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A89503 A practical commentary, or An exposition with notes on the Epistle of Jude. Delivered (for the most part) in sundry weekly lectures at Stoke-Newington in Middlesex. By Thomas Manton, B.D. and minister of Covent-Garden. Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677. 1657 (1657) Wing M530; Thomason E930_1; ESTC R202855 471,190 600

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hath many Names a distinct consideration of them yeildeth an advantage in beleeving for though they express the same thing yet every notion begetteth a fresh thought by vvhich Mercy is more taken abroad in the vievv of Conscience This is that pouring out of Gods Name spoken of Cant. 1. 3. Ointment in the Box doth not yeild such a fragrancy as vvhen 't is poured out and Spices do not give forth their smell till they are chafed Nothing is more conducible to beget a trust then distinct thoughts and conceptions of Gods Mercy Let us take notice of some places vvhere 't is set forth See Psal 103. 8. The Lord is merciful and gracious slow to anger and plenteous in mercy The expression is diversified and I note it the rather because in other places the same notions of Mercy are punctually expressed see Nehem. 9. 17. so Psal 14. 5. 8. and in divers other places chiefly see that Exod. 34. 7. and you vvill find that this is the very description vvhich God hath given of himself Novv vvhat doth the Spirit of God aim at in this express enumeration and accumulation of names of Mercy but to give us an help in meditation and that our thoughts may be more distinct 1. The first notion is Mercy which is an Attribute whereby God inclineth to succour them that are in misery 'T is an Attribute that meerly respecteth the creature The Love and knovvledg of God first falleth upon himself but Mercy is only transient and passeth out to the creatures God knoweth himself loveth himself but he is not merciful to himself And then it respecteth the creatures in misery for misery is Mercy 's only motive Justice seeketh a ●it object but Mercy a ●it occasion Justice requireth desert but Mercy only want and need 2. The next notion is Grace vvhich noteth the free bounty of God and excludeth all merit of the creature Grace doth all gratis freely though there be no precedent obligation or debt or hope of recompence vvhereby any thing may accrue to himself only that it may be vvell vvith the creature Gods external motive is our misery his internal motive is his ovvn Grace and elective Love Am I in want there is mercy Am I unworthy there is grace Mercy respects us as we are in our selves vvorthy of condemnation Grace as compared with others not elected The ultimate Reason of the choyce is Gods grace The Angels that never sinned are saved meerly out of grace but men that vvere once miserable are saved not only out of grace but also out of mercy 3. The next notion is long-suffering or slowness to anger The Lord is not easily overcome by the wrongs or sins of the creature but easily overcometh them by his own patience and goodness He doth not only pity our misery that 's mercy and do us good for nothing that 's grace but beareth long with our infirmities Alas if God were as short and swift in the executions of revenge as men are God must create another World to raise up seed to Christ If he did not wait upon sinners there would be none made Saints We provoked him to cut us off long since but wrath is not easily heightened into rage and therefore he waiteth that he may be gracious Isai 30. 18. 4. Kindness or bounty plenteous in goodness BERAB CHESID Gods communications of his grace to the creature are every way rich and full You may say God is merciful gracious patient But will he be thus to me Yes he is plenteous in goodness kind and communicative Psal 119. 68. Thou art good and dost good therefore David goeth to him for grace Well then study Gods Name and answer all your discouragements out of the descriptions of his Mercy 9. Consider your own experiences We have not only heard that God is merciful but we have known it All men may speak of patience and common mercy and outward deliverances but few improve them to a spiritual use and purpose 1. Consider Gods patience How long hath he waited for your Conversion and he that hath spared you can save you 'T is said The wages of sin is death Rom. 6. 23. the word implyeth that God is bound to pay it by virtue of an implicite bargain and agreement between him and the creature But as yet the hand of God hath not found you out you are indebted to Justice but Mercy stoppeth the arrest of Vengeance Many others have been taken away in their sins by a sudden arrow and dart from Heaven Vengeance hath trodden upon the heel of sin As Zimri and Cosbi unloaded their lusts and their lives together The Angels for an aspiring thought were turned out of Heaven Gehazi was blasted with Leprosie just upon his lye and Lots wife turned into a stone for a look a glance upon Sodom and Her●d smitten with lice in the midst of his pomp and vain-glory and some have perished in the mid way Psal 2. in the very heat of some carnal and wicked pursuit God can do the like to you therefore reason thus If Mercy would not save me why hath Mercy spared me God might have sued out the Bond long since what is the meaning of the dispensation Is God weak or unjust or hath he a mind to be gracious Surely he would not have spared me all this while if he had not a mind to save my Soul Such reasonings as these many times give us the first encouragement to apply our selves to God Wicked men like Spiders draw other conclusions Psal 50. 21. But should not his patience c. Rom. 2. 4. 2. Consider Gods goodness in giving thee food and clothing and honour and gladness of heart and all this without thy desert say Certainly all these benefits are but so many baits to catch my Soul I see the Sun riseth every day with a fresh countenance and shineth upon the fields of just and unjust to what purpose but to shew that God is gracious without hire This bodily Sun is but an obscure type of the Sun of Righteousness that is willing to display his beams and wings over a poor languishing Soul Common mercies are the tastes of Gods love while you are sinners and the common fruits of Christs death that you may be invited to come for more Why hath he given me the unrighteous Mammon but that I may look after the true Riches What a vile unthankful heart should I have if I should be contented with Mammon without Christ and be like Judas with the bag in my hand and the Devil in my heart Gods children are wont to make these gifts a step to higher dispensations they know God like the good housholder bringeth forth the best at last therefore they must have something above and beyond all these things Common hearts are contented with common mercies but they are still waiting when the Master of the feast will bid them sit higher I may have this and be damned Where are the arguments of
his special Love 3. Consider deliverances from imminent dangers Then the Curse began to seize upon you but God snatched you out of the fire like brands out of the burning Amos 4. 11. or like a debtor that escapeth out of the Sergeants hands Every deliverance is a temporary pardon See Psal 78. 38. Then he being full of compassion forgave their iniquity and destroyed them not the meaning is respited Vengeance as appeareth by the Context So Mat. 18. 32. He forgave them the debt yet 't was after required the meaning is spared them for the present Thus when God taketh you out of the teeth and jaws of Wrath when you are delivered out of sickness and apparent danger you have a reprieve or a temporary pardon Oh if you had dyed you had dyed in your sins and so been eternally miserable If the Lord had taken the present advantage you had been howling a sad note among the screech-owls of darkness For ever blessed be that Mercy that made a rescue 10. Consider Gods invitations Mercy pointeth and beckneth to thee to come and be saved How many means hath God used to call thee to himself Every good motion is a call every Preacher a messenger sent from Heaven to invite thee to Christ every Sermon a new summons Plead with thy self Though God hath not drawn me yet he hath warned me The Elect have no more favour in the general means then thou hast Though Gods grace be limitted by the pleasure of his Wisdom yet thou hast a fair warrant and encouragement and every way as good a ground to come to Christ as others have Whosoever c. John 6. 37. When the Gospel doth not exclude me why should I exclude my self Doubts that God will not accept me if I come are but foolish jealousies without a cause But 't is time to leave off this meditation upon Gods mercy which hath carryed me out so far and to come to the Uses It informeth us that those that would apply themselves to God must make mercy their only plea and claim Returning sinners have this form put into their mouths Hosea 14. 2. Take away all iniquity receive us graciously Lord we desire to be entertained by Mercy to have our suits dispatched by Mercy So David professeth that he had no other claim Psal 13. 5. I have trusted in thy Mercy Upon which Chrysostom sweetly glosseth If any others have any thing to alledg let them plead it Lord I have but one thing to say one thing to plead one thing upon which I cast all my hopes and that is thy Mercy So must you come to the Throne of Grace Lord my plea is mercy all the comfort I expect to receive is from mercy The Apostle I remember maketh a challenge Rom. 11. 35. Who hath first given him and it shall be recompenced to him again Is there any man that can enter this plea This is due to me Lord give me what thou owest I desire no more let me have no blessing till I do deserve it Merit-mongers are best confuted by experience Let them use the same plea in their prayers which they do in their disputes let them say Give me not eternal life till I deserve it at thy hand let them dispute thus with God or with their own Consciences when they are in the agonies of death or under the horrors of the Lords wrath Surely men that cry up the merit of Works are men of little spiritual experience and seldom look into their own Consciences Dare they plead thus with God in their agonies and horrors The best claim Gods dearest servants can make is mercy Possidius in the life of Austin reporteth of Ambrose when he was about to dye he said thus Though I have not lived so that I should be ashamed to live among you yet I am not afraid to dye not that I have lived well but because I have a good and gracious Master This hath still been the ground of the Saints confidence It exhorteth us to use this encouragement to bring our Souls into the presence of God Think of the mercies of God The vile abuse of this doctrine hath brought a suspition and prejudice upon it but children must not refuse their bread because dogs catch at it When B●n●adad was dejected and in danger not only of losing his Kingdom but his life his servants comforted him with this fame 1 Kings 20. 31. We have heard that the Kings of Israel are merciful Kings You have heard how the God of Israel delighteth in mercy When you come for mercy you speak to his very bowels You shall read in 2 Sam. 14. 1. that when Joab perceived the Kings heart was to Absalom then he setteth the woman of Tec●ah a begging The Kings heart is to shew mercy he hath sworn that he hath no pleasure in his destruction therefore take courage and come to him He hath sent Christ to you as a pledg of his good-will and mercy why will you not come to him He that had Love enough to give us Christ hath Bowels enough to give us Pardon and Bounty enough to give us Heaven and what ever we stand in need of Fear not his Justice Justice and Mercy are made friends Christ hath taken up the quarrel between them so that nothing hindereth but that God may act according to the natural inclination of his own grace And let not the multitude of your sins discourage you The free gift is of many offences to Justification Rom. 5. 16. Take it for the offences of many persons as the Context seemeth to carry it and 't is an encouragement to think of the multiplyed instances of Mercy and how many monuments of free-grace we shall see when we come to Heaven and that all this while Mercy is not tyred Or take it for the many offences of the same person and still 't is an encouragement that Mercy can so often bear with our vanity and folly and not only pardon several sorts of sin but frequent relapses into the same sin He will multiply to pardin Isai 55. 7. If the Soul still draw back and be under discouragement consider your own need If the Lord were never so tenacious and hard to be intreated yet such is your need that you should follow him with uncessant complaints 'T is blasphemy to wrong his mercy by lessening thoughts But grant the sinner his supposition yet you should be instant and try what he will do for importunities sake See Luk. 11. 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Luk. 18. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. In those Parables there is a kind of condescention and yeilding to our unbelief as if the Lord had said If you will not beleeve all this that is said concerning my Mercy yet your want is great that is enough to make you earnest and frequent in your addresses to me come and see what I will do for your importunity the unjust Judg was moved
which these three things are considerable 1. The state of Sodom 2. The sins of Sodom 3. The judgement The first will shew you Gods mercy the second their guilt the third Gods justice Usually these three follow one another great mercies make way for great sins and great sins for great judgements 1. I begin with the state of Sodom There 1. the quality of the place there were sundry goodly Cities of which Sodom was the principal fairly situated in the plain of Jordan full of people and well supplyed with Corn Wine and Oyl and all earthly contentments 't is said Gen. 19. 10. Sodom was pleasant and as the Garden of the Lord. And yet afterwards this was the place which was the Scene of so much wrath utter desolation What may the wourld learn from hence that we must give an account for common mercies God reckoned with the servant that had but one Talent Matth. 25. The world is a place of tryal all men have a trust committed to them The Talents of the Heathens were fruitful seasons food and gladnesse Act 14. 17. God that never left himselfe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without a witness hath left us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without excuse a plentiful soil doth not argue a good people but a good God Sodom was pleasantly and richly situated If we had nothing else to answer for but an Island of blessings how poorly have we discharged this trust 2. Take notice of their late deliverance four Kings made war upon them by whom they were carryed captive and rescued by Abraham Gen. 14. 15 16 Deliverances from war and captivity leave a great engagement When God hath once spared us if we repent not the next turn is utter destruction Deliverances if not improved are but reprivals we are not so much preserved as reserved to a greater misery hoisted up that our fall may be the more dreadful snatched out of one misery that we may be cast into a worse Oh what have we to answer for our late deliverances Sodom was but once saved in war we many times 't is to be feared that passage recordeth our doom Psal 166. 43. Many times did he deliver them but they provoked him by their counsel and were brought low for their iniquity deliverances not improved are pledges of certain ruine 3. Gods patience in bearing with them Sodom for a long time slept quietly in their sins unmolested undisturbed the times of Sodom cry to me the Lord profered Abraham if there were but ten righteous persons found there he would spare the Cities in four Cities not ten righteous persons God is silent as long as their sins would let him be quiet but then when he could no longer bear he goeth down to take vengeance how long doth the Lord protract the ruine of these wicked Cities justice is his strange work but 't is his work mercy doth much with God but not all justice must be heard especially when it pleadeth on the behalfe of abused mercy God that would spare the sinner yet hateth the sinne When a people do nothing but weary justice and abuse mercy the Lord will raine from the Lord c. Gen 19. 24. Christ will enterpose for such a peoples destruction Heaven will rain down Hell upon a people so obstinately wicked The Lord is gracious but not senselesse as he will not always contend so not always forbear 4. Lots admonition it seemeth he frequently reproved them and therefore do they scorn him Gen. 19. 9 This one fellow came in to sojourn amongst us and he will needs be a Judge his soul was not only vexed with those leud courses but as occasion was offered he sought to disswade them Thence learn That God seldome punisheth without warning the old World had Noahs ministry and Sodom Lots admonitions the Lord may say to every punished people as Reuben to his breren Did not I warn you and you would not hear Gen. 42. 22. Seldome doth he hew a people with the sword but first he heweth them by Prophets means of conviction aggravate both the sin and the judgement Ah we have a clearer light and therefore must expect an heavier doome Matth. 10 15. sins are aggravated not onely by the foulnesse of the Act but the degrees of light against which they are committed Sodom sinned sorely as to the act but they could not sin against so much light as we do therefore it shall be easier for them at the day of judgement 5. They had the benefit of Magistracy those were Cities that were brought into government we read of the King of Sodom Gen. 14 2. but it seems he did not enterpose his Authority but rather connive at and tolerate the wickednesse of this people yea rather approve and partake with them in their abominations Consider when the vices of inferiours are dissembled and winked at by Governours the Lord himselfe taketh the matter in hand and then look for nothing but speedy ruine the guilt of a Nation is much encreased when sin is tolerated yea favoured and countenanced especially when righteousnesse is rather restrained and curbed then sin as the affronts done to Lot witnessed the end why Magistracy was ordained is then perverted 1 Tim. 2. 2. Rom. 13. 5. namely for the punishment of evil doers and that goodnesse be encouraged they were punished for allowing the filthinesse of strange flesh What will become of us if Magistrates should be carelesse and wink at yea countenance strange opinions as horrid and as much against the light of Christianity as that was against the light of Nature Secondly let us look upon the sinnes of Sodom See Ezek. 16. 49. Loe this was the iniquity of thy Sister Sodom pride fulness of bread and aboundance of idleness neither did she strengthen the hand of the poor and needy to which adde the sins of the Text and then this black roll is compleat I shall consider 1. The Sins 2. The Aggravations 1. The Sins 1. Pride 'T is hard to enjoy plenty and not to grow haughty prosperous Winds soon fill the Sailes but blowing too strongly overturn the Vessel how few are able to carry a full Cup without spilling to manage plenty without pride men grow rich and then high minded and that 's the next way to ruine 2. Idlenesse an easie carelesse life maketh way for danger God sent all into the world for action standing pooles putrifie and things not used contract rust so doth id●e persons settle into vile and degenerate lusts 3. Fulnesse of bread that is corporal delights Luk. 17. 28. They eat they drunk they bought they sold they builded their whole lives were but a diversion from one pleasure to another how soon are earthly comforts abused into luxury and excesse Fulnesse of estate maketh way for fulnesse of bread and many beastly sins 4. Vnmercifulnesse you never knew any Prodigal but they were also uncharitable as Sodom here and the Epicure Luk. 16. and you shall see James 5. 4
