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A96093 The beatitudes: or A discourse upon part of Christs famous Sermon on the Mount. Wherunto is added Christs various fulnesse. The preciousnesse of the soul. The souls malady and cure. The beauty of grace. The spiritual watch. The heavenly race. The sacred anchor. The trees of righteousnesse. The perfume of love. The good practitioner. By Thomas Watson, minister of the word at Stephens Walbrook in the city of London. Watson, Thomas, d. 1686. 1660 (1660) Wing W1107; Thomason E1031_1; ESTC R15025 429,795 677

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Tell them in what a sad condition they are in the gall of bitterness Shew them their danger they tread upon the banks of the bottomless pit if death gives them a jog they tumble in and we must dip our words in honey use all the mildness we can 2 Tim. 2.25 In meekness instructing c. Fire melts oyntment mollifies words of love may melt hard hearts into Repentance this is soul-mercy God made a Law Exod. 23.5 that whosoever did see his enemies Ass lying under a burden he should help him On which words saith Chrysostom We will help a Beast that is fallen under a burden and shall we not extend relief to those who are fallen under a worse burden of sin 3. soul-Soul-mercy is in reproving refractory sinners there is a cruel mercy when we see men go on in sin and we let them alone and there is a merciful cruelty when we are sharp against mens sins and will not let them go to hell quietly Lev. 19.17 Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thy heart thou shalt in any wise rebuke thy neighbour and not suffer sin upon him Fond pity is no better than cruelty Titus 1.13 Rebuke them sharply 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cuttingly the Chyrurgion cuts and lanceth the flesh but it is in order to a cure they are healing wounds so by a cutting reproof when we lance mens consciences and let out the blood of sin we exercise spiritual Chyrurgery this is shewing mercy Jude 23. Others save with fear pulling them out of the fire If a man were in the fire though you did hurt him a little in pulling him out he would be thankful and take it as a kindnesse Some men when we tell them of sin say O this is bitternesse no it is shewing mercy If a mans house were on fire and another should see it and not tell him of it for fear of waking him were not this cruelty when we see others sleeping the sleep of death and the fire of Gods wrath ready to burn about their ears and we are silent is not this to be accessory to their death 4. Soul-mercy is in praying for others This is like physick used in a desperate case and oft it recovers the sick patient James 5.16 The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man avails much as it cures the sick body so the sin-sick soul There is a story of one who gave his soul to the Divel who was given in to the prayers of Luther When Eutychus fell down from an high loft and was taken up dead Paul fell on him * Affectus vehementia Beza that is he did effectually pray over him and he prayed him alive Acts 20.9 11. By sin the soul is fallen from an high loft viz. a state of innocency now fervent prayer oft-times fetcheth life in such a dead soul Use 1. See what a blessed work the work of the Ministry Use 1 is The preaching of the Word is nothing but shewing mercy to souls This is a mighty and glorious engine in the hand of the Lord of Hosts for the beating down of the Divels strong-holds The Ministry of the Word doth not only bring light with it but eye-salve anointing the eyes to see that light It is a sin-killing and a soul-quickning Ordinance it is the power of God to salvation What enemies are they to their own souls that oppugne the Ministry They say the people that live under the line curse the Sun and are glad when the sun sets because of its burning heat Foolish sinners curse the Sun-rising of the Ministry and are offended at the light of it because it comes near their sins and scorcheth their consciences though in the end it saves their souls Use 2 Use 2. It reproves them that have no mercy to souls Reproof 1. Evil Magistrates 2. Evil Ministers 1. Evil Magistrates who either take away the Key of knowledge * Luke 11.52 or give a Toleration to wickednesse suffering men to sinne by a Licence The meaning of Toleration is this if men will to hell none shall stop them Is not nature enough poyson'd Do not men sin fast enough but must they have such political engines as scrue them up higher in wickednesse Must they have such favourable gales from the breath of great ones as serve to carry them full sail to the Divel This is far from soul-soul-mercy * Meminerit princeps non solum quantum sibi commissum sed quatenus permissum fit Cicero What an heavy reckoning will these Statists have in the day of the Lord 2. Evil Ministers 1. Such as have no bowels to the souls of their people They do not pity them pray for them they seek not them but theirs they preach not for love but lucre their care is more for Tythes than souls How can they be called spiritual fathers who are without bowels These are mercenarii not ministri 2. Such as feed not the souls of their people with solid truths When Christ sent out his Apostles he gave them their Text and tells them what they must preach Matth. 10.7 Preach saying the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand Upon which place saith Luther the Ministers of Christ must preach quae ad regnum coelorum conducant Things that pertaine to the Kingdom of God pardon of sin sanctification living by faith ne aliter ex ecclesiâ faciant politiam They are unmerciful to souls who instead of breaking the bread of life fill their peoples heads with very speculations and notions who rather tickle the fancy than touch the conscience and give precious souls rather musick than food 3. Such as darken knowledge with words and preach so as if they were speaking in an unknown tongue Some Ministers love to soar aloft like the Eagle and flie above their peoples capacities endeavouring rather to be admired than understood They are like some crabbed Authors which cannot be read without a Comment Indeed God calls his Ministers Ambassadors 2 Cor. 5.20 but they must not be like those Out-landish Ambassadors that cannot be understood without an Interpreter 'T is unmercifulnesse to souls to preach so as not to be understood Ministers should be Stars to give light not clouds to obscure the truth Saint Paul was learned yet plain Clearnesse and perspicuity is the grace of speech 'T is cruelty to souls when we go about to make easie things hard This many are guilty of in our age who go into the Pulpit only to tie knots and think it their glory to amuse the people this savours more of pride than mercifulnesse 4. Such as see others going on in sin but do not tell them of it When men declare their sin as Sodom it is the Ministers duty to lift up his voice like a trumpet and shew the house of Jacob their sin Isa 58.1 Zeal in the Ministry is as proper as fire on the Altar he who lets another sin and holds his peace is a man-slayer That Sentinel deserves death who sees the enemy
animae here the soul doth rest Psal 116.7 Now that only in which the soul doth acquiesce and rest can make it blessed The Globe or Circle as is observed in Mathematicks is of all others the most perfect figure because the last point of the figure ends in that first point where it began So when the soul meets in God whence it sprang as its first original then it is compleatly blessed That which makes a man blessed must have six Qualifications or Ingredients in it and these are found no where but in God the chief good 1. In true blessedness there must be Meliority that which fills with blessedness must be such a good as is better than a mans self If you would ennoble a piece of silver it must be by putting something to it which is better than silver as by putting gold or pearle to it So that which doth ennoble the soul and enrich it with blessedness must be by adding something to it which is more excellent than the soul and that is God the World is below the soul it is but the souls foot-stool therefore cannot crown it with happiness 2. Another Ingredient is Delectability that which brings blessedness must have a delicious taste in it such as the soul is infinitely ravished with there must be in it spirits of delight and quintessence of joy and where can the soul suck those pure comforts which do amaze it with wonder and crown it with delight but in God In Deo quadam dulcedine delectatur anima immò rapitur * Ang. The love of God is an honey-comb which drops such infinite sweetness and satisfaction into the soul as is unspeakable and full of glory 1 Pet. 1.8 A kiss from Gods mouth puts the soul into a Divine Extasie so that now it cries out It is good to be here 3. The third Ingredient into blessedness is Plenty that which makes a man blessed must not be too scanty it is a full draught which quencheth the souls thirst and where shall we find Plenty but in Deity Psal 36.8 Thou shalt make him drink of the River of thy pleasures not Drops but Rivers The soul baths it self and is laid as it were a steeping in the water of life the River of Paradise over-flows and empties its silver streams into the souls of the blessed 4. In true blessedness there must be Variety Plenty without variety is apt to nauseate in God there is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all fulness Col. 1.19 What can the soul want but it may be had in the chief good God is bonum in quo omnia bona he is a Sun a Shield a Portion a Fountain a Rock of Strength an Horn of Salvation In God there is a complication of all excellencies there are every moment fresh beauties and delights springing from God 5. To make up blessedness there must be perfection * Beatitudo est status omnium honorum aggregatione perfectus Boetius Cicero the joy must be perfect the glory perfect Hebr. 12.23 Spirits of just men made perfect Bonum constat ex integro if there be the least defect it destroys the nature of blessedness as the least symptom of a disease takes away the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and right temperature of the body 6. True blessedness must have Eternity stamped upon it Blessedness is a fixed thing it admits of no change or alteration God saith of every child of his I have blessed him and he shall be blessed As the Sunshine of blessedness is without clouds so it never sets Joh. 10 28. I give unto them eternal life 1 Thes 4.17 And so shall we ever be with the Lord. Eternity is the highest link of the Chain of blessedness Thus we have seen that this Diamond of blessedness is only to be found in the Rock of Ages Blessed are the people whose God is the Lord. SECT V. Use 1 IF there is such a blessedness in Reversion be Use 1 convinced of the truth of this set it down as an Article of your faith We live in times wherein many are grown Atheists they have run through all opinions and now of Professors they are turned Epicures they have drunk in so much of the poyson of Error that they are quite intoxicated and fallen asleep and begin to dream there is no such thing as a state of blessedness after this life and this opinion is to them above the Bible When men have the spiritual staggers it sadly presageth they will dye Oh it is a dangerous thing to hesitate and waver about fundamentals like Pythagoras who doubted whether there was a God or no! so whether there be a blessedness or no. Doubting of principles is the next way to the denying of principles Let it be a Maxim with every good Christian There is a blessedness in Reversion there remains a rest for the people of God Hebr. 4.9 Use 2. Revolve this truth often in your mind there Use 2 are many truths s●im in the brain which do not sink into the heart and those do us no good Chew the Cud Let a Christian think seriously with himself There is a blessedness feasible and I am capable of enjoying it if I do not lay bars in the way and block up my own happiness Though within I see nothing but guilt without nothing but curses yet there is a blessedness to be had and to be had for me too in the use of means The serious meditation of this will be a forcible Argument to make the sinner break off his sins by Repentance and sweat hard till he find the golden Mine of blessedness I say it would be the break-neck of sin how would a man offer violence to himself by Mortification and to heaven by supplication that at last he may arrive at a state of blessedness What is there a Crown of blessedness to be set upon my head a Crown hung with the Jewels of honour delight magnificence a Crown reached out by God himself and shall I by sin hazard this can the pleasure of sin countervail the loss of blessedness what more powerful Motive to Repentance than this Sin will deceive me of the blessing If a man knew certainly that a King would settle all his Crown-Revenues on him after such a Term of years would he offend that Regal Majesty and cause him to reverse and alter his Will There is a blessedness promised to all that live godly 1 John 2.25 This is the promise that he hath promised us even eternal life We are not excluded but may come in for a childs part now shall we by living in sin provoke God and forfeit this blessedness O what madness is this Well may the Apostle call them foolish and hurtful lusts 1 Tim. 6.9 because every lust doth what in it lies to cut off the entail of mercy and block up the way to happiness every sin may be compared to the flaming Sword which keeps the heavenly Paradise that the sinner cannot enter Use 3. Let
lived a very civil life go home and mourn because thou art but civil many a mans civility being rested upon hath damned him 'T is sad for men to be without repentance but 't is worse to need no repentance Luke 15.7 9. Tears are but finite 't is but awhile that we shall Motive 9 weep after a few showres that fall from our eyes we shall have a perpetual sunshine in heaven the bottle of tears is stopt Rev. 7. ult God shall wipe away all tears when sin shall cease tears shall cease Psal 30.5 Weeping may endure for a night but joy cometh in the morning in the morning of the Ascension then shall all tears be wiped away Motive 10 10. The benefit of holy mourning the best of our commodities come by water 1. Mourning doth make the soul fruitful in grace When a showre falls the herbs and plants grow Isaiah 16.9 I will water thee with my tears O Heshbon I may allude to it tears water our graces and make them flourish Psal 104 10. he sends his springs into the vallies that is the reason the vallies flourish with corn because the springs run there where the springs of sorrow run there the heart bears a fruitful crop Leah was tender-eyed she had a watry eye and was fruitful the tender-eyed Christian usually brings more of the fruits of the Spirit a weeping eye is the water-pot to water our graces 2. Mourning doth fence us against the Divels Tentations Tentations are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fiery darts Ephes 6.16 because indeed they set the soul on fire Tentations enrage anger inflame lust now the waters of holy Mourning quench these fiery darts wet powder will not soon take the fire when the heart is wetted and moistned with sorrow it will not so easily take the fire of Tentation tears are the best Engines and Water-works to quench the Divels fire * Faciem nostram debemus magis lachrymis rigare quaem lavacris and if there be so much profit and benefit in Gospel-sorrow then let every Christian wash his face every Morning in the Lavor of tears † 11. And lastly to have a melting frame of spirit is Motive 11 a great sign of Gods presence with us in an Ordinance 't is a sign the Sun of righteousness hath risen upon us when our frozen hearts thaw and melt for sin it is a saying of St. Bernard By this you may know whether you have met with God in a duty when you find your selves in a melting and mourning frame we are apr to measure all by comfort we think we never have Gods presence in an Ordinance unless we have joy herein we are like Thomas unless saith he I shall see in his hands the print of the nails I will not believe John 20.25 So are we apt to say Unless we have incomes of comfort we will not believe that we have found God in a duty but if our hearts can melt kindly in tears of love this is a real sign that God hath been with us as Jacob said Gen. 28.16 Surely the Lord is in this place and I knew it not So Christian when thy heart breaks for sin and dissolves into holy tears God is in this duty though thou knowest it not Methinks all that hath been said should make us spiritual Mourners perhaps we have tryed to mourn and cannot but therefore as a man that hath digged so many fathoms deep for water and can find none at last he digs till he finds a spring so though we have been digging for the water of tears and can find none yet let us weigh all that hath been said and set our hearts again to work and perhaps at last we may say as Isaacs servants Gen. 26.32 We have found water When the herbs are pressed the watery juyce comes out these eleven serious Motives may press out tears from the eye Quest But may some say My constitution is such that I cannot weep I may as well go to squeeze a Rock as think to get a tear Answ But if thou canst not weep for sin can'st thou grieve Intellectual mourning is best there may be sorrow where there are no tears * Curae loves loquuntur ingentes stupent the Vessel may be full though it wants vent it is not so much the weeping eye God respects as the broken heart yet I would be loth to stop their tears who can weep God stood looking on Hezekiahs tears Isa 38.5 I have seen thy tears Davids tears made Musick in Gods ears Psal 6.8 The Lord hath heard the voyce of my weeping 'T is a sight fit for Angels to behold tears as pearls dropping from a penitent eye CHAP. IX Shewing the hindrances of mourning Quest BUT what shall we do to get our heart into this mourning frame Answ Do two things 1. Take heed of those things which will stop these Channels of mourning 2. Put your selves upon the use of all means that will help forward holy mourning 1. Take heed of those things which will stop the current of tears there are nine hindrances of mourning Hindr. 1 1. The love of sin the love of sin is like a stone in the pipe which hinders the current of water the love of sin makes sin taste sweet and this sweetness in sin-bewitcheth the heart Saint Hierom saith it is worse to love sin than to commit it A man may be overtaken with sin Gal. 6.1 And he that hath stumbled upon sin unawares will weep but the love of sin hardens the heart keeps the Divel in possession in true mourning there must be a grieving for sin but how can a man grieve for that sin which his heart is in love with oh take heed of this sweet poyson the love of sin freezeth the soul in impenitency Hindr. 2 2. Despair despair affronts God undervalues Christs blood damns the soul Jerem. 8.12 They said there is no hope but we will walk after our own devices and we will every one do the imagination of his evil heart This is the language of despair there is no hope I had as good follow my sins still and be damned for something despair presents God to the soul as a Judge clad in the garments of vengeance Isa 59.17 Judas his despair was in some sense worse than his Treason Despair destroys Repentance for the proper ground of Repentance is mercy Rom. 2.4 The goodness of God leads thee to Repentance But despair hides mercy out of sight as the cloud covered the Ark Exod. 39. Oh take heed of this Despair is an irrational sin there is no ground for it the Lord shews mercy to thousands why mayest not thou be one of a thousand the wings of Gods mercy like the wings of the Cherubims are stretched out to every humble penitent though thou hast been a great sinner yet if thou art a weeping sinner there 's a golden Scepter of mercy held forth Psal 103.11 Despair locks up the soul in impenitency 3. A conceit
