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A61853 The worm that dyeth not, or Hell torments in the certainty and eternity of them plainly discovered in several sermons preached on Mark, chap. the 9th and the 48. v. / by that painful and laborious minister of the gospel, William Strong ; and now published by his own notes, as a means to deter from sin and to stir up to mortification. Strong, William, d. 1654. 1672 (1672) Wing S6014; ESTC R32735 120,570 318

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his graces and gives up it self to him commits himself to God Psal 10 14 this is the frame of every child of God that has escaped the wrath to come he makes Christ the covering of his eyes looks upon no other beloved but him he keeps nothing from Christ but resigns it to him either as a snare or as a sacrifice and rejoiceth in this that I am my beloveds and my beloved is mine and he that believes in him shall not perish but have everlasting life Let me exhort you now that are yet in your unbelief and dare to question the truth of these things believe that there is a wrath to come if the Lord before he brought you into the World had but showed you Hell and Heaven that you might know the terrour of the Lord Heb. 4.2 the misery of the one and the happiness of the other then you would think you should have been perswaded of it because you had seen it but now you are come into the World and have ●●o experience of either and men are naturaly sensual and it is to be received by faith and many men will not be perswaded of it till they feel it 2 Cor. 5.11 We knowing the terrour of Lord we perswode men c. and Heb. 4.2 For unto us was the Gospel preached as well as unto them But the Word preached did not profit them not being mixed with Faith c. There is no part of the Word can do men good that is not mixed with Faith Now it is plain that men believe it not and they see it when it is too late Alas How many unbelievers are there in the World that pass for believers Luk. 16.3 I have five brethren says Dives in Hell if one went to them from the dead they will repent c. And Abraham said unto him if they hear not Moses nor the prophets neither will they be perswaded though one rose from the dead again they will not be perswaded if the Lord should send one of the damned spirits and give them so far an intermission that they might preach unto us of wrath to come which they themselves feel and which swallows them up with horrour c. Yet this would not perswade us if you could lay your ears to Hell and but hear the cries in that bottomless pit if the Lord should take any soul and carry it away into that dungeon and let it have a tast of this wrath in the place of the damned and then set him upon earth again with possibilities and offers of mercy yet the man would be as far from believing it as now he is so long as the athiesme and unbelief of his spirit doth remain and this is the misery of all men that have a name only to live in the Church they dye in a sleep are cast away in a calm and are never awakened till the last Trumpet how would it make a mans heart bleed and fall assunder within him as drops of water to see men hasten so fast to destruction and never consider that it is for eternity and that the Lord reserves this wrath for his enemies and that God will shew his wrath and make his power known unto the vessels of wrath fitted for destruction But men will say what will you make us Atheists Why do you think so hardly by us as not to believe there is Heaven and Hell and that God will recompence men according to their works surely we do not doubt this Yet let me tell you it doth plainly appear that men believe it it not and my reasons are these First Because they walk wholy in the way that leads thereunto even to Hell Prov. There is a way that seems right to a man but it leads down to the Chambers of death they do conceive that the end will be as fair as the way is promising did men believe that the wrath of God is revealed from Heaven against all the ungodliness and unrighteousness of men and that the wrath of God is upon all the children of disobedience and that the Lord is angry with the wicked every morning there is not a day that they rise but a cloud of Gods displeasure doth arise upon them that every sin adds unto the treasure of wrath and doth qualify a man for Hell every vain thought and every idle word and that by this men are fitted to destruction 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and every new degree of sinning Rom. 9.22 doth lay in fuel for a further degree of wrath it were impossible that men should rejoyce in iniquity as they do and count it their happiness to have free liberty of sinning as the Devil has time and space to sin in and all restraining grace is taken away his lusts are let out to the uttermost and God too lets him alone and keeps silence winks at their sins vae illis ad quorum peccata connivet Deus would men rejoyce in this if they did believe that the fiery Lake is but a little before if a company of Gallants were feasting and rioting in an enimies quarters and in the midst of all their jollity one should give them an alarme you must pay for all that you eat or drink here with the deerest and last drop of your hearts blood if they did believe it would not that which had been to them so sweet in the mouth become now gravel in the belly If as it was with Belteshazer in the middle of all his jollity such an impression be set on as Mene Tekel Would it not make his heart and loins to tremble There was one commending the happiness of a King to Dyonisius the Tyrant he told him he shall have a part in that happiness and caused him to sit down in a chair of state with great attendance and all the glory that he should desire but with a sword over his head hanging by a Thread all his comforts did him but little good because of the sword hanging over his head and truely this is every unregenerate mans condition and yet poor souls when they do evil they rejoyce and pride and please themselves in a way of sining Secondly They think the people of God to be very miserable men and women because they are afflicted in this life and there way is hedged up with thornes that they cannot find their paths and they have not that freedom in sinning that they have cannot run to access of riot c. Whereas if men did believe that there were wrath which God reserves for the workers of iniquity they would count it the greatest mercy in the World to be disappointed in a way of sinning and the greatest plague to be sinners Prov. 14.15 The backslider in heart shall be filled with his own ways God will give him over that he shall sin enough indeed in this World God doth in a special manner afflict his own people when the wicked come into no misfortune but they have more then