that he should act freely and entertain us as a King not as an Host Merit taketh off something of his Royalty and supream Majesty Touching the Mercy of God give me leave to give you a few Observations 1. 'T is the aim of the whole Scripture to represent God merciful 'T is true God is infinitely just as well as infinitely merciful but he delighteth in gracious discoveries of himself to the creature he counteth it his glory Moses was earnest with God to shew him his Glory and then God proclaimeth his Name Exod. 34. 5 6. The Lord the Lord merciful and gracious long-suffering and abundant in goodness and truth keeping mercy for thousands forgiving iniquity transgression and sin c. In this description there is more spoken of his Mercy then of his Justice and first his Mercy is described and then his Justice for Justice is only added to invite men to take hold of his Mercy and to shew that Justice is never exercised but in avenging the quarrel of abused Mercy So he is called a God of pardon Nehem. 9. 17. as if wholly made up of sweetness So 2 Cor. 1. 3. he is called Father of mercies and God of all consolations He is a just God but he is not called the Father of Justice Mercy is natural to him he counteth it as the proper fruit and product of the divine Essence 2. Mercy is represented as his delight and pleasure So Micah 7. 18. Mercy pleaseth him 'T is an act exercised with complacency Judgment is called his strange work Isai 28. 21. God loveth to bless and protect to destroy is not suitable to his disposition 't is a thing that he is forced to Punitive acts in the representations of the Word are more against his bowels drawn and extorted from him as Jer. 44. 22. The Lord could no longer bear because of your doings their sins were so clamorous that they would not let God be quiet he would bear no longer unless they would make an Idol of him But now all acts of grace and favour are exercised with delight I will rejoyce over them to do them good Jer. 32. 41. 'T is as pleasing to God to do it as 't is to us to receive it The Scripture after the manner of men doth often represent a Conflict in the Attributes about sinners and if Mercy get the upper-hand 't is always with joy and triumph Jam. 2. 13. Mercy rejoyceth over Judgment but if he be compelled to strike and Justice must be exercised the Scriptures represent a reluctation in his bowels Lam. 3. 33. He doth not afflict willingly nor grieve the children of men in the original from his heart but is like a Father with a rod in his hand and tears in his eyes 3. The Scripture representeth God as exercising mercy though with some present disadvantage to his Glory As mercy to the Ninivites though the credit of his Message lay at stake Niniveh shall be destroyed in forty days yet God spared it and therefore Jonah in a pet challengeth him for it Jon. 4. 2. Lord was not this my saying when I was in my Country ●or I knew that thou wert a gracious God As if he said I knew 't would come to this that the Prophets of Israel should be disgraced before the men of Niniveh and to threaten Judgments in his Name is to expose our selves to derision when we have done our errand free-grace will make us all lyars To this effect did he expostulate with God God might easily destroy sinners with much honour to himself but he is long-suffering even then when his patience for a while seemeth to impair the revenues of Heaven The World suspects his Being the Saints quarrel his Justice and question his Love and all because the wicked are prosperous and God keepeth silence The great stumbling block at which most have dashed the foot of their faith is the suspension of due Judgments What was the effects of his patience to them of Aslyria and Babylon The Lord himself telleth you Isai 52. 5. My Name every day is blasphemed that was all he got by it his people suffered in person and God himself in his reputation all that he got was blasphemies and reproaches and injuries So Psal 50. 21. I kept silence and thou thoughtst that I was every way like thy self that was the effect gross conceits of his Glory and Essence When Judgments are quick and speedy the World is under greater awe the confidence of the Saints is strengthened and supported and Gods honour is more clear and unstained yet with all these disadvantages to his Glory if we may speak so God forbeareth Certainly his heart is much set upon the honour of his Mercy that God will glorifie it though other Attributes seem to suffer loss 4. The Scriptures speak much of his readiness to receive returning sinners Though they have done infinite wrong to his Holiness yet upon repentance and as soon as they begin to submit Mercy embraceth and huggeth them as if there had been no breach Luk. 15. 20. I will go to my Father and the Father ran to meet him So Isai 56. 20. Before they call c. So Psal 32. 5. I said and thou forgavest c. So Jer. 31. 17 with 20. I have heard Ephraim bemoaning himself c. and presently Oh my dear and pleasant child The first relentings of the creature work upon the bowels of Mercy Love's pace is very swift it runneth to meet a returning sinner Christ cometh skipping over the Mountains Cant. 2. 8. He thinketh that he can never be soon enough with us He would fain have the company of sinners and therefore meeteth them more then half way When we but conceive a purpose we presently receive the fruit of his early mercies 5. God doth not only admit them to come but of his own accord inviteth them that are slack and backward The Scriptures do every where record the intreaties of God he draweth us with coards of Love coards that are woven and spun out of Christs heart and bowels In one place thus Cant. 4. 8. Come away from Lebanon my Sister my Spouse from the Lions dens from the mountains of Leopards Christs love is hot and burning he thinketh we tarry too long from his embraces So Cant. 5. 2. Open to me my Sister my Spouse c. Christ stands begging for entrance Lost man do but suffer me to save thee poor sinner suffer me to love thee These are the charms of Gospel Rhetorick So Isai 49. Harken to me and attend to the words of my mouth c. Oh sinners you will not harken to me for the good of your Souls You see none singeth so sweetly as the Bird of Paradise the Turtle that chirpeth upon the Churches hedges that he may cluck sinners to himself The Scripture is full of such an holy witchcraft such passionate charms to entise Souls to their happiness 6. They that constantly refuse the offers of his grace are
understand it disputare vis mecum mirare mecum clama O Altitudo Gods Decrees are hard meat not easily digested by carnal reason a proud creature cannot endure to hear of Gods soveraignty it awakeneth our security to hear of a distinction in the Counsels of God and that grace runneth in a narrower channel then whole Mankind do but consider amongst the Angels some are past by and others confirmed and who art thou O man that replyest Sixthly In the Election of Angels pardoning mercy is not so much glorified as in the election and calling of men then was grace shewed but not mercy none of the fallen Angels were saved but fallen man is called to grace in Christ we were all in our blood when God said Live the whole lump and mass of mankinde was fallen probably next to the free Counsels of God that was the reason the whole humane nature fell but not the whole Angelical nature but onely a part of it so that the Kinde it self needed not to be repaired their sins argued more malice because of the height of their understanding they sinned without a Tempter but the reason of reasons is the will and gracious good pleasure of God who was willing to shew pardoning mercy to us and not to them the good Angels had confirmation but we redemption we are reconciled they continued love after a breach made is more remarkable Seventhly from the sin in general by which they fell was by pride see the danger of this sin it alwayes goeth before falling the Angels lost their holiness out of a desire of greatness they would be over all and under none t is dangerous when men minde rather be great then good In Scripture we have two notable instances of the fall by pride and our restoration by humility the Angels fell by pride and aspiring and Christ restored mankinde by being humble lowly and submitting himselfe even to the death of the Cross Adam would be as God and so ruined us and Christ that was God became as man and so saved us to counterwork Sathan he layeth aside the glory of his Godhead he layeth aside the glory of his Godhead and puts on an humble garb saving as not by power but by suffering well then look upon pride as the sure forerunner of a fall Eighthly Observe the particular fact is uncertain though the general sin may be known as how this pride was discovered whether in a thought or by some bold attempt is not known it doth not so much pertain to edification and salvation to know their sin as to know our own The Scriptures direct us to look inward 't is more for our profit to keep out Sathans power then to know the circumstances of his fall let us not fall with him Peter would know Johns end but Christ rebuketh him what is that to thee follow thou me Joh. 21. 20 22. We betray our duties by our curiosity surely we should be more at home and look to our beame that we may not ascite others before the chair of censure but our selves before the tribunal of conscience Ninthly Observe that the first sin that ever was was a punishment to its selfe they kept not their first estate the sin is expressed in such a phrase as doth imply their loss duty hath its reward in its mouth as the sacks of the Patriarchs their moneys so sin its punishment never think that you shall get any thing by offending God you do but defile and debase and degrade your selves from your own excellency when you sin 't is Hell enough to turn away from God and misery enough to polute and stain an image in our soules the fall of the Angels is described to be a departure from their own happiness Secondly Consider it with Application to your selves First apply it for humiliation we left 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 our first estate as well as the Angels God made man upright but they sought out many inventions Eccles 7. 29. Read your own guilt and Apostacy in the sin of the Angels usually the Page is whipped to shew the Prince his fault but here the Princes and noblest part of the world are set out to us for examples that in their ruine and dreadful fall we might understand our own Do but observe the Parable they had 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an original estate of happinesse and holinesse and so we they fell soon so we they fell by Pride so we the Angelical fall is our glass we are a kind of Divels and Apostates from God they were driven out of Heaven so we out of Paradise they are punished with darkness and so we Secondly apply it for Caution there is a new beginning in Christ the Apostle saith Heb. 3. 14. We are made partakers of Christ if we ●old 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the beginning of our confidence steadfast unto the end If we should break with God again upon this new stock there will be no more sacrifice for sin faith which is the gift of Gods grace is the beginning and root of a new life in Christ if we should forfeit this we cannot expect God will deal with us any more We are now come to the phrases that imply their punishment and that we made to be two-fold Present and Future the first part of the present punishment is paene d●ni their loss implyed in that clause leaving their own habitation in which their guilt is further intimated for the Apostle here maketh it to be their act but Peter in the paralel place maketh it Gods act 2 Pet. 2. 4. God spared not his Angels that sinned but cast them down to Hell without further diversion we may take up the point thus That the Apostate Angels upon their sin and fal departed from that place of happiness and glory which before they enjoyed So Rev. 12. 8. Their place was found no more in heaven and the great Dragon was cast out that old Serpent called the Divel and Sathan which deceiveth the whole world he was cast out into the earth and his Angels were cast out with him That Scripture I confess is mystical and speaketh of the overcumming of Sathan in this present world and casting him out of the Church which is there expressed by Heaven as the World by Earth For I observe in that book the Church is sometimes expressed by terms suitable to the Jud●ical state So in Rev. 11. 2. The Church is called the Temple and the World the Court and sometimes by the Celestial state and so the Church is called Heaven and the World Earth but however there is a plain allusion to Sathans first fall from Heaven as the ground of these expressions and therefore I may use that place as a proof in this matter that you may understand the loss of the Angels give me leave to lay down these propositions 1. The place of their Innocency was Heaven round about the Throne of God where the good Angels do
his Rank and Ministry Note That sin is a bold contest or a daring of God Every sin is an affront to the Law that forbiddeth it 2 Sam. 12. 9. Wherefore hast thou sinned in ●espising the Commandment a sinner doth in effect say What care I for the Commandment I will go on for all that but a godly man feareth the Commandment Prov. 13. 13. If a Law of God standeth in his way he durst not go forward he feareth more to break a Law then to meet with the Devil in all his ruff or any opposition from the world this is a holy timerousness whereas on the contrary no such boldness as in sinning 't is not onely a despising of the Law but a contest with God himself 1 Cor. 10. 22. Do we provoke the Lord to jealousie are we stronger than he will you enter into the lists with God as if you could make your part good against him Ezekiel 22. 14. He that sins against light and conscience he biddeth open defyance to the Majesty of God and his lust and Gods will do contend for the mastery Let this make us afraid of sin 't is a daring attempt of the Creature against his Maker a challenging of God to the Combate well might the Apostle say that the carnal mind is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 enmity against God Rom. 8. 7. Therefore when you are tempted consider What am I now a doing Shall I challenge the Combat of my Maker Draw Omnipotency about my ears An Angel durst not How can I do this wickedness and sin against God Gen. 39 9. Again It informeth us what is the proper remedy against sin an holy awe and fear therefore the first and chiefest point of true wisedom is made to be the fear of God Prov. 9. 10 so Prov 14. 21. this keepeth the soul from daring Jobs es●hewing evil is ascribed to his fearing God Job 1. 1. There are two Grounds of this fear Gods Power and Goodness 1. Gods Power Shall we contend with Him who can command Legions surely he will always overcome ●hen he judgeth Rom. 3. 4. and have the best of it at last and so this sin will be my ruin there is a difference between striving with him in a sinfull and wrestling with him in a gracious way there God will be overcome by his own strength Command ye me c. Isaiah 45. 11. but when you have the confidence to contest with him in a sinfull way what will become of you Psalm 76. 7. Thou even thou art to be feared and who can stand in thy wrath when thou art angry Man may make his part good against man but who can cope with the Lord himself 2. Gods Love and Mercy That should beget a fear or an unwillingness to displease God Hosea 3. 5. They shall fear the Lord and his goodness not only abstain from sin as a Dogg from the bait for fear of a Cudgel out of bondage or servile fear but out of an holy childlike affection to God and so do not only forbear sin but abhor it 't is base and servile when we are moved with no other respects but our own danger there is an holy fear which ariseth from grace and partly of nature an Arch-Angel durst not that is the holiness of his Nature would not permit him there is an holy reverend fear by which we fear to offend our good God as the greatest evil in the world and it ariseth partly from the new Nature and partly from thankfulness to God because of his Mercy in Jesus Christ I have done with this Note when I have told you That boldness in sinning resembleth the Devil but an holy fear resembleth Michael 't is Devil like to adventure upon sin without fear and shame Satan had the impudency to seek to defeat the Lords purpose of burying the body of Moses but the good Angel in opposing him durst not bring a railing accusation Certainly They that fear neither God nor man Luke 18. 7. have out-grown the heart of a man and are next to the Devils many account it a praise to themselves when they are bold to ingage in vilanous actions and attempts Oh to be presumptious and self-willed is the worst Character that can be given to a man a stubborn boldness argueth a seared conscience Once more from that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He durst not That the Angels are of a most holy Nature which will not permit them to sin Therefore they are called holy Angels Mat. 25. 31. and the Devils unclean spirits In their Apparitions they usually came in a Garb that represented their innocency as at Christs Sepulchre there were two Angels in white the one at head the oth●r at feet where Jesus had lain Mat 28. 4. so to Daniel Dan 10. 5. one appeared having his loins girt with fine Gold of Vphaz with long white Robes Gold to shew his Majesty in white Robes as an Emblem of purity and holiness see Acts 10. 2. Now this holiness they have partly by the gift of God in their Creation God made them so at the first which may beget an hope in us men the same God must sanctifie us that made the holy Angels surely he can wash us though never so filthy and make us whiter then snow Psalm 51. 7. Partly by the merit of Christ which reached to things in Heaven as well as in earth Col. 1. 20 Eph. 1. 10. if those places be not cogent but be thought to intend the glorified Saints yet because they are called Elect Angels 1 Tim. 5. 21. And all election is carryed on in and by Christ Eph. 1. 4. It seemeth probable at least that they have benefit by him yea Heb 12 22 23. they are made a part of that general Assembly of which Christ is the Head and so by consequence they are members of the redeemed society which should incourage us the more to come to Christ Angels have much of their whiteness from being washed in Christs blood they are preserved in Jesus Christ as well as we and have their confirmation from him or else they had faln with the other Apostate Spirits Again This Holiness is the more increased and augmented 1. By their constant Communion with God for their always beholding his Face must needs beget the more holy awe and reverence Michael durst not c. 'T is a great advantage to holiness to set God before our eyes and to foresee him in all our ways Psalm 18. 23. I was upright before thee that is the thought of his being before God made him more sincere He that doth evil hath not seen God in the third Epistle of John vers 11. that is hath no acquaintance with him the good Angels being so neer the chiefest good are at the greater distance from evil 2. By their continual obedience They do his Commandments hearkening to the voice of his word Psalm 103. 20. exercise perfecteth and strengthneth every habit the Angels the more they do the will
