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A43133 The precious blood of the son of God shed without the gates of Jerusalem for the redemption of lost and undone sinners: whereby his great love to mankind is undeniably manifested, in these following particulars; his agony in the garden; being betrayed by Judas, being falsly accused before Annas, Caiaphas, Herod and Pilate; his being scourged, scorned, and spitefully used; his condemnation and going to execution; how he was crucified; of his being reviled, and pardoning the thief upon the cross; and of his giving up the ghost. All which is practically applyed and improved, for the bringing of sinners out of the way of sin and hell, into wisdom's ways, whose ways are ways of pleasantness, and all her paths are peace. By that eminent divine, Mr. John Hayward. Hayward, John. 1695 (1695) Wing H1231F; ESTC R215936 43,769 124

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vain Fear Above all deliver us from thy Wrath and from thy Curse and from the inseparable Companion thereof eternal Death Let some small Drops of thy most precious Blood distil into our Souls that we may present it to thy Father in full satisfaction for all our Sins Give unto us the full Fruit of thy Death Grace here and Glory hereafter O Lord Jesus O the Salvation of our Souls behold we come to thee as we are poor vile Creatures we make bold to approach to the Rivers of thy Mercy to the sweet Streams of thy Grace to the true Son of thy Justice whose Beams are spread over the whole World and giveth great Light to all those who do not wilfully shut their Eyes Behold we prostrate our unworthy Souls at thy Feet we do not revile but we praise and ado●…e thee we do not mock but we mourn at thy Passion O thou who wert pitiful to thy Enemies be not hard to thy Supplicants thou who didst pray for them that reproached thee pray for us that pray unto thee lift up thy Voice unto thy Father for us and cease not till he hath forgiven us Of our Saviour's pardoning the Thief his tasting of Vinegar how he cried to his Father Luke 23. 43. And Jesus said unto him Verily I say unto thee to day shalt thou be with me in Paradise WE are further encouraged O our Redeemer to crave not thy Prayer only but also thy Pardon by Example of the Thief that died with thee who although he had spent his Life in all manner of Debauchery and Wickedness yet when he desir'd thee thou didst presently return answer This Day thou shalt be with me in Paradise O sweet Word O Heart nothing so tender thy Lips are the Honey-comb Honey and Milk do flow from thy Tongue thou didst pray for Sinners upon the Cross to shew thy self our Advocate Thou didst pardon Sins to shew thy self our Judge What is this O liberal Lo●…d how marvellous are thy Mercies towards us To those who mocked reviled and blasphemed thee thou madest no answer but when the Thief prayed to thee his Petition was no sooner made but forthwith it was granted Thou gavest more also than he did desire the Thief desired thee only to remember him and thou didst give him the Kingdom of Heaven But when O gracious Lord Even that present Day With whom Even with thy self implying hereby that the same Glory thou didst enjoy thou wilt give to thy Elect for which Reason they are called Co-heirs with thee Rom. 8 27. This Glory and Felicity is perfect in thee and from thee distributed in measure as from the Head to the Members What would'st thou deny us or what would'st thou not give unto us if we were to thee such Servants as thou art unto us a Lord Seeing thou art so bountiful and ready to forgive such open Offenders which although it ought not to encourage us to defer our Repentance until the end of our Lives because of this Conversion of the Thief as it was the last Work thou didst in thy Life so it was not the least Yet it may encourage us never to think our Sins too great or our time too short to obtain thy Pardon Come unto him then all ye that are feeble hearted and never think you shall be damned See what a Lover of Men he is how desirous of our Salvation see how easie to be entreated for the greatest Matters and how ready to give his Glory at the first Request He seeketh all Occasions he desireth nothing more than to bestow it upon us He forgave David his Sin upon the fi●…st acknowledgment He gave to the Thief his Kingdom upon the first desire He that is so inclinable to forgive Sins and to give Glory wherein can he be hard or unkind to us If ye will say ye have done little Service whereby he should hope for so high a Reward Fear not it sufficeth that you have a desire to serve him This is a Property of him That he is liberal and merciful for which Vertues he is especially commended not so much to regard the Work of our Bodies as the Willingness