that this mourning will make us melancholy Hindr. 3 We shall drown all our joy in our tears but this is a mistake Lose our joy tell me what joy can there be in a natural condition what joy doth sin afford is not sin compared to a wound and a bruise Isa 1.6 David had his broken bones Psal 51. Is there any comfort in having the bones out of joynt doth not sin breed a palpitation and trembling of heart Deutr. 28.66 Is it any joy for a man to be a Magor-missabib a terror to himself Surely of the sinners laughter it may be said it is mad Eccles 2.2 Whereas holy mourning is the breeder of joy it doth not eclipse but refine our joy and make it better * Homine ad Deum converso mutatur ga●dium non tollitur Aug the Prodigal dated his joy from the time of his Repentance Luke 15.24 Then they began to be merry 4. Checking the motions of the Spirit the Spirit sets Hindr. 4 us a mourning it causeth all our spring-tides Psal 87.7 all my springs are in thee Oft we meet with gracious motions to prayer and repentance now when we stifle these motions which is called a quenching the Spirit 1 Thes 5.19 then we do as it were hinder the tyde from coming in When the dew falls then the ground is wet when the Spirit of God falls as dew in its influences upon the soul then it is moistned with sorrow but if the Spirit withdraw the soul is like Gideons dry fleece a ship can as well sail without the wind a bird can as well flie without wings as we can mourn without the Spirit Take heed of grieving the Spirit do not drive away this sweet Dove from the arke of thy soul The Spirit is res tenera delicata if it be grieved it may say I will come no more and if it once withdraw we cannot mourn 5. Presumption of mercy Who will take pains with Hindr. 5 his heart or mourn for sinne that he may be saved at a cheaper rate How many Spider-like suck damnation out of the sweet flower of Gods mercy Jesus Christ who came into the world to save sinners is the occasion of many a mans perishing Oh saith one Christ died for me he hath done all What need I pray or mourn Many a bold sinner plucks death from the tree of life and through presumption goes to hell by that ladder of Christs blood by which others go to heaven It is sad when the goodnesse of God which should lead to repentance Rom. 4.2 leads to presumption O sinner do not hope thy self into hell take heed of being damned upon a mistake Thou sayest God is merciful therefore goest on securely in sinne But who is mercy for the presuming sinner or the mourning sinner Isa 55.7 Let the wicked forsake his way and return to the Lord and he will have mercy upon him no mercy without forsaking sinne and no forsaking sinne without mourning If a King should say to a company of Rebels Whosoever comes in and submits shall have mercy such as stood out in rebellion could not claime the benefit of the Pardon God makes a Proclamation of mercy to the mourner but such as are not mourners have nothing to do with mercy The mercy of God is like the Arke which none but the Priests were to meddle with none may touch this golden Arke of mercy but such as are Priests unto God * Rev 1.6 and have offered up the sacrifice of tears 6. A conceit of the smalnesse of sinne Gen. 19.20 Is Hindr. 6 it not a little one the Devil holds the small end of the Perspective-glasse to sinners To fancy sinne lesse than it is is very dangerous an opinion of the littlenesse of sinne keeps us from the use of means Who will be earnest for a Physitian that thinks it is but a trivial disease and who will seek to God with a penitent heart for mercy that thinks sinne is but a slight thing But to take off this wrong conceit about sinne and that we may look upon it with watry eyes consider 1. Sinne cannot be little because it is against the Majesty of heaven there is no treason small it being against the Kings person 2. Every sinne is sinful therefore damnable a Pen-knife or Stilletto makes but a little wound but either of them may kill as well as a greater weapon there 's death and hell in every sinne Rom. 6.23 What was it for Adam to pluck an Apple but that lost him his crown 'T is not with sinne as it is with diseases some are mortal some not mortal the least sinne without repentance will be a lock and bolt to shut men out of heaven 3. View sinne in the red glasse of Christs sufferings the least sinne cost the price of blood Would you take a a true prospect of sinne go to Golgotha Jesus Christ was fain to vail his glory and lose his joy and pour out his soul an offering for the least sinne read the greatnesse of thy sin in the deepnesse of Christs wounds Let not Satan cast such a mist before your eyes that you cannot see sin in its right colours Remember not only great rivers fall into the Sea but little brooks not only great sinnes carry men to hell but lesser Hindr. 7 7. Procrastination or an opinion it is too soone yet to tune the penitential string When the Lamp is almost out the strength exhausted and old age comes on then mourning for sinne will be in season but it is too soone yet That I may shew how pernicious this opinion is and that I may rowle away this stone from the mouth of the Well that so the waters of repentance may be drawn forth let me propose these four serious and weighty considerations 1. Dost thou know what it is to be in the state of nature and wilt thou say it is too soone to get out of it Thou art under the wrath of God John 3.36 and is it too soone to get from under the dropping of this Vial Thou art under the power of Satan Acts 26.18 and is it too soone to get out of the enemies quarters 2. Men do not argue thus in other cases they do not say It is too soon to be rich they wil not put off getting the world till old age no here they take the first opportunity Is it not too soone to be rich and is it too soon to be good is not repentance a matter of the greatest consequence Is it not more needful for men to lament their sinne than augment their estate 3. Gods call to mourning looks for present entertainment Heb. 3.7 8. To day if you will hear his voice harden not your hearts A General besieging a garrison summons it to surrender upon such a day or he will storme it Such are Gods summons to repentance To day if ye will heart his voice sinners when Satan hath tempted you to any wickednesse you have not said It
The bitter herbs of repentance he that tasts the gall and vineger in sin hungers after the body and blood of the Lord. 2. Affliction God oft gives us this sawce to sharpen our hunger after Grace Reuben found Mandrakes in the field Gen. 30.14 The Mandrakes are an Herb of a very strong savour * Herba magni odoris stomacho labora●tibus tribuit medelam and among other vertues they have they are chiefly medicinable for those who have weak and bad stomacks Afflictions may be compared to these Mandrakes which do sharpen mens desires after that spiritual food which in time of prosperity they began to loath and nauseate penury is the sawce which cures the surfeit of plenty In sicknesse people hunger more after righteousness than in health The full stomach loaths the honey-comb Christians when ful-fed despise the rich cordials of the Gospel I wish we do not slight those truths now which would taste sweet in a prison how precious was a leaf of the Bible in Queen Maries dayes The wise God sees it good sometimes to give us the sharp sawce of affliction to make us feed more hungrily upon the bread of life And so much for the first part of the text Blessed are they that hunger MATTH 5.6 For they shall be filled CHAP. XV. Shewing that the spiritual hunger shall be satisfied 2. The Promise annexed I Proceed now to the second part of the text a Promise annexed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they shall be filled A Christians fighting with sin is not like one that beats the aire 1 Cor. 9.26 and his hungring after righteousnesse is not like one that sucks in only ayre Blessed are they that hunger for they shall be filled Doctr. Doctr. Those that hunger after righteousnesse shall be filled God never bids us seek him in vain * Isa 45.19 here is an hony-comb dropping into the mouths of the hungry they shall be filled Luke 1.53 He hath filled the hungry with good things Psal 109.7 He satisfieth the longing soul God will not let us lose our longing here is the excellency of righteousnesse above all things a man may hunger after the world and not be filled the world is fading not filling Cast three Worlds into the heart yet the heart is not full but righteousness is a filling thing nay it so fills as it satisfies a man may be filled and not satisfied a sinner may take his fill of sin but that is a sad filling it is far from satisfaction Prov. 14 14. The back-slider in heart shall be filled with his own wayes he shall have his belly full of sin he shall have enough of it but this is not a filling to satisfaction this is such a filling as the damned in hell have they shall be full of the fury of the Lord But he that hungers after righteousness shall be satisfyingly filled Jerem. 31.14 My people shall be satisfied with goodness Psal 63.3 My soul shall be satisfied as with marrow Joseph first opened the mouth of the Sacks and then filled them with corn and put money in them Gen. 42.25 So God first opens the mouth of the soul with desire and then fills it with good things Psal 81.10 For the illustration of this consider these three things 1. That God can fill the hungry soul 2. Why he fills the hungry soul 3. How he fills the hungry soul 1. That God can fill the hungry soul he is called a fountain Psal 36.9 With thee is the fountain of life The Cistern may be empty and cannot fill us Creatures are oft broken Cisterns Jer. 2.13 But the fountain is filling God is a Fountain if we bring the Vessels of our desires to this Fountain he is able to fill them the fulness in God is 1. An infinite fulness though he fill us and the Angels which have larger capacities to receive yet he hath never the less himself as the Sun though it shines hath never the less light Luke 8.46 I perceive that vertue is gone out of me Though God lets vertue go out of him yet he hath never the less the fulness of the creature is limited it ariseth just to such a degree and proportion but Gods fulness is infinite as it hath its Resplendency so its Redundancy it knows neither bounds nor bottom 2. It is a constant fulness The fulness of the creature is a mutable fulness it ebbs and changeth I could saith one have helped you but now my Estate is low the blossoms of the Fig-tree are soon blown off creatures cannot do that for us which once they could but God is a constant fulness Psal 102.27 Thou art the same God can never be exhausted his fulness is over-flowing and ever-flowing then surely it is good to draw nigh to God Psal 73.28 it is good bringing our Vessels to this spring-head 't is a never-failing goodness 2. Why God doth fill the hungry soul The Reasons are 1. God will fill the hungry soul out of his tender compassion he knows else the Spirit would fail before him and the soul which he hath made Isa 57.16 If the hungry man be not satisfied with food he dyes God hath more bowels than to suffer an hungry soul to be famished when the Multitude had nothing to eat Christ was moved with compassion and he wrought a miracle for their supply Matth. 15.32 Much more will he compassionate such as hunger and thirst after righteousness When a poor sinner sees himself almost starved in his sins as the Prodigal among his husks and begins to hunger after Christ saying There is bread enough in my Fathers house God will then out of his infinite compassions bring forth the fatted Calf and refresh this soul with the delicacies and provisions of the Gospel oh the melting of Gods bowels to an hungry sinner Hosea 11.8 My heart is turned within me my repentings are kindled We cannot see a poor creature at the door ready to perish with hunger but our bowels begin to relent and we afford them some relief and will the Father of mercies let a poor soul that hungers after the blessings of the Gospel go away without an Alms of free-grace no he will not he cannot let the hungry sinner think thus Though I am full of wants yet my God is full of bowels 2. God will fill the hungry that he may fulfill his Word Psal 107.9 Jer. 41.14 Luke 6.21 Blessed are ye that hunger now for ye shall be filled Isa 44.3 I will poure water upon him that is thirsty I will poure my Spirit upon thy seed c. Hath the Lord spoken and shall it not come to pass promises are obligatory if God hath passed a promise he cannot go back Thou that hungerest after righteousness hast God engaged for thee he hath to speak with Reverence pawned his truth for thee As his compassions fail not Lam. 3.22 so he will not suffer his faithfulness to fail Psal 89.33 If the hungry soul should not be filled the
the Lees well refined and it shall be said in that day Lo this is our God we have waited for him we will be glad and rejoyce in his salvation Spiritual mercies are not only worth desiring but waiting for 3. If God should not fill his people to satisfaction here yet they shall be filled in heaven the Vessels of their desires shall be filled as those water-pots Joh. 2. up to the brim MATTH 5.7 Blessed are the merciful for they shall obtain mercy CHAP. XV. Containing a Discourse of mercifulness THese Verses like the stairs of Solomons Temple cause our Ascent to the Holy of holies We are now mounting up a step higher 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Blessed are the merciful c. There was never more need to preach of mercifulness than in these unmerciful times wherein we live It is reported in the life of Chrysostom that he did much preach on this subject of mercifulness and for his much pressing Christians to mercy he was called of many 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Almes-preacher or the Preacher for mercy our times need many Chrysostoms Blessed are the merciful Mercy stands both in the Van and Rear of the Text in the beginning of the Text it stands as a Duty in the end of the Text it stands as a Reward The Hebrew word for godly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies merciful the more godly the more merciful the Doctrine I shall gather out of the words which will comprehend and draw in the whole is this That the merciful man is a blessed man Doctr. As there is a curse hangs over the head of the unmerciful man Psal 109.6 7 8 9 c. Let Satan stand at his right hand when he shall be judged let him be condemned and let his prayer become sin let his children be fatherless and his wife a widow let his children be continually vagabonds and beg let the Extortioner catch all that he hath and let the stranger spoil his labour let there be none to extend mercy to him let his posterity be cut off and in the generation following let their name be blotted out let the iniquity of his fathers be remembred with the Lord and let not the sin of his mother be blotted out Why what is this crime Ver. 16. Because he remembred not to shew mercy c. See what a long Vial full of the plagues of God is poured out upon the unmerciful man So by the Rule of contraries the blessings of the Almighty do crown and encompass the merciful man 2 Sam. 22.26 Psal 37.26 Psal 41.1 The merciful man is a blessed man For the illustrating this I shall shew 1. What is meant by mercifulness 2. The several kinds of mercy 1. What is meant by mercifulness I answer 1. Quid misericordia it is a melting disposition whereby we lay to heart the miseries of others and are ready on all occasions to be instrumental for their good Quest 1. How do mercy and love differ Answ In some things they agree in some things they differ like waters that may have two different spring-heads but meet in the stream Love and mercy differ thus Love is more extensive the Diocess that Love walks and