate Now it doth imply not only our bare subsistence for ever but also the Tranquillity and Happiness of that state 1. It is Life Heirs together of the Grace of Life 1 Pet. 3.7 Life is the most precious Possession and Heritage of the Creature there can be no Happiness without it All our Comforts begin and end with Life Life is better than Food Mat. 6.25 Is not the Life more than Meat and the Body than Raiment Poisons and Cordials are all one to a dead Man Creatures base if they have Life are better than those which are most excellent A living Dog is better than a dead Lion All Creatures desire to preserve Life All the Travail of Men under the Sun is for Life to prop up a Tabernacle that is always falling Job 2.7 Skin for Skin and all that a Man hath will he give for his Life All our labour and care is for it and when we have made provision for it it is taken from us It is called the Life of our Hands Isa. 57.10 We make hard shift to maintain it This Life is a poor thing it is no great matter to be Heir to it James 4.14 What is your Life it is even a Vapor that appeareth for a little time and then vanisheth away 2. It is Life Eternal not like the Earthly Life which is but as a Vapor a little warm Breath or warm Smoak tunn'd in and out by the Nostrils Our present Life is a Lamp that may be soon quenched it is in the Power of every Ru●●ian and Assassinate But this is Life Eternal In Heaven there is a fair Estate the Tenure is for Life but we need not take thought for Heirs We and our Happiness shall always live together The Blossoms of Paradise are for ever fresh and green therefore if we love Life why should we not love Heaven This is a Life that is never spent and we are never weary of living This Life is short yet we soon grow weary of it The shortest Life is long enough to be encumbred with a thousand Miseries If you live till old Age Age is a burden to it self The Days shall come in which they shall say we have no pleasure Eccles. 12.1 Life it self may become a burden but you will never wish for an end of Eternal Life that is a long date of days without misery and without weariness Eternity is every day more lovely Well might David say The loving Kindness of God is better than Life Men have cursed the Day of their Birth but never the Day of their New Birth Those that have once tasted the sweet and benefit of God's Life never grow weary of it 3. This Life is begun and carried on by degrees 1. The Foundation of it is laid in Regeneration Then do we begin to live when Christ beginneth to live in us and we may reckon from that day when in the Power of his Life we began to advance towards Heaven for then there was a Seed laid of a Life which cannot be destroyed The Life of Nature may be extinguished but not of Grace Rom. 8.11 If the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus
he is resolved to say I am his that is the fitter Argument with God With our own Souls in our own Straits plead He is mine Psal. 42.11 Why art thou cast down O my Soul and why art thou disquieted within me hope thou in God for I shall yet praise him who is the Health of my Countenance and my God but in Prayer plead I am his though you cannot plead his Choice plead your own Resignation Consider it is a forcible Argument Every one will provide for his own He is worse then an Infidel who will not provide for his own especially those of his own Houshold It is a comfortable Argument When we cannot speak of our Works we may speak of our Interest Lord I am a Sinner but I am thine I am a poor Wretch but I am one that would not be his own unless I am thine Oh but says the poor Soul If I could say that I am thine one that belongeth to the Purposes of thy Grace there were some Comfort Answ. It is sweet when we can say mutually I am my Beloved's and my Beloved is mine But are you not willing to chuse him though you cannot say he hath chosen you The choice of our Portion discovereth our Interest Canst thou in truth of Heart say Lord I have none in Heaven but thee none upon Earth that I desire in comparison of thee Psal. 73.25 If you can in the sincerity of your Hearts call God to witness this it is sweet Though thou canst not apply Christ canst thou resign thy self then we have the Fruit of Election though we have not the Sense of it God certainly hath chosen us when by the Work of his Grace he maketh us chuse him Fallen Man is not dainty in his choice till a Work of Grace passeth upon him he turneth from the Creator to the Creature he saith to the World Would to God thou wert mine to Riches Honours Pomp would thou wert mine Happy is the People that are in such a Case It is Grace turneth us from the Creature back again to God God is our Portion because we are his God cannot refuse that Heart which he hath thus drawn to himself 2. Observe again That none are given to Christ but those that were first the Father's Thine they were he had chosen them in the Purposes of his Grace and disposed them into Christ's Hands Thine by Election mine by Special Donation The Acts of the three Persons are commensurable of the same Sphere and Latitude those whom the Father chuseth the Son redeemeth and the Spirit sanctifieth The Father loveth none but those that are given to Christ and Christ taketh charge of none but those that are loved of the Father Your Election will be known by your Interest in Christ and your Interest in Christ by the Sanctification of the Spirit All God's Flock are put into Christ's Hands and Christ leaveth them to the care of the Spirit that they may be enlightned and sanctified In looking after the Comfort of Election you must first look inward to the Work of the Spirit on your Hearts then outward to the Work of Christ on the Cross then upward to the Heart of the Father in Heaven 1 Pet. 1.2 Elect according to the foreknowledg of God the Father through sanctification of the Spirit unto Obedience and sprinkling of the Blood of Jesus Christ. There is a Chain of Salvation the Beginning is from the Father the Dispensation through the Son the Application by the Spirit all cometh from God and is conveyed to us through Christ by the Spirit Secondly The Father's Act about Believers Thou gavest me them How are they given to Christ Things are given to Christ two ways by way of Reward or by way of Charge 1. By way of Reward So all Nations are given to him by way of Reward Psal. 2.8 Ask of me and I will give thee the Heathen for thy Inheritance and the uttermost parts of the Earth for thy Possession He is Lord of all Acts 10.36 even of the Devils All Flesh are thus given to him to be ruled by him This Donation is very large and comprizeth Elect and Reprobates all Nations are Christ's Heritage in this sence as well as the Church All Power in Heaven and in Earth is given to him to dispose of Elect and Reprobates according to his own Pleasure Only in this giving by way of Reward there is a difference some are given to Christ at large to be disposed of according to his Pleasure others are given to him for some special Ministry and Service as Hypocrites in the Church and so Judas was given to him as Christ saith Vers. 9. Of them which thou hast given me I have lost none but the Son of Perdition Again others are given to him by way of special and peculiar Interest to be Members of his Body Subjects of his Kingdom c. So only the Elect are given to Christ the great Bargain that Christ drove with his Father was an Interest in Souls therefore it is said Isa. 53.10 11. When thou shalt make his Soul an Offering for Sin he shall see his Seed he shall prolong his days and the Pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in his Hand He shall see of the travel of his Soul and be satisfied This was all the Gain that Christ reckoned of 2. By way of Charge This again is proper to the Elect who are redeemed justified sanctified glorified The Elect are made over to Christ not by way of Alienation but Oppignoration none of them who are given to Christ by way of Charge can miscarry John 6.37 All that the Father giveth me shall come to me and he that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out And ver 39. This is the Will of him that sent me that of all which he hath given me I should lose none but should raise it up again at the last day And John 10.28 29. I give unto them eternal Life and they shall never perish neither shall any Man pluck them out of my Hand My Father which gave them me is greater than all and no Man is able to pluck them out of my Father's Hand There is Christ's Faithfulness and the Father's Power engaged therefore this must needs be proper to the Elect. Now because both these ways are proper to the Elect that that I observe is That the Father's Elect are given and committed to the Son as his Purchase and Charge First They are given to him by way of Reward Christ by virtue of his Purchase hath many Relations to Believers they are given to him as Subjects of his Kingdom as Scholars of his School as Children of his Family as the Spouse of his Bosom as the Members of his Body All these Relations I shall insist upon for this was the Honour that was granted to Christ upon his Obedience It was much that Christ would be our King more that he would be our Master more that he would be our Father
Faith with Power What encouragement hath a Minister to go to God for such not only when you send for him in times of sickness but always as the Apostle saith in every Address to God It is sweet to give an account of the thriving Lambs and to desire the Lord to perfect his Work And it argueth in the Minister Sincerity to take pleasure in their gracious Estate and to account it as it were his own Benefit that God hath any way blessed them with Grace which moveth him again to commend their Case to God Certainly if we have but any portion of the Unity of the Spirit or any share in the Communion of Saints or any respect to God's Glory thus it would be Again it concerneth Masters of Families Your Family is your Charge given you of God pray for them in the Bowels of Love You are to make an Errand to the Throne of Grace not only for your selves but your Children and Servants as the Centurion came to Christ for his Servant Mat. 8.6 If we did not want Hearts we could never want an occasion of recourse to God By virtue of our Relation we are to espouse the Interests of our Family and to plead with God on their behalf as we would on our own Job is an excellent Pattern Job 1.5 He rose early day by day and offered Burnt-Offerings for his Children in the time of their Feasting His great care was to keep his Children in the Favour of God he knew no hurt in their Feasting had heard none by information yet because Miscarriages are usual in the heat and license of Feasts the Family should not be without a daily Sacrifice For Job said it may be that my Sons have sinned and cursed God in their Hearts Up then betimes as Job did and milk out a Blessing for your Families not only in general as Men will put up cursory Prayers out of Custom and Use for their Families they pray God to bless their Families but bring them forth by Head and Pole and set them before the Lord as Job offered Sacrifices according to the number of his Children Or as Christ here I pray for these pointing to the Apostles Lord for these and every one of them The occasion of Job's Prayer is not manifest If you do but suspect that a Child hath such a Disease you will go to a Physician should we have less care of their Souls Christ says they live in an evil World vers 11. therefore he prays for them Again look on this Prayer of Christ not only as an Act of Love to his Charge and Familiars but as an Act of Prudence as to the Apostles who were to bring others to believe by their Word I pray for them I pray not for the World c. These that are designed for the great Work of the Gospel chiefly for them they had to do with Obstinate Jews and Idolatrous Gentiles and they had need take the Blessing of Christ's Prayers along with them Ministers and Dispensers of the Mysteries of Salvation above all Men need the help of your Prayers How affectionately doth Paul call for this every where 1 Thess. 5.25 Brethren pray for us It is a Duty you owe and it may be not only of great comfort to us but of great profit to your selves God would have all Orders and Estates in the Church to be obliged to one another you for our Instructions we for your Prayers The Head cannot say to the Foot I have no need of thee 1 Cor. 12.21 Our Calling is encumbred with the more Difficulties and that we may be acquainted with all sorts of Satan's Enterprizes our Persons may be exposed to more Temptations than Yours The many Things requisite to make our Ministry useful call for your Prayers Abilities the right use of them Fruit and success that we may be able Pastors faithful successful that we may have Abilities which are a common Gain whatever Gifts are bestowed on Ministers are for the Peoples profit that out of love of Ease or love of the World or Error we may not mislead you nor be disheartned for lack of success Instead of praying for Ministers many now pray against them the Calling is repined at as if it were some heavy Plague and Judgment sent upon the World But therefore you have need to pray the more 2 Thess. 3.2 That we may be delivered from unreasonable and wicked Men for all Men have not Faith Pray that the Lights of the Church be not eclipsed pray for our standing amidst the Assaults of Satan It is not enough to give us Love and Maintenance but we must have your Prayers So much for the Object of Christ's Prayer II. Now for the Limitation of that Object I pray not for the World but for them that thou hast given me Many Things may be inferred out of this Limitation 1. Universal Redemption is disproved for those for whom Christ prayed not for them he died not These two Offices of the Priesthood must not be severed Christ doth not only profess to pray for these but denieth to pray for the World His Intercession is of the same latitude with his Redemption they are Acts of the same Office and of the same Extent and Latitude All Men were not intended in his Passion and Intercession See Serm. on 2 Cor. 5.16 2. The Weakness of the World notwithstanding all their outward Props and Supports altho they be strong and have many on their side yet they have not Christ on their side He hath left the World out of his Prayers he will not so much as take their Names into his Lips Therefore Rom. 8.31 If God be for us who shall be against us What will that Party do that have God against them Against how many will you set Me said Antigonus You may shake your Spear and bid defiance against all the Powers of Darkness they have not Christ among them he will not speak one good word for them they may have Riches Honours Friends Countenance in the World but God will never take their part 3. The dangerous and sad Condition of Worldly Men. Oh it is a sad thing not to have a Name in Christ's Prayer There is a great number left out and if you will know who they are they are called the World It presseth us to come out of that State where we are in this danger Men that are now Worldly may be in the Roll of God's Election but it is no comfort to them I pray not for the World so it is expressed and as long as thou art Worldly thou canst take no Comfort in Christ's Intercession Certainly this should be an effectual Consideration with the People of God to cause them to keep themselves unspotted from the World Jam. 1.24 These have the benefit of Christ's Prayers A Christian should never be quiet till he be clearly out of that number which is excepted Christ hath a constant enmity and antipathy against Mammon there must be a
〈◊〉 ye unlord the Law so the word signifieth 6. By taking some solemn time to meditate of and admire the excellency of his Person and the fulness of his Redemption In Heaven this will be our great Work there they praise the Lamb for ever-more Rev. 4.10 11. The four and twenty Elders fall down before him that sat on the Throne and worship him that liveth for ever and ever and cast their Crowns before the Throne saying Thou art worthy O Lord to receive Honour and Glory and Power for thou hast created all things and for thy pleasure they are and were created They do not slight their glorious Work All the Glory they have is God's meer Bounty they hold it by Grace and magnify it by Grace So Rev. 5.8 The four Beasts and four and twenty Elders fell down before the Lamb having every one of them Harps and golden Vials full of Odours which are the Prayers of the Saints There is the Employment of the Church Militant and Triumphant Harps which are Instruments of Praise belong to Souls already glorified as Vials full of Odours belong to Believers on Earth The Earth is the true place of Prayer as in Heaven we shall be employed in Eternal Thanksgivings All the Church is yielding Homage to Christ It is the Study of Saints Ephes. 1.16 I cease not to give Thanks for you It was Paul's constant practice he breathed nothing but Christ 1 Cor. 2.2 I determined to know nothing among you save Jesus Christ and him crucified Our Thoughts of Christ should be sweet to us we should have ravishing apprehensions of him from day to day ravishing thy Heart with the excellency of Christ. Vse 3. Is Consolation to them that desire to glorify Christ. It is a singular Prop in your Prayers in every Address you have an Interest in Father and Son They are mine saith the Lord I loved them with an everlasting Love They are mine saith Christ I redeemed them with an everlasting Redemption And will not God provide for his own and Christ for his own Can he that hath the Father and Son miscarry and doubt of Audience You have the Father who is the Original Fountain of Blessing and you have Christ who is the Golden Pipe and Conveyance But especially in your last Address when you lie on your Death-Bed you know Christ's own Plea John 17.4 5. Father I have glorified thee upon Earth I have finished the Work that thou hast given me to do And now Father glorify thou me with thy self with the Glory that I had with thee before the World was It is a sweet Evidence What doth God look for from the Creature but Glory Objection 1. But you will say I cannot glorify Christ in my Addresses to God and cannot come with an Assurance becoming his Purchase I Answer 1. When we cannot apply let us disclaim Lord we come not in our own Names our own Worth and Desert which is none at all we come in the Merits of Christ we know there is no other Name under Heaven Hosea 14.3 In thee the Fatherless findeth Mercy that is every Person that wanteth a Guide Relief and Support Though we cannot say Father yet we can say we are Fatherless we have none to help us 2. If we cannot speak of the Love that he beareth to us for Christ's sake yet let us plead the Love that he beareth to him Christ's Name is very dear and precious in Heaven being God's beloved Son Lord for the Love that thou bearest to Christ We are his Clients though we cannot say we are his Members Though I cannot say Thou art mine yet I may say He is thine a Mediator of thy setting up God might have refused us if Christ had not Letters Patents from Heaven and his Commission under the Broad-Seal of God John 6.27 Him hath God the Father sealed Lord he is thy own authorised Mediator Moses was refused that interposed of his own accord Exod. 32.32 33. I have nothing to bring thee but a Mediator of thine own It is a prevailing Argument Object 2. Alas there is little that I do for God my Station is private Those in the Magistracy and Ministry that are in an eminent Sphere of Activity they may glorify Christ they do his Work upon Earth but what do I do I Answer 1. God will be glorified by every Man in his Way and Place John 17.4 Father I have glorified thee upon Earth I have finished the Work that thou hast given me to do We must not speak of our Rank Christ is glorified by thy diligence and Faithfulness in thy private Place a Man-Servant or a Maid-Servant 1 Cor. 7.22 He that is called in the Lord being a Servant is the Lord's Free-man being redeemed from the thraldom of Satan and servitude of Sin he doth glorify Christ. Titus 2.9 10. Exhort Servants to be obedient unto their own Masters and to please them well in all things not answering again Not purloining but shewing all good fidelity that they may adorn the Doctrine of God our Saviour in all things Godly Servants what an Ornament are they to the Gospel By the first Inlets of Religion into a Family it is made beautiful and lovely in the Eyes of Carnal Men who esteem the Doctrine by the Life and Practice of the Professors of it Servants in those days were bought and sold like Beasts The Lord doth not esteem Men by the Places they hold but by their Carriage in them 2. There is no Station so private but thou mayest do something for Christ to bring up thy Children in the Nurture of the Lord to instruct thy Servants thy Neighbours thy Fellow-Servants Zeal is like Fire or like Leaven it will spread and diffuse it self Object 3. I have laboured but to little purpose Answ. Success is not thy Work but God's We must mind our Duty and leave the success to God we shall not be responsible for lack of Success but want of Endeavours Isa. 49.4 Then I said I have laboured in vain I have spent my strength for nought and in vain yet surely my Judgment is with the Lord and my Work with my God It was a complaint of Christ himself his Ministry was without Fruit yet not without Reward We may have the Crown of Faithfulness if not the Fruit. A Minister is like a Fountain that always runneth whether they will hear or whether they will forbear So must you act in your Families Object 4. I was never called to Martyrdom I doubt I shall not glorify him I Answer 1. Wish not for Troubles but leave them to God and when they come take up his Cross. Simon of Cyrene was compelled we must not chuse our Cross but bear it Christ himself did not carry his Cross till it was laid upon him we must not seek it but take it up not brew our Cup but drink it When a Cross meeteth us in our way which we cannot escape without Sin or breach of Conscience we must bear it 2.