of our Minds He so thirsteth after the Salvation of our Souls that he often accepteth our Purpose for Performance it sufficeth many times that we are prepared in Will the rest he doth supply by his Grace His gracious Goodness perfecteth what we have and supplieth what we want Be not therefore affrighted at his terrible Justice but rather comforted let them fear who are stubborn and flinty-hearted who will not be converted and come to him who follow Vanity with all their Might who boldly sin and then say What Evil have I done Let them tremble who are so far from calling upon him as they will not know him It is dreadful for such to fall into his Hands But they who are smitten with Sorrow for their Sins they who arise and return to him let them be encouraged with this That he that hath drawn them will certainly receive them It is not the Thief alone who was received but let all Sinners be brought forth and there is not one that can be named were he never so great who truly repented and was converted but he was justified He so loveth converted Sinners that if it were necessary so to do he would rather suffer death again than consent that one of them should be damned O happy Thief how pleasant were thy Pains how delightful was thy Death being assured thou shouldest ●…orthwith reign with him in Heaven who suffered with thee and for thee upon Earth The other Thief demanded of Christ to be delivered from the Cross and it was conditional if thou be the Son of God he desired neither as he should nor what he should But the converted Thief having heard him openly profess That his Kingdom was of another World desired no bodily Benefit but only to be remembred of him when he came into his Kingdom Pilate in his Tribunal the People standing by and the Thief in Fetters heard these Words of Jesus But Pilate contemned him the Multitude mocked and the Thief only believed in him Assuredly O good Jesus thou art a most invincible King otherwise thy Children could not be able to sustain their continual Combats nor ever be drawn out of the cruel Bondage of Satan Nor Pilate would not have written upon the Cross altogether against the advice of the Jews Jesus of Nazareth King of the Jews But the same Spirit that guided Pilate to pronounce him innocent guided him also to write this Inscription And in truth the Hebrew Word Messias and the Greek Word Christ which signifies anointed was the Original of the Unction of the Hebrew King Yet our Saviour was not declared by his Name to the Fathers at the first to Adam and the Patriarchs he was revealed under the Title of The Seed of the Woman Jacob called him Sheloh but to David this Son was promised under the Figure and
so much as one Drop unto thee unless it be in exchange of everlasting Life Of the Death of our Saviour and how they opened his Side with a Spear Matth. 27. 50. Jesus when he hath crye again with a loud Voice y●…lded up the Ghost AFter when Jesus knew that all things were performed he cried with a loud Voice and bowed his Head and gave up the Ghost and the Sun was darkened the Veil of the Temple rent through the midst John 19. 30. And the Earth did quake and the Stones were cloven and the Graves did open and many Bodies of the Saints which slept arose and came out of the Graves after his Resurrection and appeared unto many Luke 23. Matth. 27. When the Centurion and they that were with him watching Jesus saw the Earthquake and the things that were done they feared greatly and said Truly this Man was the Son of God What is this O gracious Lord God! who ever saw two such Contraries combined together Whoever saw such Misery joyn'd to such Might when was so great Glory accompanied at any time with so great Grief Who is he that is so humble and yet so high Who is so powerful and yet so poor He that is contemned on Earth is honoured in Heaven he that is fastned naked to the Cross maketh the Earth to quake he that died raised the Dead to Life O our sweet Saviour thou didst now manifestly declare who thou wast and wherefore thou camest into the World The Centurion and they that were with him did acknowledge thee to be the Son of God and the Dead whom thou raisedst to Life did testifie that thou camest to overcome Death We will make no account of the Jews scoffing at thee seeing the Heavens the Earth the Living and the Dead did witness for thee And thus likewise in all the other Passages of his Life our Saviour did so bear and behave himself that he never did so high a Miracle but therein his Humanity did appear nor did he ever so mean a Work but his Divinity did therein shine All his Actions participated of both his Natures in every thing that he did or suffered the Glory of the one was joined with the Humility of the other It was great Humility to be conceived