incouragements you might have from them you lived amongst the wise Virgins yet in a land of uprightness they will do wickedly Fifthly from the unprofitableness of sin Rom. 6.22 what fruit have you of that whereof you are now ashamed and the several inconveniencies that thou hast met with in a way of sinning Hos 2.6 sometimes the Angel meets thee as it did Balam as it were with a sword in his hand to stop thee and yet thouwast as a wild Asse that knew no bounds had no bridle and therefore now ye eat the fruit of your own ways and are filld with your own devices for you are one of them that have loved death Pro 8. last Thirdly an act of condemnation 1 Joh. 3.21 Tit. 3.11 if our hearts condemn us God is greater then our hearts c. he is condemned of himself Conscience passeth the sentence of eternal death upon a mans self Mat. 27.4 I have sin'd and having been his own judge he doth quickly become his own executioner and so Spira hence Apostate c. Heb. 10.27 There is a receiving of judgment in a mans self and upon this act the soul looks upon it self even in Hell already he casts down the 30. pieces 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 spurnes at Gold and his soul abhors dainty meats his life draws near the grave and his soul to the destroyers he looks every day when the Devil shall be sent as the executioner to setch away his soul oh says he that I had been made a Dog a Toad and that I could creep into my first nothing rather then have lain under the weight of eternal wrath for ever I envy the case of Cain and Judas c. But there is a great deal of difference between the condemnation of Conscience here and hereafter First Here it does condemn for particular sins as we see in Judas for his treason in Spyra for his apostacy c. but hereafter it shall condemn a man for all his sins at once for they shall be all set in order before him and shall be always before his eyes Rev. 20.12 the book of conscience shall be opened and all the former condemnations of conscience shall be opened and all the former condemnations of Conscience shall be set before a man and the judgment of God confirming all these and if the condemnation for one sin be so terrible what will it be for all sins when they shall be all charged on a man Secondly Here conscience condemns but now and then c. and when it does so then Felix trembles this strikes a terrour into the center of the soul but hereafter it shall always condemn thee and shall give thee no respite thou shalt turn in upon thy self and hear nothing but the sentence of thy own Conscience for ever for as it never dyes so it never sleeps but ever wakes to torment thee Thirdly Here though Conscience condemns a man to death yet there may be an appeal and a hope of pardon for here mercy rejoyceth over judgment but hereafter the judgment of Conscience shall follow the final judgment of God and the judgment of the Lord and of Conscience shall stand Fourthly Here though Conscience condemns a man yet there is a reprival a while Gen. 4.7 sin lyer at the door but the door is shut and does not break in upon men but then the condemnation shall be immediately follow'd with the execution go ye curs'd and immediately tho● must go there 's no reprival but tho● shalt lye under this sentence for ever Fifthly from hence there doe● arise in the soul perfect sorrow this life is a state of imperfection but i● the world to come all imperfection shall be done away here there i● unto godly men an imperfection o● grace and comforts but hereafter that which is perfect shall come and and that which is in part shall be done away so here is also an imperfection in respect of misery unto wicked men but the earnest of that just recompence of reward that divine justice shall render unto men here is but the first fruits of that harvest of wrath which men shall reap according as they have sowen here afflictions are only the beginning of sorrow perfectum est cui nihil deest so there shall be nothing wanting unto a mans sorrow for ever there shall be perfect sorrow c. this perfection of sorrow is set forth to us in Scripture in these particulars First Mat. 8.12 By the several dreadfull expressions of it There shall be utter darkness As the happiness of the people of God in Scripture is compared unto light Col. 1.12 the inheritance of the Saints in light as light in Scripture is put for all comforts happiness and sweetness so is darkness for all misery and affliction and it shall be utter darkness purae tenebrae the fulness of all misery there shall not be so much as a beam of light and comfort to eternity and there shall be weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth that expression is used three ways in Scripture First as an experession of the greatest rage and madness the highest anger and indignation Psal 37.12 the wicked plotteth against the just and gnasheth against him with his teeth Secondly of the highest scorn and contempt as Lam. 2.16 they hiss and gnash their teeth Thirdly of extremity or vexation when a man cannot tell whither to turn him Psal 112.10 they shall gnash their teeth and consume away as for those thoughts of popish interpreters that there shall be extremity of heat by reason of fire and yet they shall gnash their teeth by reason of extremity of cold they are but vain inventions and conceits of men ignorant of the Scripture so Luke 16.23 24. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being in torment the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 does signifie to put a man upon the rack and examine a man by torments and is taken from those torments that men do use to invent to put malefactors unto which does note the greatest extremity of torment and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 does signifie the pangs of a woman in travel which are commonly put for the greatest extremity of pain as Acts 2.24 it is used of the extremity of Christs suffering he calls them the traveling pangs of death Now though a woman undergo extremity of pain yet it is but bodily and it is but short and she has hope of a joyfull issue because a man child is born into the world she forgets her pain but when these shall be the Travelling pains of the soul which shall never be delivered but dye in travel and travel for ever and never see the fruit of it this must needs be perfect sorrow Secondly It will appear from the causes of this sorrow and they are such as that they must needs bring with them perfect sorrow First The wrath of God lets into the soul to the utmost the curse in the extremity and perfection thereof Matth 25. Depart from