measure of faith loose hopes weaken endeavors 1 Cor. 9. 26. Irun not as one uncertain Those that ran a race gave over when one had far out-gone them as being discouraged and without hope When hope is broken the edg of endeavors is blunted Go on with confidence you are assured of the issue God will bless you and keep you to his everlasting Kingdom 5. In the hour of death when all things else fail you God will not fail you this is the last brunt do but wait a little while and you will find more behind then ever you enjoyed death shall not separate as Olevian comforted himself with that Isai 54. 10. The hills and mountains may depart but my loving-kindness shall not depart from you being in the agonies of death he said Sight is gone speech and hearing is departing feeling is almost gone but the loving-kindness of God will never depart The Lord give us such a confidence in that day that we may dye glorying in the Preservation of our Redeemer VERSE II. Mercy unto you and Peace and Love be multiplyed WE are now come to the third thing in the Inscription and that is the form of salutation delivered as all Apostolical salutations are in the way of a prayer In which we may observe 1. The matter of the prayer or blessings prayed for which are three Mercy Peace and Love 2. The manner or degree of enjoyment be multiplyed I begin with the matter or blessings prayed for It will not be altogether unuseful to observe that diversity which is used in salutations In the Old Testament peace was usually wished without any mention of grace as Psal 122. 8. For my brethrens and companions sake I will say Peace be within thee and ●an 6. 25. Peace be multiplyed unto you But in the times of the Gospel grace being more fully delivered that was also added and expressed in the forms of salutation but yet in the times of the Gospel there is some variety and difference Sometimes you shall meet with a salutation meerly civil as James 1. 1. To the twelve Tribes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 greeting so Acts 15. 23. which was the usual salutation among the Heathen but most usually 't is grace and peace and in other places grace mercy and peace as 2 John 3. and 1 Tim. 1. 2. and here it differeth from them all for 't is mercy peace and love And Causaubon observeth that the Greek Fathers if they wrote to a earnal man they would wish him grace but not peace if to a godly man they would wish him grace and peace too To touch upon these things is sufficient From these Blessings mentioned in this place I shall observe something in general and then handle them particularly and apart First In the general Consideration you may observe 1. That spiritual blessings are the best blessings that we can wish to our selves and others The Apostles in their salutations do not wish temporal felicity but spiritual grace Gods people pray for one another out of the communion of the Spirit and for themselves out of a principle of the divine Nature and therefore they do not seek wealth and honour for themselves or one another but increase of Gods favour and Image 'T is true Nature is allowed to speak in prayer but grace must be heard first our first and chiefest requests must be for mercy peace and love and then other things shall be added to us the way to be heard in other things is first to beg for grace Psal 21. 4. He asked life of thee and thou gavest him length of days for ever Solomon sought wisdom and together with it found riches and honour in great abundance Well then if thou prayest for thy self make a wise choyce beg for spiritual blessings so David prayeth Psal 106. 4. Remember me O Lord with the favour that thou bearest unto thine own people nothing less would content him then Favorites mercy other blessings are dispensed out of common pity to the generality of men but these are mercies privilegiate and given to Favorites now saith David of this mercy Lord no common blessing would serve his turn So Psal 119. 132. Look upon me and be merciful to me as thou usest to do to those that love thy Name Surely that which God giveth to his people that 's a better mercy then that which God giveth to his enemies Again these are mercies that cost God dearer they flow to you in the Blood of his own Son yea they are mercies that are better in themselves wealth and honour may become a burden yea life it self may become a burden but not mercy not grace not peace of Conscience and therefore they are better then life Psal 63. 3. then wealth then honour none ever complained of too much mercy of too much love of God These are blessings that swallow up other miseries yea the loss of other blessings grace with poverty 't is a preferment peace of Conscience with outward troubles is an happy condition if there be a flowing of spiritual comforts as there is an ebbing of outward comforts we are not much wronged therefore first seek these bleseings Again If you pray for others pray for grace in the first place that 's an evidence of spiritual affection Carnal men wish such things to others as they prize and affect themselves so also do gracious men and therefore their thoughts run more upon mercy peace and grace then wealth and honour and greatness When a man sendeth a token to a friend he would send the best of the kind These are the best mercies if you were to deal with God for your own Souls you can ask no better You may ask temporal things for God loveth the prosperity of his Saints but these special blessings should have the preferment in your wishes and desires of good to them and then you are most likely to speed Our Lord Christ in the 17 of John commendeth the Colledg of the Apostles to the Father and what doth he ask for him dominion and worldly respect Surely no nothing but preservation from evil and sanctification by the Truth these are the chiefest Blessings we should look after as Christians Observe again the aptness of the requests to the persons for whom he prayeth Those that are sanctified and called have still need of mercy peace and love They need mercy because we merit nothing of God neither before grace received nor afterward the very continuance of our glory in Heaven is a fruit of mercy not of merit our obligation to free-grace never ceaseth We need also more peace there are degrees in assurance as well as faith there is a temperate confidence and there are ravishing delights so that peace needs to be multiplyed also And then love that being a grace in us 't is always in progress in Heaven only 't is compleat Take it for love to God there we cleave to him without distraction and weariness or satiety
God in communion is always fresh and new to the blessed spirits And take it for love to the Saints it 's only perfect in Heaven where there is no ignorance pride partialities and factions where Luther and Zuinglius Hooper and Ridley joyn in perfect consort Again Observe the aptness of these requests to the times wherein he prayed when Religion was scandalized by loose Christians and carnal doctrines were obtruded upon the Church In times of defection from God and wrong to the Truth there is great need of mercy peace and love Of mercy that we may be kept from the snares of Satan Christians whence is it that any of us stand that we are found faithful 'T is because we have obtained mercy They would deceive if it were possible the very Elect Mat. 24. 24. Why is it not possible to deceive the Elect as well as others of what mould are they made wherein do they differ from other men I answer Elective grace and mercy interposeth 't is not for any power in themselves but because Mercy hath singled them out and chosen them for a distinct people unto God And we need peace and inward consolations that we may the better digest the misery of the times and love that we may be of one mind and stand together in the defence of the Truth Again Note the aptness of the blessings to the persons for whom he prayeth Here are three blessings that do more eminently and distinctly suit with every person of the Trinity and I do the rather note it because I find the Apostle elsewhere distinguishing these blessings by their proper fountains as Rom. 1. 7. Grace to you and peace from God the Father and our Lord Jesus Christ Sort the blessings right there is grace from the Father and peace from Christ So here is mercy from God the Father who is called the Father of mercies and the God of all comfort 2 Cor. 1. 3. and peace from the Son for he is our peace Ephes 2. 14. and love from the Spirit Rom. 5. 5. The love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given to us Thus you see every Person concureth to our happiness with his distinct blessing In the next place how aptly these blessings are suited among themselves first mercy then peace and then love mercy doth not differ much from that which is called grace in Pauls Epistles only grace doth more respect the bounty of God as mercy doth our want and need By mercy then is meant the favour and good-will of God to miserable creatures and peace signifieth all blessings inward and outward as the fruits and effects of that favour and good-will more especially calmness and serenity of Conscience or a secure enjoying of the love of God which is the top of spiritual prosperity And then love sometimes signifieth Gods love to us here I should rather take it for our love to God and to the Brethren for Gods sake So that mercy is the rise and spring of all peace is the effect and fruit and love is the return He beginneth with mercy for that is the fountain and beginning of all the good things which we enjoy higher then love and mercy we cannot go for Gods Love is the reason of it self Deut. 7. 7 8. Rom. 9. 15. Isai 45. 15. and we can deserve nothing at Gods hands but wrath and misery and therefore we should still honour Mercy and set the Crown upon Mercy 's head as further anon that which you give to Merit you take from Mercy Now the next thing is peace mark the order still without mercy and grace there can be no true peace Isai 57. 21. There is no peace saith my God to the wicked they say Peace peace but my God doth not say so Christ left his peace with his own Disciples John 14. 27. and not as worldly and external peace is left in the happiness of which both good and bad are concerned that is general but this is proper confined within the Conscience of him that enjoyeth it and given to the godly 'T is the Lords method to pour in first the oyl of grace and then the oyl of gladness Alas the peace of a wicked man 't is but a frisk or fit of joy whilest Conscience Gods watchman is naping stoln waters and bread eaten in secret Prov. 9. 17. The way to true peace is to apply your selves to God for mercy to be accepted in Christ to be renewed according to the Image of Christ otherwise sin and guilt will create fears and troubles Again the last thing is love great priviledges require answerable duty Mercy and peace need another grace and that 's love 'T is Gods gift as well as the rest we have graces from God as well as priviledges and therefore he beggeth love as well as mercy and peace but it must be our act though we have the grace from above We would all have mercy and peace but we are not so zealous to have love kindled in our hearts Mercy peace all this runneth downward and respects our interest but love that mounteth upward and respects God himself Certainly they have no interest in mercy and were never acquainted with true peace that do not find their hearts inflamed with love to God and a zeal for his glory that as he hath ordered all things for our profit so we may order and refer all things to his glory and honour Mercy runneth down from God and begets peace of Conscience for peace of Conscience is nothing else but a solid taste of Gods mercy and peace of Conscience begets love by which we clasp about God again for love is nothing else but a reverberation or beating back of Gods beam upon himself or a return of duty in the sense of mercy so that God is at the beginning and ending and either way is the utmost boundary of the Soul all things are from him and to him Secondly Let me handle them particularly and apart and first Mercy which is the rise and cause of all the good we have from God The Lord would dispense blessings in such a way as might beat down despair and carnal conf●●ence Man hath need of mercy but deserveth none Despair would keep us from God and carnal confidence robbeth him of his glory therefore as the Lord would not have flesh to glory so neither to be cut off from all hope Mercy salveth both we need not fly the sight of God there is mercy with him why he should be feared Psal 130. 7. False worships are supported by terror but God that hath the best title to the heart will gain it by love and offers of mercy And we have no reason to ascribe any thing to our selves since Mercy doth all in the Court of Heaven and not Justice If you reckon upon a debt you are sure to miss 'T is a part of Gods Supremacy that all his blessings should come as a gift
born with for a long time Rom. 9. 22. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He endured with much long-suffering c. All may bless God for patience they owe an heavy debt to divine Justice yet 't is a long time ere God putteth the Bond in suit though they dare him to his face yet they walk up and down without the arrest of Vengeance He beareth with them years and years after a thousand and a thousand affronts from their cradles to their graves When they were green wood they were fuel fit enough for divine wrath Oh consider there can be no cause of this but his mercy to his worst creatures 'T is not out of any delight in sin for he is holy and cannot endure to look upon it Hab. 2. 13. Of purer eyes c. 't is not out of any stupid neglect He is just and will not clear the guilty Exod. 34. 7. 't is not out of any ignorance He telleth man his thoughts nor for want of power so men forbear The sons of Zerviah may be too hard for them but 1 Sam. 24. 19. If a man findeth his enemy will he let him go well away When they are in our power we satisfie our wrath and revenge to the full But now God upholdeth all things by the word of his Power He can in a minute speak us into nothing As the impression of a Seal upon the water dependeth upon the Seal if the Seal be taken away the impression vanisheth So do our beings depend upon Providential influence and supportation If God should withdraw the word of his Power we should soon vanish and disappear Therefore 't is not for want of Power but meerly out of Mercy that we are forborn How may we wonder at this We are of eager and tart spirits sharp-set upon revenge Could we have put up so many refusals of Love such despights done to Mercy such wrongs such grievings of Spirit and yet have contained The Disciples themselves though holy men when they were sensible of being slighted in the Village of Samaria called for fire from Heaven Luk. 9. 54. Certainly we could not endure such a contradiction of sinners If thunderbolts were in our power we should soon kindle a burning and turn the World into smoak and desolation 7. 'T is not only the aim of the Word but of Providence and of all the Dispensations of God to the Creature to represent him merciful The whole World is a great Volume written within and without with characters and lines of Mercy Psal 145. 7. His mercy is over all his works Every creature beareth the marks and prints of divine Goodness and Bounty Once more The World is a great Theatre and Stage whereon Mercy hath been acting its part for these six thousand years Justice is to have a solemn triumph at the last day Now and then God hath kept a petty Sessions and given us occasion to say Verily there is a God that judgeth the world as well as preserveth the world But the greatest part that hath been acted upon the Theatre of the World is Mercy as you will easily see if you consider 1. The black lines of Providence If God threaten 't is that he may not punish if he punish 't is that he may not punish for ever In the sadder Providences though there be misery at the top yet there is mercy at the bottom Many times God threateneth but 't is to reclaim though he doth not change his counsel yet he doth often change his sentence Jer. 18. 7 8. When the message is nothing but plucking up and pulling down Free-grace cometh in with a sudden rescue and prevents the execution Mercy you see is forced to use all methods and to speak in the language of Justice that men may be more capable to receive it Sometimes God punisheth but with vvhat aim that he may not for ever punish 'T is vve that make punishment to be a pledg of eternal damnation it its ovvn aim 't is a prevention and so it proveth to the Elect We are judged of the Lord that we may not be condemned of the world 1 Cor. 11. 