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A96523 Three decads of sermons lately preached to the Vniversity at St Mary's Church in Oxford: by Henry Wilkinson D.D. principall of Magdalen Hall. Wilkinson, Henry, 1616-1690. 1660 (1660) Wing W2239; Thomason E1039_1; ESTC R204083 607,468 685

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you come without a wedding garment You must bee qualified as I mentioned before I call upon the young ones this day O bewaile your mispent time your trading in the vanitie of the world T is too too much that you have given so much of your fresh green yeares unto Satan Now come and O that God would draw you else you can never come Give up your strength and marrow to God You have tried the flesh the Divell the world they cannot help nor comfort you You have gone to King Jareb Hos 5. 13. When Ephraim saw his sickness and Judah saw his wound then went Ephraim to the Assyrian and sent to King Jar●b yet could hee not heale you nor cure you of your wound Youthfull pleasures and vanities cannot afford any reall satisfaction O! that God would perswade you to make a better choice to goe to Christ for Physick to make him your Physitian You have spent all upon Physitians of no value imitate the poore woman and come unto Jesus Christ let not the Devil steale this precious truth out of your hearts that the present time is the time of repentance and tempt you to put off Repentance 'till your spectacle dayes Eccles 12. 1. Remember now thy Creatour in the dayes of thy youth while the evill dayes come not nor the yeeres draw nigh when thou shalt say I have no pleasure in them I call also upon old ones you that have lived so many yeeres spent so much time as is not worthy of reckoning in the sacred Chronologies Though I dare not flatter or give the least advantage to any to put off repentance 'till old age yet I dare not set a barre against you If now God open your eyes and give you a hungring and thirsting after Christ and discover to you more of Christ in your old age than in your young happy is it for you Some God cals at the eleventh houre and they receive their peny Now then though you begin late yet set upon the worke seriously Commend God in your old age that now hee hath opened your eyes to see this fountaine and because you have set out late therefore you must worke the harder To every one young and old to all sorts of sinners single double died I address my invitation come come unto this fountaine Isai 55. 1. Ho every one that thirsteth come to the water and hee that hath noe money come yee buy and eat yea come buy wine and milke without money and without price Joh. 7. 37. In the last day the great day of the feast Jesus stood and cryed saying if any man thirst let him come unto mee and drinke Rev. 22. 17. And the spirit and the bride say come And let him that heareth say Come and let him that is a thirst come and whosoever will let hiw take of the water of life freely Neither doe I proclaime universall grace but free grace Come and take Christ upon the Gospel termes and conditions Cast downe your rebellious weapons try conclusions noe longer with God Isai 55. 6 7. Seek yee the Lord while hee may bee found call yee upon him while hee is neare Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him returne unto the Lord and hee will have mercy upon him and unto our God for h●e will abundantly pardon 2 Cor. 5. 20. Now then wee are Embassadours for Christ as though God did beseech you by us wee pray you in Christ's stead bee yee reconciled unto God Rom. 12. 1. I beseech you therefore brethren by the mercies of God that yee present your bodies a living sacrifice holy acceptable unto God which is your reasonable service O! that God would move some soule this day open some heart this day O! that God would plucke some soule out of the Devil's snare wash some Aethiopian some polluted sinner in this fountaine My Errand and Embassie this day is to proclaime free grace to offer Jesus Christ what message shall I returne to him that sent mee I have the office of a Barnabas to bee a son of Consolation to tender the riches of Christ What will you not accept of Christ Will you undervalue the glorious excellencies of the Gospel Will you not have this man to raigne over you Your blood bee upon your own heads you are left without all excuse 2. My exhortation is speciall to the house of David and inhabitants of Ierusalem to those that have received virtue from this fountaine Goe goe often to this fountaine wash and wash againe take heed of thinking you have enough of grace enough of Christ already The oftner you have been at the fountaine the more your desires will bee enlarged Quo plus sunt potae plus sitiuntur aquae This is a holy warrantable covetousness to covet grace never to think you have enough of Christ still labour for more of him Cry with the Horse-leech's daughter give give Lord give mee more of Christ I want grace more grace more grace Thou that hast tasted of Christ wilt desire to drink a full draught Thou that hast a sparkle of true grace wilt desire it may increase into a flame Phil. 3. 13 14 15. Brethren I count not my selfe to have apprehended but this one thing I doe forgetting those things which are behind and reaching forth unto those things that are before I press toward the marke for the price of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus Let therefore as many as bee perfect bee thus minded and if in any thing yee bee otherwise minded God shall reveale even this unto you Then goe againe and againe to the fountaine never leave going Whilest thou hast pollutions thou canst never get rid of the body of sin in the Church militant thou hast need of dayiy washing and cleansing in the fountaine None other can cure thee none can cleanse thee but this fountaine but this laver of Christ's blood The 4th and last use shall bee for direction Vse 4. For Direction 1. Bee broken of all those cisternes that are broken and can hold no water Say not with Naaman are not Abana and Pharphar c. No other streames are healing but those that are from this fountaine 2. Neglect not the due season of comming to the fountaine The five foolish Virgins mist their opportunities and so did Esau Heb. 12. 17. For yee know how that afterward when hee would have inherited the blessing hee was rejected for hee found no place of repentance though hee sought it carefully with teares 3. Make use of all the right keyes knowledge faith love repentance prayer 4. Waite patiently upon God who will open the fountaine Tarry at the poole of Bethesda wait at the posts of wisdome's gates Continue knocking never give over 'till God open the fountaine Bee not impatient of delayes but still tarry at thy Father's dore resolve to take no repulse no put off with Esther resolve If I perish I perish 5. VVash in this
he that hath no money come ye buy and eat yea come buy wine and milk without money and without price A second is Mat. 11. 28. Come unto me all ye that labor and are heavy laden and I will give you rest A third invitation is John 7. 37. If any man thirst let him come unto me and drink Rev. 22. 17. A 4th is The Spirit the Bride say Come and let him that heareth say Come and let him that is athirst come and whosoever will let him take of the waters of life freely The l●st I shall name is the most prevalent obtestation in all the world Rom. 12. 1. I beseech you therefore brethren by the mercies of God that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice holy acceptable unto God which is your reasonable service Put forth thy labor to make a Catalogue of the mercies of God they exceed all Arithmetick measure them their dimensions are infinite The Apostle makes four dimensions breadth length heighth and depth Eph. 3. 18. The mercies of God reach to the Heavens his faithfulness to the clouds All the pathes of the Lord are mercy and truth to such as keep his covenant and testimonies Psal 25. 10. His mercy is from everlasting to everlasting his mercy is above all his works Had we the tongues of Men and Angels we could not sufficiently set forth the mercies of God yet let us summon up all the members of our Bodies and all the faculties of our Souls to praise the Lord for his mercies and tell the wonders which he hath done for the children of men How many National mercies and signal deliverances have we received and we yet are in peace even to a miracle of mercies our fleece is yet dry whil'st others are wet with blood Thousands have faln beside us and ten thousand at our right hands and no evil comes nigh our dwelling What variety of personal mercies do we receive How many deliverances have we received from the Grave being ready to fall in and yet we are reprieved and have space to repent How many deliverances have we received from Fire Water Pobbers unreasonable men and all the plots and projects of Malignant Enemies unto the Gospel of Jesus Christ Further What mercies do we receive for our souls Do we not injoy Sabbaths Ordinances publick assemblies Blessed be God our eyes yet behold our teachers and our Gospel is not driven into corners How many mercies Quot misericordiae tot ora Isa 30. 20. so many mouthes All these mercies have so many mouthes calling upon us to thankfulness and amendment of life Now the holy Spirit of God strives by all these mercies to win us to repentance It is our obliged duty as God strives with us in mercy and loving kindness so we should strive with him in our return of thankfulness and reformation of our lives Every mercy should be a Lord-stone to draw us up to Christ Every mercy should be as a foot-stool to raise us up higher to Heaven Every mercy should be as a Looking-glass wherein we should behold the visible resemblances of the loving kindness of God O then take heed of neglecting the voice of the Spirit when he calls by mercies For if he be neglected when he speaks in the sweet musick of mercies he will speak terrible things in the thunder of judgement 5. The Spirit strives by the exercise of patience 5. Yet further The Spirit strives by the exercise of patience forbearance and long sufferance towards sinners God is not willing that any should perish but that they should repent and be saved O the unwearied patience of a merciful Father How long did God bear with the old world with the Amorites Jerusalem The Lord waits to be gracious he delights in mercy It is his nature to be merciful Judgement is called his act his strange act Isa 28. 21. The Lord will rise up as in mount Perazim he shall be wroth as in the valley of Gibeon that he may do his work his strange work and bring to pass his act his strange act This is to shew his unwillingne●s to punish sinners till needs must He is said to hyer a Razour to shave them as if he had none of his own Isa 7. 20. In the same day shall the Lord shave with a razor that is hired namely by them beyond the river by the King of Assyria the head and the hair of the feet See and admire the wonderful patience of God though we provoke him every day O wonderful patience that the Drunkard dies not in his vomit that the Swearers Blasphemers tongues fall not presently out of their heads Still the Lord waits knocking at the doors of our hearts exercising infinite patience and forbearance towards poor sinners He whets his Sword and bends his Bow Psal 7. 12. He might cleave us asunder presently but there we have experience of singular patience God was but six days in creating the world yet as Chrysostome observes he was seven days in encompassing the Walls of Jericho before he destroyed it Patientia laesa fit furor but let us take heed of abusing patience patience abused breaks forth into extremity of fury Mercy pleads I am slighted I am abused I will no more have mercy on them then patience interposeth I will wait longer but patience being abused it pleads I will be no longer tired out nor abused At last comes long-suffering I am gentle and merciful and I will wait longer and longer but if long-suffering be wearied out What will plead for us What will become of us The long-suffering of God waited in the days of Noah whilest the Ark was preparing as the apostle Peter speaks 1 Pet. 3. 20. 2 Pet. 3. 9. The Lord is not slack concerning his promise as some men count slackness but is long-suffering to us-ward not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance We should account the long-suffering of the Lord our salvation Rom. 2. 4. or despisest thou the riches of his goodness and forbearance and long suffering not knowing that the goodness of the Lord leadeth thee to repentance 6. The Spirit of God strives by many signal exemplary Judgements 6. The spirit strives by many signal and exempla●y Judgements inflicted upon others inflicted upon others We have read of the Wars of Jerusalem in Josephus but more pathetically set forth in the ●ook of the Lamentations We have read of the heavy Judgements of God upon Germany and Palatinate We have read of the barbarous butcherings of those blood-sucking Caribals in Ireland upon the Protestant Party We hear now of a Sword letting out blood in Scotland good blood and bad blood being let out together the Sword destroying one as well as another We hear of sad breaches and heart-divisions widened more and more in England You hear a general complaint of poverty and decay of Trade By all these Judgements the Spirit of God strives with us and woes