you will fall off and all will end in shame and horror Therefore take heed of following Christ for the L●aves John 6.26 It was an old Complaint Non diligunt Jesum propter Jesum Men have their Carnal Ends in Religion as to make it a Step to Promotion a Cloak to Injustice a Means to get Rich Matches Whatever thou dost in Religion do it upon Reasons of Religion Especially take heed of neglecting Warnings Reproofs and Checks of Conscience stifling of Convictions makes way for Hardness When you are convinced of any Sin or neglect of Duty O do not hold the Truth in Vnrighteousness Rom. 1.18 Truths many times are imprisoned in the Conscience there they are but they cannot get a fair Hearing till God give them a Gaol-delivery and bring them out of the House of Bondage The Devil holds you Prisoners when you hold the Truth in Prison when you are convinced of any Sin or of the neglect of any Duty do not choak Conscience but humble thy self till the Heart be gained to practise the Duty and the disposition of Heart towards Sin be in some measure abated 3. Beware of Treason against Christ. God forbid you will say any of us should be treacherous to Christ Many are so that seem to defy it Judas did put a great affront upon Christ when he sold him for thirty Pieces a cheap and vile price You will find in the Law that thirty Pieces was the price of a Slave Exod. 21.32 If an Ox shall push a Man-Servant or Maid-Servant he shall give unto their Master thirty Shekels and the Ox shall be stoned They proffered no more than was wont to be given for the basest of Men possibly there may be something of Mystery in it that Christ should be sold for the price of a Servant or Slave however it aggravated his Treason and Treachery There are many such Judas's alive that do but wait for a Chapman that are ready to sell Heaven and Happiness and Religion and all their Profession for a Penny matter God tries us as Constantius did them in his Army having some sense of the Christian Religion he made this Proclamation Whoever would not renounce their Profession they should no longer have their Military Places And this he did to prove them said he For if they be not faithful to their God they will not be faithful to me So the Lord in his Providence seems to put us upon such a Trial whether we will renounce our Profession tho we cannot sell Christ in Person and there be no Priests to deal with us yet Satan is still alive and therefore when for worldly Ease and Peace and handfuls of Barley and pieces of Silver we part with the Promise and Comfort and Hopes of it and hazard the Favour of God and Peace of Conscience for the trifling Matters of the World we are guilty of this Treason of Judas Tho you hate the memory of Judas you love his Sin I observe that the Historical Passages of Christ's Sufferings are often morally verified The Jews preferring Barabbas by the Sensualist preferring his Pleasures and brutish and swinish Delights before the Delights of Communion with Christ Judas his selling Christ by the Mammonist that yieldeth against Conscience for a little worldly Gain and Sustentation of himself here in this present World 4. Take heed of his Despair O cherish the Repentance of Peter but not of Judas If you have sinned against God go out and weep bitterly but take Sanctuary at the Lord's Grace Do not hug a Distemper instead of a Duty There were two Ingredients wanting in Judas's Repentance that should be in every true Penitent 1. Love to Conversion Whatever a convinced Hypocrite doth he doth it out of Self-love Pharaoh could say Take away this Plague he doth not say Take away this hard Heart Every Creature loveth its own Quiet and Safety Wicked Men only hate Sin when they feel Wrath and are surprized with Horror and Trouble not out of a Love to Grace but Fear of Hell When Hurt is at hand the Fear of it worketh upon us True Repentance cometh from a sight of the Beauty and Excellency and Sweetness that is to be found in the ways of God And they grieve not only for the Effects of his Wrath because God is angry but because God is offended 2. Hopes of Mercy Judas goeth not to God but hangs himself No Conviction is good that doth not lead to God When the Spirit convinces of Sin he convinces also of Righteousness John 16.8 And the Heirs of Promise are described to be those that flie for Refuge to the Hope that is set before them Heb. 6.18 They are sensible that there is an Avenger of Blood at their Heels that the Wrath of God is pursuing them for their Sin O but they run to take Sanctuary at the Grace of God Judas's Sin stuck close to him and he casts away himself but Peter runs to Christ and Christ sends him a comfortable Message Mark 16.7 Go tell my Disciples and Peter that I go before them into Galilee 4. Observe That the Wicked in their Machinations against the Church do but draw Perdition upon themselves The Church hath Benefit by Judas's Treason we are redeemed and God hath Glory but he is the Son of Perdition Judas was the first Heretick of the Gospel denying Christ's Godhead he betrayed him thinking him a meer Man and he was the first false Brother and Persecutor And now Hereticks and Persecutors what do they carry away but Shame The Plots blow up the Author Heresies edify the Church but damn the Broacher Light breaketh out by knocking of Flints Persecutors are an Iron in the Fire heated too hot burneth their Fingers that hold it but the Church is purged The Church was beholden to Charles the Fifth God doth it to shew his Justice Power and Wisdom 1. His Justice that they are taken in their own Net Judas was hanged ere Christ was brought to the Cross. Psal. 76.10 Surely the Wrath of Men shall praise thee 2. His Wisdom He taketh the Wise in their own Craftiness The wise Painter knoweth how to lay on black Lines and Shadows All their Policy is but a Spider's Web woven with much Art but it cometh to nothing God will be known to be only wise even when wicked Men think to over-reach him As the Governor of a Castle that is privy to the Plots of his Enemies he knows what they will do and suffers them to run on to such a Point 3. His Power Let Cain Pharaoh Achitophel Haman Herod Judas speak is not this true They all confess They did but kick against the Pricks dash against the Rocks roll up a Stone that will fall upon them and break them all to pieces It is the Devil's Torment that all his Plots are turned to his loss and the good of those he hated most all his Instruments are but Executioners of God's Will while they rush against it As Men walking in a Ship
own Will begat he us with the Word of Truth that we should be a kind of First-fruits of his Creatures The First-fruits were the Lord's Portion Or else by the consent of their own Vows Rom. 12.1 I beseech you that you present your selves a living Sacrifice holy acceptable to God that is your reasonable Service They have dedicated and devoted themselves to God God calleth for it when he saith My Son give me thy Heart God will have his own Right established by the Creatures Consent it is a necessary Fruit of Grace 2. Purged by degrees and made free from Sin this is to be sanctified to be purged from the Corruption of Sin and the World We are not only accounted holy but we are made holy and that cannot be till we are purged because we come into the World polluted with the Stain of Sin 1 Cor. 6.11 Such were some of you but ye are washed but ye are sanctified but ye are justified in the Name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God There is a Stain and an Uncleanness sticketh to our Natures and defileth all our Actions we need to be purged 3. Endowed with God's Image and Likeness not only cleansed from Sin but adorned with Grace as the Priests under the Law were not only washed but adorned with gorgeous Apparel To be sanctified is more than to be purified because it noteth not only the Expulsion of Sin but the Infusion of Grace 2 Tim. 2.12 If a Man therefore purge himself from these he shall be a Vessel unto Honour sanctified and meet for the Master's use and prepared unto every good Work Besides purging Sanctification addeth somewhat more they are not only purged from the Filthiness of Sin but prepared by the Infusion of Grace for every good Work made holy as God is holy 2. Why we should chiefly mind it in Prayer 1. Because of the Excellency of it It is God's Glory Angels Glory Saints Glory God's Glory Exod. 15.11 God is glorious in Holiness Angels Glory who are called Mat. 25.31 Holy Angels And the Saints Glory Eph. 5.26 27. That he might sanctify them with the washing of Water by the Word that he might present it to himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing but that it might be holy and without blemish The Church's Honour lieth not in Pomp and outward Ornament but in Holiness 2. Because God aimeth at it in all his Dispensations Election Eph. 1.4 According as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the World that we should be holy and without blame before him in Love 2 Thess. 2.14 God hath from the beginning chosen you through Sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the Truth God chuseth us that we may be of a choice Spirit As when Esther was chosen out among the Virgins then she was decked with Ornaments so when we are chosen by God we are beautified with Holiness Redemption Eph. 5.26 Christ loved the Church and gave himself for it that he might sanctify and cleanse it with the washing of Water by the Word His Promises 2 Pet. 1.4 Whereby are given unto us exceeding great and precious Promises that by these ye might be Partakers of the Divine Nature having escaped the Corruption that is in the World through Lust. His Providences Heb. 12.10 They verily for a few days chastened us after their own Pleasure but he for our Profit that we might be Partakers of his Holiness Earthly Parents correct their Children out of meer Passion but he to renew our Affections to sanctify us for himself that the Husk may flie off He bestows Blessings to encourage us in Holiness 1 Tim. 6.17 18. Charge them that are rich in this World that they be not high-minded nor trust in uncertain Riches but in the Living God who giveth us richly all Things to enjoy That they do good that they be rich in good Works ready to distribute willing to communicate That your Riches may be Instruments of Piety not Occasions to the Flesh. It is our Corruption to turn all things to a carnal Use. His Ordinances That he might sanctify them by the washing of Water through the Word Ephes. 5.26 This is God's Aim and it should be ours Vse is to teach us what to seek for our selves and others not temporal Felicity so much as Sanctification not Deliverance from Afflictions nor outward Blessings so much as the sanctified Use of them This is to pray for one another out of the Communion of the Spirit and for our selves out of a Principle of the Divine Nature Temporal Blessings are only to be desired in order to spiritual Ends. Nature is allowed to speak but Grace must be heard first Mat. 6.33 Seek ye first the Kingdom of God and the Righteousness thereof and all these things shall be added unto you These are for Overplus 2. Observe from the Matter he had prayed for Conservation from Evil now for Sanctification It is not enough to keep from Evil but we must be holy and do good Psal. 34.14 Depart from Evil and do good Isa. 1.16 17. Cease to do evil learn to do well God hateth Evil and delighteth in Good as we must hate what God hateth so we must love what God loveth Eadem velle nolle I durst not sin God hateth it I durst not omit this Duty God loveth it Our Obedience must carry a proportion with the Divine Mercy not only be positive but privative Divine Mercy spareth and saveth God is a Sun and a Shield Psal. 84.11 Therefore we must not walk in the Counsel of the Vngodly nor stand in the Way of Sinners nor sit in the Sea● of the Scornful But our delight must be in the Law of the Lord and in his Law must we meditate day and night Psal. 1.1 2. We must have Communion with Christ in all his Acts in his Death and Resurrection he mortifieth Sin and quickneth the Heart Rom. 6.11 Likewise reckon ye also your selves to be dead indeed unto Sin but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord. The same Divine Power that killeth the Old-Man quickneth the New In the Word which is the Rule there are Precepts and Restraints therefore we are not only to escape from Sin but there must be a delight in Communion with God there must be an eschewing what God forbiddeth and a practising what God commandeth Thus are we obliged from our Approver our Principles our Encouragements our Rule Vse Let it press us not to rest in abstaining from Sin Men are not vitious but they are not sanctified The Pharisees Religion ran upon Negatives 1. Both are alike contrary to the New Nature 2. Both are alike disserviceable to the Work of Grace 3. Both are hated by God 1. Both are contrary to the New Nature it hateth Evil and loveth Good There is a putting off and a putting on Ephes. 4.22 That ye put off concerning the former Conversation the Old Man which is
Eternity Moses with Plainness and yet with Majesty speaks of the Original of all Things the Propagation of Mankind c. There is no such ancient historical Monument for above the Funerals of Troy all is uncertain And all the rest of the Bible is but a Comment on Moses 5. The Prophecies of the Word future Contingencies are in it foretold many Years before the Event Isa. 41.22 23. Let them shew the former Things what they are that we may consider them and know the latter end of them or declare us things for to come Shew the things that are to come hereafter that we may know that ye are Gods Cyrus was mentioned by Name an hundred Years before he was born Isa. 45.1 Thus saith the Lord to his Anointed to Cyrus whose right Hand I have holden The Birth of Josiah three hundred Years before it came to pass 1 Kings 13.2 Behold a Child shall be born unto the House of David Josiah by Name c. The building of Jericho five hundred Years before it was reedified Joshua 6.26 Cursed be the Man before the Lord that raiseth up and buildeth this City Jericho he shall lay the Foundation thereof in his First-born and in his youngest Son shall he set up the Gates of it Which was fulfilled 1 Kings 16.34 In his days did Hiel the Bethelite build Jericho he laid the Foundation thereof in Abiram his First-born and set up the Gates thereof in his youngest Son Segub according to the Word of the Lord which he spake by Joshua the Son of Nun. The great Promise of Christ made in Paradise was accomplished some thousands of Years afterward Vse 1. It informeth us how to settle the Conscience in sore Temptations When we doubt of the Truth of the Scriptures take this course 1. There must be some Word and Rule from God to guide the Creatures how else shall he be served and worshipped The inward Rule of Reason is not enough as appears by the sad Experience of the Heathens Rom. 1.21 22. Because that when they knew God they glorified him not as God neither were thankful but became vain in their Imaginations and their foolish Hearts were darkned Professing themselves to be Wise they became Fools There must be some second Edition of his Will Reason will teach us that God is to be worshipped and every Man's Heart will tell him that he must not be worshipped as we will but as he will for the Servant must not prescribe to the Master but the Master to the Servant Now we have no Rule of Worship but in the Scriptures The Alchoran is a silly Piece fit for Sots As for Revelation those that are ingenuous cannot speak of any such thing and we see how Men split themselves upon that Rock all is proved Lies at length 2. There is far more Reason to receive the Scriptures as the Word of God than to suspect them There is none more credulous than the Atheist he offereth violence to his own Heart The first Temptation to it ariseth from his Lusts he would not have them true and then afterward he is hardned and grown obstinate in his Prejudices If he would but hearken to the Books of Moses as to the Story of an ordinary Man as of Henry the Eighth there is enough to make him tremble Now there is no such History in the World of such a genuine native Style so free from weaknesses so likely even to a common Eye and if Moses be true so is all the rest the same Vein runneth through all Now the Cause being so weighty the Inducements so rational why should we not believe it at least we may say as of the blind Man if it be not he it is like him John 9.9 3. To what hath been alledged add only this Consider the Matter and Aim of the Scriptures The Scriptures seek to establish nothing but the Worship and Glory of the true God the Creator and Governor of the World they discover the God of Nature in a most worthy and glorious manner And for Precepts Deut. 4.8 What Nation is there so great that hath Statutes and Judgments so Righteous as all this Law which I have set before thee this day Where are there such Precepts where such Promises such a manifestation of Happiness such Purity There have been Corruptions in the best things to which Man ever put his Hand mixtures of Falshood and Folly but here all is Pure and Divine Where are there such Comforts for afflicted Consciences Jer. 6.16 Stand ye in the Ways and see and ask for the old Paths Where is the good Way and walk therein and ye shall find rest for your Souls Mat. 11.28 Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavy laden and ye shall find rest for your Souls Go and survey all the Religions in the World whatever pretence they be of see where you can find such Rest for your Souls such Provision for the Comfort and everlasting Happiness of the Creature such rich Encouragements for afflicted Consciences That which all Religions aim at is here only accomplished 4. Beg the Light of the Spirit What will your Arguings reprove David saith Psal. 36.9 In thy Light we shall see Light We shall never else have any certainty 1 Cor. 2.14 The natural Man receiveth not the Things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishness unto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned Vers. 15. But he that is spiritual judgeth all things The Spirit in the Heart discerns the Spirit in the Scriptures as the Sun is seen by its own Light 5. Till you have Certainty by the Light of the Spirit practise what the Scripture enjoins upon these rational Inducements John 7.17 If any Man will do his Will he shall know of the Doctrine whether it be of God or whether I speak of my self You will say What is the meaning of this Promise before doing the Will of God we must of necessity know it Answ. It is true before you know it certainly There are degrees of Knowledg First we know the Scriptures to be the Word of God by rational Inducements and some foregoing Light of the Spirit as those that are bred in the Church They that would know not to wrangle but to practise shall have new Light till they grow up to a greater Certainty It concerneth chiefly weak and doubting Christians do that you may believe believe that you may do They that set their Hearts to fear and obey him shall be clearly resolved of the Christian Faith Vse 2. It teacheth us these Duties 1. To make the Word the Judg of all Controversies There God speaketh to us A Father having many Children while he lives he governeth them himself and needeth no Will and Testament but a little before he dieth that his Children may not fall out he calleth Witness maketh his Will Voluntatem suam de pectore morituro transfert in tabulas din duraturas If any Controversy happen Non itur