32. So Hosea 2. 6. I will hedg up her way with thorns c. We should soon grovv vvorldly and drovvned in carnal businesses and projects if God did not come novv and then and blast our enterprizes and make us see our folly We are puffed up and God pricketh the bladder 2 Cor 12. 7. Hovv svveet is this vvhen in the midst of Judgment God remembereth Mercy Yea the very executions of Justice are found to be one of the methods of Mercy In the middle of the first Curse God dropped out a promise of the blessed Seed So often Mercy overtaketh a Judgment and maketh it cease in the mid way Look as there vvas a conflict betvveen the tvvins in Tamars Womb Zarah did put out the hand but Pharez broke out first So is there betvveen Gods Mercy and Justice Justice puts out the hand in a threatening or some beginnings of a Judgment but Mercy gets the start and breaketh out first 2. Consider the white lines of Providence He intreateth that he may do us good and doth us good that he may do us good for ever For his intreaties 'T is not duty so much that is in the bottom of the Exhortation as Mercy To glorifie Mercy is the last aim of God and his eternal Purpose He hath accepted us in the Beloved to the praise of his glorious grace Ephes 1. 6. God receiveth no profit he intreateth us not that he may be happy but that he may be liberal See Prov. 9. 12. If thou be wise thou shalt be wise for thy self but if thou scornest thou alone shalt bear it God dealeth vvith us as earnestly as effectually as if the profit vvere his own but it vvholly redoundeth to us Again He doth us good that he may do us good for ever He trusteth us vvith Mammon to prepare us for the true riches and vvith the riches of grace to prepare us for glory Look as men vvhen they vvould put precious liquor into a vessel first try it vvith water to see vvhether it leaketh or no so doth God try us vvith common mercies he giveth us an estate in the world that being moved vvith his goodness vve may look after an estate in the Covenant and an interest in Christ and so fit us for Heaven 'T is our vvretchedness to make our table a snare and our welfare a trap As the Sea turneth all that it receiveth into salt water the fresh streams the influences of the Heavens c. so do carnal men assimulate and corrupt their comforts and by little and little all their blessings are cursed for Mercy can bear any thing but a constant abuse and neglect of it self Certainly Gods revealed Will is othervvise that vvhich cometh from God should lead us to God see Rom. 2. 4 5. 8. Consider in how many notions Mercy is represented to us Gods Mercy
with the widows clamour be it as you imagine that I have no bowels for creatures miseries nor ears for their requests which yet is a blasphemy confuted by every object in the world the young Ravens will tell you otherwise but be it so you are undone if I be not merciful see what I will do for constant asking Upon all these encouragements be perswaded to make an essay faith at first standeth but upon one weak foot Who knoweth but that God will be gracious There is encouragement enough to venture though we do not know what will come of it Take up a resolution to make tryal you will find better welcome then you can expect God desires to exercise mercy as much as you desire to feel it It presseth us in all our enjoyments to acknowledg Mercy The Saints are wont to do so 'T is good to refer all things to their head and proper fountain Every thing that we enjoy is the fruit of Mercy especially saving grace 'T is a sure sign a man hath received no benefit by grace if his heart be not stirred up to praise it We have cause to praise God for his mercy above the Angels I mean not only the bad Angels with whom God entered not into a treaty he dealt with them in justice and not in mercy but even the good Angels in some respects we have more cause to bless God then they have Gratitude respecteth the freeness and graciousness in giving rather then the greatness of the benefit God was bountiful to the Angels in making them such excellent creatures out of nothing but he is merciful to us notwithstanding the demerit of our sins There was no let in his doing good to the Angels Goodness floweth out freely from an holy God to righteous creatures but wronged Justice interposed and put in a bar against us so that his Justice must be satisfied before Mercy can have a free course We are a generation of sinful men the wretched off-spring of fallen Adam we had forsaken God and cast him off which the Angels had not and therefore though they have a large experience of Gods goodness yet they wonder at the grace shewed to us 1 Pet. 1. 12. But now much more is this mercy to be acknowledged if we consider the difference between us and other men who it may be excelled us in moral accomplishments but God hath passed them by choosing us poor things of nought poor base creatures that the glory might entirely redound to his own grace But especially should this Mercy affect us when it hath made a distinction between us and others that were involved in the same guilt when one is taken and another left as the bad thief went to his own place when the good thief was taken to Paradise and many of Gods Elect were as deep in sin as those in Hell I say in all such cases we should still be crying out Mercy mercy for certainly Justice could make no such distinction it awardeth a like punishment to all that are found in a like crime but Gods infinite and eternal Mercy only maketh the difference 'T is Caution Do not wrong Grace and Mercy if it be the cause of all the good which we enjoy this is to close up the Fountain and to make Mercy our Enemy and if Mercy be our Enemy who shall plead for us If Mercy be an Accuser where shall we get an Advocate But how do we wrong Grace I answer Partly by neglecting the offers of it when you make God speak in vain 2 Cor. 6. 2. 'T is a great affront we put upon God to despise him when he speaketh to us in the still voyce and all the woi●gs and pleading of Mercy do not move to look after our Salvation though you do not despise there is danger in bare neglect Heb. 2. 3. When all the charms of Mercy do no more work with you then a story of golden mountains or Rubies and Diamonds faln from Heaven in a night dream this neglect argueth a greater suspition and distrust of Gods mercy then doubts and troubles of Conscience do Mercy speaketh to them and they do not think the message worth the hearing or regarding Again You wrong Grace by refusing it out of legal dejection for by this means you straiten the riches and darken the glory of it as if there were not more in Grace then there is in sin or as if an Emperors Revenue could not discharge a beggars debt The Prodigal could say there was bread enough in his fathers house If we perish 't is not for want of mercy but for want of faith Grace is Gods treasure he is rich in mercy Ephes 2. 4. As far as we straiten grace we make him a poorer God Again We wrong Grace and Mercy by intercepting the glory of it 'T is the greatest sacriledg that can be to rob God of his Glory especially of the glory of his Grace for that 's his great aim in all his transactions with man to make his Grace and Mercy glorious see Ephes 1. 6. Now when you think God accepteth you rather then others for some worth and good qualities that he seeth in you more then others it may be in this light of the Gospel which we now enjoy such thoughts are not expressed but if they lurk secretly in the heart you think God foresaw you would bring him more glory you take the Crown from Grace's head and put it upon your own So also you wrong Grace when you ascribe any thing to your power and strength as Joab sent for David to take the honour of winning Rabbath 2 Sam. 12. 28. Lest I take the City and it be called after my own name So send for God to take the honour Not I but grace 1 Cor. 15. 10. Throw the Crown at Grace's feet The industrious servant said Thy pound hath gained ten pounds Luke 19. 16. not my industry but thy pound Once more We wrong Grace by turning it into wantonness see Vers 4. 't is made there to be an heavy charge and black note when men presume on Grace and use it only as a dung-cart to carry away their filth Grace must bear all and pardon all as riotous children that have a rich father care not how they spend his estate shall pay for all 'T is a mighty wrong to Grace this when you make it pliable to such vile purposes and father the bastards of your own carnal hearts upon Gospel encouragements 'T is the Devils Covenant not Gods when you think that you may live as you list be at your own dispose and mercy shall be at your beck and you shall have comfort when you please and that you may sin freely because God pardoneth freely as if Mercy gave you a priviledg and liberty to sin In short If a man slackens any part of his duty for Mercy 's sake or le ts loose the reins to vile affections with more freedom upon the
and overcome with the vehemency of any passion as mans is this maketh the wonder there is no blindness and passion in him that loveth and yet the thing that is loved is vile and uncomely 3. The frequency of the expressions of his Love It would weary the arm of an Angel to write down Gods repeated Acts of Grace Rom. 5. 17. The free gift is of many offences unto Justification We carry loads of experiences with us to Heaven Gods Book of Remembrance is written within and without This will be our wonder and amazement at the last day to see such huge sums cancelled with Christs blood Every day pardoning mercy is put in Our past lives are but a constant experience of our sinning and Gods pardoning We are weary of every thing but sin we are never weary of that because 't is natural to us The very refreshments of life by continuance grow burdensom Meat drink musick sleep the chiefest pleasures vvithin a vvhile need to be refreshed vvith other pleasures Man is a restless creature and loveth shift and change But now vve are never weary of sin we have it from the womb and we keep it to the grave and yet all this while we subsist upon God we subsist upon him every moment We have life and breath and hourly maintenance from him whom we thus grieve and offend Dependance should beget observance but in us 't is otherwise As a dunghill sendeth out vapors to obscure the Sun that shineth upon it so do we dishonour the God of our mercies and grieve him day by day How long hath God been multiplying pardons and yet Free-grace is not tyred and grown weary 4. Consider the variety of the expressions of his Love We have all kind of mercies we eat mercy we wear mercy we are encompassed with mercy as with a shield The Apostle saith 2 Pet. 1. 3. He hath given us all things that pertain to life and godliness that is as I would interpret all things that are necessary to life natural to life spiritual to maintain grace here and to bring us to glory hereafter He that hath an interest in Christ his portion is not straitened he hath a right to all things and a possession of as much as Providence judgeth needful therein we must not be our own carvers A man of mortified affections thinketh he hath provision enough if he hath things necessary to life and godliness and will you not love God for all this Certainly we do not want obligations but we want affections Look as too much wood puts out the fire and causeth smoak so the multitude and dayly experience of Gods mercies lesseneth the esteem of them We have but too many mercies and that maketh us unkind and neglectful of God What shall I tell you of Sabbaths Ordinances food rayment If a man would be but his own remembrancer and now and then come to an account with God he would cry out Oh the multitude of thy thoughts to us-ward how great is the sum of them Psal 139. Or if a man would but keep a journal of his own life what a vast volume would his private experiences make how would he find mercy and himself still growing up together Shall I shew you a little what a multitude of mercies there are I will not speak of the higher and choycer mercies such as concern the soul but of such as concern the body What a deal of provision is there for the comfort and welfare of the body I instance in these mercies partly because they are so common that they are scarce noted partly because carnal men prize the body most they prefer it above the Soul now the Lord would leave them without excuse they that love the body shall not want arguments to urge them to love God since he hath bestowed so much of his love and care upon the body to gratifie all the senses not only for necessity but delight There is light for the eye the poorest man hath glorious lamps to light him to his labours For the taste such variety of refreshments of a different sap and savour For the smell delicious infusions into the ayr from flowers and gums and aromatick plants For the ears musick from birds and men and all this to make our pilgrimage comfortable and our hearts better How many creatures hath the Lord given us to help to bear burdens how many things for meat and medicine If man had not been created last after the World was setled and furnished vve should have seen the vvant of many things vvhich vve novv enjoy and do not value First God provided our house and then furnished our table and vvhen all vvas ready then man is brought in as the Lord of all We are not affected vvith these mercies Hovv can vve sin against God that can look no where but vve see arguments and reasons to love him As Christ said Many good works have I done amongst you for which of these do you stone me So may the Lord plead I have done many things for you you cannot open your eyes but you see love you cannot vvalk abroad but you smell love and hear love c. for vvhich of those do you grieve me and deal so despightfully vvith me Let me now come to the Effects of Gods Love I shall only instance in those three great Effects Creation Preservation and Redemption Certainly that must needs be a great benefit out of which there flies not only sparks but brands and so that Love which can produce such fruits and effects must needs be exceeding great 1. Creation This deserveth love from the creature The fruit of the Vineyard belongeth to him that planted it and whom should we love but him that gave us the power to love All that thou hast all that thou canst see that thou canst touch is his gift and the work of his hands He gave thee the essence not of a tree a bird a beast but of a man capable of reason fit for happiness God made other creatures by a word of Command and man by Councel 't was not Be thou but Let us make man to shew that the whole Trinity assisted and joyned in consultation He made other creatures for his glory but not for his love and service God is glorified in them passively as they give us occasion to glorifie God the creatures are the harp but man maketh the musick All thy works praise thee and thy Saints bless thee Psal 145. 10. How many steps may a Christian ascend in his praise and thanksgiving We might have been stones without sense beasts and without reason born infidels and without faith We might have continued sinners and without grace all these are so many steps of mercy But Creation is that we are now to speak of and truly it deserveth a remembrance especially in youth when the effects of Gods creating bounty are most fresh in our sense and feeling We are always to remember our
Creator but then especially The aches of old serve to put us in mind of our ingratitude but the strength and vigor and freshness of youth should make us remember the bounty of our Creator Look upon the body or the soul and you will see that we have cause to love him In the body we find as many mereies as there are limbs If a man should be born blind or lame or should lose an eye or an arm or a leg how much would he love him that should restore the use of these members again We are as much bound to love him that gave them to us at first especially when we consider how often we have deserved to lose them We would love him that should raise us from the dead God is the Author of life and the continual Preserver and Defender of it If we love our parents that begot us we should much more love God that made them and us too out of nothing Take notice of the curious frame of the body David saith Psal 139. 16. I am wonderfully made accepictus sum so the Vulgar rendereth it painted as with a needle like a garment of needle-work of divers colours richly embroydered with nerves and veins What shall I speak of the eye wherein there is such curious Worshmanship that many upon the first sight of it have been driven to acknowledg God Of the hand made to open and shut and to serve the labours and ministeries of Nature without wasting and decay for many years if they should be of marble or iron with such constant use they would soon wear out and yet now they are of flesh they last as long as life lasteth Of the head fitly placed to be the seat of the senses to command and direct the rest of the members Of the lungs a frail piece of flesh yet though in continual motion of a long use 'T were easie to enlarge upon this occasion But I am to preach a Sermon not to read an Anatomy Lecture In short therefore every part is so placed and framed as if God had employed his whole Wisdom about it But as yet we have spoken but of the casket wherein the Jewel lieth the Soul that divine spark and blast how quick nimble various and indefatigable in its motions how comprehensive in its capacities how it animateth the body and is like God himself all in every part Who can trace the flights of Reason What a value hath God set upon the Soul He made it after his Image he redeemed it with Christs Blood c. Well then God that made such a body such a soul deserveth love He that made the Soul hath most right to dwell in it 't is a curious house of his own framing But he will not enter by force and violence but by consent he expecteth when love will give up the keys Rev. 3. 