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A46992 Comfortable words to afflicted consciences together with a short advice to ministers how to handle them : and also Mansio Christiana, or, The Christians mansion-house, being a sermon preached on the Lords-day, 7th Feb., Anno Dom. 1668 at the funeral of Mrs. Martha Walmisley, the wife of Mr. Charles Walmisley, minister of Chesham magna in the county of Bucks / by William Jole ... Jole, William, d. ca. 1702. 1671 (1671) Wing J887; ESTC R8442 40,808 152

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and lead them to Christ and to the Covernant of Grace and to the Promises they are broken and bruised already therefore deal gently with them handle their Souls with smooth and not with rugged hands We say a Chirurgeon needs an Eagles eye a Lyons heart and a Ladies hand so we may say of a Minister he needs an Eagles eye to be of a piercing sight in the Mysteries of the Gospel He needs a Lyons heart having to do with wounded and Ulcerous Souls He needs a Ladies hand having to do with broken hearted sinners Afflicted consciences are thirsty and ready to faint therefore lead them to the Rock Jesus Christ from whose side being struck by the rod of God do only flow those waters that can allay the scorching heat of an i●flamed Conscience and can refresh and revive the drooping Soul that boweth under his burthen of temptations hence do issue those waters that can cleanse the Conscience and wash away the guilt of sin which makes it so disquiet and tormenting after David had sinned ●ou●y by Adultery and Murder he came to these waters Psalm 51. ver 2. Wash me throughly from mine iniquity and cleanse me from my sin Moses's rod struck the Rock that water might gush out to the thirsty Israelites God's rod struck the Rock Jesus Christ that Mercy might flow out more freely to the thirsty sinner If they be thirsty lead them to Christ the Fountain of living waters A wounded Spirit is shot with a poysoned arrow I mean the sting of sin be you therefore that loving friend that may draw out the venome with your mouths I mean by your godly council and seasonable advice Do not tell afflicted Consciences of a God only but of a God reconciled in Christ put them into the clift of this Rock Jesus Christ when you shew them any thing of the Glory of God They are bruised therefore speak not all Law unto them but mingle Gospel with it least you break those whom God hath bruised Shew them the cleansing and comforting Blood of Jesus Christ and if their trembling Souls chance to propose any such Questions as are in the 6 Micah 7. will the Lord be pleased with thousands of Rams Shew them the Lamb of God that taketh away the sins of the world While they cry out of their own sinfulness set before them Christ's perfect Righteousness and that He freely offers to cloath them with it shew them not only Christs ability to save but Christs willingness to save for that is sound advice given by a late writer That Soul which is disquieted for sin must be pacifyed by something that is not sin He that is sensible of his own unrighteousness must be made to see a perfect righteousness somewhere else even the righteousness of Christ If it were a prevailing argument with God Exod. 32. ver 13. To press him to pardon Israel for the sake of Abraham Isaack and Jacob his Servants and his Covenant made with them Then surely it must needs be a stronger argumen● when a poor sinner shall be seech God to remember Jesus Christ his only begotten and well-beloved Son that dyed for him and his Covenant made with Christ But as afflicted consciences will be much fingering their sore and so put back their cure The sight of Sin is a thick cloud which will much hinder the sight of a Saviour Therefore when they complain of great and manifold offenees do you shew them Gods great and manifold Me●cies Psalm 51. ver 1. Shew them Davids argument Psalm 25. ver 11. O Lord pardon mine Iniquity for it is great Here is our usual Objection turned into an Argument My Sins are great therefore I fear God will not pardon them says the doubting sinner My Iniquity is great therefore Lord pardon it says the believing David even merciless men will do much to purchase them a great name the merciful God by pardoning great sinners gets Himself a greater name of being Merciful Shew them how to frame an argument out of Gods own words Ier. 33. ver 8 9. And I will cleanse them from all their Iniquities whereby they have sinned against me and whereby they have transgressed agains● me and it shall be to me a name of joy 〈◊〉 Praise and an Honour before all the Nations of the Earth which shall hear all the good th●t I ●o unto them Press the Lord with His own words to exalt His great name by cleansing and pardoning thy sins and the more and the greater they are the more will His Mercy be glorifyed Seeing God designeth to be glorifyed in the great Attribute of his Mercy we cannot