conscience 2. The strivings of a mans own spirit are pacified with natural means are pacified with natural means eating drinking sleeping idle company vain pleasures quiet meer natural convictions But where Gods Spirit strives the soul cannot be quieted but by supernatural means the in omes of God the ravishing consolations of the holy Ghost a white Stone a pardon sealed no mirth sports company can satisfie a wounded conscience onely one remedy is reserved for a perfect cure and that 's the Medicine made up of the Blood of Christ 3. The strivings of a mans own spirit are flashy suddain and soon gone when the judgement ceaseth As soon as the judgement 3. The strivi●gs of a mans own Spirit are flashy and suddain is removed the strivings cease but when Gods Spirit strives it is solid and serious If the Jvdgement be removed and the s●n unpardoned there can be no quiet If the Judgement be over Pharaoh is quiet but no quiet in Davids spirit till the sin be removed Q. 3. A third Quaery is How may we know whether Gods Spirit Q. 3 A. hath effectually stroven and prevailed with us 1. When we hearken to the call of Gods Spirit Psal 27. 8. Thou 1. Wh●● we answe● the call of God● spirit saidst seek my face my heart said unto thee Thy face Lord will I seek 2. When we have the testimonie of Gods Spirit as Rom. 8. 16. The spirit it self beareth witness with our spirits that we are the 2. When we have the spirits testimony children of God 3 When we have the sealing of the Spirit Eph. 1. 13. In 3. When the spirit seals whom after ye believed ye were sealed with the holy Spirit of promise 4. When we have the earnest of the Spirit Eph. 1. 14. 4. When we have the earnest of the Spirit 5. When we have the spirits anointing 6. When we have the fruits of the Spirit Use 5. For direction 1. Pray for the Spirit 2. Set a high price on the Spirit 3. Cherish the motions of the Spirit 4. Observe the call and knocking of the Spirit 5 When we have the anointings of the Spirit 1 John 2. 20. Ye have an Unction from the Holy One and ye know all things 6. When we have the fruits of the Spirit Gal. 5. 22 23 24. Love joy peace long-suffering gentleness goodness faith meekness temperance The fifth Use is for direction 1. Pray for the Spirit to sanctifie and cleanse thee No work of sanctification but by the spirit 2. Set an high price of and be a diligent attendant of Gods word The Spirit usually works by the Word The Spirit and Word agree together 3. Cherish the sweet motions of Gods Spirit make much of every holy motion and inspiration O do not grieve nor sad O do not quench the Spirit of God but account Gods long-suffering your salvation God waits and is patient O do not provoke do not abuse his patience 4. Observe all the calls knocking 's and invitations of Gods Spirit The Lord calls by his word by checks of conscience by mercies and by judgements do not then bolt the doors of your hearts nor stand out against all the warnings threatnings and promises all these are upon record Heb. 2. 3. How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation Lastly Here 's one word of comfort unto all those who make Use 6. For comfort much of the strivings of Gods Spirit These shall be filled with the consolations of the Spirit The Spirit will comfort support help them In Prayer The Spirit helpeth their infirmities Rom. 8. 26. The Spirit purgeth and purisieth them The Spirit of God is their Counsellor in doubts their Comforter in all distresses and the Spirit will guide them by his counsel till he bring them unto glory Doct. 2. It s a● exceeding great mercy c. I now proceed in a few words to the second Doctrine That it is an exceeding great mercy when the Lord vouchsafes unto any person time and space for repentance Here the Lord alloweth to the old World 120 years so long it was that the Spirit of God strove with the old World We read in Gen. 18. 24 25. the Lord staid communing with Abraham making abatements from 50 to 45 from 45 to 40 from 40 to 30 from 30 to 20 from 20 to 10 Was it not a great mercy for the Lord to bear so long with the Amorites They had a long time of forbearance Thus did the Lord deal with Niniveh Jonah 3. 4. Yet forty days and Niniveh shall be overthrown So the Lord waited long on the Israelites Psal 95. 8. Harden not your hearts as in the provocation and as in the day of temptation in the wilderness So Jerusalem Luke 19. 42 44. If thou hadst known even thou at least in this thy day the things that belong unto thy peace but now they are hid from thine eyes The five foolish Virgins had a time allowed both wise and foolish slept and slumbred but the foolish wanted oyl and lost the accepted season Jezabel had time alloted her Rev. 2. 21. I gave her space to repent of her fornication but she repented not The Reasons are 1. To glorifie the riches of Gods mercy Mercy Reas 1. To glorifie the riches of Gods mercy waits upon us wooing and alluring us to repentance The Lord invites Isa 55. 1. Ho every one that thirsteth let him come c. He calls sinners to repentance He entreateth by his Ambassadors 2 Cor. 5. 20. He waits to be gracious Rev. 3. 20. 2. To glorifie the Justice of God and to leave a people without R. 2. To glorifie Gods justice excuse When mercy patience goodness graciousness long-suffering are all abused what remains but destruction never fruit grow on thee more Cut it down I will take this kingdom from you I will send you a famine of the word These are terrible threatnings 3. The Lord oftentimes is pleased to spare a people longer at the R. 3. God spares a people at the request of his servants request of his servants Luke 13. 8. The Vine-dresser prayed Let it alone yet longer till I dig about it and dung it Gods Ministers pray hard and tug hard at the oar they cry night and day Lord spare try this people a little longer exercise a little more patience towards them let thy Word work upon them they live under the sound of it let it effectually prevail with them The Uses are 1. For admiration O admire the infinite mercies of God who doth thus bear with sinners notwithstanding Use 1. For admiration their provocations yet he tryes waits and allows them a great deal of space when as in Justice he might cut sinners assunder in the midst of their sins This breathes terrors unto all presumptuous sinners who presume Vse 2. For terror of space and grace neither of which is in their own power To some God gives space others he
Fountaine is opened and men apprehend their thirst they will hasten to the waters 4. The fountaine is opened because God sends messengers to 4. God sends Messengers to invite invite and guides to direct to it The ministers Embass●e is to invite men and women to come unto this Fountaine to perswade them to reconciliation 2 Cor. 5. 20. Now then wee are Embassadours for Christ as though God did beseech you by us wee pray you in Christs stead to bee reconciled unto God It 's our maine business to beseech and intreat men to take Christ and to come unto this fountaine 5. Now is the day of grace the opportunity season offered from 5. Now is the day of grace God a price put into our hands Now Christ tenders himselfe and his benefits Now the counsel is a word in due season Isai 55. 6 7. Seek yee the Lord while hee may bee found and call upon him while hee is near Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him returne unto the Lord and hee will have mercy 6. The Lord opens to us upon him and to our God for hee will abundantly pardon 6. The Lord himselfe now opens to us and this is evident because hee knocks for us to open to him Rev. 3. 20. Behold I stand 6. The Lord opens to us at the dore and knock if any man heare my voice and open the dore I will come in unto him and I will sup with him and he with mee And the Lord affords us severall Hammers to knock at his dore withall viz. especially 4. Hammers God useth to knock withall 1. The Hammer of his word Every sermon you heare is a 1. Hammer of the word knocking at the do●res of your hearts God makes use of his Messengers as his mouth Jer. 15. 19. Thou shalt stand before mee and if thou take forth the precious from the vile thou shalt bee as my mouth However the Ministers of God be despised and evill intreated Christ accounts the affronts offered to them equall to those hee met withall immediately offered unto himselfe Luk 10. 10. But into whatsoever City you enter and they receive you not goe out into the streets of the same and say even the very dust of your City that cleaveth on us wee shak off against you By the sermons you heare God knocks at your hearts Ezek. 25. and Ezek. 33. 30 31 32 33. They speak each one to another saying Come and heare what is the word that commeth forth from the Lord they sit before thee as my people and heare thy wordes but will not doe them 2. The hammer of his spirit The spirit breatheth upon the waters 2. Hammer of the spirit How many strivinges waitings whispers of the spirit are there to draw us unto God Wee are exhorted not to quench the spirit nor grieve the spirit The Lord will once say as Gen. 6. 3. My spirit shall not alwayes strive with man 3. The Hammer of mercies God knocks at our hearts by mercies peace prosperity Ther 's a prevalent exhortation Rom. 12. 1. 3. Hammer of mercies I beseech you brethren by the mercies of God that yee present your bodies a living sacrifice holy acceptable unto God which is your reasonable service To us he speakes by mercies Wee are brands pluckt out of the burning and have our lives for a prey 'T is mercy wee enjoy peace in our Borders wee are free as yet from the Plague Famine and the sword wee enjoy the peace of the Gospell and the Gospel of peace 4. God knockes sometimes by the Hammers of judgment sometimes 4. The Hammer of Judgments by the Sword Plague and other Calamities though at present we are free our duty is Jer. 6. 8. Bee thou instructed O Jerusalem lest my soule depart from thee lest I make thee desolate and a land not inhabited Wee should learne righteousness at all times especially when judgments are amongst us Isai 26. 9. With my soule have I desired thee in the night yea with my spirit within mee will I se●k thee earely for when thy judgments are in the earth the inhabitants of the world will learne righteousness Micah 6. 9. Heare yee th● rod who hath appointed it It appeares farther that the fountaine is opened because God God affords the right key One false key is Free-will hath afforded us the right keys to open it There are three false keyes and foure true keyes The first false Key is free-will O saith the sinner I le repent hereafter I shall have time enough But is repentance in thy power Velle naturae malè velle corruptae naturae b●ne velle gratiae Phil. 2. 13. For it is God who worketh in you both to will and to doe of his own good pleasure Jam. 1. 18. Of his own will begat he us with the word of truth that wee should bee a kind of first fruites of his Creatures Free-will is an Aegyptian reed it will deceive us Jer. 10. 23. O Lord I know that the way of man is not in himselfe it is not in man that walk●th to direct his steps Sams●ns case is very observable Judg. 16. 20. And shee said the Philistines be upon thee Samson and hee awoke out of sleep and said I will goe out as at other times before and shake my selfe and he wist not that the Lord was departed from him Man can undoe himselfe and marre himselfe but cannot save himselfe Hos 13. 9. O Israel thou hast destroyed thy selfe but in me is thy help 2. A second false key is universal grace and redemption Christ died A 2d false key is universal Redemption for all say some tasted death for every man for Cain and Judas as well as David and Paul many plead and think by this key to open the Fountaine but it 's a false key and will not unlock the fountain Dore. The latter part of the Text which they urge expounds the former they urge Joh. 316. God so loved the world that hee gave his only begotten-Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have life everlasting And that in 2 Cor. 5. 15. And that hee died for all But what followeth that they which live should not h●nceforth live unto themselves but unto him who died for them and rose againe They urge likewise Heb. 2. 9. But wee see Jesus who was made a little lower than the Angels for the suffering of death crowned with glory and honour that hee by the grace of God should tast death for every man The grace and free love of God moved him to bestow this transcendent benefit on his people only not for the whole world Rom. 5. 18. Therefore as by the offence of one judgment came upon all men to condemnation even so by the righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men to justification of life Here is hended the universality of Christ's body Adam was a common
Labour for the practise of mortification and learne the divine lesson taught in the schoole of Christ to deny thy selfe Labour to bring thy selfe over to a sweet frame of resignation that thou canst willingly part with thy choicest pleasures and comforts for Jesus Christ As those in the Revelations cast down their crownes so cast down thy chiefest comforts at the feet of Christ It was an excellent speech of David 2 Sam. 15. 25 26. If I shall find favour in the eyes of the Lord he will bring me back againe and shew me both it and its habitation But if he say thus I have no delight in thee behold here am I let him doe to me as seemeth good to him so if it seeme good in the eyes of God he can wholy take thy heart off thy comforts or else give thee them in greater mercy in a more sanctified manner and so make thy comforts exceeding comfortable What canst not thou foregoe any outward pleasure any worldly delight now how wouldst thou resist unto blood undergoe the fiery tryall if Christ should call thee thereunto If thou hast runne with the footmen and they have wearied thee then how canst thou contend with horses And if in the land of peace wherein thou trusted'st they weari●d thee then how wilt thou doe in the swelling of Jordan Tertullian in his tract de cultu faeminarum hath this observation Timeo c●rvicem ne margaritarum smaragdorum laqueis occupata Jer. 12. 5. Tertul. in Lib. de cultu Faeminarum lorum Spathae non det I feare saith he that neck that is used to pearles and chaines will not give it selfe to the sword Men of delicate appetites who pamper their flesh will find it a difficult taske to endure any hard-ship for Christ's name It was an inhumane practise of that Monster Nero who rejoyc'd when Rome was on fier None but beasts will enjoy their pleasures when the common-wealth is in jeopardy and religion and liberty lies at stake O then put on bowels of compassion and be alike affected one to another beare one anothers burthens Let your resolution run paralel with St Paul's who is af●licted and I burne not O that instead of burning in lusts you would burne in love one to another A blessed alteration Tudippus and Phocion being both condemn'd to die one of them was afraid the other recollected his spirits and in this wise comforted him Non satis est tibi Tudippe cum Phocione Mori Is it not sufficient for thee O Tudippus that thou diest with Phocion A comm●nion with Christ's afflicted members in a suffering condition is accounted their crowne and glory Consider God hath cald us unto vertue and unto glory It 's the Gospels glory to set out unto us high and glorious things these we want and these are worthy of our search Let 's then no more seeke after lying vanities and forsake our own mercy The dehortation reacheth us home in my text Ne quaesuris seeke them not which is the Use and Application which I promis'd you the close of my paines and your patience Application Is 55. 