visits in is larger Mercy properly respects them that are miserable Love is of a larger consideration Love is like a friend that visits them that are well Mercy is like a Physitian that visits only them that are sick Again Love acts more out of affection Mercy acts out of a principle of conscience Mercy lends its help to another Love gives its heart to another Thus they differ but Love and Mercy agree in this they are both ready to do good Offices both of them have soundings of bowels and healing under their wings Quest 2. Whence doth mercy spring Answ It s spring-head riseth higher than nature Mercy taken in its full latitude proceeds from a work of grace in the heart naturally we are far enough from mercy the sinner is a bramble not a Fig-tree yielding sweet fruit 'T is the Character and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of a natural man unmerciful Rom. 1.31 A wicked man like Jehoram hath his bowels fallen out * 2 Chr 21.19 Therefore he is compared to an Adamant Zach. 7.11 because his heart melts not in mercy Before conversion the sinner is compared to a Wolf for his savageness to a Lyon for his fierceness * Isa 11.6 to a Bee for his sting Psal 118.12 to an Adder for his poyson Psal 140.3 By nature we do not send forth oyle but poyson not the oyle of mercifulness but the poyson of maliciousness Besides that inbred unmercifulness which is in us there is something infused too by Satan the Prince of the aire works in men Eph. 2.2 He is a fierce Spirit therefore called the red Dragon Revel 12.3 And if he possesseth men no wonder if they are implacable and without mercy what mercy can be expected from hell so that if the heart be tuned into mercifulness it is from the change that grace hath made † * Col. 3.12 When the Sun shines then the ice melts when the Sun of righteousness once shines with beams of grace upon the soul now it melts in mercy and tenderness thou must first be a new man before a merciful man thou canst not help a member of Christ till first thou thy self art a member 2. The several kinds of mercy 2. Quotuplex misericordia or how many wayes a man may be said to be merciful Mercy is a Fountain that runs in five streams we must be merciful to the 1. Souls of others 2. Names of others 3. Estates of others 4. Offences of others 5. Wants of others SECT I. Shewing that mercy is to be extended to the soules of others 1. WE must be merciful to the souls of others this is Spiritualis Eleemosyna a spiritual Almes Indeed soul-mercy is the chief the soul is the most precious thing it is a vessel of honour 't is a bud of eternity 't is a sparkle lighted by the breath of God 't is a rich Diamond set in a Ring of clay the soul hath the blood of God to redeem it the image of God to beautifie it it being therefore of so high a descent sprung from the Ancient of dayes that mercy which is shewn to the soul must needs be the greatest This soul-soul-mercy to others stands in four things 1. In pitying them If I weep saith Austin for that body from which the soul is departed how should I weep for that soul from which God is departed Had we seen that man in the Gospel cutting himself with stones and fetching blood of himself it would have moved our pity Mark 5.5 To see a sinner stabbing himself and having his hands imbrued in his own blood should cause relentings in our bowels our eye should affect our heart God was angry with Edom because he did cast off all pity Amos 1.11 2. soul-Soul-mercy is in advising and exhorting sinners
him in the Gospel they have a withered hand and cannot stretch it out to good uses They have all quoad 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not quoad 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 these are a Kin to the Churl Nabal 1 Sam. 25.11 Shall I take my bread and my water and give it unto men whom I know not whence they be It was said of the Emperour Pertinax he had a large Empire but a narrow scanty heart * Augustum imperium angustum animum There was a Temple at Athens which was called the Temple of mercy it was dedicated to charitable uses and it was the greatest reproach to upbraid one with this that he had never been in the Temple of mercy 't is the greatest disgrace to a Christian to be unmerciful Covetous men while they enrich themselves they debase themselves setting up a Monopoly and committing Idolatry with Mammon thus making themselves lower than their angels as God made them lower than his Angels In the time of Pestilence it is sad to have your houses shut up but it is worse to have your hearts shut up How miserable is it to have a Sea of sin and not a drop of mercy Covetous hearts like the Leviathan are firm as a stone Job 41.24 One may as well extract oyle out of a flint as the golden oyle of charity out of their flinty hearts The Philosopher saith that the coldness of the heart is a presage of death * Corde infrigidato moritur animal When mens affections to works of mercy are frozen this coldness at heart is ominous and doth sadly portend that they are dead in sin We read in the Law that the Shell-fish was accounted unclean this might probably be one Reason because the meat of it was inclosed in the Shell and it was hard to come by They are to be reckoned among the unclean who inclose all their Estate within the Shell of their own Cabinet and will not let others be the better for it How many have lost their souls by being so saving There are some who perhaps will give the poor good words and that is all * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ignat. Jam. 2.15 If a brother or sister be naked and destitute of food and one of you say to them Depart in peace be ye warmed and filled notwithstanding you give them not those things which are needful what doth it profit Good words are but a cold kind of charity * Veritas fundatur in aliquo esse the poor cannot live as the Camelion upon this Ayre let your words be as smooth as oyle they will not heal the wounded let them drop as the honey-comb they will not feed the hungry 1 Cor. 13.1 Though I speak with the tongue of Angels and have not charity I am but as a tinkling Cymbal 'T is better to be Charitable as a Saint than Eloquent as an Angel Such as are cruel to the poor let me tell you you unchristian your selves unmercifulness is the sin of the Heathen Rom. 1.31 While you put off the bowels of Mercy you put off the badge of Christianity Saint Ambrose saith that when we relieve not one whom we see ready to perish with hunger we are guilty of his death * Pasce fame morientem si non paveris occi●isti Ambr. If this Rule hold true there are more guilty of the breach of the sixth Commandment than we are aware of St. James speaks a sad word Jam. 2 13. For he shall have judgement without mercy that shewed no mercy How do they think to find mercy from Christ who never shewed mercy to Christ in his members Dives denied Lazarus a crumb of bread and Dives was denied a drop of water At the last day behold the sinners Inditement Matth. 25.42 I was an hungred and ye gave me no meat I was thirsty and ye gave me no drink Christ doth not say Ye took away my meat but Ye gave me none ye did not feed my members then follows the sentence Ite maledicti Depart from me ye cursed When Christs poor come to your doors and you bid them Depart from you the time may come when you shall knock at heaven gate and Christ will say Go from my door Depart from me ye cursed In short Covetousness is a foolish sin God gave the Rich man in the Gospel that appellation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thou fool Luk. 12.20 The Covetous man doth not enjoy what he doth possess he imbitters his own life he discruciates himself with care either how to get or how to increase or how to secure an Estate and what is the issue and result often as a just reward of sordid penuriousness God doth blast and wither him in his outward Estate That saying of Gregory Nazianzene * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. is to be seriously weighed God many times lets the Thief take away and the Moth consume that which is injuriously and unmercifully with-held from the poor Before I leave this Use I am sorry that any who go for honest men should be brought into the Inditement I mean that any Professors should be impeached as guilty of this sin of covetousness and unmercifulness Sure I am Gods Elect put on bowels Col. 3.12 I tell you these devout Misers are the reproach of Christianity they are wens and spots in the face of Religion I remember Aelian in his History reports that in India there is a Griffin having four feet and wings his Bill like the Eagles 't is hard whether to rank him among the Beasts or the Fowle So I may say of penurious Votaries they have the wings of profession by which they seem to flie to heaven but the feet of Beasts walking on the Earth and even licking the dust 't is hard where to rank these whether among the godly or the wicked Oh take heed that seeing your Religion will not destroy your Covetousness at last your Covetousness doth not destroy your Religion The Fabulist tells a Story of the Hedge-hog that came to the Coney-Burroughs in stormy weather and desired Harbour promising that he would be a quiet Ghuest but when once he had gotten entertainment he did set up his prickles and did never leave till he had thrust the poor Coneys out of their Burroughs So Covetousness though it hath many fair pleas to insinuate and wind it self into the heart yet assoon as you have let it in this Thorn will never leave pricking till it hath choaked all good beginnings and thrust all Religion out of your hearts SECT 8. Perswading to mercifulness Use 3 Use 3 I Proceed next to the Exhortation to beseech all Christians to put on bowels of mercies Exhort be ready to indulge the miseries and necessities of others Saint Ambrose calls charity the summe of Christianity and the Apostle makes it the very definition of Religion James 1. ult Pure Religion and undefiled before God and the Father is this to visit the fatherlesse and the widows
God giveth him not power to eat thereof Religion makes no man a Niggard though it teacheth prudence yet not sordidness 2. Who act below themselves as they are Christians while they sinfully comply and prostitute themselves to the humours of others a base kind of mettle that will take any stamp they will for a piece of silver part with the jewel of a good conscience they will be of the State-Religion they will dance to the Divels Pipe if their Superiour commands them These are Poor-spirited but not Poor in Spirit 4. I distinguish between Poor in an Evangelical sense and in a Popish sense the Papists give a wrong gloss upon the Text by Poor in spirit they understand those who renouncing their Estates vow a voluntary poverty living retiredly in their Monasteries * Monasteriis Caenobii● Pauperes Bellarm. but Christ never meant these he doth not pronounce them blessed who make themselves poor leaving their Estates and their Callings but such as are Evangelically poor Well then what are we to understand by Poor in spirit the Greek word for Poor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is not only taken in a strict sense for those who live upon Alms * Ad extremam inopiam reducti Beza quibus nihil superest but in a more large sense for those who are destitute as well of inward as outward comfort Poor in spirit then signifies those who are brought to the sense of their sins and seeing no goodness in themselves despair in themselves and sue wholly to the mercy of God in Christ * Qui serio cordis affectu pauperiem suam agnoscunt spem fiduciam in una miserecordia Dei propter Christum repositam habent Paraeus Poverty of spirit is a kind of self-annihilation such an expression I find in Calvin The poor in spirit saith he are they who see nothing in themselves but flie to mercy for Sanctuary such an one was the Publican Luk. 18.13 God be merciful to me a sinner of this temper was Saint Paul Phil. 3.9 That I may he found in Christ not having mine own righteousness these are the poor which are invited as Guests to Wisdoms Banquet Prov. 7.3 4. Here several Questions may be propounded 1. Why doth Christ here begin with poverty of spirit Quest 1 why is this put in the fore-front I answer Answ Christ doth it to shew that poverty of spirit is the very basis and foundation of all the other graces that follow * Totius a ●ificii fundamen Avendanus You may as well expect fruit to grow without a root as the other graces without this till a man be Poor in spirit he cannot mourn Poverty of spirit is like the fire under the Still which makes the water drop from the eyes when a man sees his own defects and deformities and looks upon himself as undone then he mourns after Christ the springs run in the vallies Psal 104.10 When the heart becomes a valley and lies low by poverty of spirit now the springs of holy mourning run there Till a man be Poor in spirit he cannot hunger and thirst after righteousness he must first be sensible of want before he can hunger therefore Christ begins with poverty of spirit because this ushers in all the rest Quest 2 2. The second Question is What is the difference between poverty of spirit and humility Answ These are so like that they have been taken one for the other Chrysostom by poverty of spirit understands humility * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost in loc yet I think there is some difference they differ as the cause and the effect Tertullian saith none are poor in spirit but the humble * Nulli pauperes spiritu nisi hamiles Tert. he seems to make humility the cause of poverty of spirit I rather think poverty of spirit is the cause of humility for when a man sees his want of Christ and how he lives on the Alms of free-grace this makes him humble he that is sensible of his own vacuity and indigence with the Violet hangs down his head in humility humility is the sweet spice that grows from poverty of spirit Quest 3 3. What is the difference between poverty of spirit and self-denial I answer in some things they agree in some things they differ In some things they agree for the Poor in spirit is an absolute self-denier he renounceth all opinion of himself he acknowledgeth his dependance on Christ and free-grace but in some things they differ the self-denier parts with the world for Christ the poor in spirit parts with himself for Christ i. e. his own righteousness the poor in spirit sees himself nothing without Christ the self-denier will leave himself nothing for Christ And thus I have shewed what poverty of spirit is The words thus opened present us with this truth Doctr. That Christians must be poor in spirit or thus Doctr. Poverty of spirit is the jewel which Christians must wear As the best creature was made out of nothing namely light so when a man sees himself nothing out of this nothing God makes a most beautiful creature it is Gods usual method to make a man poor in spirit and then fill him with the graces of the Spirit as we deal with a Watch we take it first in pieces and then set all the wheels and pins in order So the Lord doth first take a man all in pieces shews him his undone condition and then sets him in frame The Reasons are 1. Till we are poor in spirit we are not capable of receiving Reason 1 grace he who is swell'd with an opinion of self-excellency and self-sufficiency is not fit for Christ he is full already intus existens prohibet extraneum if the hand be full of pebbles it cannot receive gold the glass is first emptied before you poure in wine God doth first empty a man of himself before he poures in the precious wine of his grace none but the poor in spirit are within Christs Commission Isa 61.1 The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me he hath sent me to bind up the broken-hearted that is such as are broken in the sense of their unworthiness 2. Till we are poor in spirit Christ is never precious Reason 2 before we see our own wants we never see Christs worth poverty of spirit is sal condimentum the sawce which makes Christ relish sweet to the soul mercy is most welcome to the poor in spirit he who sees himself clad in filthy rags Zach. 3.4 5. what will he give for change of rayment the righteousness of Christ what will he give to have the fair Mitre of salvation set upon his head when a man sees himself almost wounded to death how precious will the balm of Christs blood be to him when he sees himself deep in Arrears with God and is so far from paying the debt that he cannot sum up the debt how glad would he be of a surety the Pearle