glorifie it more than by throwing our selves upon it If Satan aggravate our Sins as he never fails to do it to the purpose when he finds a sinner despairing then we must set all the true colours upon Mercy great Mercy glorious Mercy rich Mercy abundant Mercy and that which is beyond all that Satan can say of our sins Infinite Mercy Shew them therefore that by casting our Souls upon Gods free Mercy we do exceedingly glorifie the Mercy of our God and the merit of our Redeemer Do not rob God of the glory of his Mercy by your unbelief But if the broken hearted sinner yet object against it self Alas my sins are no ordinary sins then do you put them in mind that Christ is no ordinary person His blood is no ordinary price His Redemption no ordinary work and Gods Mercy in Christ is no ordinary matter Paul did not despair of Pardon because he saw himself to be chief of sinners 1 Tim. 1 ch ver 15. but gloried so much the more in Christs coming to save such as he was A Soul that is once enabled to look upon Christ as his Saviour will not despair though Conscience tell him he is a great sinner but can be as willing to accuse ●t self as Satan is to accuse it and yet not despair of pardon but imploy Satans malice as an argument for greater love to Jesus Christ Those that despair of Mercy should be much pressed with the great injury done to Gods Infinite Mercy and to Christs Infinite Merit by such as despair of Pardon for it is as much as to make God an unmerciful God and Christ to be an Impotent Saviour and it is a most dangerous sin in respect of us ●or it blocks up the way to Mercy ●ll other sins might be pardoned if unbelief did not intercept our Pardon ●n the 3 Io. ver 18. He that believeth not ●s condemned already because he believeth ●ot in the name of the only begotten Son of ●od It is not said because he was a ●hore-monger or a Thief or a ●runkard but because he believeth not in the name of Christ So that unbelief is the greatest sin of all other Satan holdeth many under despairing thoughts a long time by telling them that they have not been broken enough yet by the terrors of the Law and therefore are unfit for pardoning mercy
COMFORTABLE WORDS To Afflicted Consciences Together with a Short Advice to Ministers how to handle them And also MANSIO CHRISTIANA Or the Christians Mansion-House Being a SERMON Preached on the Lords-Day 7th Feb. Anno Dom. 1668. at the Funeral of M rs MARTHA WALMISLEY the Wife of M r. Charles Walmisley Minister of Chesham magna in the County of Bucks By WILLIAM IOLE Minister of Sarrett in the County of Hertford London Printed by Iohn Winter for Samuel Homes at the Sign of S. Paul in Little Britain Anno Dom. 1671. To the READER IF the matter be sound and seasonable rest contented and look not for any Rhetorical expressions These Sermons would gladly stoop to the weakest capacities we like the Receipt if it be proper for the Distemper fainting Spirits will find but cold comfort from strong Lines and elegancy of Phrases afflicted Consciences can gather but little sweetness from the Flowers of Rhetorick the virtue of a Cordial doth not lie in the cup in which it is presented but in the goodness of the Ingredients we value the Meat more than the Garnishes about the Dish if the Meat be savory do not sleight it because it is not served up in a silver Dish And beware that you do not say as some are apt to say ●at this day the world even surfeits by Books of this nature We think there is safet● in the multitude of Counsellors for our Po●●●ick and Civil State How ●●mberless are the Books and Re●●●pts yea the Physitian for o●r bodies grown yet w●o says we have too many and y●t so foolish are we to thi●k that in the distempers and unsettled cases of our Souls we may have too many Books too many Counsellors too many Physitians too many Directions I will add but this Oft times a poor countrey Physitian does good where many great Doctors either overlook or neglect As a Woman that was in a despairing condition propos●d the doubts and gave the first occasion of Preaching this matter so the desire of some other Women hath now occasioned the Printing it and for their sakes I have purposely avoided any Phrases that might seem dark or difficult Let not the whole despise that which is prepared for the sick nor let the strong censure what was intended for the weak Vale. Psalm 88 Ver. 6. Thou hast laid me in the lowest Pit in Darkness in the Deeps THis Psalm fully answers the Title given to it a Psalm containing a grievous Complaint but the occasion of it is doubtful Some rerefer it to the Babylonish Captivity because that is the lowest condition that the Church can be brought unto in this world and so Figuratively may be called the lowest Pit but others more properly make it relate only to Heman's own private condition Some expound it of his outward afflictions or of some sharp fit of sickness that brought him nigh to Death which occasioned