me ye cursed and the Lord does it to manifest an attribute to shew the power of his wrath Psal 90.11 Rom 9 22 Now if God manifests his displeasure here by the creature how miserable can he make a man But much more when he does it immediately for that is the fire that is here spoken of the immediate wrath of God upon the soul and if but a few drops of it let in upon the hearts of some of his own people make their strength to consume away and turn their moisture into the drought in Summer If when it seased upon Christ the Green-tree it did come so fiercely because the Father was pleased to bruise him how much more will the Lord delight to bruise thee If Christ did sweat drops of blood and was in an agony under the sence of this wrath Oh! where must thy poor soul be whom the Lord will hate and deal with as an enemy for ever a vessel of wrath Thirdly When a man shall in judgment be given over to sin perfectly and all the restraints of the spirit of God upon a man shall be taken away there is a twofold restraining grace upon mens acts and upon their lusts and men are in many things under both here for their acts Gen. 20.6 I withheld thee that thou shouldest not touch her and their lusts when thou goest up to worship no man shall desire thy Land but now God will let out mens lusts to their full length and a mans thoughts shall be taken up with them for ever a man shall feed upon his darling eat the fruit of his own wayes and be filled with his own devices Now to be given over to be proud for ever drunk for ever from the cup of Gods right hand unclean for ever scoffers for ever and that which was before a mans pleasure shall now be his torment It is but for God to change a mans apprehensions and it will be so here Amnon desired Tamar but after his Lust was satisfied it vanished and the hatred wherewith he hated her was more then the love with which he loved her before 1 John 2.17 The world passeth away and the Lust thereof as we see in Judas while the Lust of covetuousness was up there was nothing so desirable as money though it was but Thirty pieces of silver but the Lust passeth away and now there is nothing in the world that troubles Judas like to this so that he hangs himself to be rid of it and so it will be hereafter the Lust shall be gone and then for a soul to be given over unto it in judgment shall be a mans continual torment for as the Saints in Heaven shall be confirmati in bono so the damned in Hell shall be obfirmati in malo and that in judgment therefore Aquinas has well observed as in Heaven the Saints shall be doing good for ever but all their good actions pertinent ad beatitudinis praemium so in Hell the wicked shall be doing evil for ever and they can do no otherwise but these mala pertinent ad damnationis poenam c. Fourthly The society that a man shall be judged unto for ever for it is part of the happiness of the saints in Heaven that they shall be gathered to their fathers to Abraham and Isaac to have their souls bound up in the bundle of the living 1 Sam. 25. gathered to the souls of just men made perfect so for a man to be gathered to the devils have their portion with the devil and his angels a creature that we have looked upon with the greatest hatred here yet then must be thy companions to run out an eternity with this is the god of this world to him thou hast lived here and with him thou shalt live for ever Psal 125.5 Lead them forth with the workers of iniquity for here men are mixed but then he will rank them with those of their own kind and they shall remain in Tophet which was a place in the valley of Ainon a place famous for three things there were memorable acts of mourning there the children of Israel did cause their children to pass through the fire to Molech that is sacrifice their children to the Devil there Eighteen hundred thousand of the Assyrian camp were destroyed by an Angel in one night Isa 30.31 Isa 31.33 Through the voice of the Lord shall the Assyrian be beaten down for Tophet is prepared of old c. And there did the Babilonians murther the people of Jerusale●n at the taking of the City Jer. 7 31. Because they had burnt their sons in Tophet to the Devil therefore they should fall and be destroyed themselves in Tophet and they should bury there till there was no place this place is put for the place of the damned and Hell is called Tophet the valley of slaughter or the invisible valey of Hinnon Prov. 21.16 It is called Coetus Gigantum those in Gen. 6. that did provoke God to bring the floud upon the world of the ungodly they being the first noted inhabitants of Hell therefore from them the place has its name and all that go down since are said to go down into the Congregation of the Giants whom in their disobedience and rebellion they have followed Fifthly The very consideration of the happiness of the saints Luk. 13.28 To see Abraham and Isaac in the kingdom of God and themselves thrust out Time was that I had as fair offers as precious oppertunities as they had and it may be means and outward mercies far beyond them but I have despised knowledg and I would none of the fear of the Lord I had my portion in this Life and therefore now they are comforted but I am tormented I was so foolish as to account their life madness and their end to be without honour but now they are numbred amongst the Saints of the most high and I am shut out Oh that you could call time again This is the language of souls in Hell Sixthly Here there is something that may mitigate sorrow but all such things shall be taken away after this life First It 's an ease to a mans heart here to speak of his misery and to vent it that he may have some to pity him and condole him but there shall be none to pity a man then for the law of nature shall cease after this Life and the devils shall not pity men nor men pity one another but rather inbitter their condition unto a man for ever Secondly Here a man in sorrow can turn himself unto some creatures and comfort himself with them as Cain fell to building of Cities c. But all the creatures are but for the time of this Life and in this Life they are thy good things but after this Life there is no sweetness or use of any creature to eternity for God shall be all in all Thirdly But it may be said surely God is a God of mercy he will
that are there cannot be easily purged those unclean stables cannot be soon swept there is no power in nature to purge it for we are dead in trespasses and sins and what is more sutable to dead men then dead works and it is necessary to consider that if Conscience is not purged here it will never be purged and there is but one means in the world will do it First Consider the disease and that is a Conscience defiled with dead works as all the works of an unregenerat man are he being a dead man c. And Conscience is defiled onely by sin and there are two things in sin that defile the Conscience First the guilt of it Secondly the defilement of it and hence Divines say that as a good Conscience is either honeste bona pacate bona purged from the filth purified and and pacified in respect of the guilt So there is a twofold evil Conscience either moleste mala a Conscience disquieted with the guilt of sin or else vitiose mala polluted with the defilement the filth of sin and a mans Conscience must be purged from both these Secondly Here is the Medicine that must purge the Conscience from both these and that is the blood of Christ by the blood of Christ is meant that perfect satisfaction that he did give unto the justice of God for the sin of man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Tim 2.6 A price every way answerable to the debt that we did owe Now there was a double debt that man did owe to God a debt of obedience as he was a creature and a debt of service as he was a sinner a debt of suffering the one answering the precept and the other the curse of the Law and both are here meant by the blood of Christ his whole and perfect satisfaction his active and passive obedience Onely our whole redemption is attributed to his blood Ephes 1.7 We have redemption through his blood because this was the last payment for the debt that Christ did pay for us was as a debt that men pay upon a bond by several parcels a little at one time and a little at another but the debt is not paid