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A57383 A communicant instructed, or, Practicall directions for worthy receiving of the Lords Supper by Francis Roberts. Roberts, Francis, 1609-1675. 1656 (1656) Wing R1591; ESTC R28105 135,670 280

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was Such a death as all things considered never was endured wherein malice of men rage of all the powers of darkness the wrath of God sins of all the Elect did meet in him at once And think what we worthless sinners gain by this Death of Christ What pardons Reconciliation Peace with God c. And all these confirmed to us in the Lords Supper that lasting Monument of Christ crucified Oh what manifold cause of thankfulness is here 2. The outward matter of the Lords Supper viz. the Elements of Bread and Wine together with the actions of taking blessing breaking giving eating and drinking them affords also much cause of thankfulness that Christ would thus condescend to our weakness as to represent such heavenly mysteries to us by such homely elements and actions He deals herein with us as once with doubting Thomas makes us as it were thrust our finger into the print of his nails that we may believe helps our inward graces by our outward senses 3. The ends of the Lords Supper are such that they notably challenge manifold thankfulness from us whensoever we partake the Lords Supper These ends are The solemn remembrance of Christs Death never to be forgotten The nourishing of the inward man of faith and all our graces The confirmation and application of the New Testament with all the Promises thereof to us The Ratification of the pardon of our sins in Christs blood And the sealing up unto us that sweet priviledge of Communion with Christ and with one another Not one of these but deserves much thankfulnesse How great thankfulness then is due for all of them together in the Lords Supper 2. The Tryal of our thankfulness which is thus necessary for worthy communicating comes next to be considered and we may try the truth of our thankfulness by the three eminent Acts or degrees of thankfulness viz. 1. Notice-taking or acknowledgement of blessings received 2. Estimation of mercies received and acknowledged 3. Retribution or rendering again for mercies received acknowledged and esteemed 1. Notice-taking or acknowledgement of benefits received is a first degree or Act of thankfulness Till a man take notice of a benefit and whence it comes he can neither esteem it nor render again for it as he ought Thus when David would express his thankfulness to God for enabling him and his people to offer so willingly and liberally towards the building of the Temple He takes notice of the benefit and whence it came even all from God alone Our God we thank thee and prayse thy glorious name But who am I and what is my people that we should be able to offer so willingly after this sort for all things come of thee and of thine own have we given thee And in the Hebrew phrase Giving of thanks is most usually expressed by Confessing to the Lord. For confessing and acknowledging what good we receive and whence we have it is a prime point of thankfulness Contrariwise it 's a point of deep ingratitude not to observe and acknowledge the benefits and whence they come Israel is blamed for this She did not know that I gave her corn and new wine and oil and multiplied her silver and gold Such like Swine eat up and devoure the Acorns or mast but never look up to the Oak whence they fall Dost thou now duly take notice of that mercy of mercies Jesus Christ and his Death how mysteriously the saving of sinners by him is contrived in Gods eternal Counsel and revealed in the Scriptures How Chri●t his death and all his benefits originally flow from Gods meer grace and the good pleasure of his will Dost thou duly observe and acknowledge the mercy of the Lords Supper tendering and applying Christ and his death and how it was from Christs tender love and care of his Church that he instituted it This is some degree of gratitude But alas how many come to the Lords Supper who do not considerately take notice of this Mystery of saving sinners by Christ which is the sum of all the Bible c. 2. Estimation of Benefits received and acknowledged is a second Act or Degree of thankfulness The Virgin Mary thankfully magnifying the Lord for that extraordinary mercy to her Her Conception of Christ by the Holy Gho●t She notably estimates and amplifies the Mercy by the M●jesty of the Giver the meanness of the Receiver and the Greatness of the Gift My soul doth magnifie the Lord For he hath regarded the low estate of his hand-maid for he that is mighty hath done to me great things God had done great things for Mary in that Christ according to the flesh was conceived in her womb but he hath done greater for thee in that Christ according to the Spirit is conceived in thy soul. She was happy in bearing Christ much happier in believing in Christ. She was happy in being Christs natural