And such is Christs blood it can never be emptied he that is poor in spirit hath recourse still to this fountain he sets an high value and appre●iation upon Christ he hides himself in Christs wounds * In vulacribus Christi dormio securus requiesco intrepidus Aug. he bathes himself in his blood he wraps himself in his Robe he sees a spiritual dearth and famine at home but he makes out to Christ Shew me the Lord saith he and it sufficeth 3. He that is poor in spirit is ever complaining of his spiritual estate that look as it is with a poor man he is ever telling you of his wants he hath nothing to help himself with he is ready to be starved so it is with him that is Poor in spirit he is ever complaining of his wants I want a broken heart a thankful heart he makes himself the most indigent creature though he dares not deny the work of grace which were a bearing false witness against the Spirit yet he mourns he hath no more grace This is the difference between an hypocrite and a child of God the hypocrite is ever telling what he hath a child of God complains of what he wants the one is glad he is so good the other grieves he is so bad the poor in spirit goes from Ordinance to Ordinance for a supply of his wants he would fain have his stock increased Try by this if you are poor in spirit while others complain they want children they want Estates do you complain you want Grace this is a good sign there is that maketh himself Poor yet hath great Riches Prov. 13.7 Some beggers have died rich the poor in spirit who have lain all their lives at the gate of mercy and have lived upon the Alms of free-grace have dyed rich in faith heirs to a Kingdom 4. He that is Poor in spirit is lowly in heart Rich men are commonly proud and scornful but the poor are submissive the poor in spirit rowle themselves in the dust in the sense of their unworthiness I abhor my self in dust Job 42.6 He who is poor in spirit looks at anothers excellencies and his own infirmities he denies not only his sins but his duties the more grace he hath the more humble he is because he now sees himself a greater debtor to God if he can do any duty he acknowledgeth it is Christs strength more than his own Phil. 4.13 as the Ship gets to the Haven more by the benefit of the wind than the sail So when a Christian makes any swift progress 't is more by the wind of Gods Spirit than the sail of his own indeavour the poor in spirit when he acts most like a Saint he confesseth himself the chief of sinners he blusheth more at the defect of his graces than others do at the excess of their sins he dares not say he hath prayed or wept he lives yet not he but Christ lives in him Gal. 2.20 He labours yet not he but the grace of God 1 Cor. 15.10 5. He who is poor in spirit is much in prayer he sees how short he is of the standard of holiness therefore begs for more grace Lord more faith more conformity to Christ A poor man is ever begging you may by this know one that is Poor in spirit he is ever begging for a spiritual Almes he knocks at heaven-gate he sends up sighs he poures out tears he will not away from the gate till he have his dole God loves a modest boldness in prayer such shall not be non-suited 6. The poor in spirit is content to take Christ upon his own terms the proud sinner will article and indent with Christ he will have Christ and his pleasure Christ and his covetousness but he that is poor in spirit sees himself lost without Christ and he is willing to have him upon his own terms a Prince as well as a Saviour Phil. 3.8 Jesus my Lord. A Castle that hath been long besieged and is ready to be taken will deliver up on any terms to save their lives he whose heart hath been a Garrison for the Divel and hath held out long in opposition against Christ when once God hath brought him to poverty of spirit and he sees himself damn'd without Christ let God propound what Articles he will he will readily subscribe to them Acts 9.6 Lord what wilt thou have me do He that is poor in spirit will do any thing that he may have Christ he will behead his beloved sin he will with Peter cast himself upon the water to come to Christ 7. He that is poor in spirit is an Exalter of free-grace none so magnifie mercy as the poor in spirit the poor are very thankful When Paul had tasted mercy how thankfully doth he adore free-grace 1 Tim. 1.14 The grace of our Lord was exceeding abundant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it was super-exuberant he sets the crown of his salvation upon the head of free-grace as a man that is condemned and hath a pardon sent him how doth he proclaim the goodness and clemency of his Prince so Saint Paul displays free-grace in its orient colours he interlines all his Epistles with free-grace as a Vessel that hath been perfum'd makes the wine taste of it so Paul who was a Vessel perfum'd with mercy makes all his Epistles to taste of this perfume of free-grace they who are poor in spirit bless God for the least crumb that falls from the Table of free-grace SECT 4. Use 4 LAbour for poverty of spirit Christ begins with this Exhort and we must begin here if ever we be saved poverty of spirit is the foundation stone on which God layes the superstructure of glory There are four things may perswade Christians to be poor in spirit 1. This poverty is your riches you may have the worlds riches and yet be poor you cannot have this poverty but you must be rich poverty of spirit intitles you to all Christs riches 2. This poverty is your Nobility * Nobilis in●pia mentis humilitas Austin God looks upon you as persons of honour he that is vile in his own eyes is precious in Gods eyes * Tanto eris apud Deum reciosior qua●to fueris in oculis tuis despectior Isiod the way to rise is to fall God esteems the Valley highest 3. Poverty of spirit doth sweetly quiet the soul when a man is brought off himself to rest on Christ what a blessed calm is in the heart I am poor but my God shall supply all my need Phil. 4.19 I am unworthy but Christ is worthy I am indigent Christ is infinite Lead me to the Rock that is higher than I Psal 61.2 A man is safe upon a Rock when the soul goes out of it self and centers upon the Rock Christ now it is firmly setled upon its Basis this is the way to comfort thou wilt be wounded in spirit till thou comest to be poor in spirit 4. Poverty of
there is hope Repentance unravels sin and makes sin not to be but hardness of heart binds guilt fast upon the soul it seals a man under wrath it is not the hainousness of sin but hardness of heart that damns this makes the sin against the Holy Ghost uncapable of mercy because the sinner that hath committed it is uncapable of Repentance CHAP. VII Containing a sharp Reprehension Use 1 Use 1 THIS Doctrine draws up a Charge against several sorts Reproof Branch 1 1. Those that think themselves good Christians yet have not learned this Art of holy Mourning Luther calls Mourning Bara herba a rare herb Men have tears to shed for other things but have none to spare for their sins there are many Murmurers but few Mourners most are like the stony ground which wanted moisture Matth. 13. We have many cry out of hard times but are not sensible of hard hearts hot and dry is the worst temper of the body sure I am to be hot in sin and to be so dry as to have no tears is the worst temper of the soul How many are like Gideons dry Fleece and like the Mountains of Gilboa there is no dew upon them Did Christ bleed for sin and canst not thou weep if Gods bottle be not filled with tears his Vial will be filled with wrath We have many sinners in Sion but few mourners in Sion It is with most people as with a man on the top of a Mast the Winds blow and the Waves beat and the ship is in danger of shipwrack and he is fast asleep so when the Waves of sin have even covered men and the stormy wind of Gods Wrath blows and is ready to blow them into hell yet they are asleep in security 2. It reproves them who instead of weeping for sin Branch 2 spend their dayes in mirth and jollity instead of Mourners we have Ranters they take the Timbrel and Harp they spend their dayes in wealth Job 21.13 Vitam agunt Sybariticam * Luther they do not lugere animo but indulgere genio they live Epicures and dye Atheists St. James bids us turn our laughter to Mourning Jam. 4.9 But they turn their Mourning to laughter Sampson was brought forth to make the Philistines sport Judg. 16.26 The jovial sinner doth make the Divel sport it is a saying of Theophylact It is one of the worst sights to see a sinner go laughing to hell How unseasonable is it to take the Harp and Viol when God is taking the Sword Ezek. 21.9 10. A sword a sword is sharpned and also furbished should we then make mirth this is a sin that enrageth God Isa 22.12 13. In that day did the Lord of Hosts call to weeping and to mourning and behold joy and gladness slaying Oxen and killing sheep eating flesh and drinking wine and it was revealed in mine ears by the Lord of Hosts Surely this iniquity shall not be purged from you till you dye saith the Lord God of Hosts That is this your sin shall not be done away by any expiatory sacrifice but vengeance shall pursue you for ever 3. It reproves those who instead of mourning for sin Branch 3 rejoyce in sin Prov. 2.14 2 Thess 2.12 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Who take pleasure in iniquity Wicked men are worse in this sense than the damned in hell for I dare say they take little pleasure in their sins there are some so impudently profane that they will make themselves and others merry with their sins sin is a soul-sickness Luke 5.31 Will a man make merry with his disease ah wretch did Christ bleed for sin and dost thou laugh at sin is that thy mirthwhich grieves the Spirit * Tantis in malis laetari diesque jocis choreis consumere nonne est eos imitari qui phrenesi laborant qui dum carnes proprias laccrant ridem Isid Clar. is it a time for a man to break jests when he is upon the Scaffold and his head is to be stricken off thou that laughest at sin now the time is coming when God will laugh at thy calamity Prov. 1.26 Branch 4 4. It reproves those that cry down mourning for sin they are like the Philistines who stopped the Wells Gen. 26.15 These would stop the Wells of godly sorrow Antimonians say this is a legal Doctrine but Christ here preacheth it Blessed are they that mourn and the Apostles preached it Mark 6.11 And they went out and preached that men should repent Holy ingenuity will put us upon mourning for sin he that hath the heart of a child cannot but weep for his unkindness against God Mourning for sin is the very fruit and product of the Spirit of grace Zach. 12.10 Such as cry down Repentance cry down the Spirit of grace mourning for sin is the only way to keep off wrath from us such as with Sampson would break this Pillar go about to pull down the vengeance of God upon the Land To all such I say as Peter to Simon Magus Acts 8.22 Repent therefore of this thy wickedness and pray God if perhaps the thought of thy heart may be forgiven thee O sinner Repent that thou hast cryed down Repentance CHAP. VIII Motives to holy mourning 2. LET me exhort Christians to holy Mourning Use 2 Exhort I now perswade such a Mourning as will prepare the soul for blessedness Oh that our hearts were spiritual limbicks distilling the water of holy tears Christs Doves weep Ezek. 7.16 They that escape shall be like Doves of the Vallies all of them mourning every one for his iniquity There are several Divine Motives to holy Mourning 1. Tears cannot be put to a better use if you weep Motive 1 for outward losses you lose your tears 't is like a showre upon a Rock which doth no good but tears for sin are blessed tears Blessed are they that mourn These poyson our corruptions salt-water kills the worms the brinish water of repenting tears will help to kill that worm of sin which would gnaw the conscience 2. Gospel-Mourning is an evidence of grace Zach. Motive 2 12.10 I will poure upon the house of David and the Inhabitants of Jerusalem the Spirit of grace and they shall mourn c. The Holy Ghost descended on Christ like a Dove Matth. 3. The Dove is a weeping creature where there is a Dove-like weeping it is a good sign the Spirit of God hath descended there weeping for sin is a sign of the new birth assoon as the child is born it weeps Exod. 2.3 And behold the babe wept To weep kindly for sin is a good sign we are born of God Mourning shews an heart of flesh Ezek. 36.26 A stone will not melt when the heart is in a melting frame it is a sign the heart of stone is taken away Motive 3 3. The preciousness of tears 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tears dropping from a mournful penitent eye are like the water dropping from the Roses very sweet and precious to God
this true hunger are blessed and may take comfort in it Object 2. But my hunger after righteousnesse is so Object 2 weak that I fear it is not true Answ 1. Though the pulse beats but weak it shows Answ 1 there is life and that weak desires should not be discouraged there is a promise made to them Matth. 12.20 a bruised reed he will not break a reed is a weak thing but especially when it is bruised yet this bruised reed shall not be broken but like Aarons dry rod bud and blossome In case of weakness look to Christ thy high-Priest he is merciful therefore will bear with thy infirmities he is mighty therefore will help them Answ 2. If thy desires after righteousnesse seeme to Answ 2 be weak and languid yet a Christian may sometimes take a measure of his spiritual estate as well by the judgement as by the affections What is that thou esteemest most in thy judgment Is it Christ and Grace This is a good evidence for heaven it was a signe Saint Paul did beare entire love to Christ because he esteem'd this Pearl above all he counted other things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but dung that he might win Christ Phil. 3.8 Object 3 Object 3. But saith a child of God That which much eclipseth my comfort is I have not that hunger which once I had Time was I did hunger after a Sabbath because then the Manna fell I called the Sabbath a delight I remember the time when I did hunger after the body and blood of the Lord I came to a Sacrament as an hungry man to a Feast but now it is otherwise with me I have not those hungrings as formerly Answ 1 Answ 'T is indeed an ill signe for a man to lose his stomach but though it be a signe of the decay of grace to lose the spiritual appetite yet it is a signe of the truth of grace to bewail the losse 't is sad to lose our first love but it is happy when we mourn for the loss of our first love Answ 2 2. If thou hast not that appetite after heavenly things as formerly yet be not discouraged for in the use of means thou mayest recover thine appetite the Ordinances are for the recovering of the appetite when it is lost in other cases feeding takes away the stomach but here feeding on an Ordinance begets a stomach SECT 6. Containing a persuasion to spiritual hunger Use 5 Use 5 IT exhorts us all to labour after this spiritual hunger Exhort Parum est justitiam velle sed esurire quod ingens desiderium prae se fert Novarinus Hunger lesse after the world and more after righteousnesse say concerning spiritual things Lord evermore give me this bread Feed me with this Angels food That Manna is most to be hungred after which will not only preserve life but prevent death John 6.50 that is most desirable which is most durable Riches are not for ever Prov. 28.24 but righteousnesse is for ever Prov. 8.18 The beauty of holinesse * Psal 110.3 never fades the robe of righteousnesse * Isa 61.10 never waxeth old Oh hunger after that righteousnesse which delivereth from death Prov. 10.2 This is the righteousnesse which God himself is in love with Prov. 15.9 he loveth him that followeth after righteousnesse All men are ambitious of the Kings favour alas what is a Princes smile but a transient Beatitude This sunshine of his royal countenance soone masks it self with a cloud of displeasure But thou who art endued with righteousnesse art Gods Favourite and how sweet is his smile Psal 63.3 Thy loving-kindnesse is better than life SECT 7. Containing an excitation to spiritual hunger TO perswade men to hunger after this righteousnesse consider two things 1. Unlesse we hunger after righteousnesse we cannot obtain it God will never throw away his blessings upon them that do not desire them If a King shall say to a Rebel Do but desire a pardon and thou shalt have it if through pride and stubbornnesse he disdains to sue out his pardon he deserves justly to die God hath set spiritual blessings at a low rate Do but hunger and you shall have righteousnesse but if we refuse to come up to these termes there is no righteousnesse to be had for us God will stop the current of his mercy and set open the sluce of his indignation 2. If we do not thirst here we shall thirst when it is too late if we do not thirst as David did Psal 42.2 my soul thirsteth for God we shall thirst as Dives did for a drop of water Luke 16.24 They who thirst not for righteousnesse shall be in perpetual hunger and thirst they shall thirst for mercy but no mercy to be had Heat encreaseth thirst when men shall burn in hell and be scorch'd with the flames of Gods wrath this heat will encrease their thirst for mercy but there will be nothing to allay their thirst O is it not better to thirst for righteousnesse while it is to be had than to thirst for mercy when there is none to be had Sinners the time is shortly coming when the draw-bridge of mercy will be quite pulled up I shall next briefly prescribe some helps to spiritual hunger 1. Avoid those things which will hinder your appetite As 1. Windy things When the stomach is full of wind a man hath little appetite to his food so when one is fill'd with a windy opinion of his own righteousness he will not hunger after Christs righteousnesse he who being puff'd up with pride thinks he hath grace enough already will not hunger after more These windy vapours spoil the stomack 2. Sweet things destroy the appetite so by feeding immoderately upon the sweet luscious delights of the world we lose our appetite to Christ and Grace You never knew a man surfeit himself upon the world and sick of love to Christ while Israel fed with delight upon Garlick and Onions they never hungred after Manna the soul cannot be carried to two extremes at once as the eye cannot look intent on heaven and earth at once * Oculus non potest caelum terram simul inspicere Cyprian so a man cannot at the same instant hunger excessively after the world and righteousness the earth puts out the fire the love of earthly things will quench the desire of spiriritual 1 John 2.15 Love not the world the sin is not in the having but in the loving 2. Do all that may provoke spiritual appetite There are two things provoke appetite 1. Exercise a man by walking and stirring gets a stomack to his meat So by the exercise of holy duties the spiritual appetite is encreased 1 Tim. 4.7 Exercise thy self to godlinesse Many have left off Closet-prayer they hear the Word but seldome and for want of exercise they have lost their stomack to Religion 2. Sawce Sawce whets and sharpens the appetite there is a twofold sawce provokes holy appetite 1.