17. Behold I stand at the door and knock if any man open to me I will come in and sup with him Why should Christ stand at the door and knock and ask leave to enter into his own house he hath right enough to enter only he expecteth till we open to him 2. Preservation We are not apprehensive enough of dayly mercies The Preservation of the World is a constant Miracle The World is hanged upon nothing as 't is in the Book of Job A feather will not stay in the ayr and yet what hath the World to support it but the thin fluid ayr that is round about it 'T is easie to prove that the Waters are higher then the Land so that we are always in the case the Israelites were in when they passed through the Red Sea Nos sumus etiam tanquam in medio rubri maris saith Luther the Waters are round about us and above us bound up in an heap as it were by God and yet we are not swallowed up 'T is true the danger is not so sensible and immediate as that of the Red Sea because of the constant rampire of Providence More particularly from the womb to the grave we have hourly maintenance from God Look as the beams in the ayr are no longer continued then the Sun shineth so we do no longer continue then God upholdeth our beings by the word of his Power Heb. 1. 3. Or as 't is with a Seal in the Water take away the seal and the impress vanisheth so do we disappear as soon as God doth but loosen his Hand and almighty Grasp by which all things are upheld and preserved But let us speak of those acts of Providence that are more sensible Into how many diseases and dangers might we fall if God did not look after us as the Nurse after her child How many have gone to the grave nay it may be to Hell since the last night How many actual dangers have we escaped God hath looked after us as if he had forgotten all the world besides as if his whole employment were to do us good He saith that he will no more forget us then a woman doth her sucking child and that we are written before him and graven in the palms of his hands Isai 45. 15 c. as men tye a string about their ●inger for a remembrance or record in a book such things as they would regard all these are expressions to describe the particular and express care of Gods Providence over his children Now what shall be rendered to the Lord for all this If we could do and suffer never so much for God it will not answer the mercy of one day Certainly at least God expecteth love for love Love him as he is the strength of thy life and length of thy days Deut. 30. 26. Every days experience is new fuel to keep in the fire The very beasts will respect their preservers they are loving to those that are kind to them The Ass knoweth his owner and the Ox his masters crib There is a kind of gratitude in the beasts by which they acknowledg their benefactors that feed them and cherish them But we do not acknowledg God who feedeth us and upholdeth us every moment There is ●● creature made worse by kindness then man He that was made to be Master of the creatures may become their Scholer there is many a good lesson to be learned in their School 3. Redemption As a man when he weigheth a thing casteth in weight after weight till the scales be counterpoysed so doth God mercy after mercy to poyse down mans heart Here is a mercy that is overweight in it self 1 John 4. 10. Herein is love not that we loved God but that God loved us and sent his Son to be a propitiation for our sins If we had had the wisdom to pitch upon such a remedy as certainly it could not have entered into hearts of men or Angels yet we could not have the heart to ask it It would have seemed a rude blasphemy in our prayers to desire that the Son of God
in any onely permitteth it and endureth it and serveth his righteous ends of it Rom. 9. 24. He endureth with much long suffering the vessels of wrath fitted for destruction he preprreth the vessels of mercy as the Apostle there expresseth but endureth the vessels of wrath while they fit themselves for ruine 4. Sin is the cause of punishment though Gods will is the cause why they are passed by they are not punished because not elected but because not obedient Wherefore doth a living man complain but for his sins Lam. 3. 39. t is here as it was in that case David gave order to Solomon that Joab and Shime● should not dye in peace 1 King 2. Yet Davids order was no cause of Joabs death but his own treason nor of Shimeis death but his own flight God never damneth the creature or decreeth to damn it without respect of sin Gods Will is the cause of Preterition his Justice is the cause of Predamnation for damnation is an act of punitive Justice God is so just that he doth not condemn any but for sin so gracious that he doth not condemn every man that doth sin 5. The formal and proper end of God in Reprobation is not the eternal destruction of the creature but the discovery of his own Justice or glory promoted or shining forth in and by that destruction in Election God desireth and effecteth the salvation of a sinner in a subordination to his own glory but in Preterition God endureth a sinner with much long suffering till by his own destruction he bringeth to him the glory of his justice Ezek 23. 11. As I live saith the Lord I desire not the death of a sinner So Ezek. 18. 23. Have I any pleasure at all that the wicked should dye the meaning is God doth not will these things with such a will as is terminated in the destruction of the creature but onely ordereth them in a subornination to his own glory or in plainer terms God delighteth not in the destruction of a sinner as 't is the destruction of the creature but as it is the execution of Justice in the execution of a malefactor there is a difference between punishment and destruction his punishment is of the Judge his destruction is of himself so in this case Thy destruction is of thy self O Israel Hos 13. 9. 2. Concerning the second Objection whether it doth not infringe our comfort and discourage men from looking after their Salvation If I am elected I shall be saved if I am not Elected I shall be damned thus many men plead say they and how will you stir up the negligent and incourage the distressed supposing that doctrine which you have layd down I Answer this scruple is but affected not offered and therefore should be chidden and not Answered a questioning Gods secret will when we know his revealed Gods secret will hath relation to his own actions his revealed will to ours we must not look to Gods Will in the depths of his Counsel but his precepts not what God will do himself but what he will have us do God saith Beleeve in Christ and thou shalt be saved that 's our rule a Physitian offereth cure to all that will come 't were a madness to dispute away the opportunity and say I do not know whether he intendeth it to me if men were ready to perish in the deep waters and a Boat should be offered to carry to land as many as would come in it to be making scruples when we are ready to be drowned whether this help be intended to us yea or no were a very fond thing in such cases we would not wrangle but thankful take hold of what is offered 2. This Doctrine can be no ground of despair to any because reprobation is a sealed book no man for the present can know his reprobation nor is to beleeve himself to be a Reprobate but is called upon to use the means that he may be saved he is no Reprobate that falleth into sin but he that persevereth in sin unto the end therefore it is no good conclusion I am a sinner therefore I am a Reprobate 't is midnight therefore 't wil never be day this is a Book sealed with seven seals none but the Lamb can open it 3. The opposite opinion is encumbred with more difficulties and scruples what comfort can a man have in Vniversal Redemption a man cannot have solid comfort in that which is common to good and bad to those that shall be damned and those which shall be saved all comfort ariseth from a practical syllogism now make the practical syllogism according to the principles of Vniversal grace Christ dyed for all men I am a man therefore for me where humanity or being a man is made the ground of claim and interest and then unless with Puccius and Huberus we hold universal salvation as well as universal redemption the argument wil yield no comfort how can I according to that opinion comfort my self in the death of Christ when men maybe damned that have no interest in it 4. As to the other part of this Objection concerning the profit of this Doctrine and whether it doth not take off men from industry so some have thought But I Answer no For 1. God hath enjoyned the end and the means together Except ye abide in the Ship ye cannot be saved saith Paul to them that sayled with him a Decree was past for their safety that not a man of them should perish yet they must abide in the Ship God doth infallibly stir up the Elect to the use of means as well as bring to such an end 2. The right use of the Doctrine of reprobation is to put us upon examination or diligence upon examination whether we beleeve in Christ or have truly repented that we may make our calling and election pure 2 Pet. 1. 10. For by this means is the sealed Fountain broken open Or upon diligence in case you finde no fruits of Elective love pray read hear meditate wait work out your salvation c. 3. The Doctrine of Election is of great use in the spiritual life without it we cannot understand the freeness of Gods love which is the great means to quicken us to praise God and to beget love to God again for as fire kindleth fire so doth love beget love 't is Gods glory to be served out of love and free consent the devil ruleth his slaves by a servile awe well then if love set love a worke and the best sight of Gods love be in Gods Decree let them say if they dare that the Doctrine of Gods Decree is an unprofitable Doctrine again nothing taketh off carnal confidence and glorying in our selves more then Gods choise according to his own pleasure nothing is a greater support in afflictions especially in distresses of conscience In short nothing is such a firm bond of love between beleevers then the consideration that they are all predestinated from all
Lord thou hast greatly deceived this people because the false Prophets had done it in his name false doctrines make God to be the deceiver and these ill consequences drawn from the Gospel are in effect charged upon the Spirit who is the author of it Well then learn the truth as it is in Jesus Ephes 4. 21. First Make him your Teacher flesh and blood will stumble in Gods plainest wayes we cannot learn any Gospel truth of our selves but we are apt to pervert it to an ill use 2. Take the whole doctrine together for it is the truth as it is in Jesus otherwise 't is the truth as 't is in the mouth of a false Teacher half truth hath filled the world with loosness when men divide between Christs comforts and Christs graces his Priesthood and his Regality his Benefits and his Laws these partial apprehensions spoyl all 3. As to your maner of learning let it be saving and such as tends to practice 't is not enough to make Christ our Teacher by using his Word and looking for the direction of his Spirit and to make the whole counsel of God our lesson but also we must learn to a saving purpose to put off the Old man to put on the New and not to store the brain with knowledge so much as the heart with grace for to this end is the Gospel given to us not for science so much as practies to make us better rather than wiser and more knowing Another Use is Examination to put us upon tryal whether we doe not yea or no turn the Grace of God into wantonness A man may be right in Doctrine and yet the constitution of his spirit may be naught Again there may be a fond dotage on the name of Christ and yet no real respect to him therefore it behoves us to search how the Gospel works with us 1. Are you not the better for the knowledge of it if you are not the better you are the worse if you know Christ and come short of the houre of his Grace you know him in vain you make Christ and the Gospel an uselesse thing compare 2 Cor. 6. 1. with Col. 1. 6. there is a receiving the Grace of God in vain and a knowing the grace of God in truth we receive it in vain when we are nothing the better for it and we receive it in truth when we feel the sweetness and power of it upon our hearts and consciences those that know the grace in truth are the more vigilent more humble more holy they are more diligent for the grace of God hath a mighty constraint to urge us to duty 2 Cor. 5. 14 15. more humble nothing so melting as Grace Zech. 12. 10. Vnkindness after so much Grace as we have received in Christ is the great reason and cause of godly sorrow More holy nothing kindles such a rage and indignation against sin as Grace doth Ezra 9. 14 Should we again after such a deliverance c. nothing perswadeth by such powerful arguments to the practice of holyness as grace doth See Tit. 2. 11. 12 13 14. Therefore what are you the better if it worketh not thus 't is sad 2. Are you the worse sensibly for the knowledge of the Gospel First Do you grow more careless and neglectful of duties as if now there were not so much required of you The Gospel never taught you that but your own corrupt hearts 't is true the more Christ is preached the more Evangelical a man is in his duties his heart is taken off more from resting in them he doth not pitch his hopes upon the tale of number of his duties and he doth not perform them out of bondage but more clearly knowingly comfortablely as upon Gospel grounds but still he will be performing as knowing that duties can never have too much of our care and too little of our trust in the Gospel we have more help therefore in all reason we should perform more work well then to grow more lazy and less frequent in the worship of God and the use of the means of grace the more we are acquainted with Gods grace in Christ is to abuse grace which was given us to make us more chearful not more slack and negligent Secondly Less circumspect and wary in your conversations loose walking is an ill sign Christ himself taught us To enter in at the streight gate and to walk in the narrow way Mat. 7. 14. When men seek more roomth and breadth for their lusts they pervert the end of the Gospel for the Gospel onely sheweth That the greatest sin is pardonable but the least is not allowable the world is much for a shorter cut to Heaven but when you have done all you will finde that the good old long way is the neerest way home still we must make streight steps to our feet mortify lusts bridle vile affections and keep close to Rule Sin is the same that ever it was and the Law is the same and God is as Holy and as much delights in holyness as ever he did we therefore must be as strict as ever 't is but a carnal liberty to have leave to be wanton to be free to sin Nature is very apt to hear in that ear See 2 Pet. 2. 18. 19. but grace counts it no priviledge Thirdly If less humble still you are guilty a man committeth sin and findeth no remorse upon the pretence of Gods free grace in pardoning this is still the wantonness which ariseth from the abuse of the Gospel Gods children never loath themselves more then upon the remembrance of mercy Ezek. 36. 31. never melted for sin more then when the warm beams of Gods love thaw their hearts that they should sin against a pardoning God a gracious Father a good Master c. every mercy is a new stab at heart Christs look made Peter weep bitterly nothing affects them so much as grace The third point is taken from that Particle Our 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he mentioneth their interest in God to provoke them so much the more to zeal against errours that were so scandilous to his grace Note That sense of Interest in God begets the best zeal for the truths and glory of God The point consists of two Branches 1. That Interest in God will beget a zeal for God it troubleth a good man to see any one wronged much more to see his own relation wronged most of all to see his God wronged can a man profess love to God and not espouse his quarrel freinds have all things common common love and common hatred wrong the one and the other is not well at ease so it is in the spiritual friendship between us and God Psal 69. 9. The reproaches of them that reproached thee are fallen upon me injuries done to God and Religion will as neerly affect us as those done to our persons certainly they that can be silent in the cause of God have little affection to him and