Mother Happier in being Christs spiritual member Now as true thankfulness esteems and values mercies turns them over and over views them on every side c. so unthankfulnesse debases vi●ifies discommends twits fleights the mercies as Israel the Mannah Our soul loatheth this light-light Bread as the Hebrew phrase is Art thou now qualified with thankfulness for the Lords Supper where then is thy due estimation of 1. Christ 2. His Death 3. His Supper All the●e are thankfully to be esteemed according to their respective worth by thankful Communicants 1. Dost thou esteem Christ the Matter of the Lords Supper according to his worth Paul so esteemed him that he desired to Know nothing but Christ. That he counted all things losse for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ yea all things dung that he might win Christ. The Church so esteemed Christ as to count him The chief among ten thousand How dost thou estimate Christ Dost thou amplifie and commend Christ to thy self by such consideration as may raise up greatest estimation of him As 1. The greatnesse of the Giver the all-sufficient self-●ufficient God Having all happinesse fulne●s and perfection in himself and no way needing any of his creatures Yet he gave Christ for us 2. The eminency of the Gift or Benefit Christ is The Gift of God That is The Gift of Gifts No other Gift being comparable to him And therefore they are said to have Received no mercy that are not partakers of this mercy of mercies He is the Son of God the only begotten Son of God the brightnesse of his Fathers glory the expresse character of his person The Son of his Love Holy harmless undefiled separate from sinners and higher then the Heavens c. Who can truly know Christ and not highly esteem Christ 3. The indignity of them for whose sakes Christ was given He was intentionally indeed given for his elect sheep and for his Church But these all undone by the fall of the first Adam
and whilest in that wretched state Whilest yet without strength when sinners whilest enemies whilest enmity it self against God when they were dead in trespasses and sins in the gall of bitterness and bond of iniquity Even then when there was nothing but unworthiness and abominableness in them was Christ given for them And this whilst Christ was not given for the Reprobates of the world for whom Christ would not so much as Pray much lesse die yet these in no worse condition by nature then those for whom Christ died How doth this heighten the mercy 4. The motive or impulsive why Christ was bestowed was not any thing at all in the creature but meerly the free Grace and Love of God Vpon these and like considerations what estimation hast thou of Christ 2. Dost thou esteem Christs Death The Mystery of the Lords Supper Christ is the matter but how Christ as crucified as Broken as slain for us in that respect Christ is the matter his Death therefore is the Mystery of it How dost value Christs Death Dost thou estimate it according to the true valuableness of it viz. 1. Esteemest thou Christs death according to the love evidenced in it Greater love then this hath no man then that a man lay down his life for his friends But greater then this Christ shewed in laying down his life for enemies Hereby perceive we the love of God because he laid down his life for us Was ever love like this love The Apostle prayes for the Ephesians and his expressions are admirable That they may be able to comprehend with all Saints what is the breadth and length and depth and heighth and to know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge He measures Christs love by 4 Dimensions Philosophy knows but three Length Breadth and Depth Divinity adds a fourth Heighth intimating that Christs love is far beyond all ordinary measures and dimensions There 's Depth in it without bottom Heighth in it without top Breadth in it without side and Length in it without end Yea it utterly passeth knowledge Christs warmest love to sinners flowed with his blood out of all his wounds Esteemest thou his Death according to Christs love in dying 2. Esteemest thou Christs death according to the sufficiency of it Christs death was an Odour of a sweet smell most acceptable to God He by once offering up of himself hath for ever perfected them that are sanctified So that there needs now no more Sacrifice for sins The infinite dignity of his person so infinitely dignified his passion Hence Christ by his short suffering prevailed more for our salvation then all men on earth or Angels in Heaven could have done if they should have suffered to eternity 3. Esteemest thou Christs death according to the many inestimable benefits of it Hereby Sinners are justified sins purged away Hereby Enemies to God are reconciled Hereby death he that had the power of death the Devil with all Principalities and powers are subdued Hereby eternal Redemption from spiritual thraldom is obtained In a word hereby we have accesse with boldnesse and entrance into the Holiest of all Heaven