but it was great Glory to be conceived by the Holy Ghost It was great Humility to be born but it was great Glory to be born of a pure Virgin It was great Humility to be born in a Stable but it was great Glory to be worshipped of the Wise Men. It was great Humility to lie among Beasts but it was great Glory to be honoured by the Angels It was great Humility to be circumcised but it was great Glory to be named Saviour It was great Humility to be baptized among Sinners but it was great Glory that the Heavens opened and that the Spirit visibly descended upon him Lastly it was great Humility to die upon the Cross but it was great Glory that both Heaven and Earth were disturbed thereat That all Creatures adored his Death except Man only for whom he died The Sun beholding his great Creator naked drew in his Light to cover him with Darkness for as our Saviour was betrayed apprehended scorned reviled spit upon and buffeted in the Night so it was not inconvenient that the residue of this Work of Darkness should in Darkness be accomplished even as he said to the Jews Luke 22. 52. This is your very hour and power of Darkness But let us consider here are three Miracles before us First That this Eclipse of the Sun happen'd on the Fourteenth Day of the Moon that is in the full Opposition of the Sun and the Moon Whereas natural Eclipses happen in their Conjunction when the Moon is directly interposed between the Sun and our Sight It continued the space of three Hours whereas natural Eclipses continue not above the fourth part of an Hour and hardly that It was a total Eclipse which never happened by the Interposition of the Moon by reason it is so far inferiour to the Sun in magnitude What then shall we say but that the Sun drew in his Light because it should not display so sad a Spectacle That the Heavens hid their Beauty and suited themselves to their Makers State that they covered the Body of Jesus that was sacrilegiously used with Darkness as with a Veil One Star shewed the Glory of the Lord at his Nativity but the most glorious Star pe●…formed this Service at the time of his Death neither was this Darkness ever better resembled than by the Darkness that was spread over the Land of Egypt but now over Goshen where the Jews did inhabit At this time the Land of the Jews only was darkned and all other Countries remained Light And that time the true Light was only among the Jews since this time they have been the greatest Strangers to it And at the end of this Darkness when Jesus cried with a loud Voice and yielded up the Ghost the Earth trembled also and the Rocks did rend whereof in the Land of Jewry in the Kingdom of Damascus and in the Mountains of Arabia Monuments and Accounts of it remain unto this Day Therefore do not think O ye Jews as his Life ended so did his Power He that laid down his Life retaineth his Power both in the Heavens and upon the whole Earth and was a less Matter to rise again than to suffer himself to die You cannot say that these things which were done at the very Hour of his Death were done by any ordinary means wherefore you must acknowledge in him Divine Majesty or Devilish Malice in your selves You were maliciously bent against him indeed but if all Men in the World oppose and be against him you see by what means he is able both to declare his Glory and his Power when no Man either durst or would open his Mouth in his Defence He did but utter his Voice and Five great and terrible Tongues did speak for him The Sun which is the lively Lamp of the World the Earth the Rocks the Veil of the Temple and the Dead when all Men were silent the Elements the Stones the Dead did speak they all preached his Mercies and thundered forth his Threatnings O good Jesu it was a great Voice indeed whereat the principal Powers of Heaven Earth and Hell di●… sh●…ke which did astonish the Living and the Dead As the Cry of our Sins did reach to the Justice of thy Father so did thy Voice reach to his Mercy Thou didst cry with a great Voice to call the Living and summon the Dead that if any should lose himself if any would not be converted to thee it should not be because he was not called but because he would not come But woe be to every Soul which is not converted which will not come woe be to every Soul that is not moved at this Voice this mighty Voice O crucified Jesu have Mercy upon us poor