2. Use 1. for Expostulation Let me expostulate the case with you as the prophet Isaiah doth wherefore do ye spend mony for that which is not bread and your labour for that which satisfies not There 's no created power which can be commensurate to the boundlesse desires of an immortall soule A glutton may fill his belly but he cannot fill his lusts A rich man may fill his barnes but he cannot fill his heart It 's triangular still one angle will be empty An ambitious man may have titles of honour enough to overcharge his memory but not to fill his pride The voluptuous may wallow in sensuall delights he may be a frequenter of prophane Theatricall interludes and yet the hell of his desires remaines unsatisfied why then should men be such fooles to seeke after other lovers besides Jesus Christ and to hunt after any other kingdome besides the Kingdome of God and his righteousnesse how many mens hearts are in aequilibrio pendula indifferent to which side the ballance turnes When M●rdecay was rays'd many became Jewes and it was the saying of Pamachius an heathen Fac me Pontificem ero Christianus Such u Platiram devi tis Portificum follow religion as the people did our Saviour for the loaves and so make it a stalking horse for the advancing of their ambitious designes but sini●ter respects never prove a sure bottome for the soule to be fixt upon If the maine question of a Minister be what 's the fleece of the sheep I much scruple whither he hath the heart to feed them For a man to be wedded to his revenues and incomes and not to the discharge of his duty what 's this but to marry the portion and not the wife What a great madnesse is there in men not to trust their honours dignities and riches with God in whose hands they are in the safest custody what folly is there in men to make their servants their Masters by Idolizing an arme of flesh and subjugating themselves unto the creatures as if they preferred a slavery before a freedome The Apostle tells us Col. 3. 3. that we are dead men and is it congruous for dead men to hunt after honours and the worlds goods wee are crucified to the world And we are Crucified with Christ O labour then to answere thy Originall As he minded not high things on earth as he was wrap't up in heavenly meditations so should we have rays'd spirits and sore aloft being carried with the wings of divine contemplation It 's reported of Lysimachus that for his staying to drinke one draught of water he lost his kingdome So if we stay for these waters drawn out of the broken cisternes of the creatures we may hazard our pretious soules had we eye-salve from Christ to iliuminate us we should discerne such transcendent beauty in the waies of holinesse so that we should enter an action and zealously commence a suite against the world and never let fall the suite till we have obtain'd a sequestration between our soules and these things here below You may remember that my errand is to you not to seeke after great things I meane such as are reputed so by the great ones of the world Who ever sought them and prospered Nimrod Haman Nebuchadnezzar Herod sought them out to the utter ruine of the seekers Let the streame be turn'd seeke the Matth. 6. 33. Kingdome of God and his righteousn●sse and all other things shall be added as supernumerar accruments O that I could prevaile with you to seeke those things that are above It 's the glory of the Gospell to set out glorious things We have a glorious God glorious graces glorious company glorious priviledges and a glorious reward Had'st thou but a glimpse of those superlative excellencies which are treasur'd up in Christ of those glorious things which are spoken of
and pray Isa 26. 16 20. wrestling of tugging hard at the Ore This God looks for and his people have practiced Lord in trouble have they visited thee they poured out a Prayer when thy chastning was upon them Come my people enter thou into thy ●hambers and shut thy doors about thee hide thy self as it were for a little moment until the indignation be over-past We are in an afflicted condition and the counsel of the Apostle is Is any among you afflicted let him pray We are sick and wounded The same James 5. 13. Apostle prescribes Confess your faults one unto another and pray one James 5. 16. for another that ye may be healed the effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much There 's a dreadful tempest the ship is a sinking we had need be awakened and cry unto God we had need pray Lord save us or else we perish This God expects Thus saith Ezek. 36. 37. the Lord God I will yet for this be inquired of by the house of Israel to do it for them I will increase them with men like a flock This duty of Prayer hath a commanding vertue The expression is very high Thus Isa 45. 11. saith the Lord the holy One of Israel and his Maker ask me of things to come concerning my sons and concerning the works of my hands command ye me This is Solomons Pharmachum Catholicum even a Medicine for all diseases O pray pray rowl your selves in the dust you deal for a Kingdom you deal for the Church the Gospel and its Ordinances for the lives of millions pray then in good earnest and joyn fasting with waiting Antichrist is a strong Devil this kinde goeth not out but by fasting and prayer 2. Wait and study the Scriptures Affliction saith Luther makes us Means 2. Wait and study the Scriptures understand Scripture we understand now what is meant by confusion and desolation Compare the times of Habakkuk with our times and they come very near they answer one another as face answereth to face Such a dark vision is now as was then Let us study and search whether the Witnesses be slain or no If they be slain then we may expect glorious times if not worse are to be looked for As far as I can apprehend by comparing Scripture with Scripture though it 's difficult to determine by the Witnesses are meant the Magistracy and Ministry Compare Rev. 11. 4. with Zech. 4. 3. and 14. These are the two olive trees and the two candlesticks standing before the God of the earth So in the Revelations And in Zechary we read And two olive trees by it one upon the right side of the bowl and the other upon the left side thereof Then said he these are the two anointed ones that stand by the Lord of the whole earth I determine nothing in this doubtful case but the great contempt cast upon both Magistracy and Ministry and greater yet is to be feared even throughout all Kingdoms makes it probable that the time of their slaughter draweth nigh We may not be over-curious in fixing particular times lest we incur the same check for our curiosity as they did It is not for you to know the times or the seasons which the Father hath put Acts 1. 7. in his own power 3. Wait upon God in his Ordinances Yet you have them and Means 3. Wait upon God in his Ordinances Isa 30. 20. blessed be God vve yet have a nail left us in the publick Assembly That Prophecy is made good That though the Lord give you the bread of adversity and the water of affliction yet shall not thy teachers be removed into a corner any more but thine eyes shall see thy Teachers Yet we have a publick Vision The voice of the Turtle is yet heard in our Land Let 's wait at these Bethesdah's at the Posts of Wisdoms Gate we should mourn for the great contempt that is cast upon Ordinances and because others slight them we our selves should learn to esteem them highly frequent them diligently and pray that God would teach us to profit by them The Word Sacraments Sabbaths Meditations Conference are advantagious Ordinances even the food of our souls Take away meat and drink and you starve the Body Take away Ordinances and you slarve the Soul Wait and treasure up your experiences Review and call to Means 4. Wait and treasure up your experiences minde the mercies of old what God hath done for you in former times Thou hast known a Famine God hath provided for thee then Thou hast been in great straits and dangers and God hath delivered thee at that time Thou hast been at the Graves mouth and a sentence of death seemed to pass against thee God hath restored thee to tell his Praises and to bless his Name Thou hast known Troubles Tumults and Commotions in the Kingdom and God hath quieted and composed them Thus then argue God is the same God he is in Heaven still and doth whatsoever he pleaseth he is as willing as able as merciful as ever He sets bounds to the Seas and stills the raging of the people He is not changed with the change of time Christ is the same yesterday to day and the same for ever Though we are out of order yet his Covenant Heb. 13. 8. 2 Sam. 2● 5. is ordered Though we are transient yet his Covenant is everlasting Wait in the right season Now is the season perilous and a time Means 5. Wait in the right season of waiting Times of afflictions are waiting times When all seem against thee and thou canst not tell how to conclude from such premises as were unheard of before Now wait and be silent Be silent O all flesh before the Lord for he is raised out of his holy Zech. 2. 13. habitation Be far from murmurings and responsations against God Thou must wait upon God in the way of his Judgements yea in Isa 26. 8. the way of thy Judgements O Lord have we waited for thee The desire of our soul is to thy Name and to the remembrance of thee Sixthly and lastly Joyn reformation with waiting I press not Means 6. Joyn reformat●on with watching all this while a lazy idle waiting a folding thy hands in thy bosom but a working waiting Wait and purge thy conscience Trim up thy soul for the entertainment of Jesus Christ God will not come into a Cage of unclean Birds The soul must be purified Mercy follows Reformation at the heels Deliverance followeth Reformation Many days of Humiliation we have had and when one is done we had need have another to bewail the failings of the former So that many harvests are past and many Summers ended and we are not saved But if there was one day of through Reformation the business would be done God would be intreated for the Land We may justly fear that the Commission given to the Sword is not yet called back
when the right of the cause and just ingagements require you to speak Tamper not about secular business on the Lord's day Verbum sapientibus abundans cautela non nocet You the grand Inquest let mee bee a remembrancer of your To the Grand-Inquest duty Inquire into the sinnes of your County Are there not Blasphemers Sabbath-breakers Prodigious swearers Opressers Adulterers Make of them faithfull Presentments Doe not you see what abundance of mischiefes Ale-houses produce what a great deale of service they doe the Devill Labour I beseech you to disposess the Divell of his strong holds Purge your Townes and Families Who knowes but that yee are called to such a time as this You have a price put into your hands Oh! let it not bee a price put into the hands of fooles who want hearts to make the best improvement of it As you love the Gospell your lives livelyhoods as you consult the good of your Countrey and tender the safety of the land of our Nativity strive to beat down sinne to reforme your lives that so God may turne away from his fierce anger And to you all high and low of what ranke or condition soever I addresse my exhortation as Amos 4. 12. Therefore thus will I doe unto thee O Israel and because I will doe thus prepare to meet thy God O Israel Zeph. 2. 1. Gather your selves together yea gather together O Nation not desired c so Joel 2. 12. Therefore also now thus saith the Lord Turne yee unto mee with all your hearts with weeping fasting mourning And you that remember least bee sure to remember my text Carry it home with you and put it in practice Hate the evill and love the Good and establish judgment in the gate It may bee that the Lord God of hosts will bee gracious to the remnant of Joseph The Fountain opened Or Free Grace discovered From Zech. 13. 1. In that day there shall be a Fountain opened to the House of David and to the Inhabitants of Jerusalem for sin and for uncleanness A Word spoken in due season is like Apples of Sermon 8. At St. Mary's Oxon. May. 17. 1649. Gold in Pictures of Silver Prov. 15. v. 11. My Text is such a precious seasonable Word even a Word of Comfort opportunely administred to the Mourners in Zion For you may cast your eyes on chap. 12. v. 10 11 12 13 14. and there you may read how deeply the Children of God drank of the Cup of Mourning they had tears plentifully given them to drink and their sorrow is not an ordinary but a soaking bitter sorrow ver 10. And I will pour upon the house of David and upon the Inhabitants of Ierusalem the spirit of grace and of supplications and they shall look upon me whom they have pierced and they shall mourn for him as one mourn●th for his onely sonne and shall be in bitterness for him as one that is in bitterness for his first-born A midst these sorrows this Evangelical Prophet holds forth the M●ssias Iesus Christ the chiefest joy to swallow up an Ocean of sorrows So that the words read are a Prophesie of Jesus Christ tendring his free grace and mercy to a people broken with godly sorrow for sin Whilst tears are in their eyes and sorrows in their hearts soul-ravishing joys and consolations are promised from the presence of God In that day there shall be a fountain opened Wherein observe First a Mercy promised not a stream but a The Text divided fountain 2. The extent and greatness of the Mercy in hand not a fountain sealed lockt up but opened 3. The opportunity In that day 4. The persons to whom this great rich Mercy is promised to the house of David c. 5. The end and benefit accruing for sin and for uncleanness To give a brief Paraphrase on the Words They are a Prophesie of the wonderful Redemption and Sanctification of sinners by the Blood of Christ It 's said In that day i. e a day of sorrow and mourning for sin after they had been sensible of sin throughly humbled felt the Gall and Wormwood bewailed the bitterness of sin then joy comes after sorrow After the people had mourned for their sins against Christ then Christ washeth them and cleanseth them when sin hath been their greatest sorrow then comes Christ and is their greatest joy It is sayd A fountaine O rich mercy A fountaine opened O height of mercy Free grace is offered justification and sanctification by the blood of Jesus Christ He is the inexhausted fountaine his blood is never drawn dry neither is the Exchequer of his grace lockt up so that none can come at it but it 's opened and freely tendred for the house of David the inhabitants of Jerusalem This fountaine is opened for them they are washt and cleansed in the meritorious laver of Christ's blood But why to them v. 10. to them is promised the pouring of the spirit and to them is Christ promised they are sensible of the bitterness of sin they know how to relish the sweetnesse of a Messias The fountaine is opened to them exclusive and to them only To others it 's a Fountaine sealed Christ came to save his people There are a peculiar people whom Christ loveth washeth saveth and these are the house of David and Ierusalem i e the Children of God in Covenant It 's said for sin for uncleannesse whatever pollutions impurities are in the Saints here they are invited to come wash Rev 1. 