nor the bond cancelled till it be all paid so though indeed all the acts of obedience that Christ did perform in our nature they were for us and were part of that obedience that we did owe all the acts of obedience that he performs in the dayes of his humiliation takeing our nature upon him he did as our surety and many of his sufferings went before his death for he was dying all the while the thirty three years that he lived upon the earth being indeed a man of sorrows a worm and no man his suffering in his hunger and thirst labour and weariness and all the persecution that he suffered from men after he set his foot upon this earth they are to be counted as part of his satisfaction but yet the shedding of his blood upon the Cross and being delivered unto death for us this was the last and great act and from the last payment which did fully satisfie the debt and cancel the bond hence it has its denomination and so the whole satisfaction of Christ as our sacrifice and surety is here meant by the blood of Christ Thirdly The manner how this medicine doth work this Cure it is by sprinkling of it a man must have his heart sprinkled from an evil Conscience It is a Typical expression taken from the sacrifice under the Law the sacrifice must not onely be killed but the bloud must be sprinkled also where the pascal Lamb was to be slain they must take the blood in the Basin and with a branch of Hysope sprinkle it upon the dore-posts not that the Angel had need to have a signal that he might pass over their houses for he knew them well enough but they had need of it that they might thereby have their faith tried and strengthened in the sprinkling of that blood of which the blood of the Lamb was but a Type So Exod. 24.8 When they had offered the sacrifice Moses took the blood and sprinkled it upon all the people Lev. 14.14 and when the Leaper was cleansed he came to the door of the Tabernacle and brought a trespass offering and the Priest did take of the blood and put it upon his right ear and the thumb of his right hand And in answer to all this Type the blood of Christ is called the blood of sprinkling Heb. 12.24 And this sprinkling is nothing else but the application of his merit and satisfaction of this blood unto a mans own particular soul for in Christ's sacrifice there was a satisfaction and application the one is in killing the sacrifice and the other in sprinkling the blood and this is done when by a mighty work of the Holy Ghost the Conscience affected and afrighted with the guilt of sin doth rely and cast it self upon this satisfaction to be a sacrifice for him then is this satisfaction apropriated and applied unto him so this blood as sprinkled is a speaking blood it speaks better things then the blood of Abel that is it speaks so in the Conscience non vindictam clamat sed veniam Conscience is pacified and a man thereby puts his sins upon the head of the Beast Our sacrifice is a sufficient satisfaction and the Conscience is not terrified with the guilt of sin as if it were his own and as if he were to satisfie in his own person no more for the soul saith he was made sin for us that knew no sin that we might be made the righteousness of God in him Christ came into the World to save sinners of whom I am chief And here are these six things taken in by the soul to pacifie the Conscience in respect of guilt First When the soul sees by a spiritual and heavenly teaching that the great plot and design of God under the second Covenant is to take away sin Heb. 10.4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To take sin off the sinner for if God will be just he must punish the sin and if he be mercifull in sparing the sinner there must be a way to separate the sin from the sinner and this the Lord will do by an act of Sovereignty such as he did never exercise unto persons under the first Covenant and that is by imputing of our sin unto another who was righteous 2 Cor. 5.20.21 and he was made sin for us who knew no sin he will be just and therefore there shall not be commutatio justitiae and he will be merciful and therefore there must be à commutatio personae there had been else no place for mercy to have come onely there is this one cause the Lord will change the person and by an act of absolute sovereignty the Lord will count it so that the sin shall be in Gods account in the guilt of it taken off from the one in
God but Christs righteousness did please him in him his soul delights and is well pleased sin blotted out Gods Image in man Christ restored it again we were full of all unrighteousness and he fulfilled all righteousness my sins are all hainous but greater were charged upon Christ he was a sufferer as a Traytor a blasphemer a Drunkard a Seducer a Conjurer a Devil he was made sin for us he made his grave with the wicked and thy heart was very wicked and full of enmity when thou didst commit sin but Christs heart was holy and full of love to God when he satisfied for it thou didst delight in sin and so did Christ delight to suffer he was payned till his sufferings were ended thou didst sin openly at such a time and such a place c. The Lord suffered without the gate openly in the view of all and as thy sin is the greatest sin so is his most shamefull suffering in the most solemn time as it were before all the world and in a most infamous place as the greatest malefactor as it were at Tyburne and for the company he suffered in it was between two Theeves c. when a soul is able to silence the guilt and clamour of his Conscience by answering all that Conscience can object by finding out something in the righteousness and satisfaction of Christ to answer it and faith is not nonplussed truly this is a work of an almighty power for while men go on in the pleasures of sin so long sin is nothing sin sits with no weight upon them but when their Conscience is awakened to it by and by their spirits are overwhelmed with it as Judas was now for a man to see sin in its utmost dimensions and not to spare and be streightned in his humiliation and yet when Conscience has said its worst yet for him to be able to look into Christ and see something in him that shall answer all its accusations with as great strength of spiritual reason as the other can be objected and for a mans soul to be stay'd by such thoughts when he is even going down to the pit this is an almighty power Thirdly When a man is convinced of sin and sees himself to be an undone man knows not whether God will be mercifull unto him or no he walks in darkness in point of justification and yet his heart is kept in a constant awe of sinning against God he would do nothing that should displease him for a world his darling lust doth yield and strike sail to the contrary grace Sam. 50.10.11 he fears the Lord and obeys the voice of his servant he would do nothing that should displease him for a world and yet he knows not whether he shall find mercy with him or no but his soul takes up an unchangeable resolution against sin and sayes I will walk no more in a way of sinning saved or damned I will be willing to obey him and count it my happiness to do him service and I will be willing to wait upon him let him do with me as it seems good in his sight if casting