those expressions My life dr●●eth nigh to the Grave I am as a man that hath no st●ength Ver. 3 4. But methinks there are many expressions that must rather be interpreted of a wounded Spirit lying un●e● the apprehensions of Gods wrath Surely if there h●d been nothing but outward afflictions we should no● have h●ard such deep expressions of inward sorrow the complain● would not have been so mou●nful as now it is And therefore I rather accep● of their Interpretation who understand the 5. Ver. to be the words of one that is ready to despair free among the dead as if he should say the Die is cast as to my Eternal estate there is no hope of Mercy for me and then this Text doth second it Thou hast laid me in the lowest Pit in Darkness in the Deeps namely as to mine own sense and apprehension I look upon my condition as d●sperate as one that is condemned to eternal darkn●ss as if my name were ent●●● among that cursed crue already as if I were ready to drop into ●●at deep and bottomless pi● of darkne●s and so the 7 th Ver. seems to bear the same part Thy wrath byeth hard up●n me I am under such dreadful apprehensions of wrath and have so little hope of mercy that I look o● my self as only not in Hell and also the 15 th Ver. While I suffer thy Terrors I am distracted He doth not mean a distraction of madness but a distraction of the mind of one that was in doubt what would be●ome of his Soul for ever I am hampered in such endless doubting that I am even like a distracted person For division of the words here is 1. an Act Laid 2. the Subject Me. 3. the Agent Thou Lastly the place where In the lowest Pit in the Darkness in the Deeps Note by the way that Heman was one of the holyest and wisest men of his time And now the Doctrine I shall offer is this That the dearest of Gods Children may think themselves in a state of Damnation David is a full instance to confirm this Doctrine 51 Psal. 11 12. Cast me not away from thy presence and take not thy ●oly Spirit from ●e restore ●nto me the joy of thy Salvation David had lost the comfortable sense and feeling of Gods love and began highly to question his Salvation Asaph also 77 Psalm 7 8 9. shews what a great conflict he had with diffidence Will the Lord cast off for ever will he be favourable no more is his mercy clean gone hath God forgotten to be gracious hath he in anger shut up his tender Mercies And so Heman here in the Text Thou hast laid me in the lowest Pit c. 1. Because the Spirit of Bondage always goes before the Spirit of Adoption God doth break and bruise the Souls of his Servants before he doth bind up and heal them He makes the Sinner to hear the terrible voice of the Law before he hears the comfortable voice of the Gospel He throughly convinceth us of Sin and mak●s us sensible of the odious and defiling nature of it before he makes us apprehend Christ as a Saviour to procure us a pardon for it God makes us see and feel our selves lost utterly lost even in a state of Dam●ation before he give us any lively hope of Salvation All that are brought into Heaven at last are brought near Hell-gates at first I do not mean all universally but generally the greatest part of those that are saved apprehend themselves for a time to be damned the Spi●i● of Bondage worketh fear and horror A malefac●or whose Conscience within and the Witnesses without convince of Murder when he h●ars the Sentence passed against him and sees the Fetters on his legs and himself thrust into the Dungeon he knows that Execution follows what fear and horror must needs seize on such a condenmed person unless he be a despera●e Rogue That poor Soul that is convinced of Murdering the Lord of Life and of many thousand Sins against God and heareth his Sentence of condemna ion read out of the
I have done Answer God s●ith That if we condemn our selves here we shall not be condemned hereafter 1 Cor. 11. chap. 31. ver Pre-judging of thy self is a good sign that God is fitting thee for mercy Although such is the froward disposition of men that repeated affronts breed an irreconcileable alienation in our hearts Yet so infinitely is Gods mercy that he called upon Iudah to return to him after he had played the Harlot with many lovers Ierem. 