Ones of God whom they malign and against whom their Heart riseth 2. It stirreth them up to come out of their wicked Condition that is out of a state of Nature Psal. 7.11 God is angry with the Wicked every day 3. To put in for a share in this Blessed Estate that they may be some of those whom he loveth as he loved Christ. Vse 1. Caution to the Carnal World do not hate those whom God thus loveth To you they are accursed but God counteth them precious Isa. 43.4 Since thou wast precious in my sight thou hast been honourable and I have loved thee To you they are the Scurf and Off-scouring 1 Cor. 4.13 We are made as the filth of World and the Off-scouring of all things to this day But to God they are Jewels Mal. 3.17 They shall be mine saith the Lord in the day when I make up my Jewels Vse 2. Advice to the Children of God to promote the Conviction and Conversion of the Carnal 1 Pet. 2.12 Having your Conversation honest amongst the Gentiles that whereas they speak against you as evil Doers they may by your good Works which they shall behold glorify God in the Day of Visitation Herein you imitate your Master and your own Safety lieth in it SERMON XLI JOHN XVII 24 Father I will that they also whom thou hast given me be with me where I am that they may behold my Glory which thou hast given me for thou lovedst me before the Foundation of the World WE have hitherto seen Christ's Prayers for the Happiness of his Church in the present World now he prayeth for their Happiness in the World to come His Love looketh beyond the Grave and outlasteth the Life that now is he cannot be contented with any thing on this side a Blessed Eternity Glory as well as Grace is the Fruit of his Purchase and therefore it is the Matter of his Prayers Every Verse is sweet but this should not be read without some ravishment and leaping of Heart One saith he would not for all the World that this Scripture should have been left out of the Bible Certainly we should have wanted a great Evidence and Demonstration of Christ's Affection Every word is emphatical Let us view it a little Here is a Compellation a Request and the Reason of that Request The Compellation Father In the Request there is the Manner how it is made I will The Persons for whom it is made that they whom thou hast given me The Matter of the Request in Presence and Vision be with me where I am that they may behold my Glory Or the Matter is Everlasting Happiness which is described by the Place of Enjoiment and our Work when we come thither Now the Reason of all is the Father's eternal Love to Christ and in Christ to us for thou hast loved me before the Foundation of the World First The Compellation Father The Titles of God are usually suited to the Matter in Hand Christ is now suing for a Child's Portion for all his Members and therefore he saith Father God is Christ's Father by Eternal Generation and ours by gracious Adoption whence our Title to Heaven ariseth And therefore it is called an Interitance Col. 3.24 Knowing that of the Lord ye shall receive the Reward of the Inheritance It is not simply Wages such as a Servant receiveth from his Master but an Inheritance or a Child's Portion such as Children receive from Parents And it is very notable the Apostle there speaketh of Servants who are saved as God's Sons So our waiting for Glory is expressed by waiting for the Adoption Rom. 8.23 because then we have the Fruit of it We hold Heaven not by Merit nor by our Purchase nor by Privilege of Birth but by Adoption The Ground of Expectation is put for the Matter of Expectation waiting for the Adoption And now we wait because now we have jus haereditatis then we have Possession Vse 1. This Notion represents the freeness of Grace in giving us Glory we do not receive it as a Debt but as a Gift Nothing is more free than an Inheritance It was purchased by Christ but it was given to us we receive it by vertue of his Testament and the Father's Promise It is called an Inheritance Ephes. 1.18 What is the Riches of the Glory of his Inheritance in the Saints an Inheritance cometh freely and without Burden and Encumbrance Thus we hold Heaven by all kind of Titles we have it by Purchase and we have it freely Christ maketh the Purchase and we possess the Gift It is a greater Security to our Hopes when we can look for Heaven from a Merciful Father and a Righteous Judg it is Just Christ having paid the Price Therefore it is called the Gift of God through Jesus Christ our Lord Rom. 6.20 It is the Father's Gift but for the greater Honour to God and security to us it is Christ's Purchase Vse 2. It sheweth the Necessity of becoming Sons to God if we expect Heaven Children can only look for a Child's Portion The World is a common Inn for Sons and Bastards but Heaven is called our Father's House none but Children are admitted there John 3.3 Except a Man be born again he cannot see the Kingdom of God Seeing is often put for enjoying yet the Word is emphatical they shall not have so much as a glimpse of Heaven but are cast into everlasting Darkness A Man should never be quiet till he be one of the Family and can evidence his New Birth As they were put from the Priesthood as polluted that could not find their Genealogy Ezra 2.62 So if you cannot prove your descent from God you are disclaimed and reckoned not to God's but to Satan's Family Vse 3. It teacheth God's Children with Patience and Comfort to wait for this happy Estate Rom. 8.23 And not only they but our selves also who have the first Fruits of the Spirit even we our selves groan within our selves waiting for the Adoption to wit the Redemption of our Bodies You do not yet know what Adoption meaneth the Day of the Manifestation of the Sons of God is to come 1 John 3.3 Behold now are we the Sons of God but it doth not appear what we shall be It doth not appear therefore wait There is the Spirit of an Heir and the Spirit of a Servant as we read of the Spirit of Adoption A Servant must have something in Hand Pay from Quarter to Quarter they do not use to expect their Master's Possession but an Heir waiteth till it fall You may look upon the Compellation as an Expression of Christ's hearty good-Will When he ●ueth for our Glorification he improveth all his Interest in God Father I will When he pleadeth for himself he useth the same Compellation Vers. 1. Father glorify thy Son Vers. 5. And now O Father glorify thou me with thine own self Thus here Christ's Heart is much set upon the Happiness of his Members if there be any
near you as Dogs snarling at one another for a bone or piece of Carrion 2. They destroy the welfare of our Bodies the part gratified is depressed by them Prov. 14.30 A sound heart is the life of the flesh but envy is the rottenness of the bones Prov. 5.11 Thou mourn at the last when thy flesh and thy body are consumed 3. These Lusts war against the Soul The perfection of the Soul consists in the Image of God which is defaced by these Lusts yea against the Graces and Motions of the Spirit Gal. 5.17 The flesh lusteth against the Spirit against the comfort of the Soul which dependeth on the holy sanctifying Spirit he is grieved when his work is hindered in us 4. These Lusts oppose our everlasting Felicity and Happiness when to gratifie the Flesh we run the hazard of losing Soul and Body for ever 1. By Efficiency they steal away our hearts from God take up our time turn our thoughts from the one thing necessary The great end of Faith is the saving of the Soul they make it the great end of their living to pamper the Body They put Heaven away from them sell it for a trifle in effect bid God keep his Heaven to himself Heb. 12.16 Prophane Esau for one morsel of bread sold his birt●right 2. By Desert Gal. 6.8 He that soweth to the flesh shall of the flesh reap corruption Rom. 6.13 Neither yield ye your bodies as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin God is provoked and so our Damnation is sure they spend their strength time estates on the service of fleshly Lusts surely these can look for nothing but everlasting perdition SERMON XI ROM VI. 13 Neither yield ye your members as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin but yield your selves unto God as those that are alive from the dead and your members as instruments of righteousness unto God HERE is the second Branch of the Exhortation which concerneth Vivification for expresly the Apostle speaketh to them as those that are alive from the dead This part of the Exhortation is propounded negatively Yield not c. positively but yield c. 1. The Negative is necessary For further declaring the sense of which he had said before Let not sin reign in your mortal body The body is mentioned as the seat of sin for two Reasons First Because these Lusts gratifie the Body and bodily Life and so pervert the Soul that is spoken to there Secondly Because they are executed by the Body this is spoken to here if they gain the consent of your minds yet yield not your members as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin let them not be acted by your bodies 2. Positively it is expressed But yield your selves unto God There observe the order set down first yield your selves unto God then your members as instruments of righteousness unto God The general Dedication is the ground of the Particular first I am Gods then I bestow my time and strength for God first we give our selves to him nor in part but in whole to serve him with all our heart and all our might and strength then sometimes the outward or inward Man as the nature of the business calleth for 3. In both take notice 1. Of the two opposite Masters Sin and God 2. The opposite Imployments are Righteousness and Vnrighteousness 3. The Instrument used by both and that is the Body or the members of the Body 1. The two Masters Sin and God the one is an Usurper the other is our rightful and most gracious Lord. God is our proper Lord for he is our Creator and therefore our Owner and Governour and he is our most gracious Lord jure beneficiario he hath obliged us to him by many benefits so that a Christian should say as Paul did Acts 27.23 His I am and him I serve 2. The two Imployments Vnrighteousness and Righteousness Unrighteousness is put for all evil works and actions for all sin is unrighteousness whether committed against God or man By sin we deal unrighteously with God whom we disobey and dishonour Mal. 1.6 If I be a Father where is mine honour if I be a Master where is my fear we deny God his due We deal unrighteously with our selves whom we defile and destroy 1 Cor. 6.18 He that committed fornication sinneth against his own body and Prov. 8.36 He that sinneth against me wrongeth his own soul. And also in many sins we hurt our Neighbour either in Soul Body Goods or good Name as is evident On the other side Holiness is Righteousness or giving God his due Righteousness is sometimes taken strictly for that Grace which inclineth us to perform our duty to man as 1 Tim. 6.11 Follow after righteousness godliness c. Rom. 1.18 The wrath of God is revealed from Heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men Sometimes largely for newness of Life for all those holy actions which are required of a Christian 1 Joh. 2.29 If ye know that he is righteous ye know that every one that doth righteousness is born of him 3. The Instrument used in both is the Body or the members of the Body For our Body is of a middle Nature which may be used well or ill and the members of the Body are weapons with which the Soul is armed to do well or ill and it is notable that the word used by the Apostle is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 instrumenta as we render it in the Text but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 weapons or arms as we translate it in the Margine The work on both sides is a kind of Warfare 1. They that serve sin or indulge bodily lusts sight for Sin and the Devil against God and their own Salvation 1 Pet. 2.11 Abstain from fleshly lusts which war against the soul. Rom. 7.23 I see another Law in my members warring against the Law of my mind While ye suffer the body to be thus employed ye wage war against God whether ye know it or owne it yea or no. 2. The other work is also a Warfare our Graces are called Armour of light Rom. 13.12 though you fight for your Duty you must perform it Doctrine That sincere Christians should not suffer themselves to be employed by Sin but offer up and present themselves to God to do his Will 1. Let us explain the Duty 2. Shew you the Necessity of it 1. In explaining the Duty here enforced let me observe to you 1. That there are two Masters which divide the World between them Sin and God every man doth serve one of these but no man can serve both Every man serveth one of these Sin or Righteousness God or Satan for there is no neutral or middle state either their time and strength is spent in the service of the Flesh or in the service of God Rom. 8.5 They that are after the flesh do mind the things of the flesh and they that are after the Spirit the things of the Spirit Gal. 6.8 They that sow to
not they No the Apostle saith Give not up your members as weapons of unrighteousness c. and elsewhere Glorifie God in your bodies and souls which are Gods And the Apostle pleadeth the dignity of the Body and how it is defiled by Fornication and other inordinacies 1 Cor. 6. per totum 2. That it is not enough to abstain from evil but we must do good for the Apostle saith Yield not and then yield So the Apostle saith 2 Tim. 2.21 If a man therefore purge himself from these he shall be a vessel of honour sanctified and meet for the masters use and prepared unto every good work So 2 Cor. 5.15 And that he died for all that they that live should not henceforth live unto themselves but unto him which died for them and rose again They are sinners that hide their Talent in a Napkin though they live not in apparent gross sins all that time and strength that is bestowed on sin is used against God but what is idlely and impertinently lost is not used for him Both deprive God of his Right the one alienate their time and strength the other mis spend it Some do not run into Gluttony Drunkenness Oppression Adultery these apparently use their bodies as weapons of unrighteousness but they do not live to God and so are defective in the other part 3. It sheweth what care we should take how we imploy our bodies for the members of the body are instruments of the Soul to execute that which it willeth and desireth and sin without the body is unfurnished with Arms. But chiefly two things should we take care of in the body the senses by which we let in sin and the tongue by which we let out sin for it is the Interpreter of the Heart First For the Senses a Christian should not be guided by his Senses but by his Reason and Conscience as sanctified by Grace Our Lord would teach us that it were better to want senses than gratifie them with an offence and wrong to God against them that cannot deny the pleasures of senses Mat. 5.29 30. If thy right eye offend thee pluck it out and cast it from thee for it is profitable for thee that one of thy members should perish and not that thy whole body should be cast into hell And if thy right hand offend thee cut it off and cast if from thee for it is profitable for thee that one of thy members should perish and not that thy whole body should be cast into hell Better be blind than by wanton gazing run the hazard of damnation not that we should maim our selves but of the two count it the less evil Therefore to want the sinful pleasure should not be so grievous when we should be content to want the sense it self The far greatest part of the world are meerly guided by their senses because the far greatest part of the world are unconverted and unsanctified and the world is full of allurements to the flesh and the more we enjoy the good things thereof the more is corruption strengthened within us and as the heart stands affected sensitive objects make a deeper or slighter impression on us Some temptations which are nothing to another may be great matters to some who cannot deny themselves without great difficulty Therefore when such temptations as suit with our fancies and appetites assault us with more than ordinary potency we must remember Sense is not to be the ruling Power in our Souls but Grace Sometimes sin is brought to our hands and the bait is played to our mouths as Joshua 7.21 Achan saw coveted and purloyned the wedge of gold Prov. 6.25 Lust not after her beauty in thy heart neither let her take thee with her eye-lids 2 Sam. 11.2 David saw Bathsheba and so his heart was fired In short Sense is an ill and dangerous Guide it was never given for a Judge or Counsellor to determine or direct but an Informer to represent the outward forms of things partly natural to inform us of things profitable or hurtful to the outward man partly spiritual to transmit the objects of Gods Wisdom Power and Goodness to our minds or to be the ordinary passage by which the daily effects of Gods Love and Mercy are conveyed to our hearts God instituted them for helps but we make them snares Well then better want senses than gratifie them with the displeasure of God to lose an Eye is a far less evil than to lose a Soul Secondly For the Tongue The Apostle saith it produceth a world of evil It hath a great use in Religion to vent the conceptions of our minds to the praise and glory of God Jam. 3.9 Therewith bless we God even the Father and therewith curse we men which are made after the similitude of God In the general think of this every member must be an instrument of Righteousness is my tongue now imployed for God or for Satan when you are apt to run into censuring detraction vain and frivolous talk Vse 2. To press you to this solemn Dedication of your selves to God intirely unreservedly irrevocably 1. God giveth himself to you in Covenant Father Son and Holy Ghost all their infinite Goodness Wisdom Power c. and will not you give your selves wholly to God 2. You are already absolutely wholly his and will not you consent that he shall be your God and you his People that is all that is wanting Jer. 24.7 And I will give them an heart to know me that I am the Lord and they shall be my people and I will be their God for they shall return unto me with their whole heart This God worketh by his renewing Grace 3. You are never so much your own as when you are Gods not as to disposal but as to enjoyment 1 Cor. 3.23 All are yours and ye are Christs and Christ is Gods There lieth your safety glory and happiness it is the foundation of all obedience and of all comfort 1. Of obedience you will not easily yield to temptations a Christian hath this answer ready I am dedicated to God 1 Cor. 6.15 Know ye not that your bodies are the members of Christ shall I then take the members of Christ and make them members of an harlot God forbid Nor will you stick at interest 2 Cor. 8.5 They first gave their own selves to the Lord and unto us by the will of God 2. Then for Comfort Joh. 14.1 Let not your hearts be troubled ye believe in God believe also in me 1 Tim 6.8 Having food and raiment let us be therewith content 1 Pet. 5.7 Casting all your care upon him for he careth for you This easeth you of all your cares and fears you are Gods nay it secureth you against eternal miseries Joh. 12.20 Where I am there shall my servant be Vse 3. To put us upon self-reflection Is your Dedication to God sincere If so 1. In the whole course of your Conversations you will prefer his Interest before