it self Christs blood is Heavens Key Oh what soul can truly taste these saving purchases of Christs death and not admire it 3. Finally doest thou aright esteem the Lords Supper it self It deserves high estimation 1. For the mysteries in it Christs death and all the benefits of it The New Covenant and all the promises of it Communion with Christ and all the comforts of it 2. For the familiarity of it Herein Christ deals familiarly with his members He stoops to their senses below that their senses may lift up their faith to him above He represents highest mysteries under meanest elements and actions Thus he condescends to our earthliness that we may aseend to his heavenlinesse 3. For the Firmnesse of it In right use the Lords Supper doth as surely signifie seale and exhibit Christ crucified and all his benefits to us as we partake the outward elements there being such a Sacramental union betwixt signes and things signified Do these and like considerations raise up thy thoughts to an high estimation of this Ordinance 3. Retribution or rendring again according to the benefit received acknowledged and esteemed is the third and highest act or degree of thankfulnesse When David was most enlarged unto thankfulnesse he saith What shall I render unto the Lord for all his benefits towards me And because King Hezekiah recovered of his ●●knesse at his prayer rendered not again according to the benefit done unto him therefore there was wrath upon him and upon Judah and Jerusalem If non-rendring be ●o dangerous then how dangerous is it to render to God evil for good But what can we or ought we to render again for Christ for his Death for his Supper which are the eminent benefits that immediately call for thankful returns or rendrings when we communicate Answ. What should we not render again for these benefits All we can render is farre too little We should r●nder 1 Triumphant praises Thus David resolved to render I will take up the cup of salvations and call on the name of the Lord. That is I will take up the Cup of Thanksgivings for Gods salvations and deliverances and will pray and praise God or preach abroad Gods mercies For Israel offered for mercies receied Thank-offerings eating thereof with joy before the Lord and in their eating were wont to take up the Cup of wine and blesse God to this custome David alludes In like sort we should be much in Praises and Thanksgivings for Christ his death c. As Paul notably thanks Christ not only for calling him to the Apostolical Ministery but also and especially for coming into the world to save sinners and himselfe chief of sinners making him a pattern of his grace to all that after should believe 2 Indeared affections Christ pardons the womans many sinnes this was one fruit of his Death Hereupon She loved him much and testified the same by washing his feet with her teares wiping them with the hairs of her head kissing them and anointing them with oyntment She hath nothing too good nothing good enough for Christ. Hath Christ loved thee and given himself for thee leaving this Sacrament as a legacy of his love Oh how should'st thou love him again that thus loved thee first 3 True hearted repentance and reformation Christ came into Zacheus's house to dine with him yea rather into Zacheus his heart there spiritually to feast his soul presently Zacheus the Arch-publican penitentially reformes Behold Lord the halfe of my goods I give to the poor and if I have taken any thing from any man by false accusation I restore him fourefold And Christ testifies This day is salvation come to this house forasmuch as he also is the sonne of Abraham S●ul
of it which thou takest in hand Rouse up therefore thy judgement and spiritual senses to eye and discern these things truly that so all thine other Graces may be helped and quickened Knowlede being the inlet guide and enlivener of them all 2. Act Faith In discerning and tasting spiritually Christs body and blood how sweet and precious nourishment they are In assenting to the truth of the New Covenant and all the promises thereof to the truth of Christs death and all the benefits thereof to the certainty of this Sacramental comfort and that to the worthy Communicant The bread and wine are Christs body and blood indeed Sacramentally especially in Applying the Covenant and Promi●es Christ his love death and all the fruits of his death particularly to thine own soul as certainly undoubtedly as the outward elements are applied to thy body Say with Thomas ●●●ling Christs wounds My Lord and my God With Paul Christ loved me and gave h●mself for me Say as certainly as this Bread and this wine are mine so the New Testament and all the Promises thereof are mine pardon of sin mine Christ and his death with all the advantages thereof are mine c. Thus to act faith is to eat and drink indeed to communicate indeed 3. Act Repentance and godly Sorrow When thou seest the bread broken and the wine separated from the bread think how Christs body was wounded and his blod