5. be cleane This fountaine of the blood of Christ washeth cleanseth the house of David and Jerusalem from all sinne and impurity This scripture requires a fuller Exposition but it 's my purpose to draw forth the Doctrines and in the explication of the doctrines to insist on a larger exposition of the words Two doctrines which are principally held forth are these 1. When the children of God are soakt in their teares of godly sorrow for Doctrin 1 sin then in that season divine refreshing consolations come from the presence of God 2. There 's a fountaine of free grace and mercy in Jesus Christ opened Doctrin 2 to purge and cleanse his people from all their sins and impurities I resume the first doctrine andfor the enlargment of it I propound Method of handling the first Doctrine this following Method 1. To select scripture examples for illustration and Incouragement 2. To confirme it by scripture reasons for conviction and plenary probation 3. To draw downe some scripture counsels and exhortations for the better ordering of our lives and conversations The former shall constitute the doctrinall part of the text This last the use and application For the first for scripture examples time would faile mee if 1 Scripture Examples I should enlarg my selfe in so great a Cloud of witnesses There 's a plentifull heape I shall gather sparingly and select only some choice remar●●ble examples God comforts prophane
Whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall give him shall never thirst but the water that I shall give him shall be in him a well of water springing up into everlasting life This fountaine was opened for Manasseh a bloody sinner 2 Chron. 33. 12 13. And when he was in affliction he befought the Lord his God and humbled himselfe greatly before the God of his fathers And prayed unto him and he was intreated of him and heard his supplication and brought him againe unto Jerusalem into his Kingdome Then Manasseh knew that the Lord he was God This fountain was opened for Saul a cruel persecutor Act. 9. 3 4. And as he journyed he came neere Damascus and suddenly there shined round about him a light from Heaven And he fell to the earth and heard a voice saying unto him Saul Saul why persecutest thou me This fountaine was opened for the poore woman a grievous sinner Luk. 7. 47. Wherefore I say un to thee Her sins which are many are forgiven for shee loved much but to whom little is forgiven the same loveth little The woman with the bloody issue believed it and shee will make triall Mat. 9. 20 21. And behold a woman which was diseased with an issue of blood 12 yeares came behinde him and touched the hem of his garment For she said within her selfe if I may touch his garment I shall be whole The woman when she had spent all upon Physitians which were of no value was cured by Christ both in body and soul Luke 8. 48. And he said unto her Daughter be of good comfort thy faith hath made thee whole go in peace And what 's the reason why is there such a fountaine opened No other but free love and bowels opened Sinne endeavours to lock up this fountaine free grace love mercy opens this fountaine But how comes such vertue in this fountaine A. This is the fountaine and originall of all vertue Q. But who are to wash in this fountaine A. All are invited none excluded but such as exclude themselves such as are not sensible of their sins who apprehend not their pollutions will never take the paines to come hither and wash My text is free grace exalted bowels opened mercy heightned gospell enlarged Here 's the Gospel Exchequer full of riches and pretious thinges Here 's the brazen serpent erected the golden scepter held forth If we come not to this exchequer look not up to this serpent take not hold of this scepter the fault is our own O Israel thou hast destroyed thy selfe but in mee is thine help Hos 13. 9. Q. But who are washt and cleansed A. The house of David and Ierusalem the children of God that are sensible of their misery mourners for sin such as apprehend themselves stunge looke to the brazen serpent Such as are humbled for sin are in a capacity of receiving Christ such as are mourners in Zion shall have beauty for ashes the oyle of joy for mourning And those that have thus mourned as for an only son shall have the benefit of this fountaine The invitation is large Luke 14. 17. And he sent his servant at supper time to say unto them that were bidden Come for now all things are ready But read their shifting excuse in the verse following They all with one consent began to make excuse The first said I have bought a peice of ground and I must go and see it have me excused Jesus Christ is freely tendred and offered sermon after sermon and frequently in these gospell dispensations but how few embrace him Heb. 2. 3. How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation which at the first began to be spoken by the Lord and was confirmed unto us by them that heard him The fountaine is full enough large enough O come hither wash and be cleane But you cannot come unlesse you be drawne by the father neither will you come unless you be sensible of your owne vilenesse pollutions impurities and of the wondersull vertue Ca● 1. 4. John 6. 44. that is in this fountaine to wash and cleanse you Of this more anon You heare my text is pure gospell It holds forth the pearle of the Gospell Jesus Christ My message from God to you is to perswade you to imitate the wise Merchant To fell all for the purchase of the Pearle of great price It s a fountaine and there 's no fcarcity at Math. 13. 46. the fountaine It s a fountaine opened and there 's riches of mercy My invitation from God this day is to humble sinners such as are sensible of their lost condition to come and wash in this fountaine Be thou never so much polluted yet this fountaine can cleanse thee Let not thy sins hinder and discourage thy comming but come quicklier and hasten thy pace This Exchequer will pay all thy debts This Fountaine will make thee cleane I doe not I dare not open a gap to Licentiousnesse But I enlarge the riches of free grace and mercy Dost thou thirst Here 's an invitation Art thou a godly mourner this day Here 's a fountaine opened Be thy sinnes crimson sinnes double dyed O now come in to Jesus Christ Here 's a plaister every way as broad as the sore Be they as scarlet Christ's blood will make them as white as wooll This fountaine doth miracles which none other can doe For it washeth the Aethiopian cleanseth the Leopard Will you then perish for want of water and there 's a fountaine Will you lie and die in your sinnes notwithstanding salvation is tendred and thewater of life offered freely O! desperate sottish sinners though God would heale them yet they wil not be healed though God would enrich them yet they looke not after his riches nor value them at all Though he would cleanse them yet they will not come to the fountaine It 's said Gen. 21. 19. God opened Hagars eyes to see a well It is God alone that can open thine eyes to see this fountaine The fountaine may be hard by us Christ may be tendered and yet we may not see nor heare him Let God be true and every man a Liar More I shall speak in this Kind when I come to the Application Meth●d propounded For a more full and profitable handling of this precious Doctrine I shall propound this Method 1. I shall discover the Analogie and Resemblance between Christ and a Fountaine 2. How Christ may be said to be a Fountaine opened 3. For whom this fountaine is opened 4. The wonderfull benefits that flow from this fountaine to the Children of God Fiftly and Lastly I shall set all home unto your Consciences by particular application 1. What Analogy there is betweene Christ and a fountain● First What Analogie and resemblance there is between Christ and a fountaine The Analogie holds good in these ensuing particular respects 1. There 's fullnesse of water in a fountaine No want at the well spring the well
Root and brought death unto all his Posterity And Christ was a common Root and brought life unto all his Posterity They urge likewise Joh. 1. 29. Behold the lamb of God which taketh away the sins of the world A. Those in the world whom he loveth washeth and justifieth it 's not universall not singula gen●rum but genera singulorum Compare this with Mat. 1. 21. And shee shall bring forth a son and thou shalt call his name Jesus for hee shall save his people from their sinnes The third false key is presumption of long life and mercy Neither A third false key Presumption of long life space nor grace are in thine own power God gave Jezabel space but denyed her grace Rev. 2. 21. And I gave her space to repent of her fornication and shee repented not This presumption hath ruined many a soule Many neglect their opportunities run their swinge and career in sinne and presume of mercy but the dore of mercy is shut against them and this key cannot unlock it Now God affords foure true keyes 1. Knowledge The eyes are opened to see the fountaine to 1. True key knowledge look up to the brasen serpent The knowledge of the worth of Christ provokes us to come to him God's people have inlightned judgements they are renewed in the spirit of their minds Eph. 4. 23. 2. Faith to believe that ther 's virtue enough in Christ to cure all 2. True key Faith our diseases both of body and soule Matth 9. 21. For shee said within her selfe if I may but touch his garment I shall be whole 3. Love And this will make us take many journies long and dangerous through fowle weather and it will sweeten all The 3. True key Love beloved object when enjoyed will make amends for all the waiting for it 4. Repentance mourning for sinne Repentance in us causeth 4. True key Repentance God to repent and make his bowels like the sounding of an Harp Jer. 31. 18 19 20. I have heard Ephraim bemoaning himselfe thus Thou hast chastised mee and I was chastised as a Bullock unaccustomed to the yoake turne thou mee and I shall be turned for thou art the Lord my God Surely after that I was turned I repented and after that I was instructed I smote upon my thigh I was ashamed even confounded I did b●are the reproach of my youth Is Ephraim my deare son Is he a pleasant child for since I spake against him I doe earnestly remember him still therefore my bowels are troubled for him I will surely have mercy upon him saith the Lord. You must understand these clave non errante not as if the fountaine was merited for any of these duties for when wee have done all wee can we must acknowledge that wee are unprofitable servants But God hath afforded these meanes keyes and helpes we must make use of them but may not make them our Christs and our Saviours 5. I will adde a 5th Praier This is a key to open and shut 5th True key prayer Heaven James 5. 17 18. Elias was a man subject to like passions as we are and hee prayed earnestly that it might not raine and it rained not upon the earth by the space of three yeares and six months And he prayed againe and the h●aven gave raine and the earth brought forth her fruit Pray that God would wash thee and cleanse thee Psal 51. 10. Create in mee O Lord a cleane heart and ren●w a right spirit within mee 3. I proceed to the third head propounded For whom is this 3. For whom is this Fountaine opened fountaine opened To give in my answer ' I le lay down this truth by way of corollary inferred from the premises That the fountaine of free grace is only opened to the adopted children of God This I shall open and apply briefly for opening whereof I shall propound these ensuing considerations 1. God from all eternity hath elected a peculiar people unto himselfe Consid 1. God from all eternity hath elected a peculiar people unto himselfe according to his owngood pleasure and purpose of his will Now election is of here and there one It 's an act of choice taking some and passing by others Jer. 3. 14. Turne O backsliding children saith the Lord for I am married unto you and I will take you one of a City and two of a familie and I will bring you unto Zion Like gleaning grapes Isai 17. 6. Yet gleaning grapes shall be left in it as the shak●ing of an olive tree two or three berries in the top of the uppermost bough foure or five in the utmost fruitfull branches thereof saith the Lord God of Israel This election hath no other motive but free love and grace Wee were in our blood Ezek. 16. 5 When I passed by thee and saw thee polluted in thy own blood I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood live yea I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood live No provision of faith or Repentance mooved God to set his heart upon us as appeares Rom. 9. 11. For the children being not yet borne neither haveing done any good or evill that the purpose of God according to election might stand not of work●s but of him that calleth c. This Postulatum being laid down for undeniable God from all eternity hath elected a peculiar people Hence I frame this syllogisme only the elect have interest in the fountaine of free grace and mercy But only God's adopted children are elect ergo they only have interest in it 2. There are a peculiar people who alone are justified by the free grace of God in Christ Rom. 5. 1. Being justified by faith wee have Consid 2. There are a peculiar poople justified by free grace p●ace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ Rom. 3. 24. Being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Jesus Christ Now thus I argue Only justified persons have interest in the fountaine of Christ's blood But the sons of God by grace and adoption are only justified persons Ergo they alone have interest in the fountaine of Christ's blood Psal 32. 1 2. Blessed is hee whose trangression is forgiven whose sinne is covered Blessed is the man unto whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity and in whose spirit there is no guil● Iustification is a forensicall terme took from an earthly Tribunal where a person arraign'd and condemned is afterward by virtue of a pardon acquitted 3ly Consider there are a peculiar people effectually called Many Consid 3. There are a peculiar people effectually called have an outward calling and take upon them an outward profession few are inwardly and effectually called This the Apostle presseth 2 Pet. 1. 10. Wherefore the rather brethren give diligence to make your calling and election sure for if you doe these things you shall never fall There are a few and but a very few called out of the world partakers