that he doth approve your Doings 4. Christ may be denyed though there be a stricter Profession of his Name and some faint love and relish of his sweetness Besides the loose National Profession of Christianity which God in a wise Providence ordaineth for the greater safety and preservation of his Church there may be a strict personal profession taken up from inward conviction and some tast and feeling and yet Christ may be denyed for all this as some that had tasted the good Word turned aside to the world and so are said to crucifie him rather then to profess him Heb. 6. 4 5 6. The Apostle intendeth some Hebrews that did mix Moses with Christ and Judaism to save their goods So elsewhere he speaketh of some that had a form of godliness but denyed the power thereof 2 Tim. 3. 5. By the Form meaning the strictest garb of Religion then in fashion this is to deny Christ when we deny the Virtue and Power of that Religion which he hath established and will not suffer it to enter upon our hearts 5. The means to discover false Profession is to observe how we take it up and how we carry it on whether we embrace it upon undue grounds or match it with unconsonant practises 1. We embrace it upon undue grounds if we take it up meerly upon Tradition without a ●ight of that distinct worth and excellency which is in our Religion for then our Religion is but an happy mistake the stumbling of blind zeal upon a good object and all the difference between you and Pagans is but the advantage of your Birth and Education standing upon an higher ground doth not make a man taller then another of the same growth and stature that standeth lower their stature is the same though their standing be not the same So you are no better then Pagans only you have the advantage of being born within the pale and in such a Country where the Christian Religion is professed You do according to the Trade of Israel and live 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the fashion of your Country will carry it and as Beasts follow the Track so you take up that Religion which is entayled upon you 2. If we match it with unsutable practises These may be known if we do consider what is most excellent in the Christian Religion Elsewhere I have shewed that the glory of the Christian Religion lyeth in three things In excellency of Rewards and purity of Precepts and sureness of Principles of Trust ● In the Fulness of the Reward which is the eternal enjoyment of God in Christ therefore they that do not make it their first and chief care to seek the Kingdom of God and his righteousness Matth. 6. 33. that are like Swine in preferring the will of carnal pleasures before communion with God or in the Scripture expression Love pleasures more then God or prefers the profers of the world before everlasting happiness they whose lives are full of Epicurism Atheism Worldlyness 't is not a pin to those whether they be Pagans or Christians for acting thus heathenishly thus brutishly they do but polute that Sacred and Worthy Name 2. The perfection of the Percepts which require a full conformity of the whole man to the Will of God More particularly Christian precepts are remarkable for Purity and Charity for Purity and therefore revellings and banquettings and chambering are made to be customs of the Gentiles 1 Pet. 4. 3. things abhorrent from the Christian Religion they that are yokeless and live according to the swinge of their own lusts or else that only fashion the outward man make no conscience of thoughts lusts c. they do not live as Christians for Charity nothing is more pressed then giving 't was Christs maximé It is better to give then to receive Acts 20. 35. and also forgiving one great strain of his Sermon is Love to enemies Matth. 5. 43 44 45 46 47 48. Christ when he brought from heaven the discovery of such a strange love from God to man would settle a wonderful love on earth between man and man 3. For sureness of Principles of Trust the whole Scripture aimeth at this to settle a trust in God and therefore it discovereth so much of Gods mercy of his particular providence of the contrivance of salvation in and by Christ so that to be without hope is to be like a gentile for they are described to be men without hope 1 Thes 4. 13. and carking and distrustful care is made the sin of the Gentiles Matth 6. 31 32. this kind of solicitude is for them that know not God or deny his providence over particular things Well then Take heed of denying Christ 't is an heavie sin it cost Peter bitter sorrow Matth. 26. 75. Will you deny Christ that bought you 2 Pet. 2. 2. Now they deny Christ whose hopes and comforts are only in this world Christ is not their God but their Belly Phil. 3. 19. Libertines are not Disciples of Christ but Votaries of Priapus Merciless and revengeful men do cond●mn that Religion which they do profess in short they do not only deny Christ that question his Natures or make void his Offices but they that despise his Laws when they do not walk answerably or walk contrary VERSE 5. I will therefore put you in remembrance though ye once knew this how that the Lord having saved the People out of the Land of Aegypt afterwards destroyed them that believed not WE have done with the Pre●ace I come now to the examples by which the Apostle proveth the danger of defection from the Faith the first is taken from the murmuring Israelites The second from the Apostate Angel the third from the be●stly Sodomites T●at you may see how apposite and apt for the Apostle's purpose these instances are I shall first insist upon some general Observations First Observe That Gods ancient Judgements were ordained to be our warnings and examples The Bible is nothing but a Book of Presidents wherein the Lord would give the world a Document or Copie of his Providence All these things are hapned to them for examples 1 Cor. 10. 11. When we blow off the dust from these old experiences we may read much of the counsel of God in them their destruction should be our caution His Justice is the same that ever it was and his Power is the same his vigour is not abated with yeers God is but one Gal. 3. 20. that is always the same without change and variation as ready to take vengeance of the Transgressors of the Law as of old for that 's the point there discussed So 2 Tim. 2. 13. He abideth ●aithful he cannot deny himself In all the changes of the World God is not changed but is where he was at first Surely we should tremble more when we consider the examples of those that have felt his Justice for God keepeth a proportion in all his dispensations If he were strict and
great judgements if great sins come between as after their deliverance out of Aegypt they were destroyed for Vnbelief This may be proved from Christ's advice to the man cured on the Sabbath d●y John 5. 14. Thou art made whole sin no more lest a worse thing come unto th●e There is the mercy the duty thence inferred and the judgm●nt that doth avenge the quarrel of the abused mercy Often it cometh to pass that many mens preservation is but a reservation to a worse thing to a greater judgement So see Joshua 24. 20. He will turn again and do you hurt after he hath done you good So Isa 63. 10. He b●re them in the arms of his Providence but they rebelled and vexed his spirit and he was turned to be their enemy None usually have greater judgements then such as formerly have had sweet experience of mercy Why There is no hatred so great as that which ariseth out of the corruption of love Disappointed love abused love groweth outragious When Amnon hated Tamar 't is said The hatred wherewith he hated her was greater then the love where with he loved her As 't is thus with men such a proportionable severity we may observe in the Dispensations of God after a taste of his mercies Joshua 23. 15. It shall come to pass as all good things are come upon you which the Lord your God promised you so the Lord shall bring all evil things upon you until he hath destroyed you when ye have transgressed the Covenant of the Lord your God No evils like those evils which come after mercy No sins are so great as those sins which are committed against mercies there is not only filthiness in them but unkindness Psal 106. 7. They provoked him at the Sea even at the red Sea Mark 't is ingeminated for the more vehemency that at the Sea even at the red Sea where they had seen the miracles of the Lord and had experirience of his glorious deliverance that there they durst break out against God See the contrary in Judges 2. 7. Certainly the more restraints the greater the offence when we sin not only against the laws of God but the loves of God c. Well then 1 It informeth us that there may be danger after deliverance there are strange changes in providence Man in his best estate is altogether vanity Psal 39. When you are at your best as the Sun at the highest there may be a Declension 2. 'T is a warning to those that enjoy mercies Sin no more lest a worse thing come unto you The next judgement will be more violent There are some special sins which you should beware of even those which testifie our unthankfulness after the receipt of mercies As 1. Forgetting the vows of our Misery Jacob voweth Gen. 28. 22. but he forgets his vow and what followed Horrible disorders and confusions in his Family Dinah deflowred Reuben goeth into his Fathers Bed a murder committed upon the Sichemites under a pretence of Religion and then Jacob remembreth his Vow We promise much when we want deliverance and when we have it God is neglected but he will not put it up so by sad and disastrous accidents he puts us in mind of our old promises 2. When you kiss your own hand bless your dragge ascribe it to your merit and power Habb 1. 16. Deut. 9. 4. for these things are our mercies blasted 3. When we grow proud self confident If you were never so high God will bring you low enough 't is a great skill to know how to abound She remembred not her last end therefore she came down wonderfully Lam. 1. 4. when we forget the changes and mutations to which all outward things are obnoxious God will give us an experience of them 4. When you continue in your sins the judgement is but gone cum animo revertendi to come again in a worse manner See Psal 106. 43. 2. The next observation is taken from the cause of their destruction intimated in those words that believed not Many were the peoples sins in the wilderness murmuring fornication rebellion c. But the Apostle comprehendeth all under this they believed not Vnbelief is charged upon them as the root of all their miscarriages elsewhere as Numb 14. 11. and Deut. 1. 32. Whence observe That unbelief bringeth destruction or is the cause of all the evil which we do or suffer In handling this point I shall open 1. The hainousness of Vnbelief 2. The Nature of it 3. The Cure of it 1. The hainousness of the sin that we will consider in general or more particularly The general considerations are these 1. No sin doth dishonour God so much as unbelief doth 't is an interpretative blasphemy a calling into question of his mercy power justice but especially of his truth 1 John 5. 10. He that believeth not God hath made him a lyar You judge him a person not fit to be credited the giving of the lye is accounted the greatest injury and disgrace amongst men for truth is the ground of commerce and humane society So that to say a man is a lyar is as much as to say a man is unfit to keep company with men But especially is this a great injury to God because he standeth more upon his word then upon any other part of his name Psal 138. 2. He hath magnifyed his word above all his Name We have more experience of God in making good his word then in any other thing As faith honoureth God so doth unbelief dishonour him what God doth to the creature that doth faith to God God justifieth sanctifieth glorifieth the creature and faith is said to justifie God Luke 7. 29. To justifie is to acquit from accusation So doth faith acquit Gods truth in the word from all the jealousies which the carnal world and our carnal hearts do cast upon him Faith is said to sanctifie God Numb 20. 12. To sanctifie is to set a part from common use and God is sanctified when we set God aloof above all ordinary and common causes and can believe that he will make good his word when the course of all things seems to contradict it Faith is said to glorifie God Rom. 4. 20. We glorifie him declaratively when we give him all that excellency which the word giveth him Now because unbelief accuseth God limiteth him to the course of second causes and denyeth him his glory therefore is it so hainous and hateful to God 2. 'T is a sin against which God hath declared most of his displeasure Search the Annals surveigh all the monuments of time see if ever God spared an Unbeliever Hence in the wilderness the Apostle saith they were destroyed for Vnbelief Many were their sins in the Wilderness Murmurings Lustings Idolatry but the main reason of their punishment was they believed not look to their final excision and cutting off why was it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for unbelief were they broken off Rom. 11.
and torment he is called the Ruler of the darkness of this world Eph. 6. 12. and the God of this World 2 Cor. 4. 4. 't is punishment enough to the Apostate Angels to be cast out into the World the World is the Divels work-house and prison one calleth it Sathans Diocess who would be in love with a place of bondage and punishment 9. The Divel and his Angels are in the World let us be the more cautious he compasseth the Earth to and fro no place can secure you from his temptation he is every where ravening for the prey with an indefatigable and unwearied diligence 1 Pet. 5. 8. Let us look about us Wo to the inhabitants of the Earth and the Sea for the Divel is come down to you Rev. 12. 12. Where ever you are Sathan is neer you the World is full of Divels when you are in the Shop the Divel is there to fill your hearts with lying and deceit as he did the heart of Ananias Act. 5. when you are in your closets and when you have shut the door upon you you do not shut out Sathan he can taint a secret duty when you are in the house of God Ministring before the Lord Sathan is at your right hand ready to resist you Zach. 3. 1. He is ready either to pervert your aimes or to divert your thoughts We had need keep the heart in an humble watchful praying frame God hath cast out the Angels out of Heaven and now they are here upon earth tempting the sons of men to folly and inconvenience be watchful the world is the Divels Chess-board you can hardly move back or forth but he is ready to attach you by some temptation 10. When grace is abused our dejection i● usually according to the degree of our exaltation the Angels from Heaven are cast down to Hell the highest in the rank of creatures are now made lowest corruptions of the best things are most noysome Thou Capernaun which are exalted to Heaven art now brought down to Hell Matth. 11. 23. 'T was one of the chiefe Cities of Galilee and where our Saviour usually conversed 't is a kind of Heaven to enjoy Christ in the Ordinances but now to slight this mercy will bring such confusions and miseries as are a kind of Hell to you slighting of grace of all sins weigheth heaviest in Gods ballance 11. Spiritual judgements are most severe and to be given up to obstinacy in sin is the forest judgement 't is diabolical to continue in sin the Angels left their habitation and what followed they lost their holiness 12. Loss of happiness is a great judgement 't is Hell enough to want God the first part of the sentence depart from me Matth. 25. 41. is most dreadful loss of Heaven is the first part of the Angels punishment we in effect say now depart from us Job 21. 14. but God will then say depart from me ye shall see my face no more c. Thus we have dispatched the first part of the Angels punishment their loss we now come to the other part their poena sensus their punishment of sense or pain b● hath reserved in everlasting chains under darkness where there is an allusion to the state of Malefactors or condemned men who are kept in prison till execution now the evils of a prison are two 1. The darkness of the place 2. The hard usage of the evil doer suitably to which the Apostle used a double notion 1. They are reserved in everlasting chains 2. Vnder darkness 1. Begin with the first part In everlasting chains Whence two notes 1. That the Angels are kept in chains 2. That those chaines are everlasting 1. They are kept in chains But what chains can hold Angels can Spirits be bound with Irons I Answer I Answer they are spiritual chains suitable to the spirituall nature of Angels such as these 1. Guilt of conscience which bindeth them over to judgement the consciences of wicked Angels know that they are adjudged to damnation for their sin this is a sure chaine for it fasteneth the judgement so as you cannot shake it off 't is bound and tied upon us by the hand of Gods justice The condition of a guilty sinner is frequently compared to a prisoner Isa 42. 7. Isa 49. 9. Isa 61. 1. and sin to a prison wherein we are shut up Rom. 11. 32. Gal. 3. 22. and guilt to chains or bonds laid upon us by God the Judge Prov. 5. 22. Lam. 1. 14. 2. Their obstinacy in sinning They are fallen so as they cannot rise againe they are called Wickednesses as sinning with much malice and obstinacy as if you should say wickedness it selfe the Divels sin is as the sin against the Holy Ghost a malicious obstinate spiteful opposition against the Kingdom of Christ such an hatred against God and Christ that they wil not repent and be saved their despair begetteth despight and being hopeless of reliefe are without purpose of repentance they do foolish creatures adde sin to sin and harden themselves in an evil way which is as a chaine to hold them in Gods Prison till their final damnation see 2 Thes 2. 11 12. Where error and wilful persisting in disobedience is made to be Gods prison wherein reprobate creatures are held till their punishment be consummate 3. Vtter despair of deliverance they are held under their torment by their own thoughts as a distressed conscience is said to be bound up Isa 66. 1. to them here remaineth nothing but a certain fearful looking for judgement and fiery indignation Job 10. 37. release they cannot look for more judgement they do expect Matth. 8. 31. Art thou come to torment us before our time their prison door is locked with Gods own Key and as long as God sitteth upon the Throne they cannot wrest the Key out of his hands 4. Gods power and providence by which the Angelical strength is bridled and overmastered so as they cannot do what they would thus Rev. 20. 2. Sathan is said to be bound up for a thousand years that is in the chains of Gods power which are sometimes streighter and sometimes looser the Divel was fain to ask leave to enter into the herd of Swine Matth 8. 5. The chaines of Gods eternal decree As there is a golden chain the chain of Salvation which is carried on from link to link till the purposes of eternal grace do end in the possession of eternal glory so there is an Iron chain of reprobation which begins in Gods own voluntary preterition and is carried on in the creatures voluntary Apostacy and endeth in their just damnation and when once we are shut up under these bars there is no opening Job 12. 14. Secondly These chains are eternal chains because the wicked Angels stand guilty for ever without hope of recovery or redemption Every natural man is in chains but there is hope to many of the prisoners Christ saith go forth but those chains upon the evill