There is no Question bu●… the Pains that our Saviour did endu●…e in his ●…dv were exceeding great yet nothing comparable to the Torments of his Soul In bodily Pains 't is possible some have born as much as he But as for the Sorrow of his Soul the unspeakable Sorrows of his Soul there was never any came near him And indeed the Pain of the Body is not comparable to the the Sorrow of the Soul Prov. 18. 14. The Spirit of a Man shall sustain his other Infirmities But a wounded Spirit who can hear And first begun his Sorrows in his Soul For as Sin beginneth always at the Soul and from thence extendeth to the Body it was most proper that the Punishment of Sin should begin at the Soul and afterwards proceed to the Body This Grief of Soul of our Saviour's was very great as one of the Evangelists testifieth Matth. 26. 37. He began to wax sorrowful and grievously troubled Another Mark 14. 34. He began to be afraid and in great heaviness and says Luke 22. 14. He was in an Agony But in a more peculiar manner he did express it himself Matth. 26. 38. Now is my Soul tr●…ubled now is my Soul heavy even unto death and also by Actions in that when no violence was offered to his Body no Man stood near him to do him any harm he was so much inwardly pressed in Spirit and in so great an Agony that in an extream cold Night when he lay upon the cold Earth all the Forces of his Body were distracted the Humours disturbed the Pores opened and he was cast into a great and bloody Sweat not a thin faint Sweat but consisting of such great Drops which issued so plenteously from every part of his Body that they came through his Apparel and trickled to the Ground in great abundance Luke 22. 44. Sure never was any Garden thus watered never Ground thus wet Adam might moisten the Earth with the Sweat of his Brows but never was it moistned but at that time with a bloody Sweat O let us therefore look upon our Saviour and upon our selves Upon our Saviour as upon the true Adam not cast but came out of Paradice of his o●… Love and free Will for to redeem us from our Sins labouring in a bloody Sweat to get for us the Bread of Life Upon our selves as those that were at that time his only Tormentors for the Executioners did not then tear him with Whips they did not then press a Crown of Thorns upon his Head It was not the Nails nor the Spear that then did pierce him but it was our Offences that did so much afflict him our Sins were the heavy Burthen under which he did so grievously sweat For then were represented to him the Sins of the whole World both past and to come which to him who bears so great a Love and Zeal to the Honour of his Father it could not but be an unspeakable Sorrow and Trouble to him Then also was presented to him the most terrible sight in the World the great Fury of the Father before whose Majesty when he is moved to Wrath the Angels cover their Faces the Mountains sweat the Earth trembleth the Sea flyeth before whom if he appears as Judge no Creature can stand and verily if the Wrath of God against one Sinner for one Sin be termed Unquenchable Fire a Worm that d●…th not Watling and Gnashing of Teeth and yet not sufficiently expressed What Words can the Wisdom of Men devise to represent the terribleness of that Judgment that was against him who was to drink of the whole Cup of his Father's Wrath not for one Sin only but for the Sins of the whole World and if he had left one drop if he had not drank up the very Dregs we had not been excused from eternal Damnation Also he beheld the Ingratitude of many who would not endeavour to make any profit to their own Souls of this great Benefit which doubtless was a sharper cut to him than all the outward Torments he endured ever as it is less grievous to a Man to take pains for another than to know that his Pains shall not be regarded Our blessed Saviour did bend under this heavy Burthen and dipt his Garments in his own Blood and he took the Cup of his Father's Wrath which had no mixture of Mercy in it He did lay upon his Shoulders a light Burthen and a sweet Yoke but we have laid upon him an unmerciful Load which none but himself is able to bear No Element is heavy in its proper place and therefore as one that diveth into the Water feeleth not the Weight of the Water which is above So he that is plunged in the depth of his Sins has no sense how heavy they are because Sin is there in its natural place But Sin in our Saviour was out of its proper place and above its Sphere and therefore lay the more grievously upon him For if a Sinner that is sanctified is oftentimes pressed with his own Sins that he crieth out with holy David Psalm 38. My iniquities are a sore Burthen too heavy for me to bear How grievous must this Sea of Sin be to him who is Sanctification it self and from whom it all flows O heavenly Father What is this that thy innocent Son thy only Son thy Son in whom thou art well pleased in this humble and heavy manner laboureth before thee Their Fathers hoped in thee and thou didst deliver them they called upon thee and were not confounded Wherefore then is thy innocent and only Son begotten of thy Substance forsaken of thee How shall we sinful Wretches