a mans self upon Christ make a man fear to sin against him there is an almighty power 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that all the power of a natural Conscience will never make the man to yield up his darling-lust as there is a Conscience moleste mala full of perplexity in respect of guilt and the purging of the Conscience therein lies in its pacification when a man looking upon sin in its greatness and exceeding sinfulness and yet can see 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the satisfaction of Christ unto which as a City of refuge he flyes being pursued Heb. 6.18 and upon that he casts himself and pleads it before the judgment seat of God that the debt is paid and the surety acquited and this he doth either by an act of recombancy and reliance or else by an act of assurance as the Lord is pleased to clear his interest and so the man is for ever perfected according to his Conscience that is Heb. 9.6 though sin doth cleave to him and the guilt of sin may by Satan be presented to him yet conscience flying unto Christ for a refuge and finding in him a perfect satisfaction the man casts all upon his surety and his Conscience is calm and serene as a man himself indebted must needs be when he knows that his surety hath paid his debt and though there be a dayly application of this unto the soul yet there is but one oblation and the man upon this ground hath no more Conscience of sin in respect of the guilt of it for ever and this pacification of the Conscience is the perfection of the man c. But there is a Conscience also that is vitiose mala full of the defilement and pollution of sin 1 Tit. 1.15 All evil is put under too heads malum triste afflicting evil or malum turpe defiling evil and sin has in it both these as it binds a man over unto all afflicting evil so there is a guilt and as it doth fill a man with all polluting evil so there is a defilement a macula a stain and filthiness of sin and it hath all the filthiness in the World in it it is leprosy pollution in blood a sepulcher and the rottenness thereof it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the very excrement of wickedness Jam. 1.21 that if there could be any thing more filthiness then naughtiness it self it is sin it has defaced the image of God and the native beauty of the soul and it hath brought upon a man positive filthiness even the image of the Devil and the dreadful marks of hellish deformity that cannot be washed away with Niter and much Sope Jer. 17.1 Though this be an universal pollution that overspreads the whole man defiles body and soul and spirit yet the main defilement of sin lyes in the Conscience and where every sin doth add to the pollution as every act intends the habit above all the faculties the defilement of the Conscience is increased thereby Now the great pollution of the soul lyes in a spirit of slumber Conscience letting a man commit evil and not to tell him it is evil and in his sencelesness under sin Isa 29.10 Ephes 4.19 Being bribed by Lust and passions and pleasures to give consent to a sin and to plead for it for Conscience to pass sentence for a sin and that in the name of God 1 Joh. 16.2 and say that it is a duty and stirs up a man to it which it may be is one of the greatest sins of his Life Conscience pleads for sin and excuses a man falsly speaking peace to a man in a corrupt and cursed state saying I shall have peace though I walk in the imagination of mine heart to add drunkenness to thirst c. In a reprobate sense to be in such a mind that Conscience approves things that
are as truly subordinate unto your good as they are unto Gods glory 〈◊〉 and the end of all is to take away the sin and to purge the Conscience that is defiled by sin and to perfect holiness in the fear of God Sixthly The blood of Christ doth purge their Consciences as it is now sprinkled in Heaven before the mercy Seat by the interception of Christ for there were under the Law two things that did perfect the sacrifice the offering of it the killing of it and the carrying the blood into the most holy place and sprinkling it upon the mercy Seat and the sacrifice was not perfect until both were done and the blood was to remain before the mercy Seat so the Lord Jesus has offer'd himself a sacrifice but his blood is sprinkled still upon us and remains and it is a speaking blood it speaks better things then the blood of Abel now it doth speak to us continually for the end of his blood and what is it but that we may be cleansed he gave himself for us that he might redeem us from all iniquity and purifie us to himself Tit. 2.14 c. and the cry of this blood still in Heaven is sanctifie them by thy truth keep them from the evil of the world father keep through thy own name them that thou hast given me c. But how shall I know my Conscience is purged by the blood of Christ c. First The more a mans Conscience is afflicted with the spiritual rising of lust and he loaths himself for it as Paul for the Law of his members warring against the Law of his mind and Job I have seen thee and therefore I abhor my self Secondly The more ready a man is to deny himself for God in any service and his Conscience puts him forth to the uttermost in it as Paul I am willing to spend my self or to dye for the name of the Lord Jesus and Abraham rose up early to obey the command of God even to sacrifice his only son for the more the glory of God and his commands do sway with a man the more cause he has to be assured that the blood of sprinkling has passed upon him c. Thirdly The more a mans Conscience keeps down h is lust in the presence of the object of it as Boaz the woman lay at his feet and yet his lust did not rise and as Job to make a Covenant with his eyes and not look upon a Maid not have eyes full of adultery a godly man may be tempted to sin it may be in the absence of the object but if it be present and lust have all the advantages that can be and yet it cannot prevail it s an argument of a pure Conscience and try all these with reference unto your darling lust for answerable as the Conscience is purged with respect unto that so it is unto all other sins whatsoever It will serve for exhortation unto all men to keep their Consciences pure Vse 2 being once cleansed in the blood of the Lamb and this was the Apostle Pauls labour and his dayly exercise Acts 24.16 in this I exercise my self to to keep 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Conscience void of offence before God and all men Now we have formerly heard that as there be two things in sin so there is a double defilement of the Conscience there is a guilt and a pollution and a mans Conscience can never be a good Conscience a pure Conscience without a stumbling block unless it be kept pure in both these and here I would speak of a pure Conscience according to the Apostles distinction First before God Secondly before men And first in reference unto the guilt of sin and a Conscience polluted therewith and this is a heart sprinkled from an evil Conscience Heb. 10.22 that is an accusing and a condemning Conscience 1 John 3.21 if our hearts condemn us not that is if they have the guilt of no sin lye upon them for which they draw us before the judgment Seat