Numb 32. 38. Nebo and Baalmeon their names being changed so exact should we be in keeping from Idols 2. Let us beware of Idolatry Satan loveth it and that is motive enough we should hate as Christ hateth and love as he loveth Rev. 2 6. and on the contrary love what Satan hateth and hate what he loveth naturally we are wondrous prone to this sin and therefore Idolatry is reckoned as a work of the flesh Gal. 5. 20. man naturally hath a corrupt and working fancy and imagination which depending upon sense formeth fleshly conceptions and notions of God and therefore are we so prone to erre in this worship 't is not needful I hope to speak to you of Paganish and Popeish Idolatry Let me only now disswade you First from making the true God an Idol in your thoughts by forming apprehensions unworthy of the glory of his Essence Psalm 50. 21. Thou thoughtest that I was altogether like thy self Now thus we do when we conceive him of such a mercy as to hold fellowship with one that continueth under the full power of his sins so weak as not to be able to help in deep extremities Zech. 8. 6. Of a rigorous and revengeful disposition as not to pardon injuries and offences upon submission and repentance Hos 11. 8. of a fickle nature so as to fail in his promises Numb 23. 19. Thus 't is easie to turn the true God into an Idol of our own brains To remedy this consider God in his works and in Christ In his works Cyril I remember observeth that before the flood we read of no Idolatry Aquinas addeth a reason to the observation because the memory of the Creation was then fresh in their thoughts Again look upon God in Christ you heard before in Levit. 17. if they did not bring their Sacrifice to the Tabernacle it was called a Sacrifice of Devils The Tabernacle was a Type of Christ you make God an Idol when you worship him out of Christ For the Father will be honored in the Son John 5. Therefore when ever you go to God take Christ along with you Secondly From setting up any Idol against God in your affections when you set up any thing above God in your esteem especially in your trust that 's an Idol covetousness is twice called Idolatry Col. 3. 5. Eph. 5 5. because it doth withdraw our affections from God yea our care our esteem our trust which is the chiefest homage and respect which God expecteth from the Creature I mention these things because I would speak somewhat to practice and because Satan is gratified with spiritual Idolatry as well as with that which is gross and bodily From that Clause about the body of Moses once more observe That of all kind of Idolatry the Devil abuseth the world most with Idolatrous respects to the bodies and Relicks of dead Saints If you ask why I answer Partly because this kind of Idolatry is most likely to take as being most plausible and suitable to that reverend esteem which we have of those that are departed in the Lord and so our Religious affections become a snare to us Partly because when men become objects of Worship and Adoration the God-Head is made more contemptible and mens conceits of a divine power run at a lower rate every day Partly because this malicious fiend hopeth this way to beat the Lord with his own weapon when the bodies and Relicks of those Saints who by the famousness of their examples were likely to draw many to God do as much or more withdraw men from him and superstition doth as much hurt as their example did good Partly because the Devil by long experience hath found this to be a successful way in the world Lactantius proveth it that the Idolizing of famous men was the rise of all Idolatry and Tertullian in the end of his Apology observeth the same that Heathen Idolatry came in this way sub nominibus imaginibus mortuorum by a reverence to the images of dead men whose memory was precious amongst them Nin●s or Nimrod the first Idolater set up his own dead Father B●lus whence came the names of Baal and Bel for an Idol The Teraphim stolen by Rachel Gen 31. 35 were the images of their Ancestors whom Laban worshipped so in the primitive times before any other Idolatry was brought into the Church they began with the Tombs and Shrines of the Martyrs First It sheweth us the first rise of Idolatry respect to the Relicks and Remains of some men famous in their generations Satan attempted it betimes not only among the Heathens but among the people of God he contended for the body of Moses that he might set it up for this use but that which he could not obtain then he hath effected now in the Roman Synagogue by the Arms the Legs the Hands the Feet the Pictures of the Martyrs surely such a known Artifice and ancient method of deceit a man would think should long ere this have been discerned but that God hath given them up to beleeve a lye Well might the Anti-Christian state be called Rev. 11. 8. Babylon Sodom and Aegypt that is Babylon for Idolatry S●dom for filthyness and Aegypt for Ignorance and darkness the same Idolatry being practised which was in use in the darkest times of Paganism Heathenism and Popery differ but little only the names are changed a new Saint for an old Heathen Idol their canonizing and the Heathens 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are much alike so are their Saints and the Heathens and Heroes and middle poners only that the Papists have put many in the Calender which either never were in the world or else were wicked and traiterous as our B●cket and St. George an Arrian Bishop that so the Devil might be doubly gratified by the Shrine it self and that by the canonization of the infamous person sin might become less odious Secondly It sheweth the perverseness of men who are apt superstitiously to regard the Relicks of them dead whom they despised living Moses was often opposed living and after death likely to be adored as 't is often the condition of Gods people to live hated and dye Sainted Vetus morbus est saith Salvian quo mortui sancti coluntur vivi contemnuntur The Scribes and Pharisees garnished the Tombs of the dead Prephets and killed the living Mat 23. 29 30. And the Jews in the fifth of John pretended love to Moses and shewed hatred to Christ posterity honoureth them whom former ages destroyed living Saints are an eye-sore they torment the world either by their example or their reproofs Rev. 11. 10. Heb. 11. 7. but objects out of sight do not exasperate and stand in the way of our lusts this fond affection is little worth those that were ready to adore Moses would not imitate him Again from that He durst not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he had not the boldness to do any thing contrary to the Law of God or unbeseeming
eternal life is Gods mercy not for any works and merits of ours we cannot challenge it as a debt sin and death are as work and wages but eternal life is a donative Rom. 6. 23. eternal life is not the wages of obedience as damnation is the wageso● sin why wherein lyeth the difference I answer wicked men stand upon their own bottom but Christ hath obtained this priviledge for us Wicked works are ours and they are meerly evil the good that we do is imp●rfect and Gods grace hath the main stroak so that we are rewarded rather according to what we have received then what we have done a servant is under a covenant of obed ence and ●radeth with his masters estate he doth but his duty he deserveth something we are bound to do good and forbidden to sin when we do what is forbidden we deserve punishment but when we do what is commanded we do not deserve the reward because we are bound and because we have all from Gods grace as you must pray for eternal life so must you look for eternal life if you should say give me Heaven for I deserve it natural conscience would blush at the immodesty of such a request 't is as great an absurdity when you make your own works the ground of your hope for in prayer our desires and hopes are put into language and made more explicite so that which is our plea in prayer must be the ground of our claim in point of confidence unless we mean to complement with God Well then 1. Let this encourage us to wait with hope notwithstanding infirmities as well as affictions what a good master do we serve he hath provided comforts not only against our misery but against our unworthiness not only glory as a reward but mercy as the cause of it that we may take glory out of the ●ands of mercy he looked upon us not only as liable to suffering but sinning and therefore as he hath provided life and safety for us so upon tearms of grace 2. It sheweth us how we should ascribe all to mercy from the beginning to the end of our salvation we were taken into a state of grace at first out of meer mercy 1 Tim. 1. 13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I was all to be mercy'd Tit. 3. 5. Not by works of righteousness that we have done but according to his mercy he saved us he doth not barely say not for our works but not for our works 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not for our best works those works of righteousness which might be supposed to be foreseen as done by us so also when we are taken into a state of glory 't is still mercy we can merit no more after grace then before 2 Tim. 1. 18 The Lord grant him that he may find mercy of the Lord in that day Once more this mercy is called the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ Thence observe That this mercy which we look for is dispensed by Jesus Christ he purchased it and he hath the managing of it in the whole oeconomy of grace he shall take of mine saith he concerning the holy Ghost and in the last day he distributeth to some judgment without mercy to others mercy they are judged upon Gospel terms Well then 1. Get an interest in Christ otherwise we cannot look for mercy in that great day 1 Iohn 2. 28. If we abide in him then shall we have boldness they that sleight Christ in the offers of the Gospel have no reason to look for benefit by him you will howl and tremble then and call upon the mountains to hide you from the wrath of him that sitteth upon the throne they that prize the mercy of Christ now they find it to be the very last mercy that planted g●ace in their hearts will then put the crown upon their heads here 't was their care to glorifie Christ and to honour him though with the loss of all there will Christ glorifie them in the presence of all the world 2. It maketh for the cemfort of Christs people and members our blessed hopes are founded upon the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ and in his hands to dispence them from thence you may collect 1. The fulness of this bl●ssedness and infinite merit purchased it an infinite mercy bestoweth it surely the building will be answerable to the foundation 't is no small thing that we may expect from infinite mercy and infinite merit would an Emperour give brass farthings do men that understand themselves give vast sums for trifles 2. The certainty of this blessedness Christ hath the managing of it he never discovered any backwardness to thy good nor inclination to thy ruine he dyed for thee before thou wert born he called thee when thou wert unworthy warned thee of dangers which thou never fearedst instead of deserved wrath shewed thee undeserved mercy interceedeth for thee when thou little thinkest of it hath been tender of thee in the whole conduct of his providence visited thee in Ordinances is mindful of thee at every turn and will he be harsh to thee at last The last Note is from that clause unto eternal life The great binefit which we have by Christ is eternal life 1. There is life all that you labour for is for life that which you prize above other things is life Skin for skin all that a man hath will he give for his life That is he will part with all things even to his very skin to save his life 2. 'T is an excellent life the life of sense which is the beasts is better then that vegetative life which is in the plants and the rational life which is in men is better then thee sensitive and the spiritual exceedeth the rational and the glorious life the spiritual Vegetative life is the vigor of the sap sensitive life is the vigor of the blood rational life is the union of the soul with the body spiritual life is the union of the soul with Christ and the life of glory exceedeth that in degree for it standeth in the immediate fruition of God 3. 'T is an happy life not subjected to the necessities of meat and drink we have then spiritual bodies 1 Cor. 15. 45. 'T is not encumbered with miseries as the present life is Gen. 47. 9 't is a life which we are never weary of in deep distresses life it self may become a burden Elijah said Take away my li●e 1 Kings 19. 4. but this life cannot be a burden 4. 'T is eternal life this life is but a flower that is soon withered a vapour that is soon blown over but this is for ever and ever as eternity increaseth the torment of the wicked so the blessedness of the godly Well then let this press you to keep your selves in the love of God till this happy estate come about Verse 22. And of some have compassion making a difference Verse 23. And others save with fear pulling them out of
it away because he could not find the name of Christ there 't is the description of a godly man His delight is in the Law of God and in his Law doth he exercise himself day and night Psal 1. 2. There are the chast delights of a child of God not in Play-books and idle Sonnets How many sacrilegious hours do most spend in these trifles Good Books should not keep us from the Scriptures Water is sweetest in the Fountain Luther professeth that he could wish all his books forgotten and utterly laid aside rather then that they should keep men from reading the Scriptures themselves Christians study the Word more that you may have Promises Doctrines Examples ready and more familiar with you to be ignorant in a knowing age is an argument of much negligence Heb. 5. 14. Now Religion is made every one's Discourse Will you alone be a stranger in Israel As the many helps ●all upon us to study the Word more so the many Errors which are abroad all errour cometh from unskilfulness in the Scriptures Matth. 22. 29. Ye err not knowing the Scriptures in the dark a man may soon lose his way To cure this mischief let me press you 1. To read the Scriptures in your Families se● up this Ordinance among other parts of Worship there 't is a Family Exercise that your children may be trained up in them 2 Tim. 3. 15. 'T is a good Closet exercise for your own private instruction none of you is in too high a Form the Prophets searched them diligently 1 Pet. 11. 12. 2. Read them with profit so as you may understand them and apply the Doctrines and Examples you meet with there Ask thy soul Vnd●rstandest thou what thou readest Acts 8. 30 or as Paul Rom 8. 31. What shall we say to these things The Scriptures are not to be read for delight but for spiritual profit and use 3. In cases of difficulty use all holy means pray to God the Spirit is the best Interpreter Pray before Pray after as you do for food if God answer not at first cry ●or knowledge li●t up thy voice for understanding Call in the helps which God hath given many private helps of Commentaries but above all despise not Prophesying Consult with the Officers and Guides of the Church Ephes 4. 14. Mal. 2. 7. 2. Observe again That those Truths which we understand already they had need be pressed again and revived upon us See 1 John 2. 21. Our Knowledge is but weak the eye of the mind is opened by degrees our Memories are weak and commands must be repeated to a forgetful Servant our Affections are slow not easily wrought up to the love of good things When the Wedge will not enter with one blow we follow it home with blow upon blow Well then we say 1. Repetitions are lawful for you 't is a sure thing Phil. 3. 1. Christ in the Gospels and Paul in the Epistles do often repeat the same passages Till you be affected with them we must inculcate necessary Principles again and again God speaketh once yea twice when men regard it not Job 33. 14. Consider men are dull to conceive slow of heart to believe The way to pierce the hard stone is by often dropping apt to forget heavenly Truths Leaky Vessels must be filled again Heb. 2. 1. We must repeat to make shame more stirring Peter was troubled when Christ said the third time Lovest thou me John 21. 17. Let this which hath been said prevent censure look upon it as a providence when the same Truth or Sermon is presented again Surely I have not meditated enough of this truth I am not enough affected with it therefore the Lord hath again brought it to my thoughts or there is some new temptation that I shall meet with that I may find the need of this old Truth c. 2. That it is a spiritual disease a Surfet of Manna when men must still be fed with new things no truths are too plain for our mouths or too stale for your ears the itch of novelty puts men upon ungrounded subtleties and that maketh way for errour or hardness of heart though you hear nothing but what you are acquainted with be content they were carnal people that complained they had nothing but the old Burden Jer. 23. 33 34. Take heed of the Athenian itch many times it argueth guilt we cannot endure to have an old sore rubbed again as Peter was troubled when Christ spake to him the third time as I noted before that his Apostacie should once more be revived 3. It may justifie two duties of great use Meditation and Repetition in our Families Meditation for 't is good to remember Truths that we do already know Once hath God spoken and twice have I heard it Psal 62. 11. we should go over and over it again in our thoughts first we learn and then we meditate S●udy findeth out a truth and Meditation improveth it as first the meat is taken in and then the digestion is afterward Conscience preacheth over the Sermon again to the heart while the thing is new it doth more exercise study then meditation but when we have once learned it then our thoughts should work upon it for meditation is the improvement of a known truth 2. Repetition in our Families let them hear it again and again the third blow may make the nail go If people were humble and sober they would have new and fresh thoughts every time a truth is revived upon them at first hearing many are lost through the wandring and distraction of our thoughts things which upon the review may be brought to hand again at least youth and children must have line upon line as when they learn to write the same letters and the same Copie are written over again and again till the figure of them be formed in their fancies I have done with the Preface I come now to the first instance produced How that the Lord having saved the people out of the Land of Egypt afterward destroyed them that believed not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the term is of an honourable use in this place the people for the peculiar people of God the holy and elect Nation that had the Law and the Covenants of Promise this people after they were delivered and that by so great and solemn a deliverance as that out of the Land of Aegypt were afterwards destroyed so that 't is ill standing upon priviledges Though many of them to whom the Apostle wrote had renounced Gentilism and were as it were come out of Aegypt and made God's people by visible profession yet after all this they might be destroyed in case of disproportionable practise or disobedience to God in that profession Of Israel's destruction see Num. 14. 37. 1 Cor. 10. 10. Libertine Christians shall fare as bad as obstinate Jews that 's the drift of his Argument From this clause observe That after great mercies there do usually follow