expect to find any Mercy with thee seeing thou art so seve●…e against thy only Son So merciful a Father against so good and loving a Son Is not thy Wrath appeased when thou seest this miserable Spectacle of him that is so dear unto thee This bloody Sweat whereof every drop is of greater value than a Thousand Worlds Is it not a sufficient Satisfaction for our Sins a sufficient Price for our Redemption O admirable and upright Justice for this was but a small Skirmish to the main Battel which did follow after Sure if thy Eyes Holy Father were fix'd upon the Cross whereunto thy only Son was fastned thou wouldst not be satisfied nor appeased because thou hadst before ordained that Death which was a Curse belonging to Sin must also be the Punishment of thy Son that the Devil that prevailed by a Tree should also be by a Tree subdued O what a painful Purchase has our Saviour made what a sharp Price has he paid for our Redemption how intolerable may we think was the end of his Sufferings when the beginning was so dreadful and how cruel were those Torments that were by him to be endured which were so terrible in being feared O therefore let the sight of our Sins draw some Drops of Tears now from our Eyes seeing they did draw so many Drops of Blood from
the World Seeing therefore he hath been condemned for us in High Treason both against God and Man seeing he hath endured the Punishment for all our Rebellions What have we any further to answer His Obedience hath made Satisfaction for our riotous Rebellion By his Condemnation are we acquitted his Condemnation at a Tribunal on Earth has acquitted us before thy Tribunal in Heaven His Sufferings are a sufficient Discharge between us and thy Justice and his Love is a sufficient Discharge between his Sufferings and us because his Love ●…eh nothing for all hi●… Sufferings but only that we love him again O what an unspeakable Obligation is this not only to love our S●…iour but to love him above and before all one would think it were impossible to do any otherwise th●…n to love him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Glory and Majesty to suffer so much ●…sery to save us from e●…l Dam●…tion O good Jesus O Health of our Souls hav●… Mercy upon ●…s we beseech thee and help us to strike this Fire within our Hearts let our Souls be satisfied with thy sacred Love Thou art O Lord our 〈◊〉 out last End the Mark ●…hether we aim the Po●…t whereto we sa●… the Ferm the R●…t of all our Desires Wherefore then do we not love wherefore do we not desire thee with that ardency wherewith all Creatures do love and desire the place of their Rest The Fire and the Air do overthrow Mountains rend up Rocks shake the whole Earth to break forth to their Natural Places wherefore do not we break through all Impediments all Hinderances and leave all Creatures to come to thee who art the only place both of our Refuge and Rest O our Desires O our sweet solace our assured st●…ength wrap our Souls in the Flames of thy Love that all careless coldness may be consumed thereby possess our Souls so inti●…ely with that Divine Fire that we may have no sense of any worldly things Most Sweet Loving Beautiful Noble Rich Wise Glorious and worthy to be both loved and adored O life of our Soul who didst die to give us Life who didst die to kill death mortifie us wholly even our Wills and all our evil Inclinations and whatsoever is ours within us Then revive us again in thy lively Love by uniting all the Faculties of our Souls unto thee and making them obedient to thy Will Seeing we have so rich a Treasure so liberal a Distributer of the same how is it possible we should not rise in Hope Justice hath sound out a way to strike the Innocent and cannot Mercy find a means to save the Guilty Assuredly yes for it is a greater Miracle that God should be condemned and crucified than that Man should be acquitted and live If therefore we have the greater we have no cause to sear the less for Justice has executed her Severity upon the Innocent and Mercy will shew her Favour upon Offenders Yea if it was Justice that the Innocent should be condemned and executed for to make Satisfaction for Sin it is Justice also that the Offenders for whom he suffered should be discharged from that Debt that the voluntary Surety hath fully paid Therefore although Grace is not due to a Sinner as a Sinner yet it is due to him as he is redeem'd It is Mercy that a Sinner should be saved in respect of the Sinner but it is Justice in respect of Christ the Just was handled as a Sinner that Sinners might be accepted of as just fo●… it is not agreeable to Justice that one Offence should be twice punished H●… hath joyned he hath united himself to us As he cannot be condemned again so cannot we likewise be condemned except we