3. ver 1. And in the 12 ver God bids back●●●ding Israel to return and in the 55 Isa● ver 7. God promiseth mercy to the wicked and unrighteous man And because the poor self-condemning sinner says he hath abundance of sin therefore God says that he will abundantly pardon not only those that are sinners in their own reckoning but even those whose lewd lives have deserved the name of wicked and unrighteous yet let them return to me says God and they shall be pardoned no matter how desperate we think our condition to be if Christ undertake the cure if he be our Physitian Nay if we believe that Christ is now in Heaven who had the sins of all the world laid on his back when he was on Earth we may the more easily believe Gods readiness to pardon the greatest sinner and also Christs merit to be able to answer for the greatest fins A 3 Objection But F●ith and Repentance are the conditions of Pardon but I cannot believe nor repent and he that belie●veth not is condemned already Iohn 3. ver 1S Ans. That Scripture speaks of a final unbelief ●e that dies in unbelief To be earnest with God for Faith is a sign of some Faith that man Mark 9. ver 24. Lord I believe help thou my unbelief He did not say I can or I cannot believe but Lord I desire to believe and I believe that thou canst help my unbelief Our Saviour seems to say unto troubled Consciences as he said to the blind man Matt. 9. ver 28. Do ye believe that I am able to do this and they said yea Lord then says Christ according to your Faith be it unto you here was Faith enough to fit them for a cure And for Repentance Christ is exalted to give Repentance and Remission of sins Acts 5. ver 31. Since you know that you cannot believe nor Repent pray unto Christ and He will enable you Peter denyed his Master thrice and yet Christ looked back upon him and recovered him again Let the greatest sinners look unto him and they shall be pardoned Take heed of Cain's unbelief My sin is greater than I can bear Or as the Note in the Margent of the Bible is greater than may be forgiven He did not say so because it was so but it proved to be so because he said so Unbelief makes sin unpardonable No sin can damn the Soul if final Unbelief be not added to it And this made St. Austin say Thou lyest Cain for the Mercy of God is far greater than the greatest sin You say you do not repent Pray tell me is sin your solace or your sorrow doth it make you mery or doth it make you mourn do you love Sin or do you loath Sin is it that evil which you allow or that evil which you allow no● Paul was a true Penitent even when he complained of a Body of Sin a Law in his Members which made him do the evil which he hated Rom. 7. ver 15. 19. compared it shews you do repent Seeing that God hath made you so sensibly to bewail your impenitency Therefore look unto Christ whom the Father hath exalted to give Repentance and Remission of sins Acts 5. ver 31. Alass I cannot weep for my sins as I ought outward sufferings ●etch more tears from my eyes then my sins How bitterly did Peter weep upon the remembrance of his denyal How plentifully did Mary Magdalen shed tears when we washed our Saviours Feet with them but alass I can scarce weep at all Answer Abundance of tears do not always declare true Repentance We read of Esa●'s Tears but not of his Repentance Gen. 27. ver 34. 38. He cryed with an exceeding bitter cry He lift up his voice and weptt Tears seem to us to be all of a colour God only can put the difference Esau's tears and Peter's both wept bitterly and yet both of them wept savingly There may be true repentance without a flood of tears the Thief on the Cross was truly penitent and yet we do not read of a tear that dropt from his eyes David truly repented and yet we find no mention of any tears when Nathan told him of his sins 2. Sam. chap. 12. ver 13. Mr. Perkins in his Cases of Conscience hath abundantly satisfyed us that tears are not absolutely necessary to true Repentance some are naturally more dry of constitution and barren of Tears than others I knew a Boy that was not able to shed a tear to save a whipping True Repentance is to be judged of more by the inward sorrow of the heart then by the outward sorrow that runs down the cheeks the greater the inward grief is the fewer tears will fall as a high wind keeps back the showers off the great combustion in the soul may keep back the showers of tears And so there may be true Repentance with drie cheeks There is great weeping and wailing in Hell but no true Repentance Children are more easie to shed tears than grown men Sighs and groans is the usual way of expressing the greatest sorrow And whereas you say you cannot weep so much for sins as for outward sufferings for ought that we can find Hezekiah wept more at the message of Death than when he humbled himself for the pride of his heart Isai. 38. ver 14. David's sickness drew more tears from him than his Sins Psal. 2. ver 5 6. What bitter lamentation did he make when he received the unwelcome tidings of Absalom's death 2. Kings chap. 18. last ver and 19. chap. 4. ver Those things that most press the outward senses do squeeze out most tears To see our House on fire would more easily force tears from our eyes than to hear a Sermon of the fire of Hell although that be much more dreadful news To conclude this particular A malefactor that is condemned to the Gallows may shed more tears than one that is pardoned and yet he that is pardoned may be more penitent than he that is executed It is dangerous to make any standard to measure true Repentance for if you will set any it must be the highest of all so that unless you are sure that you weep as bitterly as Peter or Mary Magdalen the Devil will still tell you it is not true Repentance besides it looks so like a Papistical trick as if you thought that rivers of tears could wash away sin without the blood of Ghrist And when we have wept until we can weep no more if Faith be not mixed with