of Christ and pass upon us the sentence of condemnation and so Paul 2 Cor. 1.12 this is our rejoycing the testimony of our Conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity we have had our Conversation in the world and more especially towards you and 1 Cor. 4.4 I know nothing by my self it was a small thing to him to be judged of by man or in mans day for men have their day of judgment also as God has his and the reason why he doth despise the judgment of all men is this that he was conscious to himself of nothing wherein he had misbehaved himself in his Apostleship towards them many weaknesses there were which he owned in himself but yet the guilt of none of them did stick upon his Conscience and yet he refers himself unto the judgment of God who knows more then a mans Conscience can know by a mans self c. and this was the great care of Job that his heart might not reproach him all his dayes Job 27.6 In respect of God there is a two-fold good Conscience in regard of guilt one in truth and the other in shew and appearance only First There is a natural Conscience that may have a great shew of goodness in it not having the guilt of sin rising in it but may with a great deal of boldness appear before God and may lift up a mans face before him and yet this not be a Conscience truly good as we see in the Heathen Rom. 2.16 their thoughts do excuse as well as ac●use and that in the day when God shall judge the secrets of all men c. therefore there is the guilt of some sins that Conscience will acquit a man from and will speak for him in the presence of the Lord and so some do apply that speech of Paul as Act. 23.1 I have lived in all good Conscience before God even unto this day it is conceived by some as Cajetan c. that it is spoken in reference unto all his dayes even those also before his Conversion in which he did never sin against his Conscience and therefore he saith bona Conscientia non bono opere for he thought that he did God good service in all that he did as Luther did say of himself Nec ita eram glacies frigus sicut Eccius alii qui propter ventrem Papam defendere videbantur sed ego rem seriam agebam ut qui diem extremum horribiliter timui salvus fieri ex intimis medullis cupiebam And the goodness of a mans Conscience in not witnessing guilt is but a seeming goodness it is sometimes from a mans uprightness and good intention in a particular act wherein though he doth ill yet he doth mean well and think also that he doth well as it is the manner of many a misled and deluded soul as Gen. 20.5.6 Abimelech answered God in the integrity of my heart and the
holy Math. call no man father upon Earth no man Rabbi upon Earth search the Scriptures Act. 17.11 John 4.1 try the spirits take nothing upon trust it s no disparagement unto the best Ministry to subject their doctrine to the Scriptures Christ himself ordered us to subject his doctrine to the tryal search the Scriptures for in them you think you have eternal life they testifie of me and by this he did confirm his doctrine if once you take things from the authority of man you set the man in the place of Christ and God in judgment may give him up to errour that you may be mislead by him who was so willing to follow his Commandment 1 Cor. 12.2 You were caried away with dumb Idols as you were led the blind lead the blind it is an honour due to God onely to be believed ex authoritate dicentis And therefore away with the names of men I am of Paul and I of Apollo c. For Paul and Apollo c. Is nothing but instruments by whom you believe and there cannot be a greater injury to your Teachers then to set them in the place of Christ c. Sixthly Avoid as much as possible Society with those by whom thou mayest be drawn to be seduced cease to hear that instruction that causeth thee to err from the way of knowledge Prov. 19.27 Perverse disputings of men of corrupt minds and destitute of the truth supposing that gain is godliness 2 Tim. 6.5 from such withdraw thy self 1 John 1.10 receive them not into your house bid them not God speed have no common familiarity with them fly from enemies to the truths of God as from a Plague or else if thou dally with them thou wilt be in danger of being insnared by them Lastly Be much in prayer to be preserved when so many even the third part of the Stars of Heaven be swept down that thou mayest stand with the Lamb and not receive the mark of the Beast when the World wonders after him it is a great mercy and therefore say Can. 1.7 Lord shew me where thou feedest where thou makest thy flocks to rest at noon for why should I be as one that turneth aside by the flocks of thy companions remember it is not parts nor learning nor common grace that will secure a man from believing lyes for we see men of the greatest parts commonly are taken the wits and the disputers of this World and it is not a form of godlyness nor a profession of Religion but it is walking close with God in that profession we see men in our days that have driven the trade of Religion for many years together and yet may become but broaken professors and prove bankrupt at last become the Leaders of some new Sect and there the height of their Religion ends and if once thy heart sit loose in prayer even in this know thou art immediately in danger to be corrupted and seduced for if once a man cease to pray against sin thou art in danger to commit it this is the way for a man to keep his Conscience pure in the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of it that his judgment be not defiled But there is a double misery that we do labour under at this time as there are heresies and false doctrines on the one side and you must keep your Consciences pure from that leaven so also there is profaneness and all manner of devilish practises on the other side and men do commonly think by objecting the one to justify themselves in the other some are enemies unto Christ in opinion teaching for doctrines the traditions of men and there are some are enemies to Christ in conversation whose god is their belly who glory in their shame and give themselves over unto all excess of riot Christ has enemies even where his kingdom is set up Psal 110 2 For he must rule in the middle of his enemies the time will come when he shall rule over them but now he rules amongst them and those enemies are of three sorts First Some are Christians but not in purity as Hereticks and false teachers and some are Christians but not in sincerity as hypocrites and those that are false hearted and lastly some are called Christians but have not so much as an external conformity and such are prophane and all professed workers of iniquity and there is onely this difference between them one speaks against the Truth and the other lives against the Truth and so all the benefits that we have by having the name of Christ called upon us is this ad hoatantum preceptorum sacrorum scite cognoscimus ut post interdict a gravius peccemus It will be necessary therefore that something be spoken to fortifie your souls and to exhort you to keep your Consciences pure from principles of prophaneness in conversation as well as principles of heresy in opinion for all mens ways are grounded upon the principles with which their