shed and separated from his body and this for thy sins Then look upon Christ by faith whom thou hast pierced and be in bitternesse for him by godly sorrow as one is in bitternesse for his first borne c. Fill thine heart with shame and confusion for those sins and with hatred iudignation and holy revenge against those sins of thine that cost Christ so dear and would have cost thee damnation And resolve for future to abominate thy corruptions as the thorns scourges nails and spear that did murder the Lord of glory 4. Act New Obedience Say to thy self O my soul was Christ thus obedient to the death for thee even to the death of the Crosse Did he count it meat and drink to do the will of him that sent him and to finish his work Did he delight to do yea and to suffer the Will of God in being sacrificed for thee How obedient then shouldst thou be to Christ live not to the world or to sinne or to thy selfe but to Christ willingly do any thing he commands forbear any thing he forbids and bear any thing he inflicts that Christ in all may be glorified 5. Act Love sincerely to Christ and his Members This Sacrament is Christs Love-token to his Church A Memorial of his death for us which was his greatest expression of love to us Behold how his love streamed forth to sinners out of every stripe and wound of head back hands feet and heart Behold how he loved thee wilt not thou love him again warme thy frozen affections at this fire of Christs love and melt them into reciprocal love to Christ. Love him in his Person Offices Ordinances and in his Image in whomsoever it appeares 6. Act Thankfulnesse Christ crucified represented here is highest matter of Thankfulnesse Acknowledge this mercy of mercies esteem it according to its worth and resolve to render again to Christ thy praises service affections sufferings and thy self both soul and body in way of Thankfulnesse Say with David Blesse the Lord O my soul And What shall I render to the Lord for all his benefits towards me c. 7. Act Finally a true spiritual Appetite Eagerly hunger and thirst after this bread and drink indeed the flesh and blood of Christ. These will so fully satisfie the soul that it shall never totally hunger or thirst more but shall live for evermore And as the hungry stomach delightfully closeth with corporal food extracting the nutritive juyce out of it so let thine hungring soul contentingly close with Christ drawing all hearty juyce and nourishment from him V. Improve thy corporal Senses discerning the outside of the Lords Supper to help thy spiritual Senses and Graces to discerne the inside of the Lords Supper As windows casements let in the light heat and influence of the Sun into an house so these windows and casements of the outward senses let in the light heat and spiritual influence of Jesus Christ the Sun of righteousnesse into the heart and soul. As in the Word preached Christ enters into the heart by the Sense of Hearing the Organ of Discipline so in the Lords Supper Christ comes into the heart by the senses of Seeing Touching and Tasting Doth Christ make use of thy Senses to condescend to thee do thou improve thy Senses to ascend up unto him Thomas would not believe that Christ was alive till he put his fingers into his wounds after he revived and then he cries out My Lord and my God so thou that doubtest of Christs love to thee and dying for thee cast hither thine eye to the bread broken and wine severed from it To the elements and actions and see the Lords dying for thee reach hither thine hand take and apply this bread broken to thine own self and as it were feel his wounded hands and feet and heart use here thy taste and discern what nourishment Christ is And be no longer faithlesse but believing O fix thy senses stedfastly upon the Supper of the Lord till thou hast fixed thine heart firmly upon the Lord of the Supper Let thy senses be acted towards the bread and wine till thy soul be affected with the bread and water of life VI Remember Iesus Chr●st and him crucified throughout the whole action This is Christs command in the Institution that we both eat the Bread and drink the Cup in remembrance of him And Paul explaining this remembrance of Christ interprets it especially in reference to his Death and the shewing of it forth The Lords Supper then was intended for a solemne Memorial of Christ crucified and as it were a Marble-Monument or piller upon Christs Sepulchre that Christ and his death might never be forgotten but that Christ dying might be everliving in his peoples hearts Therefore at the Lords Supper remember Christ remember his love to thee remember his death for thee think often and meditate much upon these things Quest. But how shall I remember Christ crucified at the Lords Supper for greatest advantage and benefit to my soul Answ. Remember Christ crucified three wayes v●z 1. Historically remembring the History of Christ and his death 2. Mysteriously remembring the spiritual mystery of Chr●st and his death 3. Energetically so remembring both as to imprint them with energy effect and eff●cacy upon the soul. This will be remembring Christ crucified indeed 1. Historically Remember the History of Christ and of his death as it is recorded in holy Scriptures especially as it is delineated by the four