chains of darkness till the Supreme Judge execute deserved wrath upon them Augustine complaineth Ligatus eram non ferro alieno sed meâ ferreâ voluntate velle meum tenebat i●imicus me ●ihi catenam fecerat constriuxerat me Lord I am bound not with iron but with an obstinate will I gave my will to mine enemy and he made a chain of it to bind me and keep me from thee quippe ex voluntate perversa facta est libido dum servitur libidixi facta est consuetudo 〈◊〉 consuetudini non resistitur facta est necessitas a perverse will gave way to lustings and lusting made way for a custom and custom let alone brought a necessity upon me that I can do nothing but sin against thee Thus are we by little and little enslaved and brought under the power of every carnal Vanity Well now put all together are these things spoken of our selves or of another Is it so indeed that there is such a warring and are we not obliged to be watchful and careful 2. From the mischievous Influence and hainous Nature of reigning Sin 1. When sin reigneth it plucketh the Scepter out of Gods hands and giveth it to some vile and base thing which is set up in Gods stead as the setting up of an Usurper is the rejection of the lawful King The Throne belonging to God must be kept for him alone therefore every degree of service done to Sin includeth a like degree of Treason and Infidelity to Christ. Our Lord telleth us Mat. 6.24 No man can serve two masters for either he will hate the one and love the other or else he will hold to the one and despise the other ye cannot serve God and Mammon As no man can serve two Masters God and Mammon so every one serveth one of these God or Mammon for the Throne is never empty but between both of them you cannot divide your heart Neither Dominion nor Wedlock can endure Partners so that by cleaving to the one you refuse and renounce the other To serve God is to give up a mans mind and heart and whole man to know and do what God requireth whatever be the consequences now this doth necessarily imply a renunciation of all those things which cross and contradict the Will of God be it Devil World or Flesh. So to serve Mammon is to give up a mans mind heart endeavour to find out and follow after the Riches Honours and Pleasures of the World whatever may come of it He that would serve God must do nothing but what God alloweth him in the matter of Pleasure Profit or Preferment or any other thing for God is not well served unless he be served as a Master commanding and governing all our actions On the other side he that serveth the World giveth God only what the World and Flesh can spare so much Religion strictness and good Conscience as will stand with his carnal ends and affections for then the World is served as a Master when men dispose of themselves and all their concernments and rule themselves and please themselves according to that fleshly and worldly appetite and fancy that governeth them and God is no further loved obeyed pleased than that love of Honour Profit or Pleasure will give leave Well then by this you may plainly see that the setting up of any Lust to reign is a laying aside and a deposing of God for if a man be bound absolutely to resign up himself to the will and disposal of God and to obey him and love and serve him with all his powers and this man on the contrary giveth up himself into the hands of some carnal affection of his be it Pride Sensuality or Love of worldly things and this ruleth him and this governeth him and this he studieth to please and gratifie certainly these Pleasures or Profits or Honours are set up in Gods stead it is a plain refusing one and a cleaving to the other a despising God and Christ and a preferring the World and Satan And it will not help the matter though we profess Christ to be the Lord all formal Titles are a Mockage Mat. 7.21 Not every one that saith unto me Lord Lord shall enter into the kingdom of heaven but he that doth the will of my Father which is in heaven Luke 6.46 And why call ye me Lord Lord and do not the things which I say Many who profess Christ to be their Lord are as true bond-men to Satan as the Heathen who offered Sacrifice to him and a drunken and unclean Christian is as true a servant to the Devil as the Votaries and Worshippers of Priapus or Bacchus or Venus for he doth as absolutely command your affections as he did theirs and though you are Christs by Profession yet you are Satans by Possession and Occupation and the bond of your servitude is altogether as firm and as strong though it be more inward and secret than their Rites of Worship Neither will it help the matter that as you do not profess so you do not intend so though we do not formally intend this yet virtually we do and so God will account it it is finis operis though not operantis If a Wife be false to her Husbands bed will it be excuse enough to say she did not intend to wrong him or will such a saying excuse a Subject that is disloyal to his Prince and sets up an Usurper Well then what horrour should this beget in our minds and what care should we take that sin may not reign 2. The Reign of Sin is mischievous to us Sin when it once gets the Throne it groweth outragious and involveth us in so many inconveniences that we cannot easily disintangle our selves and get out again 1. This is one that it turneth the man upside down and degradeth and depresseth him to the rank of Beasts A brutish Worldling that once gratifieth his carnal affections is but a nobler kind of Beast he imployeth his Reason to gratifie his Appetite and puts Conscience under the Dominion of Sense and so inverteth the whole Nature of a man Tit. 3.3 Serving divers lusts and pleasures The worldly bait taketh advantage of the brutish part when Reason is asleep and then the Beast rideth and ruleth the man and Reason becometh a slave to Sensuality 2. This servitude is so burdensom as well as base and attended with so much pain and shame that those that know the service of sin as we all do by sad experience should use all caution that it never bring them into bondage Again the Apostle disswadeth from the reign of sin by this Argument Rom. 6.21 When ye were the servants of sin ye were free from righteousness what fruit had ye then in those things whereof ye are now ashamed As if he had said You have full experience of the service of sin and the fruits of it what fruit then before you had a contrary Principle set up in your hearts you
hath said Ye shall not eat of it neither shall ye touch it lest ye die She speaketh too warmly and with an impatient resentment of the restraint and too coldly of the commination God had said In dying ye shall die A faint denial is a kind of a grant Our Lord rebuketh the Devil with indignation Mat. 4.10 Get thee behind me Satan Secondly It must be a thorow universal Resistance Take the little Foxes dash out the brains of Babylons Brats the Devil would frighten you by propounding great sins at first but he approacheth by degrees Therefore Eph. 4.27 we must not give place to the Devil You set open the door to Satan by yielding a little a temptation is better kept out than gotten out when he hath but the narrowest passage or least opportunity he seeketh to re-enter and seat himself in the heart and exercise his former Tyranny and doth excite the person to commit more sin When the stone at the top of the Hill beginneth to roll downward it is an hard thing to stay it I 'le yield but once saith the deceived heart But the Devil chargeth us further and further till he hath left no tenderness in our Conscience as some that thought to venture but a shilling or two by the secret witchery of gaming have played away all their Estates Thirdly It is not for a time but perpetual It concerneth us not only to stand out against the first assault but a long siege what Satan cannot gain by argument he seeketh to gain by importunity but resist him stedfast in the faith 1 Pet. 5.9 as Joseph's Mistress spake to him day by day Gen. 39.10 Deformed objects when we are accustomed to them seem less odious As you rate away an importunate Beggar that will not be answered To yield at last is to lose the Glory of the Conflict Now many resist not You may know it 1. When you cannot bring your hearts to let sin go though Conscience worry you and condemn you for it as many men sin while their hearts condemn them Rom. 1.18 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they hold the truth in unrighteousness 2. When you slightly purpose hereafter to amend but do not presently resolve Acts 24.25 And as he reasoned of righteousness temperance and judgment to come Felix trembled and said Go thy way for this time when I have a convenient season I will call for thee The contrary you may see in David Psal. 119.60 I made haste and delayed not to keep thy commandments 3. When you do not consent to the necessary effectual means of your recovery which if you were truly desirous to get rid of sin you would do They that will not use the means do not desire the thing Prov. 21.25 The desire of the slothful killeth him for his hands refuse to labour 4. When in actual Temptations you interpose not a strong dissent or negative either by serious dislikes or rebukes deep groans hearty defiance or strong arguments which are the several ways of resistance Vse 2. Exhortation when God affordeth to poor captivated Sinners such help if they will but take it and make use of it in time surely then we should watch and strive And that I may deal the more effectually in this Use I shall distinctly unfold the Duty of watching and striving the means to curb and check sin First Watching 1. The spring and rise of it in the Soul are these three fundamental Graces of Faith Fear and Love otherwise it is but moral Prudence and Caution which will be too feeble a restraint to sin unless it be animated and inspired with these Graces First Faith puts upon watchfulness that Faith which looketh to things to come and maketh them in a manner present to the Soul it is a realizing sight Heb. 11.1 Now Faith is the substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen The more lively sense we have of the concernments of another World and the more mindful we are of our eternal Enjoyments the more watchful In every sin it is our eternal Enjoyments are in danger and Heaven and Hell are not things to be sported with or ventured and put to hazard for a little carnal satisfaction Many expound that Eph. 6.12 We wrastle with spiritual wickednesses in high places 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 about heavenly things for the word Places is supplied it is in the Original only in or for the heavenlies the main quarrel between us and Satan is about high and heavenly things which tend to the honour of God and the eternal good of our Souls it is not our temporal and worldly so much as our spiritual and heavenly concernments which are struck at The Devil would fain cheat us of our Souls our God and our Happiness and by propounding some base and unworthy trifle deprive us of everlasting Glory Now a man that hath a sense of Eternity deeply impressed upon his heart and hath made eternal things his scope 2 Cor. 4.18 he hath his eyes in his head is careful not to lose his interest in and hope of these things who knows that the whole World will not countervail the loss of his Soul and that one glimpse of Heavens Glory and Happiness doth so much out-shine all the Pomp and gawdy Vanities of the present Life that he dareth not let his heart linger after these things lest he should forget or neglect those better things He is cautious of coming short of the heavenly rest which his eye and his heart is upon Heb. 4.1 But they whose Faith about these things is either weak or none at all are bold and venturous as if there were no such danger in sins and temptations they forgets God and their Souls and the great account they must give of all their actions to their impartial Judge and the eternal recompences of Heaven and Hell into which all the World shall at last issue themselves Secondly Fear or a reverend and awful regard of Gods Eye and Presence they are afraid to do any thing unseemly in his sight Gen. 39.9 How can I do this wickednes● and sin against God How will God take it to be affronted to his Face As Esther 7.8 Will he force the Queen before me in the house So Shall we give vent to our sin when God seeth and heareth Void our excrements in his presence The Israelites were commanded to march with a paddle Deut. 23.12 13 14. Thou shalt have a place also without the camp whither thou shalt go forth abroad And thou shalt have a paddle upon thy weapon and it shall be when thou wilt ease thy self abroad thou shalt dig therewith and shalt turn back and cover that which cometh from thee For the Lord thy God walketh in the midst of thy camp to deliver thee and to give up thine enemies before thee therefore shall thy camp be holy that he see no unclean thing in thee and turn away from thee The Masters eye makes the Servant diligent the presence
teacheth us That none can be a Servant to another but by the election and consent of his own proper Will and whatsoever service men enter they enter it of their own accord the Devil cannot force us to evil and Christ will not force us to good The second Notion teacheth us That we must not judge of our service to any either to Sin or God by our professed Consent barely but by our Practice and Obedience if we obey sin we are servants to sin whatever we prosess or say to the contrary and if we do not live in obedience to God whatever Professions Vows and Covenants we make to him or with him we are not Servants of God 2. In the Application of it to the matter in hand take notice 1. Of two contrary Masters Sin and Obedience 2. Of two contrary Rewards and Wages Death and Righteousness 3. The suiting the one to the other Sin and Death Obedience and Righteousness 1. By Sin he meaneth sinning wittingly and willingly constantly easily By Death as the Wages is understood the second or eternal Death 2. The other Master By Obedience is meant obedience to God if you obey Gods commands and as our Duty is expressed by Obedience so our Reward by Righteousness He doth not say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the Law of Contraries would seem to require but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by Righteousness you may expound it either of our Title to Happiness or our Reward it self 1. Our Title you shall be pronounced and accepted as righteous and so Heirs of eternal Life There are many acceptations of the word Righteousness in Scripture In short take them thus 1. It may be taken in a Moral sense for a good disposition of mind and heart Eph. 4.24 That ye put on the new man which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness 2. In a Legal or Judicial sense for a state of Acceptation or the ground of a Plea before the Tribunal of God So Rom. 5.19 By the obedience of one many shall be made righteous In this Judicial sense either with respect to the Precept or the Sanction 1. With respect to the Precept or the Law as it is sincerely and Evangelically obeyed 1 Joh. 3.7 He that doth righteousness is righteous And Luke 1.6 They were both righteous before God walking in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord blameless this is opposite to reatus culpae 2. With respect to the Sanction which is double the Threatning or the Promise With respect to the Threatning so Righteousness implieth freedom from the Obligation to Punishment So Rom. 1.17 18. For therein is the righteousness of God revealed from faith to faith as it is written The just shall live by faith For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men who hold the truth in unrighteousness this is opposite to reatus poenae With respect to the Promise so Righteousness imports our Right and Title to eternal Life not from any merit in our obedience it self but Gods gracious condescension in the Covenant There is laid up for me a crown of righteousness 1 Tim. 4.8 Our Title is first by Faith then continued by new Obedience 2. It may imply the Reward it self for it is said elsewhere Isa. 48.18 O that thou hadst hearkened to my commandments then had thy peace been as the river and thy righteousness as the waves of the sea Where by righteousness is not meant any moral Vertue or gracious Disposition but Prosperity and Happiness So Prov. 8.18 Riches and honour are with me yea durable riches and righteousness thereby is meant Felicity As Iniquity is put for Punishment He shall bear his iniquity so Righteousness is put for Reward So here Righteousness is opposed to Death and signifieth eternal Life Doctrine That it greatly concerneth Christians to consider upon what they bestow or imploy their Time Service and Obedience This will be evident by these Considerations 1. That the great business which belongeth to our Duty is the choice of a Master or to consider to what we must addict our selves and upon what we bestow our minds and hearts our life and love our time and strength 1 Kings 18.21 How long halt ye between two opinions If the Lord be God follow him but if Baal then follow him He brings the business to a tryal not to give them liberty to be of what Religion they pleased but on deliberation to chuse the best So Josh. 24.15 If it seem evil to you to serve the Lord chuse you this day whom you will serve He doth not leave it to their liberty to chuse God or Idols but would have them to compare the best with the worst the service of God or the service of Devils which will be Life and which will be Death which will be good and which will be bad for them not as if it were doubtful which to chuse for that is evident to any man in his right wits nor to blunt their zeal by any demurrer in the case but rather quicken and hasten their choice but chiefly that they might chuse freely and be more firm and constant in their Covenant and to shame them that they might be more inexcusable if pretending to God they divert their obedience from him to other things Well then whom will you serve and love To whom will ye give up your minds and hearts and whole man To do what God requireth or to serve and please your Lusts Make a right choice and then be firm and true to it Will you pretend to be Servants to God and do nothing for him 2. The Considerations which must guide us in this choice are two 1. Right and Interest 2. The Good or Hurt that we all get by it for there are wages proportionable and suitable to every work 1. Where lyeth the Right to command and who hath the best Title to us Justice is to give every one his own Give unto Caesar the things that are Caesars and to God the things that are Gods Surely sin is an Usurper but God is our rightful Lord for he made us and to him we must give an account of our time strength and imployments Acts 27.23 There stood by me this night an Angel of God whose I am and whom I serve And 2. His service turneth to the best account Our Apostle telleth us Rom. 6.23 The wages of sin is death but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord. 3. That in a moral Consideration there are two Masters sinful Self and the Holy God This distribution comprehendeth all men either they are servants of Sin or servants to God whosoever yieldeth his consent or obedience to sin doth thereby make himself the true and proper servant of sin and whosoever yieldeth his obedience to God is the servant of God If you deliver up your selves to serve God to obey his commands you will be reputed as his Servants and so accepted