sensible of their thirst and therefore they will not come God affords food for our body and food for our soule in abundance now an hungry man will goe apace for corporall food and had we a spirituall appetite a soule hunger we should quicken our pace and run as fast for the sood of our soules see Heb. 2. 3. How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation God puts a prize into our hands if we neglect to use it our condemnation will be the greater A sluggard will tell of this Lyon that mountaine and that shrubbe in the way so your lazy negligent people will tell and reckon up all the difficulties they can to flatter themselves in their idlenesse whereas indeed when we consider the battell we are to fight the race to runne the strait gate to passe through and the great difficulty to attaine salvation this should excite and provoke us to beg strength from God and act in his strength tugge hard at the Oare wrestle harder mend our pace that we may enter in at the strait gate fight the good fight of faith and so runne that we may obtaine A third sort of persons to be reproved are unbelievers They believe 3. Vnbelievers not such worth and excellency in the soule as we speak of This is the grand capitall damning sin of the Gospel Unbeliefe is a complication of many sins made up of a fraternity of iniquity See John 8 24. Unbeliefe as well as covetousnesse caused the yong man to preferre treasures on earth before treasures in heaven Unbeliefe as well as covetousnesse made the foolish Gadarens to preferre their swine before a Saviour Did people in good earnest believe that the soule is more worth then a world that the soule is of a heavenly-borne beeing and runnes parralell with eternity they durst not graspe the world make an Idol of Mammon Volupia c. and put their pretious soules in jeopardy What hindred Christ's miracles see Matth. 13. 28. What 's the portion of unbeleevers see Luk 12. 46. Rev. 21. 8. The Jewes had a saying that every sinne that they committed had a spice of the golden calfe Every sinne without question hath a spice of infidelity Unbeliefe and misbeliefe are destructive to the soule 4ly Impatient sinners are to be reproved these are worst of all 4. Impenitent sinners they throw away the remedy spurne away the plaister that God ordaineth for their cure Wee say falling into the water drownes not but lying there for a man may fall into a water and may be plucked out alive so falling into sinne damnes not but lying in it without repentance 'T is true that every sinne deserves damnation but all sinnes doe not actually damne otherwise who could be saved There are two sorts of sinners penitent and impenitent sinners Penitent broken hearted sinners are received into mercy through Christ their sinnes are wash't away in his bloud their sinnes are imputed to his score and his righteousness imputed to them for justification But impenitent sinners such as sweare and will sweare are drunke and will be so breake sabbaths and will doe so without remorse or regret of conscience these shut the dore of mercy against themselves An impenitent person is Felo de se his own executioner see Rev. 16. 11. Rom. 2. 5. Impenitent persons take not the dignity of their soules into consideration little doe they think what will become of their soules unto all eternity The law requires exact obedience will not abate a tittle not the least transgression God hath given us a Court of mercy the Gospel and in it a surety Christ and the instrumentall meanes faith and repentance Now impenitent Persons despise the Gospel the suerty the remedy they reject the great salvation tendred in the Gospel and so they are left unexcusable Their bloud be upon their own heads God would heale them they will not be healed they are filthy and impure the Lord proclaimes a fountaine to wash in it but they will not come unto it and so their damnation is just and they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 selfe condemned and their destruction is from themselves Of all judgments deprecate this of impenitency The Lord never give you over to impenitency 2. The next Use shall be for expostulation and here I would expostulate Vse 2. For expostulation the case as Isai 55. 2. Rom. 6. 21. Who of any understanding would serve so unprofitable a master as sinne is who would bee so mad as to be penny wise and pound foolish as to get riches lands revenues by cozenage fraud oppression and hazzard their pretious soules What if you could get never so much gold purchase never so much land honestly and justly and yet with the care and turmoyle of getting and keeping all you neglect your soule what advantage would all this be unto you Call your selves to an account and reckon what you get by purchaseing the world and loseing your soules cast up your accounts and you will find you have made a miserable bad bargain ' I le draw this Use unto particular instances 1. Let me expostulate the case with the voluptuous persons who eate and drinke and rise up to play Hawkes hounds cardes dice whores cups are the voluptuous man's companions Hee 's lul'd a sleep on the lap of pleasures and followes his own swinge and careere against the counter-blasts of a reclaiming conscience Let me aske the voluptuous liver what doe all his pleasures conduce to the advantage of his soul what comfort can a man take at night when he goeth to bed when all the day he hath past away in gameing drinking and carrowsing How many spend more upon their houndes then they doe towards the maintainance of a faithful Ministry How many preferre a pack of cards a pack of houndes a cast of hawkes before the word of God How many preferre a drunken merry meeting before a Sermon They can sit whole days and nights at cards and dice and at their cups upon ale-benches and yet how weary at a Sermon Double duties are tedious to them sabbaths fasts are heavy burdens unto them This sin of voluptuousness is the crying sin of the nation for which God lets us bloud by his heavy judgments at this very time O that all voluptuous Epicures would seriously lay to heart the sacred Irony of the wise man Eccles 11 9. O! that God would perswade you to have special regard of your pretious soules O that God would open your eyes to see your vanities and wicked pleasures and turne the streame into the right channel as Prov. 3. 17. To account the wayes of wisdome the only wayes of pleasantness 2. Let me expostulate the case with the covetous Mammonist He riseth early c hee 's a scrapeing and carking for the world the trash and pelfe here below filling his barnes with corne his coffers with gold still labouring for corne and oyle never satisfied never thinking he hath enough But what 's
expectation of Novel Opinions and Phrases and as for the failings either of Author or Printer be pleased to cover them with the Mantle of a charitable Interpretation I beg thy Prayers and commend these Labours to thy acceptance and commit thee unto Gods gracious providence I remain Thy Servant for Christs sake Henry Wilkinson The Contents of this Second Decad. SERM. I. JOb 13. 26. For thou writest bitter things against me and makest to possesse the inquities of my youth The Text divided p. 2. and explained by answering 5. Queries 1. What 's meant by bitter things p. 3. 2. What 's meant by writing of them p. 3. 3. What 's meant by the sins of youth p. 4. 4. What 's meant by possessing the sins of youth p. 5. 5. Why doth Job a holy man whose sins were pardoned complain of himself p. 6. Doct. That sins committed in our youth will cause much smart and bitternesse in our elder years Method of handling the Doctrine 1. By Scripture proof p. 7. 2. By three Reasons 1. D●awn from the rule of Justice p. 8. Reas 2. Drawn from the nature and quality of sin p. 9. Reas 3. Drawn from four Aggravations of youthfull sins viz. 1. They are committed with a great deal of violence p. 9. 2. They are committed with abundance of delight p. 10. 3. Young men make many vain pretences ibid. 4. Youthfull sinnes are committed after many Invitations Calls and Warnings p. 11. 3. By improving all in four Uses 1. For Humiliation p. 12 13 14. Here are four sins especially reproved 1. Voluptuousness p. 15. 2. Contempt of Superiours p. 16. 3. Affectation of Novelty p. 17. 4. Pride p. 18. Use 2. For Exhortation p. 19. Four Considerations are prest 1. From Gods Omniscience p. 20. 2. God keeps Record ibid. 3. Consider what sinne will cost thee ibid. 4. Consider the four last things p. 21 22. Use 3. For Direction 1. Be humbled for all sins p. 22. 2. Look through thy Humiliation to Christ p. 23. 3. Walk circumspectly ibid. Use 4. For Consolation ibid. SERM. II. Gen. 6. 3. And the Lord said my Spirit shall not alwaies strive with man for that he also is flesh yet his dayes shall be an hundred and twenty years The Text Divided and Explained p. 28 29. Doct. 1. That it is a most dreadfull judgement upon a people when the Spirit of God refuseth to strive any longer with them p. 30. Doct. 2. That it 's an exceeding great mercy to a people when the Lord vouchsafeth them time and space of Repentance ibid. Method of handling the first Doctrine 1. From Scripture Testimony p. 30 31 32. Three signes of Night 1 When shadows grow long p. 32. 2. When wild beasts goe abroad and 3ly when Labourers go to their rest p. 33. 2. Seven wayes the Spirit strives 1. By its Motions p. 35. 36. 2. By the Ministery of the Word p. 37 38. 3. By the checks and convictions of conscience p. 39 40. A fourfold Rule for examining of conscience p. 40. 4. By the tenders of mercies p. 41. 5. By the exercise of patience p. 42. 6. By National Judgements p. 43. 7. By Personal Judgements p. 44. SERM. III. upon the same Text viz. Gen. 6. 3. 3. Reas 1. Because man is flesh p. 45 46. Reas 2. Because the Spirit is a free Agent p. 47. Reas 3. Drawn from the rule of Divine Justice p. 48 49. 4. For Application Use 1. For Information of the greatnesse of the Judgement when the Spirit ceaseth striving in 4. Aggravations 1. God takes away his Ordinances p. 50. 2. God suffers not the Spirit to work by the Ordinances 3. God gives them over to a Spirit of delusion ibid. 4. God gives them over to a hard heart p. 53. ●se 2. For Exhortation Three Morives 1. From the brevity of our lives p. 55. 2. From the Vncertainty of the Spirits striving ibid. 3. From the certainty of the Day of Judgement p. 56. Use 3. For Reproof of 4. sorts of persons especially 1. Such as contemne the Spirit p. 56. 2. Such as are barren and unfruitfull p. 57. 3. Such as are secure p. 57. 4. Impenitent persons p. 57. Use 4. for Examination in three Queries 1. How we may distinguish the strivings of Gods Spirit from a spirit of error and delusion p. 58 59. 2. How we may distinguish the strivings of Gods Spirit from our own spirit p. 59. 3. How we may know whether Gods Spirit hath effectually stroven with us p. 59 60. Use 5. for Direction in four particulars p. 60. Use 6. for Consolation Doct. 2. That it is an exceeding great mercy when the Lord vouchsafes unto any person time and space for Repentance p. 60. Reas 1. To glorifie the Riches of Gods Mercy p. 61. Reas 2. To glorifie his Justice ibid. Reas 3. At the request of Gods servants many are spared ibid. Vse 1. For admiration of Gods infinite mercy Vse 2. For terrour unto presumptuous sinners Convictions 1. It 's great folly to put off Repentance 2. It argues great contempt 3. It argues high presumption Use 3. for Exhortation in four Considerations 1. Now the Spirit strives 2. Now is the limited time 3. Now is the accepted time 4. Now once past cannot be recalled Use 4. for Caution in five particulars 63 64. The 5. ●se for Admonition in five particulars p. 64 65. The 6. Vse is for Comfort ibid. SERM. IV. 2 Pet. 3. 11. Seeing then that all these things shall be dissolved what manner of persons ought ye to be in all holy conversation and godlynesse The Coherence and Text explained and divided p. 65 66 67 68. Doct. That the serious consideration of the day of Judgement should in an especial manner engage us unto an holy life and conversation p. 69. Method of handling the Doctrine 1. By Scripture Testimony p. 69 70. 2. By evidence of three Reasons 1. Because onely holy persons shall be able to stand in judgement p. 71. Q. Whether the Saints shall have their sins mentioned at the day of Judgement p. 71. Reas 2. This is the present time ibid. Reas 3. Judgement returns all as death leaves them p. 72. 3. By particular Application in five Vses 1. For terrour unto three sorts 1. Scoffers at holynesse p. 73. 2. Hypocrites p. 74. 3. Secret sinners p. 75. Vse 2. for Exhortation p. 76 77. 9. Motives 1. We are elected unto Holynesse p. 78. 2. We are created unto Holynesse ibid. 3. We are redeemed to be holy ibid. 4. It s Gods will that we should be holy ibid. 5. Holynesse is our calling p. 79. 6. Heaven is a place for holy persons ibid. 7. There shall be holy employment ibid. 8. There shall be holy company ibid. 9. This is the time of labouring after holynesse ibid. Use 3. for Examination in 12. Characters 1. Spiritual poverty p. 80. 2. High estimation of Jesus Christ ibid. 3. The heart is in love with holynesse p. 81. 4. Irgenuous sorrow for sinne ibid. 5.