bring us into this Land Numb 14. ve 8. Hearken unto Caleb and Ioshua unto the faithful spies and true Ministers which declare from the word of God what place Heaven is and hearken not unto any that endeavour to bring an evil report on this good Land where only is fulness of Ioy and pleasures for evermore Indeed there are some difficulties will meet us in our way thitther but no impossibilities Say with Caleb the Lord is with us we are able to overcome them Numb 13. compared with Num● 14. ver 9. 2. Pray against earthly mindedness The young man that seemed so earnest to get to Heaven as is set out by his postures of running and kneeling and asking what to do yet his great earthly Possessions hindred him from being prevailed with by the promise of Heavenly treasure Mark 10. ver 2● Reuben and Gad had so much Cattle that they are not eager to dwell in Canaan Iacob's Flocks and Herds made him drive slowly homewards Gen. 33. v. 14. though I grant his fear of Esau might be a great cause also Those Christians are in most danger of neglecting Heavenly Mansions that are well seated in Earthly places haec sunt quae faciunt invitos mori these things make us unwilling to die Let us use the Earth as the Birds do the Air is their proper place and they care not to descend on the Earth but only for their times of Feeding so long as they keep aloft they are secure but when they come to settle on the Ground there are Nets or Guns or some Snare to endanger them So long as Christians keep their thoughts on Heaven and the thing above they are ●afe from Temptation but when they ●et them hover too long upon Earth and the things ●●low Satan is ready to shoot at them or hath one Snare or other to catch them though your daily Bread grows on Earth yet look on Heaven as your home and send your thoughts desires thither again that it may appear though you Table here you expect to dwell in Heaven A few words more and then I shall conclude 1. Be content though God allo● you but a low place or no place in this world seeing Christ is preparing a place for you in a better world 2. Get your affections more weaned from earthly Houses you that have them and fix your thoughts more on those Heavenly Mansions Because Children know no better things they are so much in love with every painted Gew-gaw It is our ignorance of the Joys in Heaven that makes us so greatly pleased with these toyes on Earth 3. Be not immoderate in grieving for any Relations or Friends departed no though you have h●d them but a little while with you So long as we are in the Body we are absent from the Lord the Apostle Paul groaned earnestly in desires of enjoying his Heavenly Mansion 2 Cor. chap. 5. ver 2. and he gives us his Reason in the 1. ver Who would not go out of a thatcht Cottage to inherit a Pallace those that die in the Lord do but leave an Earthly Tabernacle to inherit an Heavenly Kingdom and will you think it too s●on for them to be thus happy Solon being asked who were happy tells a story of two Youths who out of affection drew their Mothers Chariot to the Temple and the Gods to recompence them caused them to die presently those are happy that can number Death among their priviledges and bid it welcom If I could offer your Wife or Children House or Land would you say no I thank you I cannot spare them yet they shall tarry with me one year longer before they go to possess it We are wiser in earthly matters why are we such fools in Heavenly matters if we did cordially believe and seriously meditate on the blessedness in Heaven we should grudge at every hour we ●arry on earth we should think the shortest life too long and like the next Heir be eagerly desirous to inherit I say nothing of the party deceased though she hath left a good name behind her because I was totally ● stranger to her FINIS PAUL The Pattern of PARDONING MERCY Being A SERMON ON 1 Tim. Chap. 1. Ver. 15. Howbeit for this cause I obtained Mercy that in me first Iesus Christ might shew forth all Long-suffering for a Pattern to them which should hereafter believe on him to life everlasting 1 Tim. 1. Chap. 16. Ver. Howbeit for this cause I obtained Mercy that in me Iesus Christ might shew forth all long suffering for a pattern to them which should hereafter believe on him to life everlasting THis Verse referreth to the last words of the former Verse whereof I am chief howbeit for this cause I obtained mercy as if the Apostle would say Although I was so heinous a sinner yet Iesus Christ hath made me a pattern of mercy to all others As God makes some stand as fearful monuments of his wrath to fright ●hose that are impenitent like Lot's