after it had for a long time been possessed by another this Favour was granted to Captives when carried into a foreign Country but denied to Fugitives that ran away out of Treachery or for some Crime afterwards it was inlarged to those that were driven away by Famine or removed themselves whilst an inundation of Enemies whom they could not resist possessed their Country they had a Right of entring again upon their Houses and Lands though by reason of their long absence they were possessed by another This was the case of the Shunamite who having left her Country for seven years to avoid the Famine her House and Land was seized on 2 Kings 8 9.5 which upon intercession was restored This is not directly the case in hand only so far that other Lords have had Dominion over us which is not only by our departure from the Lord but by our Rebellion only in reason his Right should be owned by Repentance and Resignation of our selves to his use and service 1 Thess. 1.9 Ye turned to God from Idols to serve the living and true God So much for the third Consideration that morally speaking there are but two Masters Sin and Obedience 4. That by yielding our selves to obey either of these we become servants to the one or the other If we yield our selves to obey sin we are servants of sin and by yielding our selves to obey God we become servants of God 1. I shall speak of Sins Servants and two things I shall say of them First That they enter upon this Service voluntarily indeed and draw this woful slavery upon themselves but not by solemn Contract and Covenant the Servants are ashamed of their Master and will not owne themselves to be what they are for they are cheated into their slavery they are inticed and drawn away Jam. 1.14 Every man is tempted when he is drawn away of his own lust and inticed They yield themselves to obey sin by voluntary inclination but not by express Covenant they are not forced but inticed and willingly put themselves into this bondage but they do not openly profess it but their course of life sheweth it their hearts are upon evil and so they are Rebels and Enemies to God and refuse his blessed Government Col. 1.21 You that were sometimes alienated and enemies in your mind by wicked works yet now hath he reconciled Secondly The second thing which I observe is That they are not only Servants in legal Reputation or so accounted before God as Joh. 8.34 Whosoever committeth sin is the servant of sin but they are so by woful Captivity or a sad Necessity they have brought upon themselves for they are deprived of all liberty to help themselves 2 Pet. 2.19 While they promise them liberty they themselves are the servants of corruption for of whom a man is overcome of the same is he brought into bondage Our service to God is a debt of Duty their serving sin is a debt of Fatal Necessity He is a Free-man that hath right and power to dispose of himself or his own actions or imployments but he is a servant that is at another mans beck and disposal and cannot do what he would be it de Jure or de Facto Now then the servants of sin though it is true de Jure of Right they should do it yet de Facto they are very slaves to their brutish affections and have no power to resist Temptations or come out of their wretched condition when they have some mind to it and are convinced of better 2. Of Gods Servants I observe two things First That they become so not only by voluntary Inclination but open Profession and express Covenant God will have no servants but who deliberately adhere to him and by choice bind themselves to walk in his ways 2 Cor. 8.5 They first gave up themselves to the Lord an● unto us by the will of God a voluntary surrender is necessary So Isa. 66.4 They chuse the things that please me and take hold of my Covenant and v. 6. They joyn themselves to the Lord to serve him This deliberate voluntary choice is expressed in a solemn Covenant-resignation God is not a Master to be ashamed of but may and must be publickly owned Secondly Our consent or yielding our selves to obey is not enough but it must be verified and made good by a continual course of actual obedience on our part for besides the yielding up of our selves to obey his servants ye are whom ye obey Many make Covenant with God but do not keep Covenant with God they will and purpose but do not perform It is known whose servants we are not only by our consent but our continual practice if we live in a constant careful obedience to God we are his servants though conscious of many failings The Tryal of our Case mainly runneth upon two things the Bent of our Hearts and the Drift of our Lives our Choice and our Course We read of some that said All that the Lord hath commandeth us we will do and God answered Deut. 5.29 O that there were such a heart within them that they would fear me and keep all my commandments always They are now in a good mood promise fair Therefore it is not enough to yield up our selves to God unless we imploy our selves for God for besides the purpose and inclination there must be a constant practice and study to please him 5. Both sorts of Servants receive wages suitable and proportionable to the work they have done 1. Of Sin unto Death The Servants of Sin bring upon themselves eternal Death Sin and Death go hand in hand in all the Methods of his Justice God hath put them together Jam. 1.15 Then when lust hath conceived it bringeth forth sin and sin when it is finished bringeth forth death Now this should be thought of by us when Satan and your own corrupt Hearts shew you the Bait Faith should see the Hook this will be Death or I am going about that which in its Nature doth expose me to eternal Death The fear of temporal Death inflicted by the Magistrate restraineth much of the evil of the World and keepeth men from things forbidden by him and is not God more to be dreaded There is but one Law giver that is able to save or to destroy that hath potestatem vitae necis aeternae Jam. 4.12 and shall not we fear and reverence him Sinners that go on wilfully in their sins seem to make nothing of dying eternally 2. Of Obedience into Righteousness that is if we be the faithful Servants of God we shall have the reward of eternal Life not only non-condemnation or freedom from eternal Death but the everlasting possession of Glory and Blessedness There is none of us can say that God bids us serve him for nought or to his loss he propoundeth endless Rewards and Punishments to procure obedience to his Laws as he will punish the wicked with endless Miseries so he will
reward the obedient with everlasting Blessedness Though we merit nothing of him you cannot say you work for nothing he is very ready to manifest his approbation of the obedient Mat. 25.23 Well done good and faithful servant It is a delightful thing to him to speak good of his Servants and that before all the World Vse 1. We learn hence whom we should chuse for our Master or to whom we should stand in the relation of Servants 1. Consider Gods unquestionable Title that will awe the Soul You are Servants of God by Obligation before you are Servants of God by Consent you are His by Creation before you are by Contract Our self-obligation is necessary the more to enliven the sense of our Duty and make it more explicite and active upon our hearts and more acceptable to God God will make the wicked see he hath a right to punish them without asking their consent but he will not reward you without your consent unless you willingly give up your selves to serve him and obey him Christ forceth not men to good against their wills but the effect of his victorious Grace is to make you willing to bring you to yield up your selves to obey him Psal. 110.3 Thy people shall be willing in the day of thy power 2. Consider the necessity of Obedience Our service is not abrogated by Grace but changed His servants ye are to whom ye obey we are redeemed that we may obey Luke 1.74 75. That we being delivered out of the hands of our enemies might serve him without fear in holiness and righteousness before him all the days of our lives We are pardoned that we may obey Psal. 130.4 There is forgiveness with thee that thou mayest be feared We are renewed and sanctified that we may obey 1 Pet. 1.2 Elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father through sanctification of the Spirit unto obedience And when once we are brought into this blessed estate and are in Covenant with Christ to depend upon him and obey him then all the subsequent Priviledges are dispensed according to our obedience as the further supply of the Spirit Acts 5.32 Whom God hath given to them that obey him and eternal Life Heb. 5.9 And being made perfect he became the Author of eternal life to all them that obey him all the effects of Gods internal and external Government all the intervening Communion with God that we have in the World Joh. 14.21 He that hath my commandments and keepeth them he it is that loveth me and he that loveth me shall be loved of my Father and I will love him and will manifest my self unto him that is he will inlighten him with the knowledge of his Salvation quicken him by the saving operations of his Grace and lift up the light of his Countenance upon him give them peace of Conscience Mat. 11.29 Take my yoke on you and learn of me for I am meek and lowly in heart and ye shall find rest for your souls a sanctified use of such good things as he seeth meet for them Isa. 1.19 If ye be willing and obedient ye shall eat the good of the land It is his obedient Servants that Christ is so tender of and willing so to cherish and to give to them the effects of his illuminating quickening comforting Grace and of his fatherly Providence 3. Consider much what it is wherein you should obey him or study to know his Will Eph. 5.17 Be not unwise but understanding what the will of the Lord is Rom. 12.2 Be not conformed to this world but be ye transformed in the renewing of your minds that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God Doubtfulness of our Duty doth exceedingly weaken our care of obedience so it doth also our detestation and resistance of sin when you are sure a thing is sin you will be more shy of medling with it and when you are sure it is a Duty Temptations will less draw you from it for it will strike you with horrour in the hour of Temptation What! shall I disobey God by venturing to do that which he hath forbidden or omitting to do that which he hath expresly commanded When our Duty is once made matter of Controversie you shall always find people less serious in it therefore it is the Lords mercy that most of the necessary things are unquestionable and out of debate otherwise sin would be more commonly committed and with less regret of Conscience Therefore it concerneth you to understand what is Duty or what is Sin that want of Light may not disable nor enfeeble your Practice and abate your Zeal for such things as God hath commanded or against such things as God hath forbidden 4. To continue your Resolution of obeying God you should often consider of two things what is past and what is to come First What is past the fruit of serving Sin and obeying God The fruit of serving sin Alas we cannot look back without shame and blushing Rom. 6.21 What fruit have you of those things whereof you are now ashamed The object of shame is either Folly or Filthiness now your eyes are opened by Grace you see both in that former course of Disobedience wherein you wandred from God But what fruit had ye then It filled you with the bondage of anguish and fear that you could not have one comfortable thought of God and alas what was all the vanishing pleasures of sin to this trouble and anxiousness of mind And you that have tasted of these bitter waters will you try once again What an evil and bitter thing it is to forsake God and walk in the way of your own hearts Jer. 2.19 They that have smarted before are wont to be more cautious afterwards a Child that hath been bitten by a snappish Curr will not easily venture his fingers again They reasoned Joshua 22.17 Is the iniquity of Pear too little for us from which we are not cleansed until this day Will you again fly from the face of God and grow shy of him Sin is another thing in the review than it was in the committing do not lay open your old wounds and make Conscience bleed afresh But do not only remember the fruits of your Disobedience but your experiences of Obedience also in the tastes of Gods Love the Deliverances and Blessings vouchsafed to you as David Psal. 119.56 This I had because I kept thy precepts this Comfort this Peace or serenity of Conscience this Protection this Deliverance and why should we grow weary of God What iniquity have we found in him Micah 6.3 Wherein have I wearied you Secondly For what is to come what will be the fruit of Sin or Obedience Of sin unto death of obedience unto righteousness Sin in it self deserveth Damnation and Hell is not a matter to be jested with for this many are now in flames and will you take that path which leadeth down to the Chambers of Death But the
Concerning the Object it respects not the former but the latter Clause their being once Sinners is not the matter of his Thanksgiving but that they had received and obeyed the Christian Faith However this must be said That it doth heighten the Mercy or illustrate the Benefit it is a great Mercy that having been once slaves of sin yet now at length they were recovered by Grace To be brought into a state of Light and Life by the Gospel were a great Benefit if a man had always been good and holy at least not considerably bad but when God will take us with all our faults and those of so great and hainous a Nature surely we have the more cause to give thanks Well then he doth not could not give thanks that once they had been the servants of sin God was not the Author of their servitude to sin but he was of their obedience to the Doctrine of Life his Mercy turned the former evil to good Or if you will take that into any part of the Thanksgiving it must be thus Since the condition of the servants of sin is so miserable God be thanked that you have escaped it 2. From whom he expects this Thankfulness I answer First It doth excite their Thanksgiving he exciteth them to give thanks for this blessed Change wrought in them he moveth them not to give thanks for Riches and secular Honours nor so much as consider whether they had or wanted these things but for the good estate of their Souls that they were partakers of so great a Benefit as from servants of Sin to become servants of Christ. Secondly It expresseth his own Thanksgiving on their behalf as congratulating and rejoycing with them in this mercy The Angels rejoyce at the conversion of a sinner Luke 15.10 So should we rejoyce in the good of others especially the Pastors of the Church 3 Joh. 4. I have no greater joy than to hear that my children walk in the truth Nothing that I more delight in in the World than to hear that those that are converted by me live after a Christian manner Doctrine That to be turned from the Service of Sin to the sincere Obedience of the Gospel is a Benefit that we cannot sufficiently be thankful for Let me represent it in the Circumstances of the Text. 1. Here is a Reflection upon their past state Ye were servants of sin This is necessary and useful First To heighten the sense of our Priviledges by Grace alas what were we when God first sought after us Slaves to Sin and Satan and Children of Wrath even as others Look as Jacob by remembring his poor condition doth raise his heart the more to admire Gods bounty to him Gen. 32.10 I am not worthy of the least of all thy mercies and of all the truth which thou hast shewed unto thy servant for with my staff I passed over this Jordan and now I am become two bands It would cure the Pride of many if they would remember their mean Originals and how like the Hop-stalk they mount up and grow out of the very Dunghil God solemnly injoyned his People when they injoyed the plenty of the Land to remember the obscure beginnings of their being a Nation and therefore when they offered the First-fruits they used this Confession Deut. 26.5 A Syrian ready to perish was my Father when he went down to Egypt and sojourned there with a few men and became a Nation great and mighty and populous Thus God taught them to acknowledge that their first Estate and Original was most wretched and miserable and so must we It holdeth more in moral things Eph. 2.1 2 3 4 5. And you hath he quickened who were dead in trespasses and sins Wherein in time past ye walked according to the course of this world according to the Prince of the power of the air the Spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience Among whom also we all had our conversation in times past in the lusts of our flesh fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind and were by nature the children of wrath even as others But God who is rich in mercy for his great love wherewith he loved us Even when we were dead in sins hath quickened us together with Christ. 1 Tim. 1.13 Who was before a blasphemer and a persecutor and injurious But I obtained mercy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all to be mercied That God should take us with all our faults and bring us into a better condition how doth this heighten the Mercy Secondly To quicken us to more diligence in our present Estate He that hath been a diligent Servant to an hard and cruel Master from whom he could not expect any recompence worth his Toil surely should be diligent and faithful in the Service of a loving gentle and bountiful Master This is urged Rom. 6.19 As you have yielded your members servants to uncleanness and to iniquity unto iniquity even so now yield your members servants to righteousness unto holiness And it is illustrated by several Scriptures 1 Cor. 15.9 10. I am the least of the Apostles and am not meet to be called an Apostle because I persecuted the Church of God But by the Grace of God I am what I am and his grace that was bestowed upon me was not in vain but I laboured more abundantly than they all And Acts 26.11 I punished them oft in every Synagogue and compelled them to blaspheme and being exceedingly mad against them I persecuted them even to strange Cities Thirdly To make the reality of the Change more evident There is a great Change wrought in those who are brought home to God it doth much hurt to Believers in judging of their own Case to forget what they once were whereas comparing these two what they are and what they were would sooner bring it to an issue and make the change more sensible and evident The Scriptures often direct us to this method Col. 1.21 And you that were sometimes alienated and enemies in your mind by wicked works yet now hath he reconciled Eph. 2.13 But now in Christ Jesus ye who sometimes were far off are made nigh by the blood of Christ. And Eph. 5.8 Ye were sometimes darkness but now are ye light in the Lord. Our gradual progress in Holiness is more insensible and therefore we may overlook the mercy because we see not such eminent effects as we found at first But all that belong to God may see a Change and say as the blind man Joh. 9.25 This one thing I know that whereas I was blind I now see they may see plainly they are not the same men they were before But when men forget the Estate they were once in and the great change the Spirit wrought in them and feel not such alterations continually they live in doubtfulness and darkness As our forgetting our poverty and affliction maketh us undervalue a more plentiful condition and those comforts which we would account
his Neighbour Or a man ready to die thank God for his recovery A slave of sin for his liberty by Christ This is to mock God He may thank God for Redemption for the new Covenant for the others and invitations of Grace for means and time to repent but for the great change and for an actual interest in Christ we can never thank him till first it be wrought in us and given to us 2. Live in admiration and acknowledgment of Grace Let this indear God to your hearts Eph. 1.6 To the praise of the glory of his grace wherein he hath made us accepted in the beloved and vers 12. That we should be to the praise of his glory who first trusted in Christ. 3. Make your Qualification more explicite by being printed and marked with your Religion in Heart 2 Cor. 3.18 You are changed into the same image from glory to glory In Life Phil. 1.27 Only let your conversation be as becomes the Gospel 4. Never return unto your old Bondage The time of slavery is past 2 Pet. 2.20 If after they have escaped the pollutions of the world through the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ they are again intangled therein and overcome the latter end is worse with them than the beginning They that revert to their old Bondage have no due sense of the mercy of their deliverance out of it SERMON XIX ROM VI. 18 19. Being then made free from sin ye became the servants of righteousness I speak after the manner of men because of the infirmity of your flesh for as ye have yielded your members servants to uncleanness and to iniquity unto iniquity even so now yield your members servants to righteousness unto holiness THESE words are an Inference and Conclusion from the foregoing Discourse shewing That as they had changed Masters they should change their course of life In them observe two things First The state of the believing Romans both past and present 1. Past that is implied they were once under the bondage and slavery of sin 2. Present they were freed from that Bondage and become the servants of Righteousness where observe two things 1. The freedom from their former Servitude 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this word is used of them that are emancipated or brought out of Bondage into Liberty Sin was a cruel and hard Master 2. Their entrance into a new Estate of Obedience in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ye became the servants or subjected your selves you have given up your selves to a more ingenious service Secondly The Exhortation hence deduced Where observe two things 1. The Preface to sweeten it 2. The Matter of it 1. The Preface to sweeten it I speak after the manner of men because of the infirmity of your flesh Some think the Apostle excuseth the earthly similitude whereby he had represented these matters as if he were forced to use these Notions of Master and Servants because of the weakness of their Understandings which could not brook a more sublime and spiritual way of discoursing Rather I think it is meant of the Equity of the Proposal which is set forth by two expressions 1. The Humanity of it 2. The due Consideration taken of the weakness of their flesh The spirit is willing but the flesh is weak Mat. 26.41 that is your will indeed is good but you must remember it may be hindred by your natural frailty So here the weakness of the flesh is mentioned to intimate their disability wholly and fully to do the Will of God that is allow for infirmities and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I speak moderately humanely and by way of condescension I propound that which is common and judged reasonable among men that is said to be common to men that doth not exceed the strength of men 1 Cor. 10.13 There hath no temptation taken you but such as is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 humane or common to men 2 Sam. 7.14 I will chasten him with the rod of men and with the stripes of the children of men that is not in rigor but with a gentle and fatherly hand 2. The matter is delivered by comparison of what is now due with what was formerly done by them when they were under the slavery of sin 1. What they had done They yielded their members to uncleanness and to iniquity unto iniquity Mark here two sins are mentioned Vncleanness and Iniquity By Vncleanness some understand carnal sins by Iniquity spiritual wickedness Others by Vncleanness understand those sins whereby the pleasure of the carnal inclination is gratified by Iniquity the violence of the Passions But the words are taken in a larger sense all sin is Vncleanness as defiling the Soul all sin is Iniquity as disagreeing with the Equity of Gods Law but divers words are heaped up to shew 1. That they stuck at no sin and whereas it is said They yielded up themselves to uncleanness and to iniquity unto iniquity it teacheth us That seldom doth sin stand alone one doth as it were impel and bind us to another venture a little and you have a tye upon you to go further 2. That they rested not in the inward consent or lust but added iniquity unto iniquity that is from the habitual inclination they proceeded to actual sin 2. What they should now do they should yield up their members servants to righteousness unto holiness that is imploy their time and strength to serve and please God and continually to grow in Grace Doctrine Those that are recovered from Sin to God should shew the reality of their Change by being as earnest in Holiness as before they were in sinning In all reason this may be required of you and less we cannot require Let me so open the Point that you may take along with you the sense of the words of the Text. 1. That there is a great Change wrought in all them that are brought home to God is evident by the whole Scripture which sets them forth as those that have been called out of darkness into light 1 Pet. 2.9 Who have passed from death to life Joh. 3.24 Translated from the power of Satan into the kingdom of Christ Col. 1.13 and many other such expressions And therefore every one that would judge of his own Estate must look after this change of state and wherein he differeth from himself unconverted when unconverted not only from others but from himself when and how the case is altered with him since he was acquainted with God in Christ. 