approaching and gives not warning Ezek. 3 20. 5. Such as poyson souls with Error how dangerous is the leprosie of the head a Frenzy is worse than a Fever what shall we say to such Ministers as give poyson to their people in a golden cup are not these unmerciful others there are unworthy the name of Ministers itineraries the Divels journey men who ride up and down and with Satan compasse the earth to devour souls it would pity ones heart to see poor unstable creatures misled by rude and illiterate men who diet the people with blasphemy and non-sence and make them fitter for Bed-lam than the New Jerusalem all these are unmerciful to souls Let me beseech all that fear God to shew soul-soul-mercy Strengthen the weak reduce the wandring raise up them that are fallen James 5.20 He which converteth the sinner from the error of his way shall save a soul from death SECT 2. Shewing that Christians must be tender of one anothers names 2. WE must be merciful to the names of others A good name is one of the greatest blessings upon earth no chaine of Pearl doth so adorn as this it being so we ought to be very tender of names They are to be accounted in an high degree unmerciful who make no conscience of taking away the good names of their brethren Their throats are open Sepulchres to bury the fame and renown of men Rom. 3.13 'T is a great cruelty to murder a man in his name Cant. 5.7 The keepers of the wall took away my vaile from me some Expositors interpret it of her honour and fame which did cover her as a beautiful vail The ground of this unmercifulnesse to names is 1. Pride Pride is such a thing as cannot endure to be out-shined it loves not to see it self exceeded in parts and eminency therefore will behead another in his good name that he may appear something lower The proud man will be pulling down of others in their reputation and so by their Eclipse he thinks he shall shine the brighter the breath of a proud man causeth a blast or mildew upon fame 2. Envy 1 Pet. 2.1 An envious man maligns the dignity of another therefore seeks to mischief him in his name Religion teacheth us to rejoyce in the esteem and same of others Rom. 1.8 I thank my God for you all that your faith is spoken of throughout the whole world 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is divulged with fame A good report is a credit to Religion Heb. 11.4 If persons professing godliness have not a good name Religion will have no very good name but envy consulting with the Divel lays a Train and fetches fire from hell to blow up the good name of another Quest How many wayes may we be unmerciful to the names of others Quest Answ Divers ways 1. By misreporting them a sin Answ 1 forbidden Exod. 23.1 Thou shalt not raise a false report Eminency is commonly blasted by flander Psal 64.3 Their tongues are as arrows shot out The tongue of a slanderer shoots out words to wound the fame of another and make it bleed to death The Saints of God in all Ages have met with unmerciful men who have fathered things upon them that they have not been guilty of Surius the Jesuite reported of Luther that he learned his Divinity of the Divel and that he dyed drunk but Melancthon who wrote his life affirms that he dyed in a most pious holy manner and made a most excellent prayer before his death It was Davids complaint Psal 35.11 They laid to my charge things which I knew not The Greek word for Divel signifies slanderer 1 Tim. 3.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not slanderers in the Greek it is not Divels Some think it is no great matter to defame and traduce another but know this is to act the part of a Devil O how many unmerciful men are there who indeed go for Christians but play the Divel in venting their lyes and calumnies wicked men in Scripture are called Dogs Psal 22.16 Slanderers are not like those Dogs which licked Lazarus his soars to heal them but like the Dogs which are Jezebel they rend and tear the precious names of men Valentinian the Emperour did decree Capitali sententiae subjugandum that he who was openly convicted of this crime of slander should dye for it And Pope Gregory did decree that such a person should be excommunicate and not have the Communion given him I think it was a just Decree Answ 2 2. We are unmerciful to the names of others when we receive a slander and then report what we hear Lev. 19.16 Thou shalt not go up and down as a Tale-bearer among thy people A good man doth not evil to his Neighbour nor taketh up a reproach against his Neighbour Psal 15.3 We must not only not raise a false report but not take it up To divulge a report before we speak with the party and know the truth of it is unmercifulness and cannot acquit itself of sin The same word in the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to raise a slander signifies to receive it Exod. 23.1 The receiver is even as bad as the Thief it is well if none of us have in this sense received stollen goods when others have stollen away the good names of their Brethren have not we received these stollen goods there would not be so many to broach false rumors but that they see this liquor pleaseth other mens tast Answ 3 3. We deal unmercifully with the names of others when we diminish from their just worth and dignity when we make more of their infirmities and less of their vertues Jam. 4.11 Speak not evil one of another I have read a story of one Idor an Abbot that he was never heard to speak evil of any man Saint Austin could not endure that any should eclipse and lessen the fame of others therefore wrote those two Verses upon his Table Quisquis amat dictis absentum rodere famam Hanc mensam vetitam noverit esse sibi Whosoever loves anothers name to blast This Table is not for him let him fast Wicked men are still paring off the credit of their Neighbours and they make thick parings they pare off all that is good nothing is left but the Kore something that may tend to their disparagement Unmerciful men know how to boile a Quart to a Pint they have a Divellish Art so to extenuate and lessen the merit of others that it is even boiled away to nothing Some though they have not the power of Creation yet they have the power of Annihilation They can sooner annihilate the good which is in others than imitate it 4. We are unmerciful to the names of others when we know them to be calumniated yet do not vindicate Answ 4 them A man may sometimes as well wrong another by silence as slander he who is merciful to his brother is an Advocate to plead in his behalf when he is injuriously traduced
the poor Sol. Jarchi Besides at the Jews solemn Festivals the poor were to have a share Deutr. 16.11 And as relieving the necessitous was commanded under the Law so it stands in force under the Gospel 1 Tim. 6.17 18. Charge them that be rich in this world that they 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 do good that they be rich in good works c. 'T is not only a counsel but a charge and the non-attendency to it runs men into a Gospel praemunire Thus we have seen the mind of God in this particular of charity let all good Christians comment upon it in their practice what benefit is there of gold while it is imbowel'd and lock up in the Mine and what is it the better to have a great Estate if it be so hoarded and cloistered up as never to see the light 2. As God commands so grace compels to works of mercy and beneficence 2 Cor. 5.14 The love of Christ constraineth Grace comes with Majesty upon the heart 't is not in sermone but virtute grace doth not lie as a sleepy habit in the soul but will put forth it self in vigorous and glorious actings grace can no more be conceal'd than fire like new wine it will have vent grace doth not lie in the heart as a stone in the Earth but as seed in the Earth * Si operari renuit gratia non est it will spring up into good works SECT 6. Containing a Vindication of the Church of England Use 1 Use 1. Inform. IT may serve to justifie the Church of England against the calumny of malevolent men Inform. Julian upbraided the Christians that they were Solifidians and the Church of Rome layes upon us this aspe●sion that we are against good works indeed we plead not for the merit of them but we are for the use of them Titus 3.14 Let ours also learn to maintain good works for necessary use We preach they are needful both necessitate praecepti and medii * Asserunt Pontificii bona opera 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 esse peccati mortis terrores vincere neque misericordiâ Dei propitiatore Christo egere quas in operibus opiniones ut impias damnamus Melanct. de Justif Debitorem ipse se Dominus fecit non accipiendo sed promittendo Austin in Psal 83. We read the Angels had wings and hands under their wings Ezek. 1.8 It may be emblematical of this truth Christians must not only have the wings of faith to flie but hands under their wings to work the works of mercy Tit. 3.8 This is a faithful saying and these things I will that you maintain constantly that they which have believed in God might be careful to maintain good works The Lamp of faith must be filled with the oyle of charity faith alone justifies but justifying faith is not alone you may as well separate weight from lead or heat from fire as works from faith good works though they are not the causes of salvation yet they are evidences though they are not the foundation yet they are the superstructure * Bona opera sunt via ad regnum non causa regnandi Bern. Faith must not be built upon works but works must be built upon faith Rom. 7.4 Ye are married to another that ye should bring forth fruit unto God Faith is the grace which marries Christ and good works are the children which faith bears for the vindication of the Doctrine of our Church and in honour of good works I shall lay down these four Aphorisms 1. Works are distinct from faith 't is vain to imagine Aphor. 1 that works are included in faith as the Diamond is inclosed in the Ring no they are distinct as the sap in the Vine is different from the Clusters that grow upon it 2. Works are the touch-stone of faith Shew me Aphor. 2 thy faith by thy works Jam. 2.18 * Sicut se res habet ad esse ita ad operari Aquin. Works are faiths letters of credence to shew if saith Saint Bernard thou seest a man in operibus strenuum full of good works then by the Rule of charity thou art not to doubt of his faith We judge of the health of the body by the pulse where the blood stirs and operates O Christian judge of the health of thy faith by the pulse of mercy and charitableness it is with faith as with a Deed in Law To make a Deed valid there are three things requisite the Writing the Seal the Witnesses so for the tryal and confirmation of faith there must be these three things the Writing the Word of God the Seal the Spirit of God the Witnesses good works Bring your faith to this Scripture-touch-stone faith doth justifie works works do testifie faith 3. Works do honour faith these fruits adorn the Aphor. 3 Trees of righteousness let the liberality of thy hand saith Clemens Alexandrinus be the ornament of thy faith and wear it as an holy bracelet about thy wrists Job 29.15 I was eyes to the blind and feet was I to the lame I put on righteousness and it cloathed me my judgement was as a Robe and a Diadem While Job was the poors Benefactor and Advocate this was the Ensign of his honour it cloathed him as a Robe and crowned him as a Diadem This is that takes off the odium and obloquy and makes others speak well of Religion when they see good works as hand-maids waiting upon this Queen Aphor. 4 4. Good works are in some sense more excellent than faith in two respects 1. Because they are of a more noble diffusive nature though faith be more needful for our selves yet good works are more beneficial to others faith is a receptive grace * Fidei est accipere charitatis distribuere Aug. it is all for self-interest it moves within its own Sphere Works are for the good of others and it is a more blessed thing to give than to receive 2. Good works are more visible and conspicuous than faith Faith is a more occult grace it may lie hid in the heart and not be seen but when works are joyned with it now it shines forth in its native beauty though a Garden be never so decked with Flowers yet they are not seen till the light comes so the heart of a Christian may be enriched with faith but it is like a Flower in the night it is not seen till works come when this light shines before men then faith appears in its orient colours SECT 7. A check to the unmerciful 2. IF this be the Effigies of a good man that he is of a Use 2 merciful disposition then it doth sharply reprove those that are far from this temper Reproof their hearts are like the scales of the Leviathan shut up together as with a close seal Job 41.15 They move only within their own circle but do not indulge the necessities of others Job 41.15 they have a flourishing Estate but like
inutile pondus An unuseful person serves for nothing but to cumber the ground and because he is barren in figs he shall be fruitful in curses Hebr. 6.8 Arg. 2 2. By this we resemble God who is a God of mercy he is said to delight in mercy * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mac. Micah 7.18 His mercies are over all his works Psal 145.9 He requites good for evil like the clouds which receive ill vapours from us but return them to us again in sweet showres There is not a creature lives but tastes of the mercies of God every Bird saith Ambrose doth in its kind sing Hymns of praise to God for his bounty but Men and Angels do in a more particular manner taste the cream and quintessence of Gods mercies 1. What temporal mercies have you received every time you draw your breath you suck in mercy every bit of bread you eat the hand of mercy carves it to you you never drink but in a golden Cup of mercy 2. What spiritual mercies hath God enriched some of you with pardoning adopting saving mercy The Picture of Gods mercy can never be drawn to the full you cannot take the breadth of his mercy for it is infinite nor the heighth of it for it reacheth above the clouds nor the length of it for it is from everlasting to everlasting Psal 103.17 The works of mercy are the glory of the God-head Moses prays Lord shew me thy glory Exod. 33.18 Saith God I will make all my goodness to pass before thee Ver. 19. God doth account himself most glorious in the shining Robes of his mercy now by works of mercy we resemble the God of mercy we are bid to draw our Lines according to this Copy Luke 6.36 Be you merciful 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as your Father also is merciful 3. Alms are a Sacrifice Hebr. 13.16 To do good Arg. 3 and to communicate forget not for with such Sacrifices God is well-pleased 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when you are distributing to the poor 't is as if you were praying as if you were worshipping God There are two sorts of Sacrifices Expiatory the Sacrifice of Christs blood and Gratulatory the Sacrifice of Alms. This saith holy Greenham is more acceptable to God than any other Sacrifice Acts 10.4 The Angel said to Cornelius thy Alms are come up for a memorial before God The backs of the poor are the Altar on which this Sacrifice is to be offered 4. We our selves live upon Alms other creatures do Arg. 4 liberally contribute to our necessities the Sun hath not its light for it self but for us it doth enrich us with its golden beams the Earth brings us a fruitful crop and to shew how joyful a mother she is in bringing forth the Psalmist saith the Vallies are covered with corn they shout for joy they also sing Psal 65.13 One creature gives us wool another oyle another silk we are fain to go a begging to the Creation Shall every creature be for the good of man and man only be for himself how absurd and irrational is this Arg. 5 5. We are to extend our liberality by vertue of a membership Isa 58.7 That thou hide not thy self from thy own flesh The poor are ex eodem luto they are fellow-members of the same body * Pars est propter totum The members do by a Law of equity and sympathy contribute one to another the eye conveys light to the body the heart blood the head spirits that is a dead member in the body which doth not communicate to the rest Thus it is in the body Politick let no man think it is too far below him to mind the wants and necessities of others it is pity but that hand should be cut off which disdains to pluck a thorn out of the foot It is spoken in the honour of that Renowned Princess the Emperess of Theodosius the great that she did her self visit the sick and prepare relief for them with her own Imperial hands Arg. 6 6. We are not Lords of an Estate but Stewards and how soon may we hear that Word Redde rationem Give an account of thy Stewardship for thou mayst be no longer Steward Luke 16.2 An Estate is a Talent to trade with it is as dangerous to hide our Talent * Defosso auro incubare dicitur qui pecuni am i●utilem detinet Grotius as to spend it Matth. 