subjiciuntur Contra ingenium naturae suae agnoscamus naturam Dei quae cogit illa nostris usibus inservire Pet. Mart. Poenitentia Dei est Mutādorum immutabilis ratio August Hunc adulterinum degenerum pro meo jam agnoscere dedignor Calv. in Loc. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 omni die 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 70 Inter. Sedes vitae sedes animae principium intellectus vo luntatis affectnum mo●um to vanity and destruction through Mans iniquity Rom. 8. 20 22. But this sharp Sentence God pronounceth with a great deal of reluctancy he is said to repent in this verse and v. 6. both to repent and be grieved at his heart This is an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 repentance cannot in a proper sense be attributed to God Repentance in God is the unchangeable disposition of changeable things as Augustine observes God may will a change where he doth not change his will There 's no change in the Creator the change is in the Creature and here we may see how God takes upon him our affections and so condescends to our capacity As we repent and are grieved when any thing displeaseth us so God here speaking after the manner of men is said to repent and grieve Hence we may observe what an hainous and abominable thing sin is that causeth God to grieve Calvin on the place supposeth God pleading on this wise This is not my work this is not the man created after mine Image endowed with such noble faculties this adulterous and degenerate world I scorn to own for mine But wherein consists the greatness of the sins of the old World against whom the Lord threatens destruction You have a general charge given in by God himself v. 5. compared with Gen. 8. 21. It 's said there The imagination of mans heart is evil from his youth They were habituated in wickedness generally both heart and life stark n●ught they were gray hair'd in wickedness and now arrived at the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the highest point and degree of impiety and the heart which the Philosophers say is the seat of life and Scripture saith It is the seat of the soul and principle of the understanding will affections and motions this is depraved and become the forge of all abominations It 's said Every imagination of the thoughts of his heart were onely evil continually Of this change in general the Lord gives a clear proof by particulars v. 2. The sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair c. By sons of God some understand Angels This was the conjecture of Tertullian Justin Martyr Clemens Alexardrinus and others But Chrysostome urgeth that Scripture which to me seems a full confutation of their opinion Matth. 22. 30. In the resurrection they neither marry nor are given in marriage but are as the angels of God in heaven Others understand by sons of God the sons of Princes and those great Personages that liv'd in those days I shall rather wave these ●xpositions and concur with Calvin Luther Musculus Ainsworth and other solid Commentators who unanimously by Sons of God understand the Posterity of Seth such as were the sons of God by external Profession the men of the Church of God and these took the daughters of men i. e. The Posterity of Cain The holy Seed mingled themselves with the prophane Seed they looked at naught 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 70 Interp. else besides Beauty and satisfaction of ●usts Beauty was the * object of their Love This desire of Beauty was the Harbinger of their ruine It seems they took any Women whatsoever having no regard to goodness no regard to God none to their Parents advice they made their own choice Beauty Lust Violence their own will was the rule they went by and might prevail'd above right Violence and power carryed all before them v. 4. some derive the word quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sons of the Earth This Etymology savors of a Poetical Figment therefore I discard it altogether The word in the Original is Nephilim it comes from Naphal to fall they were Apo●ates and fell from God and by reason of their tyranny and cruelty caused many to fall before them It 's said Haggibburim they were mighty men The Caldee calls them Gibbaraja mighty men So Nimrod was Gibbor mighty Gen. 10. 8. He hunted souls he was a monstrous Tyrant and Persecutor of the Church of God These men were famous they had a great name but they were famous onely for oppression and cruelty their Will was their L●w and their strength and might bore down all before them They got power and a name by the Injuries and Persecutions which they exercised upon the Church of God Calvin gives a remarkable observation That it was the Haec prima fuit mundi nobilitas nequis longa famosa imaginum serie nimium sibi placeat Calv. in Loc. first Nobility of the world That no one should too much please himself with a long and famous series of Images of Ancestors And Luther gives another note writing of the fame of these wicked Gyants and the renown they got by their Villanies he compares them to the Popes Cardinals and Bishops who would not be called by those names they deserved they would not be called Tyrants Impious Qui salutantur principes regna tenerent non Tyranni c. sed clementissimi sanctissimi reverendissimi appellantur Luth. Sacrilegious but Merciful Holy Reverend So the renown of these Gyants is mentioned for their Villanies They were famous Oppressors cruel Blood-suckers wicked Tyrants And thus you have a draught of the old World set before your view Their crying sins were prophaneness of heart and life promiscuous Marriages Polygamies contempt of God and Parents Oppressions Cruelty and Persecution They had many warnings from God many reproofs and admonitions by the Ministry of the Patriarchs and all in vain wherefore the Lord threatens in the Text My spirit shall not always strive c. Which words are a Sermon Preach'd by the great God of Heaven and Earth to the old wicked World which Sermon is a Patern and the Archetipam for Ministers to Preach by and consists of Judgement and Mercy 1. Here 's a dreadful Judgement or a sad Commination of Divis 1. A Judgement and the reason thereof the heaviest punishment that can befall a people on this side Hell My spirit c. 2. Here 's a strong reason to enforce For that he also is flesh In the Mercy contained in the Text. 1. You have something implyed It s said Not always implying that it hath striven some time and a long time too In Justice God might cut sinners asunder in the midst of their rebellions and send them to Hell But O the infinite mercy and patience of God thus to strive at all and to strive so long with rebellious sinners 2. Here 's a mercy
came justly upon them for the neglect and unprofitableness under the Gospel in King Edward the sixth's days And if they were so severely punished for a few years unprofitableness under the means of Grace of how much forer punishment shall we of England be accounted worthy who well nigh a hundred years have enjoyed the purity of the Gospel and yet we are barren and unfruitful Let us every one acknowledge his own unfruitfulness that notwithstanding fatning Ordinances we have lean souls and let us every one pray in particular Lord lay not my unfruitfulness under the Ministry unto my charge The Spirit will not always strive and wait at those Bethesda's God may in judgement say I will take this kingdom from you and give it to others who will bring forth the fruits of it I will no more suffer my servants to be abused no more suffer my word to be despised I 'le rain Mann●h no more round about your tents if you have so cheap an esteem of it Let us all deprecate this dreadful judgement which the P●ophet Amos threatens Amos 8. 1. Behold a basket of summer-fruits and he said What seest thou and I said A basket of summer-fruit then said the Lord unto me The end is come upon my people of Israel I will not again pass by them any more This is the second way whereby the Spirit ●●rives viz. By the Ministry of the word A third way whereby the Spirit strives is by the checks and 3. The Spirit strives by the conviction of conscience Multi habent scientiā pauci vero conscientiam Bernard de interiore domo In corde puritatem In ore veritatem In actione rectitudinem Bern. de interdomo convictions of conscience Bernard makes a sad complaint in that excellent Tract De interiori domo Many haue knowledge but few have conscience He lays down there three choice qualifications of a good conscience To have sincerity in the heart truth in the mouth and rectitude in the conversation These are distinguishing Notes for tryal and examination Now the spirit of God strives by the checks of conscience Conscience flew in Judas his face a legal qualm came upon him I can call it no better It sprang from the horror of the wrath of God and Hell fire flashing in his face It was no Evangelical repentance Judas got thirty pieces of silver but conscience forced him to a restitution Conscience is a reflect act it looks back upon a mans self It is like a Musket over-charged it will recoil upon a sinner It is like a Blood-hound that will follow by the scent and will never leave searching till it hath descryed the Delinquent Wherefore Brethren let us take special notice of the checks of Conscience Let us keep faith and a good conscience joyn'd as the Apostle exhorts Let us not break Gods link Let Pauls Herein I exercise be our continual Monitor Acts 24. 16. Herein I exercise my self to have a conscience void of offence towards God and towards men A Christian may have a pardon in the Court of the Judge and yet not discern it in the Court of his conscience In case of desertions withdrawings and suspensions of Gods gracious countenance a Christian may not be able to apprehend Gods reconciled countenance but in this case there are incouraging supporting promises Isa 50. 10. Who is among you that feareth the Lord that obeyeth the voice of his servant that walketh in darkness and hath no light let him trust in the name of the Lord and stay upon his God We read likewise Psal 97. 11. Light is sown for the righteous and gladness for the upright in heart and Psal 112. 4. Unto the upright there ariseth light in the darkness God is gracious and full of compassion and righteous in all his ways But what shall we say when a sinner is condemned both in the Court of the Judge and of conscience how great is that condemnation Spira had a check of conscience and a voice forbidding him O do it not He paid full dear for the wounding of his conscience It 's an observatian of an excellent Divine in a precious Book called Moses self-denyal We had better saith he have all the world Mr. Burroughs Moses Self-denyal cast shame in our faces and upbraid us then that our consciences should cast dirt into them It 's better to endure all the frowns and anger of the greatest Potentates on earth then to have an angry conscience within our breast It 's better to want all the pleasures that earth can afford then to loose the delights which a good conscience will bring in O let the Bird in the breast be always kept singing whatsoever we suffer for it We all subscribe to this in The● whether we do thus in Hypothesi let 's examine our awakned Conscience Let us every one deal impartially with his own conscience All our hearts are naked unto him with whom we have to deal Let every one pray study confer for the information of his own Conscience nothing may be done doubtingly for that is not of faith and whatsoever is not of faith is sin In the whole course of our lives let us bring all our actions to the rule of the word of God and let that decide the controversie Here 's a four-fold infallible rule Let A four-fold rule for the examining of conscience 1. Every one be perswaded in his own heart 2. Let us abstain from all appearances of evil 3. Prove all things and hold fast that which is good 4. Hold faith and a good conscience Let us keep close to these known plain rules discarding carnal policy carnal interests which are the devised ways of men and then let our resolution concur with Luthers I bear this title I Hūc gero titulum cedo nulli Luth. yeild to none Now then when the Spirit thus strives by the checks of conscience let us not resist nor stifle those motions let us not shut our eyes against known light breaking in upon us This is a third way whereby the Spirit strives viz. by the checkings and convictions of Conscience A fourth way wereby the Spirit strives is by the tenders of 4. The Spirit strives by the tender of mercies mercies and loving kindness openings of bowels of compassion towards poor sinners These mercies are tender mercies and there is a multitude of them Psal 51. 1. Have mercy upon me O God according to thy loving kindeness according to the multitude of thy tender mercies blot out my transgressions They are the sounding of Bowels the fountain opened Zech. 13. 1. In that day there shall be a fountain opened to the House of David and to the Inhabitants of Jerusalem for sin and for uncleanness Here is a free tender of Jesus Christ and the riches of his mercies The spirit makes many Proclamations and Invitations to come in to Jesus Christ One is Isa 55. 1. Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters and
us to repentance to Dan. 4. 27. break off our sins by repentance that our tranquillity may be lengthned and that there may be a healing of our errors The use we are to make is that of the Apostle 1 Cor. 10. 6. Now these things were our examples to the intent we should not lust after evil things as they also lusted Let us not pass uncharitable censures upon others as greater sinners for greater sufferings but remember that except we Luke 13. 5. repent we shall likewise perish Seventhly and lastly Let us consider how the Spirit of God 7 The Spirit strives by personal judgements strives by personal Judgements inslicted on our selves There is a Judgement of chastisement and a Judgement of revenge God sends Judgements by way of revenge upon the wicked of the World but by way of chastisement unto his own children When God takes away thy riches and other outward comforts as a childe a wife c. by these the Spirit of God strives with thee and sends thee to God to inquire into the cause and walk more closely and humbly with God and thy duty is to pray to God to teach thee what thou understandest not If God send thee a sore disease a grievous pain suppose the Stone Strangury Collick c. by all these the Spirit strives with thee and reads thee a Lecture of thy Mortality and warneth thee to make a serious and speedy preparation for death Afflictions are sent by God as Scullions to scour away the rust and canker of Gods children They are the Shepheards Dogs to bring home the straying Sheep Luther saith Afflictions teach us to understand Scripture Where God teacheth with the rod there he bestoweth a choice blessing Psal 94. 12. Blessed is the man whom thou chastenest O Lord and teachest him out of thy Law God sends affliction on an errand Go affliction take down such a mans pride goe awaken another from his security Affliction is Gods Ordinance and with the same hand he gives Jesus Christ that he gives correction to his own children Thus the Spirit strives by personal judgements and afflictions The use we must continually make is Heb. 12. 5 6. My son despise not thou the chastening of the Lord nor faint when thou art rebuked of him for whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth and scourgeth every son whom he receiveth Hence saith the Apo●●le Rom. 5. 3. We glory in tribulation knowing that tribulation worketh patience and Jam●s 1. 2. My brethren count it all joy when ye fall into divers temptations The rod hath a voice and we are call'd upon Mich. 6. 9. Hear ye the rod and who hath appointed it Thus you have heard how Gods Spirit strives by its motions by the Ministery of the Word the checks of Conscience tenders of Mercy exercise of patience and long-suffering inslicting of exemplary and signal Judgements upon others and personal Judgements upon our selves Now the Lord give us his Grace and teach us to make much of and cherish the strivings of his holy Spirit and let us all deprecate the fearful judgement in the Text My spirit shall no longer strive with you Iudgement and Mercy Set forth from Gen. 6. 3. HAving dispatcht those two Particulars according to my Serm. 3. at St. Mary's Oxon Jan. 19. 