2. The difference between the two Estates is chiefly seen in the change of Masters or the dominating Principle in the Soul what governeth the man for that determines our Estate There are some who are under the reign of sin even those who are contentious and do not obey the truth but obey unrighteousness Rom. 2.9 But there are others who are under the Empire and Soveraignty of Grace who are fitted and framed for what is right good and holy and hate
the contrary Eph. 4.24 And that ye put on the new man which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness the Constitution of their Souls is for Holiness and against sin Therefore we must see what governeth us 3. The two Masters are Sin and Righteousness as vers 18. Being then made free from sin ye became the servants of righteousness Righteousness is the opposite Master to sin before sin was their Master now Righteousness governs them he doth not say Being now made free from sin ye became the Servants of God but Servants of Righteousness All will pretend they are Servants of God but if you be so you will be Servants of Righteousness that is do those things which Right and Reason calleth for at your hands Therefore if you be Servants of God you will not neglect his Precepts What do you for him 4. The difference between the two Services is very great the Service of Sin is a Captivity and Bondage but the Service of Righteousness is true Liberty In the general they agree That both are Service committing sin or living in sin is a servitude Job 8.34 Whosoever committeth sin is the servant of sin and living to Righteousness is a service also not a slavery but a voluntary service as we oblige our selves to God to live righteously ever after the time we enter into his Peace and Obedience Therefore both are expressed in the Text by terms that imply serving our Emancipation from sin implieth a slavery before and our giving up our selves to God an Obedience for the time to come Therefore we are said to be Servants of Righteousness it is service in regard of the strictness of the Bond but liberty in regard of the sweetness of the Work it is service because we live according to the Will of another but it is liberty because of our inclination and delight to do it In short though we are said to be the servants to Righteousness yet there is no work more pleasant more honourable more profitable 1. More pleasant because it implieth a Rectitude and Harmony in the Soul of man it is a Feast to the Mind to do those things that are good and holy The Heathens saw it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. it breeds serenity surely much of the happiness of a man is to injoy himself which a wicked man cannot do whilst his Soul is in a Mutiny and his Heart disalloweth himself in the things which he doth love and practise and his Convictions check his Affections and Inclinations The fruit of righteousness is peace Isa. 32.17 And all the paths of wisdom are pleasantness Prov. 3.17 In the Body the vigorous motion of the Spirits breedeth chearfulness and Health ariseth when all the humors of the Body keep their due temperament and proportion In the World when all things keep their place and the Confederacies of Nature are not disturbed the Seasons go on comfortably In a Kingdom Pax est tranquillitas ordinis when all persons keep their rank and place there is Peace So when all things are rightly governed and ordered in the Soul 2. No work more honourable Prov. 12.26 The righteous is more excellent than his neighbour Many think it to be a low spirited thing to be godly and on the contrary imagine it a sort of Excellency to be free from the restraints of Religion and to live a life of Pomp and Ease without any care of the World to come The sensual World esteemeth little of a good man but alas that carnal Life which maketh shew of ease delight honour and riches is nothing to the Life of Grace for if God be excellent they are excellent they are made partakers of his Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 admitted into the Communion of his Life which all others are deprived of Eph. 4.18 when others live as Beasts they live as God when others live as Beasts their life is imployed about the noblest Objects and Ends and is assisted by the immediate influence of Gods own Spirit Therefore if Honour be derived from the true Fountain of Honour those who are most God-like are the most noble and excellent 3. No work is more profitable for it giveth us the favour and fellowship of God for the present and makes way for an everlasting fruition of him in Glory 1. The Favour and Fellowship of God for the present What an unprofitable drudgery is the life of an unsanctified Worldling in comparison of the work of an holy Man who lives in Communion with God and attendance upon God and hath access to him when he pleaseth with assurance of welcome and audience He hath a surer interest in God than the greatest Favourite in the Love of Princes God never faileth him Psal. 118.8 9. It is better to trust in the Lord than to put confidence in man It is better to trust in the Lord than to put confidence in Princes A poor Christian that liveth in obscurity in the World is never upbraided with the frequency of his Suits never denied Audience never hath cause to doubt of success The Princes of the Earth have uncertain minds love to day hate to morrow as in the instance of Haman their Being is uncertain Psal. 146.4 His breath goeth forth he returneth to his earth in that very day all his thoughts perish 1 Kings 1.21 Otherwise it shall come to pass when my Lord the King shall sleep with his fathers that I and my son Solomon shall be counted offendors Therefore attendance upon God is surely a noble work to be made Courtiers and Family-servants of the infinite Soveraign their Hearts are imployed in loving him Tongues in praising him Lives in serving him and are constantly maintaining converse with him through the Spirit surely these have the most profitable service Creatures can be imployed in 2. The everlasting Fruition of God in Glory hereafter Psal. 17.15 I will behold thy face in righteousness I shall be satisfied when I awake with thy likeness 1 Joh. 3.2 Now we are the sons of God but it doth not yet appear what we shall be but this we know that when he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is Then we shall be admitted into his immediate Presence to see his Face and shall be changed into and satisfied with his likeness we shall then live with God for ever and be in a larger capacity to know God and love him and then our work shall be our reward we shall be everlastingly loving and praising of God Well then though we are not altogether at liberty when freed from sin but enter into another Service yet this Service is no Bondage but a Blessedness and a beginning of our eternal Happiness and therefore to be preferred before Liberty it self 5. No man can be a Servant of Righteousness but he that is first by the Goodness and Mercy of God freed from the power and slavery of sin for the Apostle saith Being made free from sin ye became the
spiritual use For make it a Wanton once and it groweth stubborn and contumacious and secureth its interest and gaineth upon you If you allow your selves too free and full a gust and relish in any outward thing and let loose the heart to every alluring Object and withhold not your hearts from any joy and sense-pleasing Object which Solomon acknowledgeth as his sin Eccles. 2.10 vicious and inordinate desires increase upon you and the more you gratifie them the more they crave The way to abate their rage is to deny them and hold an hard hand over them to bring the body into subjection 1 Cor. 9.27 Liberty allowed in satisfying carnal desires doth marvellously increase and nourish them and will bring you to carelesness and hardness of heart if not some foul scandalous fall I am sure the heart is corrupted strangely Solomon saith Prov. 24.21 He that delicately bringeth up a servant shall have him become a son at length he will no more know his condition but grow bold and troublesome I am sure the Flesh was ordained to be a Servant and not a Master Take it in the mildest sense it was ordained to be God's Servant and our Servant and must be used as a Servant kept fit for Work We are the worse for License Our natural desires unless they feel Fetters and Restraints will grow unruly Therefore it is good to bridle the Flesh lest it grow masterly But when the Flesh is that which you mind which you indulge with too free a leave you deny your selves nothing but cocker every Appetite you bring a snare upon the soul and carnal Distempers are the more rooted and will prove troublesome if not destructive to you 7. Consider the consequence and weight of these things If it were a small matter we speak to you about you might refuse to give ear but it is in a case of Life and Death Eternal Life and Eternal Death We can tell you of many Temporal and present inconveniencies that come by the Flesh The Body the part gratified suffereth as well as the Soul by it Prov. 8.11 Thou shalt mourn at last when thy flesh and thy body is consumed It betrayeth you to commit such sins as suck your bones and devour your strength and give your years to the cruel It bringeth infamy and a blot upon the Name sins and scandals Pleasing the Flesh and minding the Flesh makes one turn Drunkard another a Wanton another a Glutton or an hard hearted Worldling or an ambitious vain-glorious Fool or a senseless Voluptuary These are no small things But rather consider it will be the eternal ruin of your precious and immortal Souls The more you give up your selves to please the Flesh the more you add fuel to that fire which shall never be quenched and provide matter of eternal sorrows and confusion of face to your selves There will a day come when God will call you to an account for this Eccles. 11.9 Rejoice O young man in thy youth and let thine heart chear thee and walk in the way of thine own heart and in the sight of thine eyes but know that for all these things God will bring thee to judgment Mark O Young Man We say dundum est aliquid huic aetati Some allowance is to be made to this Age before they have learned by experimenting pleasures to contemn them but the Young Man is admonished do what thou pleasest let thy wanton and wandring eye inflame the lusts of thine heart smother thy Conscience by all manner of sensual and vain delights but at length thou wilt learn the folly of this to thy bitter cost These things that are now so pleasing to the senses will one day gnaw and sting the conscience when God whom thou now forgettest shall whether thou wilt or no drag thee forth to Judgment and thou shalt in vain call upon the Rocks and mountains to cover thee 8. Consider how contrary it is to our Christian hopes to mind the flesh or please the flesh 1 Pet. 2.11 Dearly beloved I beseech you as strangers and pilgrims abstain from fleshly lusts which war against the soul. You are or you should be travelling into another Country where are the spirits of just men made perfect and this body of thine is to become a spiritual body will you please it not in a gross but in a more cleanly manner Nothing is more unsuitable Shall we that are going to Canaan hearken after the flesh pots of Egypt nothing is so contrary to our profession and that breedeth such unreadiness to depart out of the world as these vain delights and therefore if you be Strangers and Pilgrims you should not lust after worldly and fleshly things stop here lest you forget and forfeit your great Hopes 9. Consider What a vile unthankfulness and an abuse it is of that liberty which we have by Christ and all the blessings of Gods Providence Gal. 5.13 Ye are called to liberty only use it not as an occasion to the flesh We have a great liberty to use worldly comforts in order to Gods glory and as encouragements of Gods service and for the sweetning of our Pilgrimage but now when you use this liberty to please the Flesh you turn it into a bondage and offer a great abuse to Jesus Christ surely he never died to promote the power of sin he never gave us these comforts richly to enjoy to hearten our Enemy he was not a man of sorrows that we might live in Pleasures he did not suffer in the Flesh that we might have liberty to indulge and please the flesh he bestowed not so large a supply of outward comforts to hinder us from those better and eternal things which he purchased for us 1 Tim. 6.17 18. Or to turn them into oceasions of unrighteousness and means whereby to dishonour his name and destroy our souls Now if we would not do so something must be done 1. As to sinful inclinations 2. As to sinful motions 3. As to sinful actions 1. As to sinful and fleshly inclinations Observe them Weaken them 1. Observe them Satan doth and we should he observeth which way the Tree leaneth and what kind of diet our soul-distempers crave and suiteth his temptations accordingly as the Angler suiteth his bait as the fishes will take it for every month a bait 1 Cor. 7.5 Lest Satan tempt you for your incontinency He hath a bait of preferment for Absalom for he is ambitious a bait of Pleasure for Sampson for he is voluptuous a bait of Money for Judas for he is covetous thus will he furnish them with temptations answerably to their inclinations a man by temper voluptuous may despise Profit as an earth-worm doth Pleasure or Honour Reputation and great places or at least doth not so much value these things It is sad that our enemy should know our temper better than we do our selves and where we are weakest and how to make his assaults and there●ore observe your inclinations Flesh-pleasing is
or other a spirit of bondage or a spirit of adoption now with what kind of spirit are we acted withall Gods children who are adopted into his family may have some degree of the spirit of bondage great mixtures of fears and discouragements for only perfect love casteth out fear 1 John 4.18 but these fears are over-ballanced by the spirit of adoption they have some filial boldness a better spirit than a slave do not wholly sin away the love of a father tho the delight and comfort be much obstructed 't was a sad word for a child of God to speak Psal. 77.3 I thought of God and I was troubled The remembrance of God may augment our grief when conscience representeth his abused favours as the cause of his present wrath and displeasure with us but this is not their constant temper but only in great dissertions for a constancy while sin remaineth somewhat of bondage remaineth but there is a partial predominant legality the partial may be found in the regenerate who do by degrees overcome the servile fear of condemnation and grow up more and more into a Gospel Spirit certainly where that prevaileth there will be liberty 2 Cor. 3.17 Tho for a while the heir differeth nothing or nothing to speak of from a servant yet in time he behaveth himself as a son and is treated as a son and they get more comfort and joy in the service of God but the predominant legality is in the carnal it may be known by the governing principle fear or love the inseparable companion of the spirit of bondage is fear and love and sonship or the spirit of Adoption go together and where slavish fear prevaileth and influenceth our Religion it may be known by these two things First By their unwillingness and reluctancy to what they do for God The good they do they would not and the evil they do not they would do that is they would fain live in a sinful life if they durst and be excused from religious duties except that little outward part which their custom and credit engages them to perform like Birds that in a sunshine day sing in the Cage tho they had rather be in the Woods They live not an holy life tho some of the duties which belong to it they observe out of a fear to be damned if they had their freest choice they had rather live in the love of the creature than in the love of God and the pleasures of the flesh than the heavenly life But now they that have the spirit of Adoption are inclined to the love of God and Holiness have hearts suited to their work Psal. 40.8 Thy law is in my heart and Heb. 8.10 I will put my laws into their minds and write them upon their hearts They obey not from the urgings of the law from without but from the poise and inclination of the new nature not barely as enjoined but as inclined They do not say O that this were no duty or this sinful course lawful but O how I love thy law Psal. 119.97 O that my ways were directed Psal. 119.5 They do not groan and complain of the strictness of the law but of the remainders of corruption Rom. 7.24 Not who will free me from the law but who will free me from this body of death Their will is to serve God more and better not to be excused from the duties of holiness or serving him at all 2. By the cause of their trouble about what they have done or left undone They are not troubled for the offence done to God but their own danger not for sin but merely the punishment as Esau sought the blessing with tears when he had lost it Heb. 12.17 He was troubled but why Non quia vendiderat sed quia perdiderat Not because he sold it which was his sin but lost the priviledges of the birthright which was his misery so many carnal men whose hearts are in a secret love and league with their lusts yet are troubled about their condition not because they are affraid to sin but affraid to be damned 't is not Gods displeasure they care for but their own safety the Young-man went away sad and grieved Mark 10.22 because he had great possessions because he could not reconcile his covetous mind with Christs counsel and direction Felix trembled being convinced of sins which he was loath to discontinue and break off slavish fear tho it doth not divorce the heart from its lusts yet it raiseth trouble about them 3. USE is to press you to get rid of this spirit of bondage and to prevail upon it more and more For Motives 1. 'T is dishonourable to God and supposeth strange prejudices and misrepresentations of God as if his government were a kind of Tyranny grievous and hurtful to man and we think him an hard Master whom it is impossible to please as the evil and sloathful servant Matt. 25.24 25. I knew that thou wert an hard man reaping where thou hast not sowed and gathered where thou hast not strawed and I was affraid and went and hid thy talent in the earth His fear was the cause of his negligence and unfaithfulness which fear is begotten in us by a false opinion of God which rendreth him dreadful rigorous and terrible to the Soul while we look upon God through the Glass of our guilty fears we draw a strange Picture of him in our minds as if he were a ridgid Lawgiver and a severe Avenger harsh and hard to be pleased and therefore unwilling to submit to him 2. 'T is prejudicial to us in many regards 1. It hindereth our free and delightful converse with God The legal spirit hath no boldness in his presence but is filled with tormenting fear and horror at the thoughts of him The Spirit of adoption giveth us confidence and boldness in prayer Heb. 4.16 and Eph. 3.12 but on the contrary the spirit of bondage maketh us hang off from God As Adam was affraid and run to the bushes Gen. 3.12 and David had a dark and uncomfortable spirit and grew shy of God after his sin Psal. 32.3 4. fain to issue forth an injuction or practical decree in the Soul to bring his backward heart into his presence v. 5. And Cain went out from the presence of the Lord of Hosts Gen. 4.16 as unable to abide there where the frequent Ordinances of God might put him in remembrance of him And Jam. 2.29 The Devils believe and tremble They abhor their own thoughts of God as reviving terror in them The Papists think it boldness to go to God without the mediation and intercession of the Saints The original of that practice was slavish fear when God had opened a door of access to himself 2. It breaketh our courage in owning the ways of God and truths of God The Apostle when he presseth Timothy not to be ashamed of the testimony of the Lord nor his servants and to be partakers of the afflictions