25.25 30. If the covetous man keep his gold too long it will begin to rust and the ●ust of it will witness against him Jam. 5.3 Arg. 7 7. The Examples of others who have been Renowned for acts of mercy and munificence 1. Our Lord Christ a great Example of charity he was not more full of merit than bounty Trajan the Emperour did rend off a piece of his own Robe to wrap his souldiers wounds Christ did more he rent his flesh he made a medicine of his body and blood to heal us Isa 53.5 by his stripes ye are healed Here was a pattern of charity without a parallel * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Greg. Myssen 2. The Jews are noted in this kind 't is a Rabbinical observation that those who live devoutly among the Jews distribute a tenth part of their estate among the poor and they give so freely saith Philo the Jew as if by giving they hoped to receive some great gratuity Now if the Jews are so devoted to works of mercy who live without Priest without Temple without Messiah shall not we much more who professe our faith in the blessed Messiah 3. Let me tell you of Heathens I have read of Titus Vespasian he was so inured to works of mercy that remembring he had given nothing that day cried out diem perdidi I have lost a day 'T is reported of some of the Turks that they have servants whom they employ on purpose to enquire what poor they have and they send relief to them And the Turks have a saying in their Alcoran that if men knew what a blessed thing it were to distribute Alms rather than spare they would give some of their own flesh to relieve the poor And shall not a Christians Creed be better than a Turks Alcoran Let all this perswade to works of mercy Regia crede mihi res est succurrere lapsis When poor indigent creatures like Moses are laid in the arke of bulrushes weeping and ready to sink in the waters of affliction be as temporal Saviours to them and draw them out of the waters with a golden cord Let the brests of your mercy nurse the poor be like the trees of the Sanctuary * Ezek. 47.12 both for food and medicine † when distress'd and even starved souls are fainting let your costly ingredients revive and fetch spirits in them Let others see the coats and garments which you have made for the poor Acts 9.39 Arg. 8 8. The sin of unmercifulnesse 1. The unmercifull man is an unthankful man and what can
are still reaping you will never be able to Inne the whole Harvest let all this perswade rich men to honour the Lord with their substance SECT 9. Containing Directions in shewing mercy BEfore I conclude this Subject let me lay down some Rules briefly concerning works of mercy Rule 1 1. Charity must be free Deutr. 15.10 Thou shalt give and thy heart shall not be grieved c. that is thou shalt not be troubled at parting with thy money he that gives grievingly gives grudgingly it is not a gift but a tax charity must flow like spring-water * Non quaeritur quantum sed quo animo detur Ambr. the heart must be the Spring the hand the Pipe the poor the Cistern God loves a chearful giver Be not like the Crab which hath all the ver-juyce squeezed and pressed out You must not give to the poor as if you were delivering your purse on the High-way Charity without alacrity is rather a Fine than an Offering 't is rather doing of pennance than giving of alms charity must be like the myrrhe which drops from the Tree without cutting or forcing * Beneficium est magis affectu quam effectu Seneca Rule 2 2. We must give that which is our own Isa 58.7 To deal thy bread to the hungry it must be de tuo pane The word for alms in the Syriack signifies justice to shew that alms must be of that which is justly gotten the Scripture puts them together Micah 6.8 To do justice to love mercy we must not make ex Rapina Holocaustum a Sacrifice of Sacriledge * Qui male part● dispergit injust●● ejus manet in saecu lum Muscul Isa 61.8 For I the Lord love judgement I hate robbery for burnt-offering He that shall build an Almes-house or Hospital with goods ill gotten displays the Ensign of his pride and sets up the Monument of his shame Rule 3 3. Do all in Christ and for Christ 1. Do all in Christ labour that your persons may be in Christ We are accepted in him Ephes 1.6 Origen Chrysostom and Peter Martyr affirm that the best works not springing from faith are lost The Pelagians thought to have posed Austin with that question Whether it was sin in the Heathen to cloath the naked Austin answered rightly The doing of good is not in it self simply evil but proceeding of infidelity it becomes evil * Non per se ipsum factum pro peccato babetur c Titus 1.15 To them that are unbelieving is nothing pure * Matth. 7.18 Hebr. 11.6 That fruit is most sweet and genuine which is brought forth in the Vine John 15.4 Out of Christ all our Almes-deeds are but the fruit of the wilde Olive * Faciunt gentes ea quae legis sunt Ethice non Evangelice bona opera agunt sed non bene Macovii loc com they are not good works but dead works 2. Do all for Christ namely for his sake that you may testifie your love to him Love mellows and ripens our Almes-deeds it makes them a precious perfume to God * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyril as Mary did out of love bring her oyntments and sweet spices to anoint Christs dead body so out of love to Christ bring your oyntments and anoint his living body viz. Saints and Members 4. Works of mercy are to be done in humility away Rule 4 with ostentation the worm breeds in the fairest fruit the moth in the finest cloth Pride will be creeping into our best things beware of this dead flie in the box of oyntment When Moses face did shine he put a vail over it so while your light shines before men and they see your good works cover your selves with the vail of humility as the silk-worm while she weaves her curious works hides her self within the silk and is not seen so we should hide our selves from pride and vain-glory 'T was the sin of the Pharisees while they were distributing alms they did buccina canere blow the Trumpet * Nec illa perfecta est liberalitas si jactantiae causa largiaris Ambrose Matth. 6.2 They did not give their alms but sell them for applause A proud man casts his bread upon the waters as a Fisherman casts his Angle upon the waters he angles for vain-glory I have read of one Cosmus Medices a rich Citizen of Florence that he confessed to a near friend of his he built so many magnificent Structures and spent so much on Scholars and Libraries not for any love to Learning but to raise up to himself Trophies of Fame and Renown * Burt. Melan. An humble soul denies himself yea even annihilates himself he thinks how little it is he can do for God and if he could do no more it were but a due debt therefore looks upon all his works as if he had done nothing * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Macar The Saints are brought in at the last day as disowning their works of charity Matth. 25.37 Lord when saw we thee an hungred and fed thee c. A good Christian doth not only empty his hand of Alms but empties his heart of Pride while he raiseth the poor out of the dust he lays himself in the dust works of mercy must be like the Cassia which is a sweet spice but grows low Rule 5 5. Dispose your Alms prudentially 't is said of the merciful man he orders his affairs with discretion Psal 112.5 * Vox pauperum monet prudentiam in dandis Eteemosynis adhibe dam esse Mollerus There is a great deal of wisdom in distinguishing between them that have sinned themselves into poverty and who by the hand of God are brought into poverty Discretion in the distribution of Alms consists in two things 1. In finding out a fit Object 2. In taking a fit Season 1. In finding out a fit Object and that comes under a double notion 1. Give to those who are in most need raise the Hedge where it is lowest feed the Lamp which is going out 2. Give to those who may probably be more serviceable though we bestow cost and dressing upon a weak Plant yet not upon a dead Plant breed up such as may help to build the house of Israel Ruth 4.11 that may be Pillars in Church and State not Cater-pillars making your charity to blush 2. Discretion in giving Alms is in taking the fit season Give to charitable uses in time of health and prosperity distribute your silver and gold to the poor before the silver cord be loosed or the golden bowle be broken Eccles 12.6 Qui cito dat bis dat make your hands your executors not as some who do reserve all they give till the Term of life is ready to expire and truly what is then bestowed is not given away but taken away by death 't is not charity but necessity Oh do not so marry your selves to money that you are resolved nothing shall part you but death be
Object 2 knowledge of God they have no sense of spiritual things nor are they the better for our instructions 1. We read in Scripture of children who by vertue Answ 1 of instruction have had their tender years sanctified Timothies Mother and Grand-mother taught him the Scriptures from his Cradle 2 Tim. 3.15 And that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from a child thou hast known the holy Scriptures Timothy sucked in Religion as it were with his milk we read of young children who cried Hosanna to Christ and did trumpet forth his praises Matth. 21.15 And sure those children of Tyre had some seeds of good wrought in them in that they shewed their love to Paul and would help him on his way to Sea-shoar Acts 21.5 They all brought us on our way with wives and children Saint Paul had a Convoy of young Saints to bring him to take ship Answ 2 2. Suppose our counsel and instruction doth not at present prevail with our children it may afterwards take effect The seed a man sowes in his ground doth not presently spring up but in its season it brings forth a crop he that plants a Wood doth not see the full growth till many years after If we must not instruct our children because at present they reap not the benefit by the same reason we should not baptize our children because at present they have not the sense of baptisme nay by the same reason Ministers should not preach the Word because at present many of their hearers have no benefit Answ 3 3. If our counsels and admonitions prevail not with our children yet we have delivered our own souls There is comfort in the discharge of conscience we must let alone issues and events duty is our work success is Gods All which considered should make parents whet holy instructions upon their children they who are of the Family of God and whom he hath adopted for children will endeavour that their children may be more Gods children than theirs they will travail in birth till Christ be formed in them A true Saint is a load-stone that will be still drawing others to God Let this suffice to have spoken of the signs of Adoption I proceed SECT 5. Discovering Gods love in making us children THE next particular to be discussed is the love of God in making us children 1 John 3.1 Behold what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us that we should be called the sons of God! God shewed power in making us creatures but love in making us sons Plato gave God thanks that he had made him a man and not a beast but what cause have they to adore Gods love who hath made them children the Apostle puts an ecce to it behold * O aeterna vera charitas Aug. That we may the better behold Gods love in making us children consider three things 1. We were deformed Ezek. 16.6 8. When I passed by thee and saw thee polluted in thine own blood it was the time of love Mordecai adopted Esther because she was fair but we were in our blood and then God adopted us he did not adopt us when we were cloathed with the Robe of innocency in Paradise when we were hung with the jewels of holiness and were white and ruddy but when we were in our blood and had our leprous spots upon us the time of our loathing was the time of Gods loving 2. As we did not deserve to be made children so neither did we desire it No landed man will force another to become his heir against his will if a King should go to adopt a beggar and make him heir of the Crown if the beggar should refuse the Kings favour and say I had rather be as I am I would be a beggar still the King would take it in high contempt of his favour and would not adopt him against his will Thus it was with us we had no 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or willingness to be made children we would have been begging still but God out of his infinite mercy and indulgence not only offers to make us children but makes us willing to embrace the offer * Psal 110.3 Behold what manner of love is this 3. Which is the wonder of love that God should adopt us for his children when we were enemies If a man would make another heir of his Land he would adopt one that is near akin to him no man would adopt an enemy but that God should make us children when we were enemies that he should make us heirs to the Crown when we were Traytors to the Crown oh amazing astonishing love Behold what manner of love is this We were not akin to God we had by sin lost and forfeited our Pedigree we had done God all the injury and spight we could defac'd his image violated his Law trampled upon his mercies and when we had angered him he adopted us What stupendious love was this such love was never shewn to the Angels when they fell though they were of a more noble nature and in probability might have done God more service than we can yet God never vouchsafed this priviledge of Adoption to them he did not make them children but prisoners they were heirs only to the treasures of wrath * Rom. 2.5 Use Let all who are thus nearly related to God stand admiring his love when they were like Saul breathing forth enmity against God when their hearts stood out as Garrisons against him the Lord conquered their stubborness with kindness and not only pardoned but adopted them 't is hard to say which is greater the mystery or the mercy this is such amazing love as we shall be searching into and adoring to all eternity the bottom of it cannot be fathomed by any Angel in heaven Gods love in making us children is 1. A rich love it is love in God to feed us but it is rich love to adopt us it is love to give us a Crumb but it is rich love to make us heirs to a Crown 2. It is a distinguishing love that when God hath passed by so many millions he should cast a favourable aspect upon thee most are cut out for fuel and are made Vessels of wrath and that God should say to thee Thou art my son here 's the mirrour of mercy the meridian of love Who O who can tread upon these hot coals and his heart not burn in love to God SECT 6. Declaring the honour of Gods children 6. THE sixth particular is the honour and renown of Gods children for the illustration of this observe two things 1. God makes a precious account of them 2. He looks upon them as persons of honour 1. God makes a precious account of them Isa 43.4 Since thou wast precious in my sight c. A father prizeth his childe above his Estate How dearly did Jacob prize Benjamin his life was bound up in the life of the Lad Gen. 44.30 God makes a precious valuation of his children