1651. Three Reasons of the Doctrine Reas 1. From the Text because man is flesh method propounded in the unfolding of this Text In the third place I am to enquire into the Grounds and ●easons for the further confirmation of the Point Amongst many that may be given I shall reduce the Reasons of the Text into three Heads The first shall be drawn from the very reason in the Text for that he also is flesh Man is corrupted by reason of sin Man was created statu integro in integrity and innocency resembling the Image of God in righteousness and holiness but now statu corrupto by reason of Adams prevarication he became depraved in the faculties of his soul and all the members of his body and they are become instruments unto wickedness The Holy Ghost sets forth sinful man in a full Character Psal 14. 1 2 3. The fool hath said in his heart there is no God they are corrupt they have done abominable works there is none that doeth good The Lord looked down from Heaven upon the children of men to see whether there were any that did understand and seek God They are all gone aside they are become altogether filthy there is none that doth good no not one Suppose we heard the Lord thus expostulating the case Is this man Is this he that I advanced to the highest rank of visible Creatures whom I created after mine own Image whom I endowed with noble faculties an understanding the bright luminary of the soul to know his Maker and a will to obey him Is he now become flesh fleshly in his imagination fleshly minded Doth he walk after the flesh minding the things of the flesh Hath he thus turn'd Apostate rebell'd against his Lord and Maker This charge being all very true wherefore should I have any more to do with him wherefore should my Spirit strive with vile sinful flesh Thus God might plead and in judgement withdraw the strivings of his holy Spirit Betwixt the spirit and the flesh what agreement can there be The Spirit will not thus be unequally yoaked since man is become thus fleshly thus depraved such a degenerate Plant so corrupt its just with Gods spirit to strive no longer with man By flesh in Scripture is comprehended a Mass of corruption Apostoli verba docent haec duo affectuum genera esse opposita Quae ut intelligamus constitutū fit affectum carnis nihil aliud esse quam usum virium humanaru● semotâ gratiâ Affectus autem spiritus est impulsus divini afflatus usus gratiae Christi Pet. Mart. in Loc. man in his worst estate Rom. 8. 5. They that are after the flesh doe minde the things of the flesh What is predicated of it v. 6 7 8 9. To be carnally minded is death because the carnal minde is enmity against God So then they that are in the flesh cannot please God And what an Antithesis is there between flesh and spirit v. 13. For if ye live after the flesh ye shall die but if ye through the spirit do mortifie the deeds of the body ye shall live The same disproportion there is as between death and life heaven and hell salvation and damnation That God strives with any is a great mercy that the Spirit waits knocking at our doors when as he might knock us down dead O great mercy But when the Spirit strives and flesh resists its motions the Spirit spends his sacred breath wooing us and inviting us to do good unto our own souls and the carnal minde bids defiance unto the Spirit of grace when notwithstanding all the beseechings wooings and sollicitations of the Spirit the flesh rebels carnal
destroys presently in the midst of their rebellions But admit he gives space though he is not bound unto that yet he denys grace to many to whom he vouchsafes space as unto Jezabel and we read of a peradventure 2 Timothy 2. 25. In meeknesse instructing those that oppose themselves if peradventure God may give them repentance This Doctrine speaks terror unto all them that procrastinate repentance I le lay down these convictions It argues exceeding great folly and madness Do we not see how Convict 1. It s great folly to put off repentance many are cropt off in their buds how many are cut off in their sins we are wiser for the World In gainful bargains we make haste saying Do not delay for fear of danger and yet we are stark fools for our souls 2. It argues a great contempt an high affront and indignity against Convict 2. It argues great contempt God Mal. 1. 8. If ye offer the blinde for sacrifice is it not evil c. offer it unto your governor will he be pleased with thee 3. It argues high presumption to presume of patience mercy Convict 3. It argues high presumption and long-suffering when as we abuse them all Rom. 2. 4 5. Despisest thou the riches of his goodness forbearance and long-s●ffering not knowing that the goodness of the Lord leadeth thee to repentance A ter●ible curse will follow if we neglect Gods time when he calls when we call he will neglect our time Prov. 1. 24 25. Because I have called and ye have refused c. therefore ye shall call but I will not answer The third use is for Exhortation to lay hold upon the present Use 3. For Exhortati●n tenders of Grace and make the best of this opportunity Defer not thy repentance a moment longer lay aside all excuses ●ne pleads for his Oxen another for his Form another for his Merch●ndise All these are unfit guests for Christ Now therefore come into Christ Is it not a great mercy that thou art yet alive on this side Hell and the Grave Now then close with God set an high price of Gods mercies and let the riches of his mercy lead thee to repentance Consider 1. Now is the Spirits striving time 2. Now is the limitted time Heb. 4. 7. To day if you will hear his voice c. 3. Now is the accepted time thy soul-saving time 2 Cor. 6. 2. 4. Now once past cannot be recalled I therefore now beseech you by the mercies of God by all the Sermons and Invitations of Christ to make your peace with God to embrace the mercies tendered to break off your sins by repentance and to regard the strivings and wooings of the Spirit of God The fourth use is fo● caution 1. Beware of presuming of future Use 4. For caution 1. Beware of presuming of Grace offers of Grace James 4. 13 14. Go to now ye that say To day or to morrow we will go into such a City and continue there a year and buy and sell whereas ye know not what shall be on the morow The fool in the Gospel was cut off in the midst of his presumption Thou fool this night shall thy soul be required of thee Esau mist his Luke 12. 20 season The five foolish Virgins mist their seasons The old world presumed of life never thinking of a Deluge but when the Flood came How did they wander some got upon House-tops some upon high Mountains some would questionless have been entertained in the Ark but the day of Grace was expired the commission of Preaching of Repentance was but for 120 years that 's past and a Flood over-whelmed them all O my dear Brethren be perswaded to lay hold on the present season of Grace lest ruine overtake you whilst you procrastinate 2. ●eware of sadding the Spirit of God and resisting the sweet motions thereof Eph. 4. 30. The Spirit invites calls woos intreats 2. Beware of sadding the spirit of God thee to be re●onciled and make thy peace with God Thou hearest a voice behinde thee saying This is the way walk therein Hearken to the voice of this spiritual Charmer which charmeth so wisely 3. Beware of low and mean thoughts of the Ordinances of God 3 Beware of low ●houghts of Ordinances Heb. 2. 3. The Israelites slighted Mannah but they paid dear for it Gods Spirit strives by the Word by Prayer by the Sacraments Take heed of undervaluing all these ways of striving Sometimes God strives by an affliction for that 's Gods Ordinance likewise and calls upon thee to learn instruction to smite upon thy thigh 4. Beware of neglecting observations of particular experiences 4. Beware of neglecting observations c. Sometimes God strives with thee in a way of mercy by tenders of Christ sometimes by threatnings neglect not these strivings but make a review of them observe Gods dealings with thy soul how the Lord woos invites and waits on thee how sometimes thy heart hath been opened like Lydia's to close with God sometimes thou art quick other times dull sometimes thou hast hold of Christ other times thou wantest his presence This is the lot of Gods people sometimes they are in an ebb some●imes in a float sometimes their Faith is strong other times they know not whether they have any at all or no This was David's case and thou must apply Davids remedy Why ar● thou cast down O my Psal 4. 2. v. ult soul and why art thou disquieted within me still trust in God Beware of trusting to thine own resolutions O say some I resolve hereafter to repent and close with God This is that which ruines multitudes because they presume in their own strength What are our resolutions but as the early dew which soon passeth away What are the best of men if God leaves them unto themselves we must therefore take heed of sacrificing to our own nets and drags trusting to our own strength but come off from all those and act in the strength of God We can do nothing without him but all things through Christ that strengthens us Samson said He would go out and shake himself as at other times And he wist not Judg. 16. 20. that the Lord was departed from him 5. Beware of pride and stoutness of heart Lastly Beware of pride and stoutness of heart trying conclusions with God and reasoning and counter-striving against God The proud men would not believe the Prophet saying Thou speakest falsly the Lord our God hath not sent thee to say Go not into Aegypt to sojourn there Jer. 43. 2. Use 5. For admonition The fifth Use shall be for admonition O that we could account the long-suffering of God our salvation And O that the goodness of God and the riches of his mercy might lead us to repentance In few words be admonished 1. Take the benefit of the season To day Repent speedily 1. Repent speedily 2. Repent seriously Isa 55. 6. Heb.
up after their deliverance Votivas Tabulas as Monuments of gratitude for their deliverance VVhat are we to offer but Thanksgiving Ps 50. 14. what are wee to render but the Calves of our lips Hos 14. 2. No● if wee thus I bour to eternize Gods name he will have regard unto our names if we honour him he will honour us so he declares Them that honour me I will honour 1 Sam. 2. 30. Secondly a gratefull commemoration of Mercies and Deliverances Reas 2. Thankfulnes is Gods Tribute is that Tribute that God requires that Homage due unto him VVe are all indebted to God nec solvendo sumus whatever we can doe at the best holds no proportion with the mercy received yet the Lord is pleased to accept of a thankfull heart and where it is graciously rewards it VVhat speciall notice doth Christ take of the thankfull Samaritan and the Apostle joynes unthankfull and unholy together what a brand of infamy lyeth on the ungratefull Impudence and Ingratitude goe together How many are like Swine that eat the Acorns but never look up to the Tree what great ingratitude was charged on Ieshurun to forget the Ro●k that made them and lightly esteem of the Rock of their salvation Now what a poor pittance is this Rent-penny and acknowledgment to vouchsafe unto the father of Mercies Shall we not return a drop of Praises for an Ocean of Mercies where 's Davids Quid retribuam What shall I render c. Psal 107. 8. A third Reason shall be drawn from the excellency of the duty Reas 3. From the excellency of the duty to record Mercies to speak good of God and blesse his name to tell what God hath done for thy self and for others what national what personal mercies he hath heaped on thee and to be exuberant in the praises of the Lord this is an excellent service To set thy Hosannahs and Hallelujahs on the highest Key and to break forth into the praises of God This is a good thing Psal 92. 1. and as it is a good thing so it is a pleasant thing Psal 147 1. further it 's a comely thing to tell of Gods mercies and to say blessed be God is in discourses a comely Parenthesis The Apostle tels us Eph. 5. 14. that filthiness foolish talking and jesting are unseemly and inconvenient but what 's to be used in their room it followeth but rather giving of thanks but adde further praise is permanent for praise is to all eternity we shall for ever be praising of the Lord we shall sing praise honour and glory unto him that sitteth on the Throne and unto the Lamb for evermore David professeth Ps 146. 2. that he will praise God whilst he hath any being we should thus exercise our selves in that language on earth which will be our employment unto all eternity Reas 4. Drawn from many obligations 1 A Bond of Creation A fourth Reason shall be drawn from those many obligations that lye us upon As 1. Vinculo creationis God it is that made us and not we our selves Psal 100. 3. Now we should be to the praise of God and set forth his praise we should be thankfull unto him and blesse his name as Rivers return unto the Sea whence they first came so wee should returne all wee have to the praise and service of God Auius Fulvius said to his Sonne when he found him in Catilines conspiracy Non ego te Catilinae genui sed patriae So doth God say I gave thee not a soul and body to serve sin withall but to serve me withall Quot membra tot ora So many members of our body and so many faculties of our soules are as so many mouths to call upon us to praise the Lord. 2. Vinculo Redemptionis here 's matter of praise for ever and eternity 2 A Bond of Redemption will be too little to praise God for Jesus Christ our Redeemer who hath delivered us from our enemies to this pur●ose That we might serve him in holynesse and righteousnesse all the daies of our lives Luk. 1. 74 75. So that Thanksgiving is a special service due unto God Quot inimici tot ora so many enemies as we are delivered from by Christs death call upon us to serve Christ for ever and to blesse God for the riches of his mercies in Jesu Christ 3. Vinculo Gratitudinis Quot beneficia tot ora wee receive mercies 3 A Bond of Gratitude at our lying down and ri●ng up we are compassed about with varieties of mercies mercies on the right and mercies on the left hand mercies for our bodies mercies for our souls so that every mercy is a mouth to call upon us to be thankfull Haman plotted most mischief and was counterplotted and the Jews accounted themselves bound even by the bond of gratitude to keep a solemn remembrance of so great a deliverance so the Romish ●un-powder ●rayto●s plotted the destruction of Protestants and layed their designes as low as Hell God hath vou●hsafed a gracious deliverance unto the land of our Nativity wherefore the very bond of Gratitude engageth us to keep this day and offer unto God praise and thanksgiving d●e unto his name 4. Vinculo gloriae divinae promovendae What lyeth in us we should 4 A Bond to promote Gods glory unite all our members and faculties to advance the glory of God Now this is a way of gloryfying God he is glorysied by the praises of his people ●or he that praiseth God glorisieth him Psal 50. 23. Now put all these together and you 'll conclude what good reason we have to keep in memory divine Deliverances and ascribe unto the Lord the praise and glory of his Deliverances I shall insist no longer in this proof of the Doctrine but make a Applicat seasonable improvement thereof in some usefull Application I shall onely ins●st on three ●ses for Info●mation Caution and Exhortation and accordingly apply the point unto the solemnity of the day Lend me I pray your patient attention whilst I make a suitable application of all 1. This serves to inform us of the warrantablenesse of our present Use 1. For information meeting upon this day and what good grounds we have to set apart this day for an Anniversary Thanksgiving Gods people formerly upon like occasions kept a day of remembrance so did the Jews here in the Text keep the Feast of Purim and truly we of this Nation have as great cause as ever any had to keep this memorable day wherein the hand of God was eminently seen in our deliverance wherein his own right arme wrought a glorious salvation for us Now to make you more sensible of the greatnesse of the deliverance I con●eive it very proper to my businesse that lies before me to make a brief Narrative and acquaint you with the ●istory of this day In pursuance whereof I shall observe two heads into which I shall cast my following Narration 1.