of ours cannot be received into Heaven till they be changed and immortalized vers 53. This corruptible must put on incorruption and this mortal must put on immortality As a man to build his house better razeth it to the very bottom so God will have the body resolved into dust before he will set it forth in this new fair Edition As the creature is dissolved that is delivered from the Bondage of Corruption first the creature is set free and discharged from being obnoxious to change and alteration so we must first die then be raised in Incorruption which should make us the more ready and willing to submit to the appointed course and not only even dare to die but to be willing to dye since Death puts an end to sin and all our calamities and is the gate and entrance by which we pass into Glory 2. Doct. That the liberty to which Gods people are reserved is a glorious liberty Here I shall first speak of the liberty of Gods children in this life 2. The glorious liberty in the world to come for the one is a step to the other for 't is called a glorious liberty to distinguish it from the liberty of Gods children here in this world which is not glorious but gracious to shew how it exceedeth this estate in glory Therefore I must shew 1. What is the liberty of Gods children in this world 2. What in the world to come 1. What is the liberty of Gods children in this world There are three practical notions in which man is greatly mistaken Misery and Happiness Wisdom and Folly Liberty and Bondage Misery and Happiness Men count none miserable but the afflicted none happy but the prosperous because they judg by the present ease and commodity of the flesh Wisdom and Folly we all affect the repute of Wisdom Job 11.12 Please our selves with a false shew of wisdom neglecting what is true and solid which is to be wise to salvation Liberty and Bondage Man accepteth of a false liberty rather than none every man would be at his own dispose live as he list whereas the true liberty must be determined by our condition as creatures by our end as creatures that are in pursuit of true happiness To think the only true liberty is to be at the command and controul of none above our selves or to live at large according to our hearts desire is to affect a thraldom and bondage instead of liberty therefore it concerneth us to state exactly what is the liberty of Gods children now it either relateth to our duty or to our felicity 1. To our duty and so our liberty must he stated by these four Things 1. It must be such a liberty as becometh a creature who is in subjection to God 'T is not a power to live as we list but a power to live as we ought to affect a power to live as we list and to be accountable to none is to revive the arrogancy of Adam and to sup up again the poyson of the old Temptation ye shall be as Gods Gen. 3.5 'T was mans Original Ambition to be at his own dispose and Lord of his own Actions to think and speak and do as he pleaseth Psal. 12.4 Our tongues are our own who is Lord over us And the Rebellion of the Libertine World is set forth by casting off the Yokes and Cords of Duty Psal. 2.3 Let us break their ●ands asunder and cast away their cords from us Meaning there the Laws of God and Christ who are impatient of any restraint But this is a liberty cannot be justified for since man hath principium finem A principle upon which he dependeth in his Being and Operations and an end unto which he is appointed he must wholly give up himself to the will of another and his liberty lyeth in a readiness to comply with Gods commands who is his proper Lord to whom he is to subject himself and to give an account of all his Actions So that mans true liberty is Gods Service Psa. 119.45 I will walk at liberty for I seek thy precepts To will and do things pleasing to our Creator is the only liberty proper to us 2. It must be such a liberty as will leave us in a capacity to pursue our chief good and last end For all creatures are by natural instinct carried to their last end and the more fettered and restrained from this the more they are in Bondage the less the more free which holdeth good in all creatures but principally in the reasonable Certainly the reasonable nature is dishonoured and debased and under a defect as 't is disabled from the fruition of God or seeking after it we are in Bondage as we are captivated and intangled with the love of inferior things and so perverted and diverted from the pursuit of true happiness The restraining of our irregular desires is not Bondage but the gratifying of them for that is a snare to us Men live in sin with as much delight as Fishes in their own Element yet they are in bonds still as they are detained from God and turned aside from him our liberty is our power over inferior things and our Bondage is their power over us 1 Cor. 6.12 When we love God with all our hearts and serve him with all our minds we are free Liberty in the root implyeth an inclination to God as the supream Object of our love In the first Act In a power of chusing the means whereby we may injoy him In the second Act in an exercise of this power or in an actual pursuing the end by these means The elective power and a governing our Actions in order to our great end is our liberty the Angels that immutably and indeclinably adhere to their last end are freer than us who may err from it Well then None are such slaves as they that cannot use the means which should make them happy but imploy their whole time in seeking after Pleasures and Honours and Profits like dissolute Servants who being sent by their Masters to a Mart or Fair to buy Commodites spend their time and money in some Inn or House of Entertainment by the way and neglect their Fair or Mart to which they were sent to imploy their Money to the best advantage So we are inslaved by the way and neglect our main business 3. It must be such a liberty as will suit with the dignity of a rational creature as man is For that is the liberty of a man when he acteth with a condecency to the reasonable nature Man was at first made to be happy his happiness consisted in the Fruition of God and his subjection to him was no captivity and restraint but rather a part of that blessedness but we became bondmen not only by breaking the Law of God but by disordering the constitution of our Souls by submitting conscience and reason to our lusts so suffering the beast to ride the man for the rule of
Heaven not to do my own will but the will of him that sent me 2. We were redeemed is to this end For we are redeemed unto God Rev. 5.9 Thou hast redeemed us to God by thy Blood To be redeemed unto God is to be redeemed to his Service and admitted into his favour and friendship and Communion with him to restore Gods right to us and our Happiness in the injoyment of Heaven Christ first appeased Gods wrath and restored us to a course of Service which we should comfortably carry on till we have received our wages Luke 1.74 75. That he would grant unto us that being delivered out of the hands of our Enemies we might serve him without fear in holiness and righteousness before him all the days of our life 3. Our entring into covenant with God implyeth it In every Covenant their is Ratio dati accepti Something given and something required Isa. 56.4 They choose the things that please me and take hold of my Covenant To take hold of his covenant there is to lay claim to the Priviledges and benefits promised and offered therein now this cannot be done unless we choose the things that please him That is voluntarily deliberately not by chance but choice enter into a course of obedience wherein we may be pleasing or acceptable to him this is the fixed determination of our Souls Our faces must be set heavenward and the drift aim and bent of our lives must be for God to walk in his way Rom. 12.1 I beseech you therefore Brethren by the mercies of God that ye present your Bodys a living Sacrifice holy acceptable to God A man devoteth himself to God out of the sense of this love to serve him and please him in all things 4. The relations which result from our Covenant Interest There is the Relation between us and Christ of Husband and Spouse Hos. 2.19 Now the duty of the Wife is to please the Husband 1 Cor. 7.34 The relation of Children and Father 2. Cor. 6.18 I will be a Father to you and ye shall be my Sons and daughters saith the Lord. Now the duty of Children is to please the Parents And that is said to be well pleasing to the Lord Col. 3.20 and the rather because 't is a pattern of our own duty to him Masters and Servants Ezek. 16.8 Thou entredst into covenant with me and becamest mine Acts 27.23 Whos 's I am and whom I serve They that please themselves carry themselves as if they were their own not Gods All that we are and all that we have and can do must be his and used for him in one way or another First Vse is for Reproof of those that study to please men to approve themselves to the World and to be accepted in the World that is their great end and scope 1. How can these comply with the great duty of Christians which is to please the Lord Gal. 1.10 If I yet pleased men I should not be the Servant of Christ. To hunt after the favour of men and to gain the applause of the World is contrary to the very Essential Disposition of the Saints whose great aim is to approve themselves to God however men esteem of them There is a pleasing men to their Edification Rom. 15.2 Let every one of us please his Neighbour for his good to Edification and 1 Cor. 10.33 Even as I please all men in all things not seeking mine own profit but the profit of many that they may be saved But to please the sinful humours dispositions and affections of men to make this our great Scope is contrary to sincerity and fidelity in Christs Service Certainly a man ought not to disoblige others much less irritate and stir up the corruptions of others but his great care must be to approve himself to God 2. There is no such necessity of the approbation of men as of God his acceptation and the Testimony of a good Conscience concerning our fidelity in his Service is more than all the favour countenance applause or any advantage that can come by men Choose the approbation of Christ and you are made for ever 't is not so if you choose the approbation of men Please God and no matter who is your enemy Prov. 16.9 Please men and God may be Angry with you and blast all your carnal Happiness as well as deny you eternal happiness Please the Lord and that is the best way to be at peace with men Second Vse by way of self Reflection Is this your great scope and end 1. Your end will be known by your work If you labour to approve your self to God in every relation in every Condition in every business in every Imployment and are still useing your selves all that you have for God this is your trade this is your study you are still at his work that if a man should ask you what are you a doing Whose work is it that you are Imployed about You may be able truely to say 't is the Lords for whom are you studying preaching conferring praying what guideth you in all your relations to whom do you approve your selves for whom are you sick or well 2 Cor. 5.15 That they which live should not live to themselves but unto him which dyed for them and Rom. 14.7 8 9. For none of us liveth to himself and no man dyeth to himself for whether we live we live unto the Lord and whether we dye we dye unto the Lord whether we live therefore or die we are the Lords What moveth you to go on with any business who supporteth you in your business can you say to God what God would have me to do I do it 2. If this be your end it will be known by your Solace So much as a man doth attain unto his end so much doth he attain of Content and Satisfaction 2 Cor. 1.12 For our rejoycing is this the Testimony of our conscience that in simplicity and Godly sincerity we have had our conversations in the World not with fleshly wisdom but by the grace of God we have had our conversations in the World You will not rejoyce so much in the Effects of his common bounty as in his special love So Psa. 4.7 Thou hast put gladness in my heart more then in the time when their corn and wine increased 3. If Gods glory be your scope any Condition will be tolerable to you so as you may injoy his favour Mans displeasure may be the better born yea poverty and want your great cordial is your acceptation with God and losses are the better born as David comforted himself in the Lord his God when all was lost at Zicklag And Hab. 2.1 I will stand vpon my Watch and set me upon the Tower and will watch to see what he will say unto me and what I shall answer when I am reproved SERMON XIII 2 Cor. 5.10 For we must all appear before the Iudgment seat of Christ that every
promised Were the believers of the Old Testament deceived that expected his coming in the flesh Surely Christ never meant to deceive us when he said John 14.2 3. I will come again if it were not so I would have told you See Serm. on Matth. 25 th v. 6. 2. The types shew it I shall instance in one which is the High Priest's entring with Blood into the Holy place within the vail and when he had finished his Service and Ministration there he came forth to bless the people which the Apostle explaineth and applyeth to Christ Heb. 9. from 24. verse to the 28. 3. There are Ordinances appointed in the Church to keep afoot the remembrance of his promise the Lords Supper 1 Cor. 11.26 For as often as ye eat this bread and drink this cup ye do shew forth the Lords death till he come He hath left it as a monument of his faithfulness that upon all occasions we may renew our hopes and expectations of it 4. We have an inward pledge his Spirit and the visits of his grace He hath taken our flesh and left with us his Spirit He went not from us in anger but in love to set all things at rights and to bring us there where he is 5. Christs interest is concerned in it that the Glory of his Person may be seen His first coming was obscure and without observation Then he came in the form of a Servant but now he will come as the Lord and Heir in Power and Glory Then John Baptist was his forerunner now an Archangel Then he came with Twelve Disciples men of mean Condition in the World a few poor fisher men now with Legions of Angels Jade 14. Then as a Minister of Circumcision now as the Judge of all the World Then he invited men to repentance now he cometh to render vengeance to the neglecters and despisers of his grace Then he offered himself as a Mediator between God and Man as an high Priest to God and an Apostle to men Heb. 3.1 But vailed his Divinity under the infirmities of his flesh now he cometh in Gods name to Judge men and in all his Glory Then he wrought some Miracles which his enemies imputed to Diabolical Arts and Magical Impostures at the day of Judgment there will be no need of miracles to assert the Divinity of his person because all will be obvious to sense Then he prepared himself to suffer death now he shall tread death under his Feet Then he stood before the Tribunals of men and was condemned to the cursed death of the Cross now he shall sit upon a Glorious Throne all Kings and Potentates expecting their doom and sentence from his mouth Then he came not to Judge but to save now to render unto every one according to their works Then he was scorned buffeted spit upon Crowned with Thorns but now Crowned with Glory and Honour Then he came to bear the sins of many now without sin not bearing our burden but our discharge not as a Surety but as a pay Master not as a Sufferer but a Conqueror triumphing over Death Hell and the Devil He cometh no more to go from us but to take us from all misery to himself 2. That he may possess what he hath purchased He bought us at a dear rate and would he be at all this loss and preparation for nothing Surely he that came to suffer will come to Triumph and he that purchased will possess Heb. 2.13 3. With respect to the wicked 'T is a part of his office to Triumph over them in their final overthrow All things shall be put under his feet Isa. 45.23 Rom. 14.10.11 Phil. 2.10 4. To require an account of things during his absence what his Servants have done with their Talents Matth. 25. What his Church have done with his Ordinances how things have been carryed during his absence in his house 1 Tim. 6.14 Keep this Commandment without rebuke unto the appearing of Jesus Christ. Whether men have carryed themselves well or beaten their fellow Servants and eaten and drunk with the Drunkard whether they have strengthned the hands of the wicked oppressed with censures the most serious of his Worshippers what disorders in the World what violation of the Law of Nature 2 Thes. 1.8 2. The Vniversality Who must be judged we must all All mankind which ever were are and shall be No Age no Sex no Nation nor Dignity nor Power nor Wealth nor Greatness can excuse us In the World some are too high to be questioned others too low to be taken notice of But there all are taken notice off by head and pole not one of the Godly shall be lost but will meet in that general assembly Nor shall any of the wicked shift the day of his appearance as we may obey in every state and sin in every state so in every state we must give an account All that have lived from the beginning of the World till that day shall without exception appear from the least to the greatest before the Tribunal of Christ. This will be illustrated by considering the several distinctions of mankind 1. The first and most obvious distinction is into grown Persons and Infants 2. Distinction is those whom Christ shall find dead or alive at his coming 3. Distinction is of good or bad 4. The next distinction of men whom Christ shall Judge are believers and unbelievers 5. Men of all Conditions high and low rich and poor of these see Matth. 25. v. 33. Ser. 3. 6. Men of all callings in the Church Apostles and private Christians Ministers and People for the Apostle here in the text joineth himself with others and saith We must all appear before the Judgment seat of Christ. Besides the Law of Christianity by which all shall be Judged the Officers and Guides of the Church must give an account of their faithfulness in their ministration There is much spoken in Scripture of their account 1 Cor. 4 4.5 I know nothing by my self yet am I not thereby justified but he that judgeth me is the Lord therefore Judge nothing before the time until the Lord come who both will bring to light the hidden things of darkness and shall make manifest the Counsels of the heart and then shall every man have praise of God He speaketh there of the execution of his Apostolical Office though he was Conscious to himself of no fault in it yet this was not the clearing of him only God that searcheth and seeth all must do this 'T is a great matter to clear a mans fidelity first as a Minister then as a private Christian. Paul would not venture it upon the single Testimony of his own Conscience So again Heb. 13.17 They watch for your Souls as they that must give an account Their work is to watch over Souls for their Eternal Salvation if Souls miscarry through their negligence they are answerable to God for it but if they miscarry through their own willfulness the