an infinite mercy is it for a man to be made sensible of sin and seeing himself sick to cry out with David 2 Sam. 12.13 I have sinned against the Lord. Were it not a mercy for a person that is distracted to be restored to the use of his reason so for him that is spiritually distempered and in a lethargy to come to himself and see both his wound and his remedy Till the sinner be made sensible of his disease the medicine of mercy doth not belong to him * Non moris ●●t membrum non percussum plaugere nondum suscepto ictu admovere manum fovere unguento ubi non dolet emplastrum adhibere ubi caesura non ost B●rn in Apologe● Branch 6 6. If sin be a soul-sicknesse then labour to get this disease healed if a man had a disease in his body a Plu●i●ie or Cancer he would use all means for a cure the woman in the Gospel who had a bloody issue spent her whole estate upon the Physitians Luke 8.43 Be more earnest to have thy soul cured than thy body Make Davids prayer Psal 41.4 Heal my soul for I have sinned Hast thou a consumptive body rather pray to God to heal the Consumption in thy soul go to God first for the cure of thy soul James 5.14 Is any sick among you let him call for the Elders of the Church and let them pray over him The Apostle doth not say Let him call for the Physitian but the Elders that is the Ministers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Physitians are to be consulted in their due place but not in the first place Most men send first for the Physitian and then for the Minister which shews they are more desirous and careful for the recovery of their bodies than their souls but if soul-diseases are more dangerous and deadly then we should prefer the spiritual cure before the bodily heal my soul for I have sinned let us consider 1. Till we are cured we are not fit to do God any service A sick man cannot work while the disease of sin is violent we are not fit for any heavenly employment we can neither work so God Opera●to animi secundum virtutem nor work out our own salvation The Philosopher defines happiness the operation of the minde about vertue To be working for God is both the end of our life and the perfection Would we be active in our Sphere let us labour to have our souls cured So long as we are diseased with sin we are lame and bed-rid we are unfit for work We read indeed of a sinners works but they are dead works Heb. 6.1 2. If we are not cured we are cursed if our disease abides on us the wrath of God abides on us Quest But how shall we get this disease of sin cured This brings to the second thing in the Text The healing Physitian The whole need not a Physitian Whence observe Doctr. 2. That Jesus Christ is a soul-physitian Doctr. 2 Ministers as was said before are Physitians whom Christ doth in his Name delegate and send abroad into the world He saith to the Apostles and in them to all his Ministers Lo I am with you to the end of the world Matth. 28.20 That is I am with you to assist and bless you and to make your Ministry healing but though Ministe●s are Physitians yet but under-physitians Jesus Christ is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Chief Physitian he it is that teacheth us all our Receits and goes forth with our labours else the physick we prescribe would never work all the Ministers under heaven would not do any cure without the help of this Great Physitian For the Amplification of this I shall shew 1. That Christ is a Physitian 2. Why he is a Physitian 3. That he is the only Physitian 4. How he heals his Patients 5. That he is the best Physitian 1. That Christ is a Physitian it is one of his titles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Exod. 15.26 I am the Lord that healeth thee He is a Physitian for the body he anointed the blinde cleansed the Lepers healed the sick raised the dead Matth. 8.16 He it is that puts vertue into physick and makes it healing and he is a Physitian for the soul Psal 147.3 He healeth the broken in heart We are all as so many impotent diseased persons one man hath a Feaver another hath a dead Palsie another hath a bloody issue he is under the power of some hereditary corruption now Christ is a soul-physitian he healeth these diseases * Medicus aegrotis Jesus Bern. therefore in Scripture the Lord Jesus to set forth his healing vertue is resembled 1. By the Brazen Serpent Numb 21.9 Those who were stung were cured by looking on the Brazen Serpent so when the soul is stung by the old Serpent it is cured by that healing under Christs wings 2. Christ is resembled by the good Samaritan Luke 10.33 34. A certain man went down from Jerusalem to Jericho and fell among Thieves which stripped him of his rayment and wounded him and departed leaving him half dead but a certain Samaritan as he journyed came where he was and when he saw him he had compassion on him and went to him and bound up his wounds pouring in wine and oyle c. We have wounded our selves by sin and the wound had been incurable had not Christ that good Samaritan poured in wine and oyle 3. Christ as a Physitian is resembled by the Trees of the Sanctuary Ezek. 47.12 The fruit thereof shall be for meat and the leaf thereof shall be for medicine Thus the Lord Jesus that Tree of life in Paradise hath a sanative vertue he heals our pride unbelief c. As he feeds our graces so he heals our corruptions 2. Why Christ is a Physitian 1. In regard of his Call God the Father called him to practice Physick he anointed him to the work of healing Luke 4.18 The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he hath anointed me to preach the Gospel he hath sent me to heal the broken-hearted Christ came into the world as into an Hospital to heal sin-sick souls this though it were a glorious work yet Christ would not undertake it till he was commissionated by his father The Spirit of the Lord is upon me he hath sent me Christ was anointed and appointed to the work of a Physitian this was for our imitation we are not to meddle in any matters without a call that is acting out of our sphere 2. Jesus Christ undertook this healing work because of that need we were in of a Physitian Christ came to be our Physitian not because we deserved him but because we needed him not our merit but our misery drew Christ from heaven had not he come we must of necessity have perished and dyed of our wounds our disease was not ordinary it had seized on every part it made us not only sick but dead and such Receits
healed because they do not look out Answ 3 after a Physitian If they have any bodily distemper upon them they presently send to the Physitian their souls are sick but mind not their Physitian Christ John 5.40 Ye will not come unto me that ye may have life Christ takes it as an undervaluing of him that we will not send to him some send for Christ when it is too late when other Physitians have given them over and there is no hope of life then they cry to Christ to save them but Christ refuseth such Patients as make use of him only for a shift Thou that scornest Christ in time of health Christ may despise thee in the time of sickness * Medicum spernens sanari nequit Bern. Answ 4 4. All are not healed because they would be self-healers they would make their duties their saviours the Papists would be their own Physitians their daily sacrifice of the Mass is a blasphemy against Christs Priestly Office but Christ will have the honour of the cure or he will never heal us not our tears but his blood saves Answ 5 5. All are not healed because they do not take the physick which Christ prescribes them they would be cured but they are loth to put themselves into a course of physick Christ prescribes them to drink the bitter potion of Repentance and to take the pill of Mortification but they cannot endure this they had rather dye than take physick if the Patient refuseth to take the Receits the Physitian prescribes no wonder he is not healed Christians you have had many Recipes to take have you taken them ask conscience There are many hearers of the Word do like foolish Patients who send to the Doctor for Physick but when they have it they let the physick stand by in the glass but do not take it it is probable you have not taken the Receits which the Gospel prescribes because the Word hath no operation on your hearts you are as proud as earthly as malicious as ever Answ 6 6. All are not healed because they have not confidence in their Physitian it is observable when Christ came to work any cure he first put this question Believe ye that I am able to do this Matth. 9.28 This undoes many oh saith the sinner There 's no mercy for me Christ cannot heal me Take heed thy unbelief is worse than all thy other diseases Did not Christ pray for them that crucified him FATHER FORGIVE THEM Some of those were saved that had an hand in shedding his blood * Acts 2.36 37 Why then dost thou say Christ cannot heal thee unbelief dishonours Christ it hinders from a cure it closeth the Orifice of Christs wounds it stauncheth his blood Matth. 15.58 Millions dye of their disease because they do not believe in their Physitian 5. The fifth and last particular is That Christ is the best Physitian That I may set forth the praise and honour of Jesus Christ I shall shew you wherein he excels all other Physitians no Physitian like Christ 1. He is the most skilful Physitian he hath his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there is no disease too hard for him Psal 103.3 Who healeth all thy diseases The Pool of Bethesda might be an emblem of Christs blood John 5.4 Whosoever first after the troubling of the water step'd in was made whole of whatsoever disease he had There are certain diseases Physitians cannot cure as a consumption in the lungs some kinde of obstructions and gangrenes Non est in medico semper relevetur ut ager Some diseases are opprobria medicorum the reproaches of Physitians * Rhetor non semper suadebit nec Iatros sanabit but there 's no immedicabile vulnus no disease can pose Christs skill he can cure the gangrene of sin when it is come to the heart he healed Mary Magdalen an unchaste sinner he healed Paul who breathed out persecution against the Church insomuch that Paul stands and wonders at the cure 1 Tim. 1.13 But I obtained mercy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I was bemercied Christ heals head-distempers and heart-distempers which may keep poor trembling souls from despair O saith the sinner never was any so diseased as I but look up to thy Physitian Christ who hath healing under his wings he can melt an heart of stone and wash away black sins in the crimson of his blood there are no desperate cases with Christ * Omnipotenti nihil insanabile Aug. he hath those salves oyles balsomes which can cure the worst disease Indeed there is one disease which Christ doth not heal namely the sin against the Holy Ghost this is called a sin unto death if we knew any who had sinned this sin we were to shut them out of our prayer There is a sin unto death I do not say that he shall pray for it 1 John 5.16 There 's no healing for this disease not but that Christ could cure this but the sinner will not be cured The King could pardon a Traytor but if he will have no pardon he must dye The sin against the Holy Ghost is unpardonable because the sinner will have no pardon he scorns Christs blood despights his Spirit therefore his sin hath no sacrifice Hebr. 10.26 29. 2. Christ is the best Physitian because he cures the better part the soul * Christus medicus animarum Aug. other Physitians can cure the Liver or Splene Christ cures the heart they can cure the blood when it is tainted Christ cures the conscience when it is defiled Hebr. 9.14 How much more shall the blood of Christ purge your conscience from dead works Galen and Hippocrates might cure the stone in the Kidneys but Christ cures the stone in the heart he is the best Physitian which cures the more excellent part The soul is immortal angelical man was made in the Image of God Gen. 1.27 Not in regard of his body but his soul Now if the soul be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so divine and noble then the cure of the soul doth far exceed the cure of the body 3. Christ is the best Physitian for he causeth us to feel our disease The disease of sin though it be most damnable yet least discernable many a man is sin-sick but the Divel hath given him such stupifying physick that he sleeps the sleep of death and all the thunders of the Word cannot awaken him but the Lord Jesus this blessed Physitian awakes the soul out of its lethargy and then it is in an hopeful way of recovery The saylor was never so near a cure as when he cryed out 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sirs What must I do to be saved Acts 16.30 4. Christ shews more love to his Patients than any Physitian besides which appears five wayes 1. In that long journey he took from heaven to earth 2. In that he comes to his Patients without sending for The sick send to their Physitians and use many entreaties here the Physitian comes
destroy them had not Moses his chosen stood in the breach to turne away his wrath Let us never leave imploring our heavenly Physitian till he lay a Fig on ENGLANDS Boyle and cause it to recover 1 PET. 1.2 Grace unto you and Peace be multiplyed The beauty of Grace THE blessed Apostle having felt the Efficacy and Soveraignty of grace is taken up with the thoughts of it and so sweet is this wine of Paradise that he commends it to these dispersed Christians to whom he writes wishing them all encrease Grace unto you and Peace be multiplied The words run in the forme of a Salutation Grace unto you and Peace When we salute our friends we cannot wish them a greater blessing than Grace and Peace Other mercies lie without the Pale and are dispersed in common to men but Grace is a special Congiary and Gift bestowed on them who are the Favourites of heaven In the words observe 1. The Connexion 2. The Order 1. The Connexion Grace and Peace 1. The Connexion The way to have peace is to have grace grace is the breeder of peace the one is the root the other the flower peace is the sweet water that drops from the limbeck of a gracious heart 2. The Order 2. The Order First grace then peace grace hath the priority Grace and peace are two sisters but grace is the elder sister * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theoph. and give me leave at this time to prefer the elder before the younger Grace unto you be multiplied For the illustration consider 1. What is meant by grace 2. The Authour of it 3. Why it is called grace 4. The Cogency of it 1. What is meant by grace This word GRACE is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it hath various acceptions in Scripture 1. Grace is sometimes taken for the favour of God Gen. 6.8 Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord God did cast a gracious aspect upon him 2. Grace is taken for beauty as we say such a thing is graceful Jam. 1.11 The flower falleth and the grace of the fashion of it perisheth 3. Grace is taken figuratively and improperly for the shew of grace as we call that a face in the glass which is but the idaea and resemblance of a face so John 2.23 Many believed in his Name that believing was but a shew of faith as Austin and Theophilact note 4. Grace is taken in a genuine and proper sense so in the Text Grace be multiplied it may admit of this description Grace is the infusion of a new and holy principle into the heart whereby it is changed from what it was and is made after Gods own heart Grace makes not only a civil but sacred change it byasseth the soul heaven-ward and stamps upon it the image and superscription of God 2. The Authour or Efficient of grace namely the Spirit of God who is therefore call'd the Spirit of grace Zach. 12.10 The Spirit is the fountain from whence chrystal streams of grace flow * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theodoret. Man as Clemens Alexandrinus observes is Gods Harp or Timbrel the Harp will not sound unless touched with the finger so the heart of man cannot put forth any gracious harmony till first it be touched with the finger of Gods Spirit this blessed Spirit works grace in the Subject 1. Universally 2. Progressively 1. Universally 1 Thes 5.10 The God of peace sanctifie you wholly The Spirit of God infuseth grace into all the faculties of the soul though grace be wrought but in part yet in every part in the understanding light in the conscience tenderness in the will consent in the affections harmony therefore grace is compared to leaven Matth. 