wife tu●ned into a Pillar of Salt to season after Ages So God is pleased to set others as Monuments of free-grace to invite all penitent Sinners the Apostle tells us what was Gods aim in pardoning him that was so great an offender to make a pattern of long suffering to encourage the greatest sinners to lay hold on his Mercy For Division of the words 1. Here is an Act mentioned Obtained 2. The thing mentioned Mercy 3. The Person mentioned I that needed long sufferings I the chief of sinners Lastly the Reason mentioned for this cause that I might be a pattern to them that shall hereafter believe that is to say that by my Example the greatest Sinners m●ght be encouraged to lay hold on the offer of Free Pardon seeing such a desperate opposer of Jesus Christ as I was received into favour that none might hereafter despair of Pardon but all Sinners might be encourag'd to come to God through Jesus Christ. The Doctrine will be most comfortable thus rendred That God hath set Paul as a glorious pattern of Mercy to encourage all sinners by his Example to seek for pardoning Mercy The orderly handling of this Doctrine will be 1. To see what a Pattern is 2. How Paul may be said to be a Pattern 3. Why Paul was made a Pattern Lastly What excellent ●ncouragement all Sinners hereafter may make of this glorious Pattern of Free-grace For the First What a Pattern is For on this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lyeth the stress of the whole matter A Pattern is materi● proposita ad imitandum something that is laid before our eyes for us to imitate when a Li●mner hath drawn some curious Picture in which he thinks he hath shewed much of his Art he hangs it out for all Passengers to look on to shew them what he can do every piece is not fit to be a Pattern but the most exact Pi●ces In the converting of Paul who by his own confession was one of the greatest
as much as can well be in a Man void of Grace and in Paul was discovered as much as need be looked for in the most eminent Saint his former madness is equalled by his present zeal and now all that Ie●ish Learning which he had raked together intending onely thereby to defend the righteousness of the Law and the Traditions of the Elders and to dispute against Christ and his Gospel God imploys it better to make him more able to confound the Iews and to prove that Jesus is the very Christ Acts 9. ver 22. None preach Christ crucifyed so plainly and the Doctrine of Justification by Christs impured Righteousness so powerfully and so thorowly as Paul does none beat so much on this string as he Romans 3 ver 27. Galat. 2. ver 16. and in Galat. 3. ver 10. None cry down the Righteousness of the Law so vehemently nor cry up the imputed Righteousness of Christ so earnestly as Paul does thus as he was behind no man in wickedness before his conversion so was he not infer or to the very chief Apostles after conversion but laboured more abundantly than they all I Cor. chap. 15. ver 10. Now he would preach nothing but Christ crucifyed 1 Cor. chap. 2. ver and would glory in nothing but in the Cross of our Lord Jesus Gal. 6. ver 14. Thus Paul was even a miracle of Mercy and a glorious pattern of Grace The next particular is why Paul was hung out as a pattern of Free grace 1. Because he had been such a notorious persecuter and therefore as the noise of his mad and ignorant zeal had filled the world before so now the news of his conversion would be the more wonderful and he would be the more fit to be a pattern because the Example of so great a Sinner would be more encouragement for other sinners to seek for Mercy Galat. 1. ver 23 24. When the Churches heard that Paul preached the Faith which he once destroyed they glorifyed God in him When sinners remember that Paul was pardoned they may glorify Go●s Mercy by seeking Pardon too 2. Paul was made a Pattern of Free Grace because he was an eminent Iew and by Sect a Pharisee and so might prove a leading Pattern to all the Iews and to that obstinat Sect of the Pharisees to leave off per securi●g the Church of Chr●st and to joyn themselves unto it ●o follow his Example in renouncing the Righteousness of Works and embracing the Righteousness of Faith Paul was well read in all their Jewish Traditions and was as zealous of them as they and therefore they might see more of the power of Grace in his conversion that now made him h●zard his own life to advance that way which before he persecuted unto Death 3. Paul was chose to be a Pattern because in such a Pattern the freeness of Grace would appear more clearly here all the world may see that we are not saved out of any Wo●ks foreseen here was nothing to fit him to receive Grace unless making havock of the Church be a preparatory work Such Works the Romish Saints are full of here was a raging Persecutor tamed and pardoned It is not our Faith apprehending Christ that saves us but our Christ apprehended by Faith Christ is the