innocent contentedness and humble submission if Rich by liberality and publick usefulness when well I will glorify God by my health being hard at work for him when sick by meekness and patience if a a Magistrate by my zeal and activity if a Minister by diligence and faithfulness if a Tradesman by my righteous and conscionable dealing So that from Christ to the meanest Christian from the King to the meanest Skullion all should be at work for God for every man is sent into the world for some cause and born for some end or other to act that part upon the stage of the world which the great Master of the Scenes appointeth 4. All our sufficiencies gifts and abilities were given us for this end Every man hath some gift more or less as well as some relation as Matth. 25. Every man received his Talent and he that had but one Talent was to give an account of it Now all these must be improved for God As the Husbandman when he scattereth his Seed on the Earth looketh for a crop and increase So when God scattered his gifts 't was not to disposses himself but that they might be used for his glory Every gift and grace received is not barely donum a gift but Talentum a Talent We are Stewards and not owners not to act for our selves but to honour our Master Therefore what honour and glory hath God by our gifts and graces God hath dominium we have but dispensationem 'T is ours for use but not ours for injoyment as a Factor intrusted with his Masters goods at length it will be seen how we have improved them 5. The end much varieth the nature of the action It maketh an act to be of another kind an indifferent action by the end may become a duty a meal is an act of Worship Alms a Sacrifice Heb. 13.18 Trading for God an act of Religion as well as Prayer On the other side a duty by the end may become a sin as Prayer is howling Hos. 7.14 when it hath only a natural or a carnal end Fasting the bending of a Bulrush Isa. 58.5 Obedience Murther Hosea 1.4 Jehu did not the Lords work sincerely but for his own base ends and interests he was Anointed at Gods command to execute Judgment on Ahabs house 2 Kings 9.6 7. And was Temporally rewarded for it 2 Kings 10.30 his Children to the fourth Generation should sit on the Throne of Israel yet I will avenge the blood of Jezreel upon the house of Jehu Why Because he did it only to get a Kingdom to himself and though he executed Gods Quarrel on Ahab and his House yet he clave to the Idolatry of Jeroboam for securing his interest So Reformation may be a covetous design Non pietate everterunt idola sed avaritia Indeed an act for the matter ●inful is not altered by the end for I must not do evil that good may come thereof nor use the Devil to serve God But how vile is it then to make God serve with our Iniquities and use his Worship as a stale to our own ends SERMON XXII 2 Cor. 5.13 For whether we be besides our selves it is to God or whether we be sober it is for your cause USE is to press you to make this your great aim to Glorify God You must take care not only negatively that God be not dishonoured but positively that he be honoured and glorified by you and that in all states and Conditions and also in all businesses and imployments Some have wholly deviated from their great end and are not yet come to themselves and live unprofitably in the World and do nothing but Eat and Drink and Play and Sleep they live to themselves and to their own ease and carnal delights Alas what are these men good for To what end have they reason and Conscience Some things if they be not good for one thing yet are good for another But a man if he doth not know God and love God and delight in God and seek the Glory of God is like the wood of the Vine Ezek. 15.2 3 4. Good for nothing Not so much as to make a pin whereon to hang any thing Good for nothing but to be cast into the fire and to reflect upon the Glory of his justice to be fuel for the Lords indignation 2dly Another sort are those who are convinced they should live to God and do now and then look after him but are not so overcome by grace as that this should be the over-ruling principle in their hearts The last end is principium universalissimum it should have an universal influence upon us and be minded and regarded in all our desires purposes actions injoyments relations Gods Glory should be at the utmost end of every business nothing is good that is not directed to the last end 'T is done to the flesh and not to God 'T is impertinent to our great scope First in all our desires if we desire increase and estate 't is to honour God with it Jam. 4.3 Agur measureth every estate by ends of Religion Pro. 30.8 9. Nay Spiritual things must be desired in order to Gods Glory Eph. 1.6 We must not please our selves meerly in the Consideration of our own Happiness and personal benefit but as Gods Glory is promoted by it 2dly Our purposes dependance is the proper notion of a crea●ed being Man hath God for principium finem 'T is no more lawful for a man to abstain from respecting or seeking his end than it is possible not to depend on his principle The Creature is from another and for another Man is for Gods Glory and for no other end As he is from Gods Power and no other cause And therefore in whatever we deliberately purpose and resolve upon the Glory of God must have the casting voice 2 Cor. 1.17 The things that I purpose do I purpose according to the fl●sh That is am I swayed by carnal motives A Christian should not lightly and rashly resolve upon any course but consider how it may conduce to the Glory of God 3dly Our actions civil sacred all the pots in Jerusalem must have Gods impress Holiness to the Lord as well as the utensiles of the Temple Zach. 14.21 In a Kings House there are many officers but all to serve the King So in a Christians there are many duties of several kinds but all must have an aspect upon and a tendency to the Glory of God I must mind it in the closet mind it in the shop mind it in the family 4thly For injoyments I must value them more or less as they conduce to the Glory of God In every thing I must ask what doth it Eccl. 2.2 How doth it contribute to m● great end The delight in an estate is not in the possession but use for that hath a nearer connection with the Glory of God The delight in an ordinance as it giveth out more of God or inableth me more to honour him The delight
of sin may be destroyed Which intimateth the communicating of the Spirit of grace for weakning the power love and life of sin And something done on our part that henceforth we should not serve sin There was a time when we served sin but being converted we changed Masters as the Apostle saith Rom. 6.18 Being made free from sin ye became the Servants of Righteousness Now he that hath been Servant to a hard and cruel Master is the better trained up to be diligent and faithful in the service of a gentle loving and bountiful Master Before regeneration every one of us pleased the flesh but when our eyes are opened by grace we see the folly mischief and unprofitableness of such a course and therefore can the better brook another service which will be more comfortable and profitable to us And in this new estate we do as little service for Sin as formerly we did for Righteousness Rom. 6.20 When you were the Servants of Sin ye were free from Righteousness when Righteousness had no power and dominion over you had no share in your time strength thoughts affections endeavours you took no care made no conscience of doing that which was truly good you must now as strictly abstain from Sin as then you did from Righteousness yea you must do as much for grace as formerly you did for sin verse 19 th As you have yielded your members Servants unto uncleanness and to iniquity unto iniquity So now yield your members Servants to Righteousness unto Holiness As watchful as earnest as industrious to perfect holiness The next place is that 1 Pet. 4.1 For as much then as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh arm your selves likewise with the same mind For he that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin In that place there are three things notable 1. The ground and foundation of the Apostles Argument 2dly The exhortation built thereon 3dly The reason connecting and joyning both 1. The foundation of his Argument is that Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh That is hath in our name and nature suffered the wrath due to us for sin 2. The inference of duty built thereon as that we should arm our selves with the same mind That is we must follow and imitate Christ also in suffering in the flesh Or which is all one a dying unto sin This should be armour of proof to us against all Temptations If we had the same mind that he had or could put on the same resolution to wit to suffer in the flesh or crucify our carnal nature lusts and passions Strongly resolve to desist from sin for which Christ hath suffered how pleasant soever it be to our flesh 3. The reason which joyneth both the Argument and Inference of duty together for he that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin This last clause cannot be understood of Christ who never sinned but of the believer how shall we understand it of him How hath he suffered in the flesh And so ceased from sin There are two expositions of it First thus One that hath suffered in the flesh that is is crucified in his carnal nature hath mortified his flesh it hath not respect to suffering afflictions but mortifying of sin 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hath ceased from sin no more to serve it henceforward that he should no longer live the rest of his time in the lusts of the flesh but according to the will of God This exposition inferreth it from Christs sufferings for us that our mortification is in correspondence and conformity to Christs Death And as necessarily flowing from the vertue of his cross and the obligation left thereby on all believers But the Second exposition maketh it clearer thus The believer is reckoned a sufferer in Christ He hath suffered in the flesh when Christ suffered judicially in his Surety whatever sufferings were inflicted on Christ the same are reckoned as inflicted on believers And so to have ceased from sin in regard of Christs undertaking to make him cease from it And the obligation which Christ suffering in his room putteth upon him to mortifie it The matter is as certain as if it were already done Another place is that Gal. 2.20 I am crucified with Christ. There are three Propositions included in that short speech That Christ is crucified that we are crucified that we are crucified with Christ. It doth not imply any fellowship with him in the act of his Mediation there he was only taken but we are spared As Isaac was dismissed when the Ram was taken for an offering Gen. 22. And God saith Job 33.24 Deliver him from going down to the p●t for I have found a ransom Or as Christ told his persecutors John 18.8 If therefore ye seek me let these go their way His offering himself in that sort was a pledge of his offering himself to the curse of the Law and punishment due to sin to exempt us from it What then doth our being crucified with Christ signify It implyeth our participation of the benefits of his Mediation as if we were crucified in our own Persons 4. Considerations will clear it to you 1. That Christ in dying did not stand as a private but publick person in the place and room of all the Elect for he is their Surety 2. That the benefits which are purchased in his Cross and Passion are thereby made ours as if we had been crucified in our own persons We are really made partakers of the fruits of Christs Death 3. The great benefit of his cross or Sacrifice of himself was to put away sin Heb 9.26 4. Sin is put away either as to the removal of the guilt of it Matth. 26.28 This is the Blood of the New Testament which was shed for many for the remission of sins Or for subduing the strength of it 1 Pet. 2.24 He bore our sins in his own Body upon the tree That he being dead unto sin might live unto Righteousness He dyed not only to obtain forgiveness of sins and reconciliation with God But that we might die unto sin So that his redeemed ones are strictly urged to mortify sin Because the old man of indwelling corruption did receive the stroke of death by his death So that either in point of Justification when Justice challengeth us for sins we may send it to Christ who died one for all may plead I am crucified in Christ he hath satisfied for me Or in point of Sanctification we may in the way which God hath appointed expect the subduing of sin as if we had merited this grace our selves 'T is a great advantage when we can say I am crucified with Christ. The next place is that Col. 3.3 5. Ye are dead therefore mortify 'T is spoken as a thing done already ye are dead yet there is a thing to be further done therefore mortify But how are we dead Partly in regard of the certainty to assure us it shall be done And Partly
to repent and believe but for repentance and faith its self to be wrought in us Put it into the instance of Peter and Judas For otherwise God would do no more for Peter than for Judas if God did only give a power to will if we please to do it so man would difference himself 1 Cor. 4.7 Then Peter no more than Judas and Judas as much as Peter Lord I thank thee that thou hast given me some supernatural help namely a power to return to thee if I will And the like help thou hast given to my fellow disciple Judas but this I have added of mine own accord a will to return and be converted And though I have received no more than he yet I have done more than he since I have accepted grace and he remaineth in sin I owe no more to thy grace than Judas did but I have done more for thy Glory than Judas did 5. Our first choice and willing the things of God is not only given us but our willing and working when we are converted Grace is no less necessary to finish than to begin and the new state dependeth absolutely on its influence from first to last He worketh all our works for us There is not one individual act of grace but God is interessed in it as the Soul is in every member there is not only a constant union by vertue of their subsistence in the Body but there is a constant animation and influence and the members of the Body have no power to move but as they are moved and acted by the Soul So grace is twofold habitual which giveth the Christian his supernatural being 2 Pet. 1.4 Who hath made us partakers of the divine nature And actual which raiseth and quickeneth them in their operations To this sense must these places be interpreted John 15.5 He that abideth in me and I in him the same bringeth forth much fruit for without me ye can do nothing And 2 Cor. 3.5 Not that we are sufficient of our selves to think any thing but our sufficiency is of God You will say then what difference is there between the regenerate and unregenerate a natural man and a new creature I Answer there is somewhat in them which may be called a new life and a new nature somewhat distinct from Christ or the Spirit of Christ that worketh in them there is the habits of grace or the seed of God 1 John 3.9 which cannot be Christ or the Spirit for 't is a created gift Psa. 51.10 Create in me a clean heart This is called sometimes the Divine nature sometimes the new creature sometimes the inward man sometimes The good treasure Matth. 12.35 A stock of grace which may be increased 2 Pet. 3.18 But grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. All which are not competible to the Spirit so that when the Spirit worketh on us 't is in another manner than on the regenerate At first conversion we are meer objects of grace but afterwards instruments of grace first upon us and then by us He worketh in the regenerate and unregenerate in a different manner he works on the unregenerate while they do nothing that is good yea the contrary the regenerate he helpeth not unless working striving labouring there is an inclination towards God and holy things which he quickeneth and raiseth up 6. In the same action unless God continueth his assistance we fail and wax faint for God doth not only give us the will that is the desire and purpose but the grace by which we do that good which we will and purpose to do these two are distinct to will and to do And we may have assistance in one kind and not in another willing and doing are different For Paul saith Rom. 7.18 To will is present with me but how to perform that which is good I find not There needeth grace for that also to will is more than to think and to exert our will into action is more than both in all we need Gods help we cannot think a good thought nor conceive an holy purpose much less perform a good action So that we need renewed strength every moment The heart of man is very mutable in the same duty and we can keep up our affections no longer than God is pleased to hold them up While the influence of grace is strong upon us the heart is kept in a warm holy frame but as that abateth the heart swerveth and returneth to sin and vanity instance in Peter se posse putabat quod se velle sentiebat Use 1. Let us apply this 1. Take heed of an abuse of this Doctrine 1. Let it not lull us asleep in idleness because God must do all we must do nothing this is an abuse the Spirit of God reasoneth otherwise Phil. 2.12 13. Work out your salvation with fear and trembling for it is God which worketh in you both to will and to do Work for God worketh it cannot be a a ground of loosness or laziness to the regenerate or unregenerate 1. Not to the unregenerate their Impotency doth not dissolve their obligation A drunken Servant is a Servant and bound to do his work though he hath disabled himself 't is no reason the Master should lose his right by the Servants default Again Gods doing all is an ingagement to us to wait upon him in the use of means that we may meet with God in his way and he may meet with us in our way 1. That we may meet with God in his way God hath appointed certain duties to convey and apply his grace We are to lye at the Pool till the Waters be stirred to continue our attendance till God giveth grace Mark 4.24 Take heed what ye hear With what measure ye mete it shall be measured to you As you measure to God in duties so will God measure to you in blessings 2. That God may meet with us in our way God influenceth all things according to their natural inclination God inlightneth with the Sun burneth with the fire reasoneth with man acts necessarily with necessary causes and freely with free causes he doth not oppress the liberty of the creature but preserveth the nature and interest of his workmanship draweth men with the cords of a man Hos. 11.4 He propoundeth reason which we consider and so betake our selves to a Godly course The object of regeneration is a reasonable creature upon whom he worketh not as upon a stock or a stone and maketh use of the Faculties which they have shewing us our lost estate and the possibility of Salvation by Christ sweetly inviting us to accept of Christs grace that he may pardon our sins sanctify our natures and lead us in the way of holiness unto eternal life Now these means we are to attend upon 2. Not to the regenerate Partly because they have some principles of operation there is life in them and where there is life there is a