reprobate Angels even The Angels that kept not their first estate the Devil and his Angels for whom everlast●ng fire is prepared God intending more especially to glorifie himself in the intellectuall cre●tures Angels and Men hath more especially decreed their final state all things concerning them tending thereunto This the Apostle calls Predestinating us to the Adoption of ch●ldren by Iesus Christ to himself according to the good pleasure of his Will to the praise of the glory of his grace And in order to this end Whom he did predestinate them he also called and whom he called them he also justified and whom he justified them he also glorified This Decree of God whether more Generally or more Specially considered hath the●e excellencies and perfections in it It is Eternal Vnchangeable Free Wise Iust and the Cause of Causes 1. Eternal According as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world c. 2. Vnchangeable for it is said That the purpose of God according to Election might stand with whom is no variablnesse neither shadow of turning And The foundation of God standeth sure having this Seale The Lord knoweth them that are his and there is a determinate number of them which cannot be increased nor di●inished 3. Free Gratuitous and meerly ●ndependent on the creature or any thing in the creature ha●ing no inward impulsive cause moving him thereunto but the good pleasure of his Will not foreseen Faith Works Freedome of Will Perseverance c. Having predestinated us to the Adoption of children by Iesus Christ to himself according to the good pleasure of his Will Who hath saved us and called us with an holy calling not according to our works but according to his own purpose and grace which was given us in Christ before the world began I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy and I will have compassion on whom I will have compassion 4. Wise For We are predestinated according to the purpose of him who worketh all things according to the Counsell of his own Will O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are his judgements and his ways past finding out for who hath known the minde of the Lord or who hath been his Counsellor 5. Just and most equal Gods Decrees may be secret and mysterious cannot be unjust or injurious God is so just yea such infinite justice that he can do or decree nothing but what is just and equal It is written Jacob have I loved but Esau have I hated What shall we say then is there unrighteousness with God God forbid Hath not the Potter power over the Clay of the same lump to make one vessel unto honour and another unto dishonour And hath not God greater power to dispose by his decree of his creatures yet God no way wrongs the cr●ature nor the Potter the Clay 6. Finally Gods Decree is the Cause of Causes All inferiour Causes and Means conducing to the ends whereunto God decrees any thing are subordinate to Gods decree as the supreme cause of them all Gods Decree not onely fore-appoints the end but also all the secondary causes and means tending and conducing to that end Hence that Concatenation of the causes of our salvation Whom he did predestinate them he also called and whom he called them he also justified and whom he justified them he also glorified Thus of Gods works before all time His Decrees 2. The works of God in time are His executions of his Decrees God executeth his Decrees 1. Partly in the beginning of Time by Creation 2. Partly in the succession and continuance of time by Providence By both which God makes himself most gloriously known to his creatures Discovering his invisible perfections by his visible works 1. Creation is Gods making the world and all things therein of nothing in the space of the first six dayes very good by the word of his power for himself Through faith we understand that the worlds were framed by the Word of God so that things which are seen were not made of things which do appear In six dayes the Lord made heaven and earth the sea and all that in them is and rested the seventh day Man was reserved to the last place as Gods most accurate and curious piece being by reason of his heavenly soul and earthly body as an Epitome or Abstract of Heaven and Earth and thence justly styled the Microcosme or Little-worlds And God saw everything that he had made and behold it was very good The LORD hath made all things for himself yea even the wicked for the day of evil In this work of Creation Gods Freedome Wisdome Power and Goodnesse shine forth most gloriously 1. Freedome in that he hath done whatsoever he pleased He made one world and no more such creatures and no other in such sort and not otherwise because he pleased None may controll his work Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it Why hast thou made me thus 2. Wisdome for he worketh all things according to the Counsel of his own Will How many ways hath God discovered his wisdome herein As in the Order of Creation He made all things in six days He could have made them in one day in one houre as easily but he would shew himself a God of Order He first made the Creatures containing then the contained and from the more imperfect proceeds to the more perfect Creatures In the variety of Creatures O LORD how manifold are thy works in wisdom hast thou made them all In the distinct Natures and Properties of all those varieties Ther 's one glory of the Sun another glory of the Moon another glory of the Stars and one Star differeth from another Star in glory Some of the Elements are hot some cold some moist some dry some light some heavy The vertues of plants fruits c. are innumerable In the sweet Harmony of the whole Vnivere though consisting of such different creatures the wisdome of God also wonderously appears 3. Power in that he could frame all things of nothing without any pre-existent matter and all most easily by his word He said Let there be light and there was light c. He spake works more easily then we can speak words He spake and it was done he commanded and it stood fast He commanded and they were created It was but A word and A work 4. Goodnesse in that God though infinitely happy and satisfied in himself was pleased to create the world especially Men and Angels to communicate himself and his goodnesse to them 2. Providence is Gods sustaining governing and ordering all Creatures together with all their actions to his own glory So that in Gods Providence generally considered there are three grand acts viz. 1. Sustaining upholding or preserving of the Creatures
the race set before us 4. The fle●h The flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit lusteth against the flesh It 's called flesh to set forth the ba●enesse of sinne the flesh being ●he base part of man 5. The old man ●o called Partly because of the long continuance of it in us it 's an in●eterate di●ease as old as our selves Partly because of the corruptness and deceitfulness of it Put off concerning the former conversation the old man which is corrupt according to the deceitfull lusts 6. The law of sin in our members becau●e it as it were commands compels and even necessitates us to sin As a law rules them that are under it 7. Finally Original corruption is stiled A body of death because As the naturall body hath many members so Original sin hath m●ny lusts as limbs thereof And because this body of sin exposeth unto death These and such like are the denominations of Original sin by all which the vilenesse of it may in some measure appear The nature of Original sin seems especially to consist in the●e three particulars v●z 1. In a totall priva●ion of the Image of God and of all that Original righteousnesse and integrity wherein we were at first created 2. In an utter inability to any true spiritual good yea in an absolute enmity thereunto For when we were yet without strength When we were enem●es we were reconciled to God The carnal minde is enmity against God for it is not subject to the Law of God neither indeed can be 3. In an universall and continual pronenesse to all evil God saw that every imagination of the thoughts of mens hear●s was onely evill continually Their throat is an open Sepulchre c. And our Saviour tels us A corrupt tree cannot brings forth good fruit This is the nature of Original corruption Oh how deadly is the Poison of it to the Nature of man The Aggravations of Originall corruption whereby it appears to be extreamly sinfull are these viz. 1. Original sin is Naturall and Hereditary It 's bred and born with us it 's propagated with our very natures and rooted in our bones and inmost principles and consequently more dangerous and desperate As those corporal diseases which are not accidental and occasional onely but Hereditary and natural are most perilous and remedi●esse 2. Original sin is univer●all And the more universally extended the more bitterly to be lamented As epidemicall univer●al diseases are the most terrible diseases as o●●e in Egypt when There was not an house wherein there was not one dead Now Original sin is universal Partly in that All men men ordinarily descended of Adam are defiled with it Iewes Gentiles bond free male female all are involved in it All are sinners by it Partly in that All of all men are tainted hereby soul bodie all the faculties and affections of the one all the senses parts and members of the other Minde Conscience Memory Will Love Hatred c. mouth hands feet c. all are wholly depraved and unclean I know that in me that is in my flesh dwelleth no good thing 3. Original sin is reigning over all the sons of Adam it reigns whilst they continue in the first Adam And it reigns most cruelly and tyrannically It enthrals men unto Sa●●n at his Will unto actual fulfilling