meriting cause and Faith is the Instrumental Lastly Paul was set as a Pattern of Free Grace to encourage other sinners beholding the Mercy of God unto him to look after Mercy too that as in a Glass or Mirrour all men may see more clearly the freeness of Grace it is a good means to prevent our despair when we see such an instance of pardoning Mercy before our eyes and this leadeth me to the last particular What encouragement may other sinners draw from this great pattern of Paul's obtaining Pardon My meaning is not that others should expect to be miraculously converted as Paul was for you may as well expect to be caught up into the third Heaven But by Paul's being pardoned you may look after a Pardon Paul believed and was obedient to the voice from Heaven and so obtained Mercy This voice from Heaven was the voice of Christ why p●rsecutest thou m● and Acts 9. ver 5. I am Iesus whom thou persecutest The Gospel now is Christs voice from Heaven he that believeth this voice and is obedie●● to it shall as surely obtain Pardon as ever Paul did and he that will not obey Christs voice in the Gospel shall n●ver be pardoned It is remarkable that Christ did not tell Paul by the voice from Heaven what he should do but sent him to be taught by Ananias who was a Minister of the Gospel Acts 9. ver 6. So now he doth not miraculously tell sinners what they must do to be saved but sends them to his Word and Ministers to be instructed and therefore pray compare those two places together Hebr. 4 ver 7. To day if you will hear his voice what is that voice of Christ Luk. 10. ver 16 He that heareth you heareth me Christ spake this to his Seventy Disciples when he sent them out to preach the Gospel Christ gives his Ministers the same power to preach as he did them though he hath not given them power to work Miracles he still says He that heareth you heareth me for it is Christs word and not Ministers to re●urn to the queston how other sinners may draw encouragement from Pauls obtaining Mercy W●y this this a pattern for other sinners ad imitandum Paul● fidem to believe and so they shall obtain mercy When you see a very deformed person well married you are apt to say nay then none need ever hereafter despair of a husband other sinners may say so from this pattern of Free Grace seeing that Paul the chief of sinners is married to Jesus Christ seeing so great a si●ner is pardoned no sinner hereafter need despair of pardon thus one Begger encourage●h another by ●elling them or shewing them what a good Alms they have 〈◊〉 I sped well at such a door and 〈◊〉 enco●rageth others to go 〈◊〉 too Though indeed begging is now grown such a common Trade that you may be soon wearied out with Beggers such is mans emptiness that he cannot be always giving but such is Gods fulness that he delights to be dealing of his dole of Mercy the oftner you come to the door of Mercy the better you shall speed and therefore this is an encouraging Pattern And consider beloved how great is Gods goodness in giving us such Patterns to invite us to the throne of Grace To see Matthew and Zaccheus two Publicans pardoned may encourage all Publicans to look after Pardon too to see Mary Magdalen out of whom went seven Devils and the Woman taken in the very act of Adultery both pardoned may encourage all sinners to seek pardon to hear Paul say I was a Blasphemer and a Persecutor and injurious but I obtained Mercy may greatly encourage all sinners to follow God by
Prayer for to shew them Mercy it is a very great mercy that we have not only Promises of Pardon but also Patterns of notorious sinners that have been pardoned 1. Because such Patterns sufficiently declare the infinite merit of Christs death who could be fitter Trumpets of Christs Power and Mercie then those blind and lame and leprous and the Woman cured of her bloody Issue and that other Woman bowed together all which Christ cured in the days of his Flesh When the Jews spake against Christ the man whom he had restor'd to sight pleaded hard for him Iohn 9. ver 30. 33. If this man were not of God he could do nothing The Jews knew not what to object but proudly asked him Dost thou undertake to teach us ver 34. What can any poor sinner object against the Power Mercy of Christ when they see ten Lepers cleansed at once but may be enforced to cry out with that Leper Matt. 8. ver 2. Lord if thou wilt thou canst make me clean He that cured Ten can cure ten Millions though it is not so with bodily Physicians their Art is fallible but Christ is the infallible Physician To hear that Christ came to save sinners may not move us so much as to see it in the Examples of Manasseh and the Theef on the Cross and those others before-mentioned such remarkable instances do abundantly declare that the merit of Christs death is exceedingly beyond the demerit of our sins Christs healing all manner of diseased that were brought unto him shews that he can heal all manner