mind is stored and by these the man walks and therefore the great work in conversion is to distroy mens former principles and cast down their strong holds and bring their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 reasonings into subjection lay but these two principles in a mans heart that the Church cannot err and that the Church of Rome is the true Church onely and that man though he know not or consent not unto many of the doctrines of Popery yet he is a Papist in his principles and these will necessarily bring in all the rest and inforce the man to consent unto them all as they shall be discovered to him so there are certain principles that if they be layd in a mans heart though he may not walk in many ways of Prophaneness but for some reasons there is a restraint upon him yet he is in his heart a prophane man and will be ready to break forth into all the ways of prophaneness as occasion and opertunity shall present it self and the principles are such as these First That is the best Religion that men do receive by tradition from their Fathers so they in Jer. 44.17 Our Fathers did burn incense to the Queen of Heaven and then they had plenty of victuals but since there has been innovations and changes in Religion we have never seen peace nor a good day Have any of the nations changed their gods Jer 2 1● That Religion which they have received by inheritance they take themselves deeply ingaged to keep close to it and say will you be wiser then your fore-fathers and will you say that they have all dyed in errour and will you condemn all these to Hell as men living in errour who were counted good men in their generation When as we know that Christ dyed to redeem us from our vain conversation that we received by tradition from our Fathers and men meerly acquainted with the 1 Pe● 1.18 Scriptures do know that God has promised unto his people
therefore he will suffer his whole displeasure to arise Now if it be so fearful a thing when the Lord lets out but a little of his wrath if his wrath be kindled but a little How much more when he doth stir up all his wrath and deals with men by fury poured out Fourthly The subject upon which this wrath shall light shall be the Souls of men but especially a mans Conscience which is the tenderest part even the eye of the Soul and the Soul of man is capable of wrath beyond what all the Creatures in Heaven and Earth can inflict there is not enough in this world to fill the sences of man Eccle. 1.8 the eye is not satisfied with seeing nor the ear with hearing for there is nothing beneath God will satisfie it Ps 17. last but as in Heaven the Soul shall be satisfied and fill'd with his love so in Hell it shall be satisfied and fill'd with his wrath and it 's this filling the Soul with misery that is properly the death of the Soul and therefore Christ saith that the Creatures can but kill the body and there is no more that they can do they cannot kill the Soul because they cannot fill it neither with good things nor with evil as there is nothing but the glory of God can make a man perfectly and fully happy so there is nothing but the wrath of God that can make a man fully and perfectly miserable Fifthly Rom. 2.5 It is wrath by long patience treasured up the patience and goodness of God should lead to repentance which a man despising treasures up wrath against the day of wrath c. The Lord doth bear long and because sentence against evil workers is not executed speedily therefore the hearts of men are fully set in them to do evil and therefore they mock at the coming of the Lord to take vengeance 2 Pet. 3 3. where is the promise of his coming he is pressed under their abominations as a Cartfull of sheaves and yet he bears still and lets men despise his goodness fill up their measure and out-stand the day of his patience which has its Period and then caesa patientia fit furor if once he doth whet his glittering Sword and his hand take hold of judgement a fire is kindled in his anger that will burn for ever and the more his patience and goodness has been despised the greater treasure of wrath is laid up and the more will be brought forth at the day of payment for it must be a just recompence of reward Sixthly This wrath doth come upon men very suddenly and unavoidably 't is sudden destruction swift damnation 2 Pet. 2.1 though a man may have gone on and prospered in a way of sinning long but yet a hand of vengeance will overtake them as the swelling in a great wall that comes suddenly down wrath has hung over a man a long time the decree has travelled with judgement long but it comes suddenly as the travel of a woman God feeds them as sheep in a large Pasture and then brings them forth to the slaughter Rev. 14.18 19. there is a fatting time and there is a killing time there is a ripening time and a reaptime gather the Grapes and trample the Wine-press for her Grapes are fully ripe thrust in the Sicle c. and the Angel thrust in his Sicle and cast it into the great Wine-press of the wrath of God and that comes upon men suddenly when they expect it not and they are ensnared and taken and it will come unavoidably there is no way to escape it when the day of vengeance is come though men have scaped it before but now all the power of the Creaturts cannot relieve a man Neh. 1.10 But though they be solded as thorns yet they shall be devoured as stubble that cannot resist the fire as the dust to the Beesom Isa 14.24 so will the Lord sweep them to destruction in his wrath Psal 80.10 They perish at the rebuke of thy Countenance look when God will cast a man into destruction that man will become a humble petitioner to the Mountains to fall upon him and hide him from the wrath of him that is upon the Throne and from the Lamb. Lastly It shall be pure wrath judgment without mercy Joh. 2.13 Rev. 14.10 They shall drink of the Wine of the wrath of God without mixture for there shall be utter darkness that is purae tenehrae and it shall be inflicted upon them with delight the Lord saith I will ease me of my adversaries and he will laugh at your calamity smiling wrath is dreadfull and his spirit shall be quieted thereby Zach. 6.8 a judge here though he condemn the malefactour yet he pities the man but the Lord will laugh at him they that are children of wrath are a sacrifice of a sweet savour to God But you will say What should we do to escape it 1 Thes 1.10 There is no way but Christ to diliver us from the wrath to come and there is no way but by being one with him and that is First By being cut off from the old root Rom 11.24 Rom. 7.4 divorced from the old Husband by a work of conviction showing a man that he is under the curse and Hell is his proper place and by a work of humiliation for all the pleasures of sin which are now damp'd and a man is now under the apprehension of the displeasure of God and of self-loathing for it Rom. 7.9 Sin revived and I dyed sath the Apostle Secondly Upon this there is a discovery made of Christ unto the soul that there is redemption in him to be had that we perish not and that he is able to save to the uttermost those that come unto him And all this is but the fruits of the ancient agreement between Christ and the Father God was in Christ reconciling the World God did love to have is so and this is seeing the Son Joh. 6.36 Joh. 12 4● The drawing of the Father John 1.44 No man can come to me except the Father draw him c. Thirdly The soul has an instinct after union has received a touch of the spirit of God Elijahs mantle has fallen upon him so that nothing will satisfie him but union with Christ Phil. 3. he looks at that in all ordinances in which he is conversant to win Christ is his only aim and he will not be bribed with any other thing as a false spirit will be if he have gifts and some raisedness in parts and qualifications and a name to live among men he is satisfied and Conscience is very quiet but a soul that has received this magnetick touch from the spirit is put off with nothing besides Christ it moves to him as naturally as the stone unto its center Fourthly He accepts of Christ upon his own terms gives up it self to him Receives Christ with all his promises and all