the lusts and wills of the flesh and unto death That as sin hath reigned unto death c. The Turkish slavery Spanish Inquisition E●yptian cruelty ●abylonian captivity are all ●●ort of this tyranny and dominion of sin Thi● reign of sin is evidenced Partly by our bein● Servants of sin Partly by our ob●ying 〈◊〉 in the lusts thereof Partly by our yiel●ing 〈◊〉 members as weapons of unrighteousness● 〈…〉 to take sins part to fight for it defend it justifie it c. against opposers 4. Ori●●nal sin whilst we are in this body is in some sort incurable The reign of it cannot be ●ured till Christ come to reign in thee and pluck thee out of ●hy carnal state And the ●●-dwelling or in-being of Original sin cannot 〈◊〉 fully cured no not in a believer whilst he 〈◊〉 here on earth As the Canaanit●s though tributaries and slaves yet would dwell ●mong the Israelites or as Ivie will remain in an old wall till it be utterly pull'd down to the ground ● We are all by nature wholly disposed and pro●e to run headlong into all Actual sins for kind● and degree Into all impiety against God all unrighteousnesse against man and intemperance again●t our selves contrary to all the Commandments of the first and second Table and this in thought word and work Into open and secret sins Omissions of good and Commissions of evil Wilfulnesses and Weaknesses c. Against ligh● of mind checks of con●cience motions of Gods Spirit means of grace professions and promi●es of better wa●king multitudes of mercies terrib●enesse of judgements c. and this in youth and age in ●o●iety and ●olitarinesse yea by Original corruption we are fundamentally dispo●ed to that unp●rdonable sinne against the Holy Ghost Oh who can understand h●s errours who can comprehend his sinfulnesse who can chuse but admire the patience and mercy of God to such masses of all corruption and abomin●●●●● 2. The evil of punishment whereunto we 〈◊〉 continually liab●e by reason of this evil o● 〈◊〉 is manifold and un●peakable both for this world and the world to come In thi● world the soul is expo●ed to ●●●●●tual judge●ents vi● b●indnesse of ●ind g●d●iness 〈◊〉 infatuation and strong 〈◊〉 horrour searednesse and senslesnesse of Conscience A reprobate sense c. The body name and state lies open to all external and temporal mi●eries and cur●es In the world to come both soul and body are liable to endlesse easelesse and remedilesse torments in hell fire wherein they shall be ever dying and never dead ever burning and never consumed ever tortured but never eased or pittied The worme of conscience ever gnawing blacknesse of darknesse ever amazing the infernall fiends ever torturing the wrath of God ever devouring and swallowing up the whole man c. Oh the misery of a meer carnall man is extreamly miserable III. What should we and what may we be in Iesus Christ the second Adam For clearing of this consider chiefly the●e three things viz. 1. The necessity of Getting out o● our naturall state into a supernaturall cond●tion in Christ. 2. The Duties we are to performe when once we are brought into Christ 3. The Priviledges which we shall enjoy in Christ. 1. The necessity of our getting out of our naturall into a supernaturall state in Christ is ●o great that we cannot otherwise possibly be saved For 1. The proper adequate wages of every sin is etern●ll death Much more the state of sin must needs be most deadly and damnable 2. Every man that remains in
in his veins but shed and actually severed from his body and these represented under the familiar elements of bread broken and wine severed from the bread and all this for us sinners What greater love can be imagined then to die for sinners The benefits intended us by this ordinance also speak love abundantly For why was it appointed but for nourishing our faith and all the graces of the inward man for assuring us of the remission of our sins for stablishing our interest in the New Testament and all its promi●es and priviledges for endearing us more and more to Christ and to one another in spiritual Communion and for perpetuating the memorial of Christ's death and love to us till his second coming O what a torrent of love flows towards us from Jesus Christ in this sacred channel of the Lords Supper Now shall we come to a Banquet of love a true love-feast and have no love Shall Christ come to ●eal such love to us and shall not we reciprocally seal love to him Surely then we shall be but dissemblers and Iudas's when we come to his Table Thus of the Necessity of our true love to Christ for worthy communicating 2. The tryall and Examination of the truth of our love to Christ may be dispatched 1. By the grounds 2. By the degrees 3. By the properties of true love to Christ. 