of diseased Souls that come unto him now 2. Such Instances do evince that God is ready to deal out Pardons to all sorts of Sinners let their Sins be what they will that come in Christs name to ask Pardon the poor Soul is apt to say How shall I know that God will pardon such a wretched sinner as I am Why you may believe it in such Patterns as Paul and those before mentioned 3. It is a great Mercy to have such Patterns of pardoning Mercy for in these we may more clearly see what is the great design of free Grace namely to set open the door of Mercy and invite all sinners to come freely and to give pardons to all that will come to God in Christs name And therefore Peter and Paul the two greatest Apostles and Pillars of the Church are both set as Patterns of Free Grace to encourage other sinners to look after Pardon Peter denyed yea abjured his Saviour and yet was pardoned Paul persecuted him and blasphemed his name and compelled others to do so to and yet was pardoned Now as some prophane wretches in Salvians time did presume to sin because David and Noah and Lot sinned Si David cur non ego si Noah si Lot cur non ego Here the poor penitents may turn their presumption into a blessed hope and say with an humble confidence si Petrus cur non ego si Paulus cur non ego si David si Noah si Lot cur non ego If all these were pardoned why may not I follow God for pardon Gods gracious design in suffering such Examples to be Registred of notorious sinners that were pardoned is that by such presidents of Mercy all other sinners might take encouragement to seek for Mercy in such marv●●lous ex●mles as these Satans greatest Obj●ction is answered to our hands What doth such a wicked creature as you hope for pardon in such patterns of M●rcy as Manasseh Peter Paul and the like God teacheth us how to answer the Devil God hath pardoned as great sinners as I am and therefore I am sure God can pardon me and I believe God will pardon all that seek to him in Christ for pardon and therefore I will ply the Throne of Grace in Christs name to beg pardon In such patterns God doth as it were make a shew of his Mercy that we may see no sins are so great but they shall be pardoned if we do not add Unbelief unto them Mr. Lightfoot hath an excellent note to this purpose on Pauls conversion The most notorious persecuter that the Gospel had yet found is chosen of all others to be the Doctor of the Gen●●les that 〈…〉 his own example or rather the glorious example of Gods Mercy in his conversion might be a comfortable Doctrine to those notorious sinners of the Gentiles as well as his Preac●ing Lastly it is a great Mercy to have such Patterns of pardoning Mercy because such instances are a good means to keep all sinners from despair your case is not desperate if the Counsellour can shew you a President of the like If the Physician can shew you many now living whom he hath recovered of the same distemper this may be a good encouragement for you to hope for a cure too This is Paul's meaning when he calls himself chief of sinners and says that he obtained Mercy for this cause that he might be a pattern to others as much as to say ●n me God shews as from an high Tower that all sinners may be pardoned as I was if they seek to him in Christs name as I did and as David said they that fear thee will be glad when they see me Psal. 119. ver 24. it may be turned here they that see David pardoned and Paul pardoned they may be glad of such encouraging patterns to make them hope for pardon too the Doctrine of free Grace is the only Doctrine to invite guilty sinners if pardon be offered freely to all that will ●ome to God in Christ Then if I go to pray to God for pardon in the name of his Son Jesus Christ I shall be pardoned as well as they and this consideration moves the poor sinner to go to the throne of grace to beg pardon God who hath no respect of persons can have no motive from within but his own free love to pardon a poor sinner and the word Sinner sufficiently declares that there can be no motive from without therefore the same Free Grace that hath pardoned other sinners will pardon all sinners that seek pardon Yea this is a good sign that God intends to pardon us when he makes us with David pray ●arnestly to be pardoned Application is for Exhortation to press all sinners to draw that encouragement from this glorious pattern of Paul's obtaining Mercy which God intends us Why do we sit still as the Lepers said one to another 2 Kings chap. 7. ver 3. Why do not we pray for pardon There are three things which God doth most delight to glorify his name his Son his Covenant and then we most glorify these three things when we look after pardon As for Gods Name he tells us p●ain enough Ier. 33. ver 8 9. That he would exalt his Name before all Nations of the Earth by pardoning his People Israel therefore let us urge God with his own words Lord glorifie thy name of Mercy in pardoning my sins that