under his feet and gave him to be vers 22. the head over all things to the Church which is his body the fulnesse vers 23. Eph. 3. 10. Col. 1. 20. of him that filleth all in all To the intent that now the Principalities and Powers in heavenly places might be knowne by the Church the manifold wisdome of God And having made peace through the blood of his crosse by him to reconcile all things unto himselfe by him I Col. 2. 10. say whether they be things in heaven or things on earth And ye are compleat in him who is the head of all Principality and Power I purposely wave many curious questions wherein Popish writers abound Wherefore in the last place I shall make a practicall improvement of the whole and apply only three inferences for Information Instruction and Consolation For Information 1. For Information 1. What excellent knowing glorious creatures the holy Angells are and if they be so excellent how much more is Jesus Christ their Lord Great is the knowledge of these glorious creatures but what they have is derivative from their Creatour 2. Be informed that it is unlawfull to worship them See thou do Col. 2. 18. it not saith the Angell to John for I am thy fellow-servant And in the place fore cited Let no man beguile you of your reward and in voluntary humility and worshiping of Angells intruding into those things he hath not seen vainly puft up by his fleshly mind 3. Be informed of the singular benefit of the Angells ministry The Angell of the Lord encampeth about them that feare him and delivereth Psal 34. 11. Josh 5. 14 15 them The Angell stood for Joshua It came to passe when Joshua was by Jerico that he lifted up his eyes and looked and behold there stood a man over against him with his sword drawn in his hands and Joshua went unto him and said Art thou for us or for our Adversaries And he said nay but as a captaine of the ho●t of the Lord am I now come And Joshua fell on his face to the earth and did worship and said unto him what saith my Lord unto his servant And he said loose thy shooe from off thy feet for the place whereon thou standest is holy This was the Lord Jesus the Angell of the Covenant for a Created Angell would have refused adoration An Angell preserved the three Children from the flame and burning of the fiery furnace and shut the Lyons mouth An Angell praised for the Church in Zechary that Angell was Christ Then the Angell Zech. 1. 12. of the Lord answered and said O Lord of hosts how long wilt thou not have mercy on Jerusalem and on the Cities of Judah against which thou hast had Indignation these threescore and ten yeares An Angell delivered Hezekiah and smote Senacherib An Angell delivered Peter An Angell brought the good newes of Christs incarnation The Angells of God preserve us in our beds in our houses in our journyes in our undertakings The Angells will carry our soules to Heaven By way of Instruction Vse 2. of Instruction Psal 91. 11. 1. Labour to walk in Gods waies For he shall give his Angells charge over thee to keep thee in all thy waies Whilest we are in our lawfull waies not in our wanderings we have a promise of Protection 2. Pray to God for the Protection of Angells We may not pray to Angells we may not worship them but we may pray to God to vouchsafe their ministry to us to make our waies prosperous to send us an Angell as Abraham believed and cause his Angells to pitcht their Tents about us as Gods messengers to defend Gen. 24. 7. and rescue us out of dangers 3. We should so live as remembring we are in the presence of God and Angells that Gods eyes are over us that the Angells observe o●r carriage and what decorum we keep in the duties we performe For this cause ought the woman to have power on her head because of the Angells Though men as Diodati observes 1 Cor. 11. 10. would give consent and connive at this disorder yet the Angells who are continuall Guardians in their Assemblies would be offended at it For I think saith the Apostle that God hath set forth us the Apostles 1 Cor. 4. 9. 16. last as it were men appointed to death For we are made a spectacle unto the world to Angells and to men Wherefore I beseech you be yee followers of me For Consolation Vse 3. for Consolation This serves for comfort to Gods children that the Angells are their Ministers 1. In their lives they have them under God their protectors the Lord bids them protect preserve succour comfort relieve such a one he is in distresse he is my servant The very Angells 1 King 19. 7 8. were purveyers unto Eliah The Angells ministred unto Christ they strengthened him when he was in the garden when he suffered in his humane Nature So the children of God find it to their comfort that the Angells refresh comfort support and protect them in their greatest extremities 2. When they die the Angells carry their soules into Heaven 3. At the day of judgment they gather the elect unto Christ Mar. 13. 27. He will send his Angells to gather his elect from the four winds from the uttermost part of the earth to the uttermost part of Heaven By all that hath been said we are to understand the happinesse of all the Saints who are here in the text called heires of salvation God gives them his Son and that 's the height of mercy God gives them his Angells for their Guardians so those two Scriptures are abundantly fulfilled Psal 34. 9. O feare the Lord ye his Saints Psal 34. 9. Rom. 8. 32. for there is no want to them that feare him And Rom. 8. 32. He that spared not his own Son but delivered him up for us all how shall he not but with him freely give us all things And these Scriptures bring a full measure of comfort unto the children of God Having Christ the Saints have all he protects and defends them he is Lord over all and commands all creatures services for the good of his people This Doctrine of the Ministry of Angells is too much Idolized by some which fall to the worshiping of them This is flat Idolatry 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is abhominable And this Doctrine is too much slighted by others who are not thankfull to God for the Protection of Angells Both these extreames are to be avoided and our duty is to look upon Angells as fellow servants and begge of God their Ministry And for all deliverances we should returne unto God the praise and glory of all in the language of the Psalmist Psal 115. vers 1. which shall be my conclusion Not unto us O Lord not unto us but unto thy name give glory Psal 115. 1. for thy mercy and truths sake
unto the soule of man As the King of Israel said to the woman that cry'd out in an extreame famine help my Lord ô King if the Lord saith he do not help thee whence shall I help thee out of the barne flore or out of the wine presse So say I if the Lord be not thy comforter in vaine mayest thou expect any comfort from the Creatures What is the vintage of Abiezer to the gleanings of Ephraim What are the onions and garlick of Egypt to the grapes of Canaan Abana and Pharphar rivers of Damascus to Jordan and the rest of the waters of Israel The waters that flow from the Cisternes of the Creatures are like the waters of Tema which soon vanish away hence is it that the Lord complaines of the peoples grand folly and backsliding Jer. 2. 13. For my people have committed two evills they have forsaken me the fountaine of living waters and hewed them out Cisternes broken Cisternes that can hold no water A miserable choyce worse then that of Glaucus Diogenes taxed the folly of men of his time quod res pretiosas minimo emerent venderentque vilissimas plurimo because they Diogenes would buy pretious things at an under rate and overvalue base things so may I condemne the folly of those who overvalue worldly comforts and in the meane time have a cheape esteem of those things which are above Perhaps God hath given thee a beautifull Child and thou mak'st an Idoll of it he straight way takes it from thee God hath given thee riches thou makest the wedge of Gold thy confidence God therefore blowes upon them Fire or water or perfidious servants are made scourges unto thee Thou art in prosperity and thou hast the world at will and gloriest in thy condition God sends an affliction to make thee know thy selfe and rowse thee from thy security carry it then home with thee for a truth write it with the poynt of a Diamond that however thou may'st flatter thy selfe yet casting the best with the worse thou wilt find all things here below to be but vanity and vexatiof spirit and that there is no sollid joy and contentment under the sun For that 's joy as the Philosopher define it in quo quiescit animus wherein the heart takes up it's rest and this cannot be found but in God alone 3. Amidst greatest crossesse straights and extremities then is 3. Demonst God helps amidst greatest Cross●ss Gods opportunity to open his store-house and let downe comforts in abundance In the midst of streights and difficulties when humane policy gives up the bucklers then it 's Gods accustomed manner to manifest himselfe to his servants comfort When Abraham was injoyn'd the hardest service to be his owne sons executioner he went in obedience to Gods command he came to the place made the Altar ready lifted up his hand to give the deaths blow then an unexpected second message comes of deliverance Gen. 22. 12. Abraham Abraham hold thy hand The execution is hindred and the intention of his obedience received a gratious entertainment Now Abraham for this unexpected providence would willingly offer some sacrifice of thanksgiving and speedy provision might be as improbable as was his sons preservation yet then in such a great necessity behold behind him a Ramme caught in a thicket by the hornes a burnt offering of Gods own providing So that the saying is no more common then true Mans extremity is Gods opportunity The example of St Paul is instar omnium very fit for my present purpose the whole story is worthy of perusall that which I shall make use of is described Act. 21. 30 31 32. And all the Citty was moved and the people ran togeather and they took Paul and drew him out of the temple and forth-with the dores were shut and as they went about to kill him tydings came to the chiefe Captaine of the band that all Jerusalem was in an uprore who immediatly took Souldiers and Centurions and ran down unto them and when they saw the chiefe Captaine and Souldiers they left beating of Paul Each passage is of speciall observation 1. A generall insurrection all the Citty 2. Their violent opposition they drew him out 3. Their bloody intention it was to kill Paul 4. The entrance upon execution they were beating him to beat out his life Now in this streight here 's matter for God and none else to shew himselfe Now the divine hand so disposeth that tydings of deliverance come let him alone he hath more work to do Satan and his instruments are chained by God and can go no further then hee 'l permit them In this extremity the divine power was clearely manifested Out of the deep David made his supplication Abyssus ahyssum vocat a depth of misery calls for a depth of mercy Daniel prayed in the Lions Den Jeremiah in the Dungeon Jonah in the Whales belly the Apostles in prison These are Gods times of audience When we are involv'd in miseries and know not how to wind our selves out then God leads us by the hand God hath severall waies to refresh his people as he did Peter when he was a sinking then Christ takes him by the hand God carries his people through thick and thinne amidst their greatest sufferings God hath waies to deliver them God hath a way in the sea to preserve thee in a Shipwrack God hath a way in persecution to stablish his people in the faith and make them of an undaunted courage God hath away in any difference to compose it and cause men to live at peace in one family in one corporation in one Church in one Common-wealth The reason many times why we see not quickly the appearance of a mercy is because matters are not yet brought to such a straight and exigency as all plea of glorying may be took from man and the more praise and glory may redound unto the God of our salvation God saved the Israelites by a few and by improbable meanes as by rammes-hornes empty pitchers c that so they might not vaunt but attribute the victory unto the Lord. Now then in a pinch of need when thou art driven upon pressing exigencies look beyond Hills and Mountaines unto the Lord only whence cometh thy help Cast thy care upon the Lord and he will sustaine thee God made the Ravens to be Eliahs purveyors in a great famine there 's still the same God as good as able as ever although 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Septuagint renders it the labour of the Olive shall lye yet consider God is a God of truth he hath said it I will never leave thee nor forsake thee Heb. 13. 5. When all creature comforts faile thee yet thou hast abundant matter in God to comfort thee who will never faile them that seek him In the mount in thy greatest straights God will be seen to make a provision of comforts for thee and therefore let the Lord be the joy of thy