1. The grounds and causes of our true love to Christ are especially these three viz. 1. Christ A●●ablenesse 2. Faith in him 3. Experience of him 1. The Amiableness and Lovelinesse of Christ is that attractive loadstone that draws the hearts and affections of his people after him Christ is most lovely both in his person offices and the benefits of his offices He is fairer then the sons of men grace is poured into his lips As the apple-tree among the trees of the wood so is Christ among the Sons He is the Rose of Sharon the sweetest The Lilly of the valleys the fairest He is white and ruddy the chief among ten thousand See there how admirably the Church paints him our and concludes with the●e words as if all particulars came short of him His mouth is sweetnesses yea whole He is delights as the Hebrew phrase signifies This is my beloved and this is my friend O daughters of Jerusalem Now as lovlinesse breeds and inciteth love ●o Christ's most of all Because his lovlinesse surpasseth all No sooner had t●e Church described and laid open Christs beauty and lovelinesse to the daughters of Ierusalem but presently they are taken and enflamed with him and they enquire after him Whither is thy beloved gone O thou fairest among women whither is thy beloved turned aside that we may seek him with thee Dost thou love Christ for his lo●eliness not for his loaves or for his bag or for the worldly advantages thou may●t ha●e by him but for his excellency beauty amiableness c. This is to lo●e Christ aright for this is to love Christ for Christ this is to love Christ for himself 2. Faith in Christ is another cause of true love to Christ. Peter speaking of Christ ●aith Whom having not seen ye love in whom though now ye see him not yet believing ye re●oyce with ●oy unspeakable and full of glory Seeing breeds loving but here 's a lo●ing without corporal seeing A loving of Christ which ariseth from believing in him And such a loving as increaseth to rejoycing and that rejoycing both unspeakable and g●orious Faith sees not at all and yet best of all Not at all corporally best of all sp●ritually Faith sees Christ enthroned at Gods right hand sending down his Spirit ruling all things for his Churches good preparing heaven for us and hastening to come to judgement and fetch his Church and members home to himself to be e●er with the Lord. Christ was alwayes lo●e●y even in his humiliation but thrice so lo●ely now in his exaltation Faith eyes this in●isible lo●eline●s of Chr●st clearly and drawes the heart to love him entirely 3 Experience of Christ or experimental acquaintance with him enkindleth true love unto him A spirituall savour of Christs fragrancy a spirituall taste of his sweetnesse is enough to ravish the soul with him Because of the savour of thy good ointments thy name is as ointment poured forth therefore do the Virgins love thee Christs good ointments are the graces and gifts of the Spirit wherewith as Mediator he was anointed above all his fellows which oyle of gladness in some sort runs down to all his members yea to the very border of his garment His Name is either his doctrine or any other attributes titles c. of Christ whereby he makes himself known as a man is known by his name Now these ointments poured forth made known do send abroad such a sweet sent and savour of Christ that all who experimentally savour them indeed cannot chuse but love Christ with a chaste Virgin-love The Church saith I sate down under his shadow with great del●ght and his fruit was sweet unto my taste He brought me to the banquetting-house and his banner over me was love Here 's her heavenly experiences of Christ. Stay me with Flaggons comfort me with Apples for I am sick of love Here 's her love to Christ flowing from that experience Yea she is so tran●ported with lo●e to him that she calls hastily for cordials to keep her from ●ainting and wouning being love-sick for Christ. Thus the Penitent woman in the Gospel had much experience of Christs rich grace and mercy to her in pardoning her many sins therefore she loved him much and she testified it most affectionately she stood at his feet behinde him weeping and began to wash his feet with tears and did wipe them with the hairs of her head and kissed his feet and anointed them with oyntment But the Pharisee that at that time had invited Christ having no such spiritual experience of Christ testified no such love to Christ. Christ saith to him Simon seest thou this woman I entred into thine house thou gavest me no water for my feet but she hath washed my feet with teares and wiped them with the hairs of her head Thou gavest me no kisse but this woman since the time I came in hath not ceased to kisse my feet Mine head with oyle thou didst not anno●nt but this woman hath annointed my feet with oyntment Wherefore I say to thee her sins which are many are forgiven For she loved much Without spirituall experience of Christ who can love him And who can chu●e but love him that have true experience of him Doth thy love to Christ arise from these grounds Thou lovest Christ because he is lovely because thou believest in him because thou hast such experience of him This is well-grounded love to Christ. 2. The Degrees or Gradual steps by which our true love to Christ riseth and by which it may be tryed