break Union and wilfully fall from him O let us admire love and adore this great Love of our Lord Jesus Christ and then we shall never break Union with him or fall from him but be in●…allibly saved by him The Sentence of Death being given forth against Jesus they laid that heavy Tree upon his Shoulders that had been unmercisully battered with Whips tor●…enting him not only with the Sight but the Weight of that which was appointed to be the Instrument of his 〈◊〉 Which painful Burthen with ●…he sull Weight of all our Sins he refused 〈◊〉 to take upon him but went on his way with great Ala●…ity both in Love towards us and in Obedience to satisfie his Father's Justice as a true Isaac bearing the Wood for the Sacrificing of himself But whither doth our Lord go What has he to do upon this stinking Hill of Calvary which being a place of common Execution is tainted with pu●…rified Bodies To be sure he will find there no sick Persons to cure no Devils to cast out no Temples wherein to teach but there he will find Dead to raise and Sinners to forgive there he will find many scattered Souls of executed Offenders which expect his coming which as the true Elizeus thy dead Body should restore them to Life What should all this mean that our Saviour has not only made choice of an infamous Death but of an infamous Place the Place was infamous but the Death was accursed for cursed is every one that hangeth on a Tree It did not satisfie his Love to die for us but he must die the most accu●…sed death to assure us thereby that he had delivered us from the Malediction of the Law Certainly our Saviour's Death containeth many Mysteries It is not enough for us to say that he died for us but we are further to consider how ye would die which was by the ignominious death of the Cross with whom also even with Malefactors When in the principal strength and beauty of his Age In what Year in the great Year of Jubilee Upon what Day at the great Solemnity of the Passover even when they did celebrate the Figure of him In what place on the Mount of Calvary only made glorious by his Death He was neither privily made away nor tumultuously slain he dyed not in a Corner that dyed for all the World he was condemned in the publick place of Judgment and suffered upon the common place of Execution upon a Day and a Year of the grea●…est Solemnity that could be God set him upon the Stage of the Wo●…ld to declare as well his Fury against Sin as his Love and Mercy towards Sinners O glorious Calvary where the Prince of Light did encounter and overcome the Prince of Darkness where at one instant our Life for a time ended and our Death did for ever dye Therefore let us not only seek our Saviour in the Temple but upon Mount Calvary for in the Temple he scourged Sinners but upon the Mount he died for them upon that he opened his Arms to embrace them It was objected against him that he was a Friend to Publicans and Sinners True he was a true Friend to them indeed but his Friendship did never more plainly appear than in this Action and upon this place
Sinners that are prostrate before thee and let our humble Voices enter into thy Ears that thy mighty Voice may sink into our Souls Give unto us a true Sense of these thy Sufferings both of Compassion as it is reason that the Members should condole with the Head and also of Fear that our Minds be not more heavy than the Earth that trembled that our Hearts be not more hard than the Stones that did cleave and that our Souls be not more fleepy than the Dead that did arise at the Power of thy Passion O great Redeemer of the World if all Creatures did fear thee when hanging upon the Cross what will they do when thou shalt come to Judgment If thou wert so mighty in thy greatest Weakness what wilt thou be in thy gre●…test Glory If these Effects did accompany the Works of thy Mercy and the Voice of thy Love where with thou didst call all Men to come to thee what will the Work of thy Justice do and the Voice of thy Fury Depart from me ye cursed into everlasting Fire We adore and admire thy Blood thy Death thy Burial thy victorious Resurrection thy Ascension into Glory By these we are refreshed from these we draw the Breath of Life O our Saviour we desire thee only we offer up our selves wholly unto thee we want nothing we wish for nothing but only thee for thou alone art sufficient for us thou art our King our Lord our Tutor our Governour our Father the Paradise of our Hearts the Nest where our Souls shall rest for ever the Haven wherein we shall be saved the Glass wherein we shall behold our selves the Staff that only stayeth us the Tréasure whereto we trust Who is so liberal as he who hath given himself for so vile Creatures Who so loving as he who hath not spared himself for his very Enemies O