mercy but there is a time when the door will be past opening Mat. 25.10 Eccl. 9.20 and all mercy will be shut out for ever there is no work nor device nor knowledge nor wisdom in the Grave whither thou goest The day of Grace has an end but the day of wrath will never end the days of Grace may be numbred but the days of wrath shall be numberless for the Scripture doth say that if the day of Grace be once overpast it will never return again Secondly An ungodly mans hope is said in Scripture to dye with him Job 11.20 his hope is as the giving up of the Ghost He breaths out his last hope and his last breath together for when a wicked man dyes his hope perishes Pro. 11.7 but the Righteous has hope in his death his hope is a living hope and therefore it dyes not with his body Now how comes it to pass a mans hope perishes this is grounded upon the eternity that is to come for were there not an eternity a mans hope would live but at a mans death a wicked mans eternal state being cast his hope dyes because there can be no expectation of a change in all afflictions here there is hope of an end or some mitigation Zac. 9 1● they are all prisoners of hope c. And the Lord shall say to them in that day Turn you to the strong hold c. but in Hell there is no hope of any other state no not for one moment but the torment continues to eternity Rev. 20. Thirdly Hell is called a bottomless pit Luke 8.31 And this must needs express the eternity of it out of a pit in which there is no bottom there can be no redemption but a man must sink and sinks for ever it is eternity to the bottom there are pits here in which men may be cast not only into the prison but into the Sea or into the Dungeon in the prison and yet out of all these they may be delivered by the blood of the Covenant and brought out but this bottomless pit there is no blood of the Covenant to redeem from There is a great Gulfe set that is by a divine decree stablished and fixed a mans state is set for eternity and there is no hope of a change a passage here there is from death to life but there is none hereafter for there is a great Gulse that God has set between that there can be no passage no change of a mans condition there can be no translation for judgment pronounced against a man at the last day is eternal judgment Fifthly If a man that is under this torment would come forth there be Chains cast upon him to keep him under that darkness Jude 6. so that he cannot escape as Jude sayes the Angels that kept not their first estate but left their own habitation are kept in Chains under darkness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they are kept in Chains that is the Judgment of God and the power of God significat potentiam Dei quâ tanqnam vinculis aeternis nunquam solvendis Estius and it is under darkness either in Hell the darkness there or under the darkness and the guilty thoughts of their own spirits now under both these the Devils are already and this is the wrath and these are the Chains that are prepared for all the seed of the Serpent which shall torment them Sixthly This fire can never goe out because there will be for ever a supply of the fuel now if there be always combustble matter added to fire here the fire will never go out but in this there will be always a supply the fire will still have an addition of fuel and of blowing the pile thereof is fire and much wood sa 30.33 the breath of the Lord like a stream of Brimstone doth kindle it c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies not barely a stream but a torrent a flood a violent and swift-running stream from much waters and Brimstone is the most fierce burning for fire to work upon and it is most hardly quenched and a River a Torrent of Brimstone the wrath of the Lord 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 burning in it the fuel is the wrath of God as a River of Brimstone burning in it as in this life the spirit of God in a work of grace is not only fire but oil it is maintained and supplied by the same grace and the same spirit and is maintained by it so after this life the spirit of God will not only be fire but a River of brimstone and their will be a dayly maintanance a continual supply of the same wrath for ever therefore that fire can never be quenched Let us now look in the grounds of this eternity and that the rather because there is a principal in the minds of men ready to tax the Lord of cruelty and injustice that he should for the sins of a few years lay upon men punishment and torment to eternity the acts transient and but for a moment that the wrath of God should be permanent and never end and therefore say they these things cannot fland with the justice of God or with his mercy therefore they conceive that men shall be but punished for a time and a time for their deliverance will come when this worm shall dye and this fire shall be quenched and some say the persons shall be destroyed and others that they be annihelated as the Socinians and divers desperate Libertines at this day that will never be perswaded that it can agree with the merciful nature of God to make creatures eternally to destroy them for a few acts of sin committed a few years here in this life and Origen was so merciful in this kind that he would have the Devil saved after some years and Hell fire to be wholly put out and Austin in his time had to do cum misericordibus quibusdam qui nolunt credere poenam sempiternam futuram c. But that men after some certain time should be delivered de civet L. 21. c. 17. Now The grounds of this eternity of wrath are these First Gods intention from eternity was to shew his wrath and to make his power known unto the vessels of wrath Rom. 9.21.22 All men are in his hand as clay in the hand of the potter and it is in his power to make them vessels of honour or dishonour Now if the Lord will shew the riches of his glory and of his mercy unto the vessels of mercy it must be to eternity and to everlasting life so if the Lord will shew forth the power of his wrath it must be to eternity for the one must answer the other and if there be eternal mercy to manifest the one there will require eternal wrath to shew forth the other for there are but two things in which the love of God is seen and in which his wrath is seen and they are things