sin that pulleth God out of the throne you enter into judgement with him as David on the other hand prayeth Enter not into judgement with thy servant O Lord Murmurers either deny his providence or tax it Implicitely they deny it as if God did not set out to every man his portion if men did believe that God did govern the world even as he made the world why do they not complain of creation as well as providence we would laugh at him that would murmure because God did not make him an Angel or a Star why is it not as ridiculous to murmure because God hath made thee a subject and not a Prince a begger and not a rich man a servant but not a master but that they own the hand of God in one and not in the other as if the world were governed by blind chance Or else they tax providence of indiscretion or unrighteousness 't is marvellous to see how murmuring robbeth God of all his attributes it clippeth his Soveraignty we will not let him do with his own as it pleaseth him the great contest between him and us is whose will shall stand his or ours it limits his power and slghts it when God doth not satisfie us we think he cannot Psal 78. 20. We set him a task and if God perform it not we question his sufficiency 't is a contention with our Maker an entring into the Lists with God as if we could make our party good against him Psal 78. 17. We tax his wisdom Men will be teaching God how to govern the world for we prescribe to him as if he did not understand what is fit for us he pleaseth us not in his wisest dispensations and bear it out as if we could mend his works Job 21. 22. Shall any teach God knowledge seeing he judgeth th●se that are high They that disallow of Gods proceedings take upon them to be Gods Teachers Twa● a blasphemous speech of Alphonsus Si Deo a consiliis ad●uisset in creatione Mundi multa sc consulius ordinaturum If he had been of Gods Council when he made the world he would have ordered many things better Many abhor the blasphemy and yet think almost to the same effect if they had the governing of the world such men should not prosper and such and such things should not be done thus do we darken counsel with wo ds without knowledge and cast a reproach of folly and injustice upon Gods providence Again to his goodness we are injurious by disvaluing what we have in comparison of what we expect Mal. 1. 2 Wherein hast thou loved us As if they had nothing because not fully what they expected 't is mans nature to forget what is granted and pitch only upon what is denyed as children in a pet throw away what they have if you do not give them more saith Haman All this availeth me nothing c Esther 5. 13. and the whole Kingdom of Israel would not content Ahab when he falleth sick for Naboth's V●eyand 1 Kings 21. 4. As in the body if one humour be out of order or one joynt broken the soundness of all the rest availeth us nothing a little is enough to set the creature a complaining His Justice also we tax as if he did defraud us of our due we think somwhat is due or else why do we complain Matth. 20. 13 Friend I do thee no wrong c. 2. 'T is injurious to others it puts us upon acts of violence and sedition the murmurers are called rebels Numb 17. 10. Schisme in the Church and sedition in the Commonwealth are but the fruits of murmuring men do like their own rank and station and then murmure and then perturb all Oh that I were a Judge saith Absolom and afterwards breaketh out into open rebellion thin exhalations end in great storms servants would be masters and the poor would be rich and subjects would be in office and power and by giving vent to their repining thoughts inflame the zeal of persons like minded with themselves till all be embroyled in blood and confusions 3. 'T is injurious to our selves man is a foolish creature what doth he get by complaining of God Who shall right us Before what Tribunal will you put him in suit Of all sins murmuring is most unreasonable but very peruitious what do we get by it but disquiet and judgement 'T is like spitting against the wind the drivel is returned upon our own heads disquiet it breedeth us a murmuring spirit is a greater evil then any affliction like a sour vessel it turneth all things that are put into it into sowrness most mens misery ariseth from their discontent if their heart and their condition were suited they would do well enough in the world we trouble our own peace if we could learn to frame our minds to our estates as the skilful Musician letteth down the strings a peg lower when the tune requireth it we should pass to heaven more comfortably Again it bringeth down judgement expressions tending to Gods dishonour have a loud cry in his ears Mi iam was smitten with leprosie for murmuring and Dathan and Abiram swallowed up alive fiery serpents and plagues and exclusion out of Canaan were Israels judgements when they were sick of the fret see 1 Cor. 10. 10. Neither murmure ye as some of them murmured and were destroyed of the destroyer Let us now make Application Beware of murmurings 't is a greater sin then the world taketh it to be here I shall speak of two things 1. Murmuring at the Times and publike changes which have hapned amongst us 2. Murmuring in our own private case 1. Murmuring at the Times 't is a repining age we live in many factions are disappointed and therefore the most are full of discontent forgetting that all this is the work of a wise God Mistake me not I list not to become the Times Advocate it little beseemeth us to be Patrons of publike miscarriages or Factors for any Private Interest Therefore let me proceed with the greatest Scripture evidence and conviction and state what is murmuring at the Times 'T is forbidden Eccles 7. 10. Say not thou that the former times were better then these for thou dost not enquire wisely concerning this Now what is the sin taxed in this Scripture I answer 1. Not godly sorrow and complaining to God and bewailing the corruptions of the times No the Mourners in Sion are marked for preservation Exek 9. None are better friends to publike Interest 't were well if these Doves of the Vallies had more company this is no sin for this is the only way of entring our protest and being free from the corruptions of the age God hath bound up all Politique Bodies in the same bundle and we are concerned in others sins 't is the art of divine mercy by this means to prevent publique ruine by interesting his people in the welfare of those places where they live that every man in this
place may be sensible of present sins and approaching judgements two dry sticks will set a green one a fire Can you blame the children of God then if they mourn and enter their protest against the iniquity of the Times The Corinthians were not clear of the incest committed amongst them till they had mourned then the Apostle saith now ye are clear in this matter 2 Cor. 7. 11. surely they that are involved in the guilt concerned in the judgement had need mourn 2. Not zeal in publique reproof Isa 58. 1. C●y●aloud spare not c. vitium saeculi is no excuse if we spare God will not spare i● we hazard our bodies in bearing our testimony we save our souls we must cry out upon sin with a full throat and that again and again provided we be clear in our Principles and Ayms and do it without clamour and popular Invectives When a fire is kindled in a City we do not say coldly yonder is a great fire I pray God it do no harm in times of publique defection we are not to read taine Lectures of contemplative Divinity or fight with Ghosts and antiquated Errors but to oppose with all earnestness the growing evils of the world what ever it cost us 3. Nor yet an holy dislike and singularity standing aloof from publique corruptions as Lot in Sodom and Noah walked with God in his generations Gen. 6 9. Gods children most commonly are forced to walk in a counter motion to the times Paul when he had accused the times as evil adviseth Christians to walk circumspectly Gal. 5. 16. Worldly wisdom would draw quite another conclusion The times are bad let us do as well as we can there 's no living in the world unless we yeild a little the Oak is rent to pieces with the fury of the wind when the willow boweth and bendeth shall we alone resist such a torrent Thus would we reason but the spirit doth not loosen the reins but straighten them upon this consideration the days are evil therefore be circumspect that is be careful to keep close to rule left you be blinded and perverted by the subtleties of those that lie in wait to deceive and elsewhere shine as lights in the midst of a perverse generation Dead fishes swim with the stream there is a difference between subjection to God and compliance with men c. But now positively What is the fault there reproved I Answer 1. Foolish murmurings or such a fond and unthankful admiration of former times that we have not a good word for the present Tacitus observed it vitio malignitat is humane vettra laudantur praesentia fastidio sunt 't is a common evil men are praising past times and declaiming against the present querulous natures are never pleased neither full nor fasting past temptations are forgotten and therefore present evils ●eem worst and laziness many times occasioneth complaints Many repine against God because he hath given us our lot in such an age wherein publick contests put us upon the trouble of prayer discourse and diligent searching in the mind of God now usually to excuse other duties we fall a complaining Again private discontent may exasperate some things are not suitable to their humours and interests no wonder if Demetrius and the Copper Smiths call those evil times when the Gospel is like to get up because their craft is like to go down and they are not favoured as they do desire Again sottish carnality may be in the wind carnal men will extol the happiness of former times their great hospitality and kind neighbourhood their honest dealing and good devotion what a merry time it was and how plentifull all things were before the new Gospel came in and they had nothing but Moss and Mattens as those sots Jer. 44. 18 19. Formalists cry up the goodness of the old Religion to disparage times of reformation so the Roman Empire thrived more under false Gods then under the Christian Religion wherefore Augustine wrote his Books De civitate Dei to answer that charge Christians these times may be the worse for those that went before we may smart for their blood and Idols and hatred of the people of God judgments were then in the causes as the clouds gather before the rain falleth 2. When we pass over the good and look only upon the evil we should ●counter ballance our affictions with our mercies Shall we receive good and not evil at the hands of God Job 2. 't is railing to gather up the failings of others and not to take notice of their graces so 't is a railing against providence and an ill office to be only like flies pitching upon a sore place is there no blessing with all this bad with our temporal calamities have we not some increase of spiritual priviledges as in the wilderness they had Gods presence though they had a tedious passage of it the free use of Ordinances will countervail all publique burdens some suppose that Solomon in that Eccl. 7. 10. alludeth to the peoples murmuring in his time there was a Temple building but the Taxes were great and therefore they cryed the former t●mes were better then these see 1 King 12. 4. 5. When we charge our guilt upon the times man is apt to transfer his faults upon others and obliquely upon God himself The woman which thou gavest me c. and so usually the times wherein we live are such c. why God ordered them and if you were as you should be the times could not hurt you a great deal of fire falleth upon a stone and it burneth not but a dry chipp soon taketh fire men think if they be corrupt the sault is not theirs but the times 't is yours certainly 't is bad men make bad times as I shall shew anon Let me now give you a few Remedies 1. When your hearts storm look back there were inconveniences in the wilderness but a sore bondage in Egypt a good memory is an help to thankfulness for my owne case when I am brimfull I consider the times that are past when there was no peace to him that w●nt out or came in when private meetings were a conventicle and in publick we could only sigh not speak when May poles and carnal sports were preferred before the Sabbath when afternoon Preaching was supprest to make way for those sports when 't was a crime to go from a doa●ing service-Reader to hear the Preaching of the word surely they that are so ready to return into Egypt have forgotten their bondage when their cry came up to God because of the anguish of their souls our hard task-Masters the domineering Prelates and their oppressing filthy Courts are forgotten our promiscuous communions and the flat and cold repetitions of an imposed liturgy quite forgotten so the confinement of Preaching and the restraint of Doctrines these things are out of feeling and therefore out of remembrance one great defect the people of God are troubled
promises of God Let us now apply this 1. It informeth us that we may look for the reward without sin Those men would be wiser than God that deny us a liberty to make use of the Spirits motives they begrudg Gods bounty to what end should the Lord propound rewards but that we should close with them by faith graces may be exercised about their proper objects without sin it requireth some faith to aim at things not seen the world is drowned in sense and present satisfactions they are Mercenaries that must have pay in hand their Souls droop and languish if they do not meet with credit applause and profit they make man their pay master they have the spirit of a servant that prefer present wages before the inheritance but to do all upon the incouragements of the mercy of Jesus Christ unto eternal life argueth grace 'T was a relief to the Soul of Christ to think of the reward Heb. 12. 2. Christ as man was to have rational comforts and humane incouragements that is sinful indeed when we would have the reward but neglect the work when we would be Mercenarii but not Operarii we sever the reward from the duty like Ephraim are willing to ●●ead the corn but not break the clods Hos 10. 11. Again we look amiss upon the reward when we have a carnal notion of heaven as some Jews looked for a carnal Messiah so do some Christians for a carnal Heaven for base pleasure and fleshly delights for a Turkish Paradis● such kind of hopes debase the heart or else when we look for it as merited by us as if we could challenge it by our works then we are Mercinaries indeed 't is here looking for the mercy of Jesus Christ c. Again our own happiness must not be our last end there is a personal happiness that results to us from the enjoyment of God now the glory of God must be preferred before it 2. If you would persevere in the love of God and a good frame of heart revive your hopes and set the Soul a looking and a longing for eternal life if we keep the rejoycing of our hope firm to the end then we are safe Heb. 3. 6. Courtiers are more polite in their manners than ordinary subjects because they are more in their Princes eye and company the oftner we are in Gods Court the more holy Well then be as much as you can in actual expectation of this blessedness To this end 1. Believe it there is a mist upon eternity to a carnal heart they are led by sense and reason and believe no more than is evident to a natural principle but now faith is the evidence of things not seen Heb. 11. 1. fancy and nature cannot ou●-see time and look beyond death faith holdeth the candle to hope and then we have a prospect into the other world and can see an happy estate to come 2. Apply it 't is a poor comfortless meditation to think of a blessed hope and the certainty of it unless we have an interest in these things an hungry man taketh little pleasure in gazing upon a feast when he tastes not of it the reprobate hereafter are lookers on and David speaketh of a table spread for him in the sight of his enemies hope hath never a more lively influence than when we can make out our own propriety and interest 1. Job 19. 26. I know that my Redeemer liveth 2 Cor 5. 1. We know that if this earthly Tabernacle were dissolved we have a building not made with hands eternal in the Heavens 2 Tim. 4. 8. Hence forth there is laid up for me c they do not only believe there is an Heaven but apply it for me You will say is hope only the fruit assurance I answer 't is the fruit of faith as well as of assurance or experience but the sense of our interest is very comfortable and in some sort necessary before we can hope any thing for our selves our qualification is to be supposed in a matter of such moment a man should not be at an uncertainty canst thou be quiet and not sure of Heaven not to look after it is a bad sign a godly man may want it but a godly man cannot slight it 'T is possible a man may make an hard ●hift to creep to Heaven through doubts and fears and may be scarcely saved whilest others have an abundant entrance but then you lose your Heaven upon earth which consisteth in peace and joy in the Holy Ghost and lose much of the efficacy of hope for uncertain wavering thoughts work little therefore assurance cannot be sleighted further I adde by shewing what application there must be if we cannot attain to assurance there are three deg●ees of application beneath assurance there is acceptation adherence and affiance 1. Acceptation of Gods offer upon Gods terms Job 5. 27. Know thou it for thy good put in for these hopes and take God to his word upon this confidence make good thy part of the stipation in the Covenant and he will not fail thee this application there must be in all an answer to the demands of the Covenant 1 Pet. 3. 21. Exod. 24. 6 7 8. 2. Adherence Stick close to this hope in a course of obedience if we do Gods work we shall not fail of wages 1 Car. 9. 26. I run not as one that is uncertain 3. Affiance resting waiting upon God for the accomplishment of this blessedness though not without some doubts and fears as to our own interest though you cannot say 't is yours yet you will cast your self upon the mercy of God in Christ as 't is in the Text. Looking for the mercy of Christ you dare venture your Soul in that bottom this is that committing your selves to him as unto a merciful and faithful Creator which the Apostle speaketh of 1 Pet. 4. 18. You will go on with your work and put your selves in Gods hand for your eternal happiness because he is merciful faithful See also Rom. 2. 7. 3. Meditate on it often med ta●ion is a temperate extasie a survey of the Land of promise God biddeth Abraham take a view of Canaan Gen. 13. 14 15. Surely the more we lift up our thoughts in the contemplation of this blessed estate the more lively will our hopes be if every morning we spent a thought this way it would season the heart against the love of present things the morning is an emblem of the Resurrection when we awake out of the sleep of death and the day cometh which will never have night more Psal 17. 15. So in time of troubles we should be reckoning upon a better estate Rom. 8. 18 so when you are by bodily sickness summoned to the grave and you are going down to converse with worms and skulls then think of a blessed eternity Job 19. 26. The next Point is from that elause the mercy The ground of our waiting and looking for