most gracious Lord and loving Father who despisest none that comes to thee but dost rather help them and accompany them and lead them in the way receive our loose or lost Souls which seek after thee raise us up by the virtue of thy Passion from the death of Sin and by the same Virtue endow us with Wisdom and Strength that by the one we may prevent and by the other resist the Attempts of our most dangerous Enemies the Flesh the World and the Devil The Flesh idle and voluptuous the World vain and curious the Devil subtle and malicious Grant unto us by the same Virtue that the Yoke of thy Commandments may be sweet and the Burthen of thy Cross light unto us that we may contemn the trifling Vanitis of this World and not weakly yield to the Calamities or vain Pleasures of this Life but that with unmoveable Minds we may bear the one and forbear the other All this was done against Jesus upon the Day of the Preparation for the Passover according to the corrupt Tradition of the Jews for Jesus who most punctually observed the Law had eaten the Passover the Day before and because the Day following was an high Sabbath and the Law had ordained That the Body of the Offender should not hang all Night upon the Tree the Jews desired of Pilate that the crucified Bodies might not hang upon the Cross being very scrupulous in small Matters but had wide and naughty Consciences in Matters of Weight Against Jesus they made particular Suit that his Sepulcher should be made sure for three Days lest his Body might be taken away because he had said that within three Days he would rise again to Life So they buried him in a Garden close adjoining to the City whereby the Providence of God did cut off many Cavils and Doubts which might have been made in case his Body had either been removed far off or secretly buried or left abroad In this Garden Jos●…ph of Arimathea in his Li●…e time had built his Tomb which doubtless he did to put himself in remembrance of Death in the v●…y midst of his Delights but the entombing this Body of Jesus in this Garden in the midst of our chiefest Delights should make us always mindful of his Death His Body was richly dressed to the Funeral that the Prophecy of him might be fulfilled Isa. 53. 9. His Grave shall be with the Rich at his Death And further to manifest the same unto us which he spake upon the Cross that he had accomplished his Charge that the terrible Tempest of his Sufferings he had fully bo●…n that his Honour and Estimation was then to follow To instruct us also that the difference between Men and Beasts doth not determine with our Lives but that the Dead are to have honest Respect not only out of particular Kindness or of Blood not only out of general Humanity engraved by the Finger of Nature in all Men but also out of Christian Duty partly in regard of the many Graces imparted to the Bodies of Men in this Life and partly to testifie our Faith of the Resurrection and Hope of Glory in the Life to come And also his Body was put into a new Sepulcher wherein no dead Body had been laid before to the end that his Enemies should not suspect or surmise that he raised some other to Life as he did the dead Body of Elizeus and not himself Lastly they stopped the Mouth of the Sepulcher with a great Stone which could not without great force and noise be rolled away they sealed this Stone and set a Guard of their own Men at Arms about it to make sure as they thought that his Body should not be taken away but as it usually falleth out that the greatest Enemies of the Truth are the greatest means to advance it so the Seals and Guards did the more evidently seal the Resurrection of Jesus than all the other Circumstances besides They did evidently declare That he was not carried to the Sepulcher as a Captive but that as a Victor he pursued Death to his Cavern and Fort namely the Grave And there gave him so deadly a Wound that he should be no more Death but the Entrance into Life But when he that would not descend from the Cross did rise out of his Grave when he had broken the Chains of Death when he was returned with Daniel out of the Lion's Den and with Jonas out of the Whales Belly they corrupted the Watch to say That whilst they slept his Disciples came and stole him away And this was the Accomplishment of their Malice this did set them altogether without excuse this is also the nature of Sinners in a desperate degree who in despite of God and their Consciences will not fear to offend whatsoever Sin they are not able by some colour to defend they will endeavour by another Sin to conceal But O good God how blind is Malice What so absurd What so senseless which it will not say or do either to attain or maintain some devi●…sh Design For if the Disciples had stollen away the Body of Jesus