13.33 because it swells it self into the whole soul and makes the Conversation to swell and rise as high as heaven 2. The Spirit of God works grace progressively he carries it on from one degree of another The Pelagians hold that gratia operans the beginning of grace is from God but gratia cooperans the progress of grace is from our selves so God shall be the Authour of faith and we the finishers God shall lay the first stone and we the Superstructure but alas there needs the continual influence of the Spirit to the carrying on the work of grace in our hearts Should God withdraw his Spirit from the most holy men their grace might fail and annihilate † * Sublata causa tollitur effectus If the Sun withdraw its light though never so little there follows darkness in the Ayre we need not only habitual grace but assisting exciting subsequent grace The Ship needs not only the Sails but the winde to carry it there needs not only the Sailes of our Abilities and Endeavours but the winde of the Spirit to blow us to the heavenly Port. 3. Why the work of holiness in the heart is called grace Answ 1. Because it hath a super-eminency above nature * Caelitus delapsa Beza it is a flower which doth not grow in natures garden 't is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of a Divine extraction Jam. 3.17 By reason we live the life of men by grace we live the life of God 2. It is called grace because it is a work of free-grace * Gratia quasi gratis data every link in the golden chain of our salvation is wrought and enamel'd with free-grace That one should be sanctified and not another this is of grace that God should pass by many of the Noble Rich Learned and graft his heavenly endowments upon a more wilde luxuriant Stock a crabbed nature weaker parts well may it be called grace Quest Quest But why is not grace bestowed upon all Answ Answ We must hold with Zanchy there is alwayes a just reason of Gods will but in particular I answer 1. God gives grace to one and denies it to another to shew his Prerogative God is not bound to give grace to all Rom. 9.15 I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy Suppose two Malefactors brought before the King one he will pardon but not the other if any demand the reason he will answer 't is his Prerogative So God will give grace to one not to another he will make one a vessel of mercy the other a vessel of wrath this is his Prerogative The Apostle hath silenced all disputes in this kinde Rom. 9.20 21. Who art thou that replyest against God hath not the Potter power over the clay If we could suppose a Plant to speak Why was not I made a Bird or a Beast Why should not I have reason just so it is when vain man enters into contest with God Why should not I have grace as well as another Dispute not against Prerogative let not the clay syllogize with the Potter 2. I answer God may justly deny his grace to any wicked man for two reasons 1. Because once he had grace and lost it if a father give his son a stock to trade
their Relations consider 1. He who is not good in his Relations goes under the just suspition of an Hypocrite let a man seem to be a penitent or Zelot yet if he bear not fruit proper to his station he is no tree of righteousness but some wild degenerate plant There are some will pray hear Sermons discourse well this is good but what means the bleating of the sheep they are not good in their Relations this discovers they are foundered and unsound A good Christian labours to fill his Relations and to go through all the parts of Religion as the Sun through all the Signs of the Zodiack I like not those Christians who though they seem to be travelling to heaven yet leave the duties of their Relations a as Terra incognita which they never come near 2. The excellency of a Christian is to bring forth proper fruit * Perfectum est quod propriam att●ngit virtutem wherein lies the goodness of a member in the body but to discharge its proper office The eye is to see the ear to hear c. So the excellency of a Christian is to bring forth that fruit which God hath assigned him what is a thing good for which doth not do its proper work what is a Clock good for that will not strike what is a ship good for that will not saile what is a Rose good for that doth not smell what is that Professor good for that doth not send forth a sweet perfume in his Relation the commendation of a thing is when it puts forth its proper vertue 3. Not to bring forth suitable fruit spoils all the other fruit which we bring forth If a man were to make a Medicine and should leave out the chief ingredient the Medicine would lose its vertue If one were to draw a Picture and should leave out an eye it would spoile the Picture there are many to whom Christ will say at the day of judgement as to the young man Luke 18.22 Yet lackest thou one thing Thou hast pray'd and fasted and heard sermons yet lackest thou one thing thou hast not been good in thy Relations 4. Relative graces do much beautifie and set off a Christian It is the beauty of a Star to shine in its proper Orbe Relative grace doth bespangle a Christian 5. A good Christian brings forth seasonable fruit Psal 1.3 he that bringeth forth fruit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in his season * Eccles 3.1 every thing is beautiful in his time Eccles 3.11 That may be good at one time which at another may be out of season There is a great deale of skill in the right timing of a thing duties of Religion must be perform'd in the fit juncture of time 1. Christian duties that relate to our Neighbour must be observed in their season 1. Our reproving others must be seasonable Reproof is a duty when we see others walk irregularly like souldiers that march out of Rank and File we ought mildly yet gravely to tell them of their sin Levit. 19.17 but let this fruit be brought forth in its season 1. Do it privately Matth. 18.15 Go and tell him his fault between thee and him alone 2. Do it when thou seest him in the best temper not when his passions are up that were pouring oyle on the flame but when his spirit is meekned and calm'd you put the seal on the wax when it is soft and plyable there is a time when mens spirits are more flexible and yielding now is the fittest season to stamp a Reproof upon them and it is likelyest to take impression When Abigail reproved Nabal it was in the right season not when he was in wine but when he was in his wits and was fit to hear a Reproof 1 Sam. 25.37 3. Another season for Reproof is in the time of affliction Affliction tames mens spirits and now a word of Reproof spoken prudentially may work with the affliction a bitter potion is not refused if in case of extremity of pain Affliction opens the ear to Discipline * Job 36.10 2. Our comforting others must be seasonable Prov. 15.23 A word spoken in due season how good is it when we see one fallen into sin and with Peter weeping bitterly oh now a word of comfort will do well The cest●ous Corinth being deeply humbled the Apostle calls for oyle and wine to be poured into his wounds 2 Cor. 2.7 Ye ought rather to comfort him and the reason is given lest perhaps such an one should be swallowed up of sorrow When the soul is wounded for sin now bring the mollifying oyntment of a promise Jer. 3.1 hang out free graces Colours display the glory of Gods Attributes his Mercy and Truth to the sinner when the spirit is broken a word of comfort spoken in season is the putting it in joynt again Gal. 1.6 this is to bring forth seasonable fruit when we give wine to them that are of a heavy heart Prov. 16.4 Pleasant words are as an honey-comb sweet to the soul Jobs friends pretended to comfort him but instead of pouring oyl into the wound they poured in vinegar 2. Duties of Religion that relate to God must be performed in their season 1. Mourning for sin is a duty God loves a contrite heart Psal 51.17 how powerful with God is the weeping Rhetorique that a poor sinner useth but yet there is a time when mourning may not be so seasonable when God hath given us some eminent signal deliverance and this mercy calls aloud to us to rejoyce but we hang our Harps upon the willows and sit weeping this sadness is fructus intempestivus fruit out of season there was a special time at the feast of Tabernacles when God called his people to rejoycing Deutr. 16.15 Seven dayes shalt thou keep a solemn feast unto the Lord thy God and thou shalt surely rejoyce Now if the Israelites had sat heavy and disconsolate at that time when God called them to rejoycing it had been very unseasonable like mourning at a wedding when we are called to thanksgiving and we mingle our drink with tears is not this to be highly unthankful for mercy God would have his people humble but not ungrateful 'T is the Divels policy either to keep us from duty or else to put us upon it when it is least in season 2. Rejoycing is a duty Psal 33.1 But when God by some special providence calls us to weeping now joy is unseasonable this is that which God complains of Isa 22.12 In that day did the Lord of Hosts call to weeping and behold joy and gladness c. Oecolampadius and others think it was in the time of King Ahaz when the signs of Gods anger like a blazing star did appear * Cum jam prae foribus esset in●●tus now to be given to mirth was very unseasonable ver 14. Surely this iniquity shall not be purged from you till you die saith the Lord of Hosts In the Hebrew it is 〈◊〉
be said worse Thou to whom the Lord hath given an estate thy cup runs over but hast a miserly heart and wilt not part with any thing for good uses 't is death to thee to relieve them that are dying know that thou art in the highest degree ungrateful thou art not fit for humane society The Scripture hath put these two together unthankful without natural affection 2 Tim. 3.2 3. God may repent that ever he gave such men estates and may say as Hos 2.9 Therefore will I return and take away my corn and my wine in the season thereof and will recover my wooll and my flax 2. The unmerciful man wants love to Christ all men would be thought to love Christ and would be very angry with them that should question their love but do they love Christ who let the members of Christ starve No these love their money more than Christ and come under that fearful Anathema 1 Cor. 16.22 Arg. 9 9. Lastly I shall use but one argument more to perswade to works of mercy and that is the reward which follows Alms-deeds giving of Alms is a glorious work and let me assure you it is no unfruitful work * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theod. Whatsoever is disbursed to the poor is given to Christ Mat. 25.40 Inasmuch as you have done it to one of the least of these my brethren ye have done it unto me The poor mans hand is Christs Treasury * Manus pauperis est Christi gazophylacium Chrysolog and there is nothing lost that is put there Quicquid in terra jacenti porrigitis sedenti in caelo datis The text saith the merciful shall obtain mercy in the Greek it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they shall be bemercified What is it we need most is it not mercy pardoning and saving mercy What is it we desire most on our death-bed is it not mercy Thou that shewest mercy shalt find mercy thou that pourest in the oyle of compassion to others God will pour in the golden oyle of salvation into thee Matth. 7.2 The Shunamite woman shewed mercy to the Prophet and she received kindnesse from him another way 2 Kings 4. She welcommed him to her house and he restored her dead child to life they that sow mercy shall reap in kind they shall obtain mercy such is the sweetnesse and mercifulnesse of Gods nature that he will not suffer any man to be a loser No kindnesse shewed to him shall be unregarded or unrewarded God will be in no mans debt for a cup of cold water he shall have a draught of Christs warme blood to refresh his soul Heb. 6.10 For God is not unrighteous to forget your work and labour of love which you have shewed toward his name in that you have ministred to the Saints c. Gods mercy is a tender mercy a pure mercy a rich mercy mercy shall follow and overtake the merciful man he shall be rewarded 1. In this life 2. In the life to come 1. The merciful man shall be rewarded in this life he shall be blessed 1. In his Person Psal 41.1 Blessed is he that considers the poor Let him go whether he will a blessing goes along with him he is in favour with God God casts a smiling aspect upon him 2. Blessed in his name Psal 112.6 He shall be had in everlasting remembrance When the Niggards name shall rot the name of a merciful man shall be embalmed with honour and give forth its scent as the wine of Lebanon 3. Blessed in his Estate Omni rerum copia affluet Prov. 11.25 The liberal soul shall be made fat He shall have the fat of the Earth and the dew of Heaven He shall not only have the Venison but the blessing 4. Blessed in his Posterity Psal 37.26 He is ever merciful and lendeth his seed is blessed He shall not only leave an Estate behind but a blessing behind to his children and God will see that the entail of that blessing shall not be cut off 5. Blessed in his Negotiations Deutr. 15.10 For this thing the Lord thy God shall bless thee in all thy works and in all that thou puttest thine hand unto The merciful man shall be blessed in his building planting journying whatever he is about a blessing shall empty it self upon him Quicquid calcaverit rosa fiet He shall be a prosperous man the honey-comb of a blessing shall be still dropping upon him 6. Blessed with long life Psal 41.2 The Lord will preserve him and keep him alive * Restituet eum Deus qui a●ea morti vicinus fuit longiore vita donabit Mollerus He hath helped to keep others alive and God will keep him alive Is there any thing then lost by mercifulness it spins out the silver thread of life many are taken away the sooner for their unmercifulness because their hearts are streightned their lives are shortned 2. The merciful man shall be rewarded in the life to come Arist Rhet. Aristotle joyns these two together 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 liberality and utility God will reward the merciful man hereafter though not for his works yet according to his works Revel 20.12 I saw the dead small and great stand before God and the Books were opened and the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books according to their works As God hath a bottle to put our tears in so he hath a book to write our alms in as God will put a vail over his peoples sins so he will in free-grace set a Crown upon their works The way to lay up is to lay out other parts of our Estate is left behind * Eccl. 2.18 19. but that which is given to Christs poor is hoarded up in heaven that is a blessed kind of giving which though it makes the purse lighter it makes the Crown heavier You that are mercifully inclined remember whatever alms you distribute 1. You shall have good security Eccles 11.1 Luk. 6.38 Prov. 19.17 He that gives to the poor lends to the Lord and that which he hath given will he pay him again There is Gods Counter-band to save you harmless which is better security than any PUBLICK FAITH yet here is our Unbelief and Atheism We will not take Gods bond we commonly put our deeds of mercy among our desperate debts 2. You shall be paid with over-plus for a wedge of gold which you have parted with you shall have a weight of glory for a cup of cold water you shall have Rivers of pleasure which run at Gods right hand for evermore The interest comes to infinitely more than the principal Pliny writes of a Country in Affrica where the people for every bushel of seed they sowe receive an hundred and fifty fold increase For every penny you drop into Christs Treasury you shall receive above a thousand fold encrease your after-crop of glory will be so great that though you