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A25241 Looking unto Jesus a view of the everlasting gospel, or, the souls eying of Jesus as carrying on the great work of mans salvation from first to last / by Isaac Ambrose ... Ambrose, Isaac, 1604-1664. 1680 (1680) Wing A2957; ESTC R33051 999,188 563

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glory of his grace mercy and grace meet both in love only they differ thus mercy is love as it helps the miserable and grace is love as it gives good things freely without desert here then is the great designe which God from everlasting carried on that the glorious essence of his free love free-grace should be especially manifested to his Saints that so thy might admire it esteem it honour it and sound forth the praises of it All the other designes of God were but subservient unto this Some reckon up three great designes of the Almighty communicating himself as 1. The glory of his Saints 2. The glory of Christ 3. The glory of himself and especially the glory of his grace 1. That his Saints should be glorious and to that purpose he made heaven and earth and he makes them Lord of all 1 Cor. 3.21 vers 23. 2 Thes 1.10 all things are yours 2. That Christ should be glorious and to that purpose he makes the Saints and gives them to Christ all things are yours and you are Christs And certainly saith the Apostle at the last day Christ shall come to be glorified in his Saints and to be admired in all them that believe 3. That God himself should be glorified he made all things for himself Bring my sons from farre and my daughters from the ends of the earth even every one that is called by my name for I have created him for my glory Prov. 16.4 Isa 43.6.7 Now this is the high designe of God to which all the rest are subservient mark the steps all things are yours and you are Christs and Christ is Gods i. For God and for his glory the two former designes are to which but not for which God worketh he that buildeth an house that he may lay a sure foundation and that he may raise the frame he gives it the due filling which belongs to it but these are not his proper ends his main designe but that he may have an house for his habitation So God works many things to our glory and that in us Christ may be glorious but the proper end that high designe which he hath in all it is his own glory And yet O my soul consider a little further the plot of our salvation of the Saints glory and of Christs glory as it aimes at the glory of God so especially at the glory of his grace As if we see that one doth this or that in wisdom it is the glory of his wisdome if he do it in strength or power it is the glory of his power if he do it out of grace it is the glory of his grace so God designed the salvation of our soules out of his meer grace favour love he must needs intend to have his grace notified in us and to have it being known accordingly admired and praised and honored by us not but that God must be glorified in his wisdome power justice holiness and his other attributes ay but especially in this it is the grace of God in which he most delighteth even as vertuous Kings affect above all their other vertues to be had in honour for their clemency and bounty So it is with our God the King of Kings Lord of Lords all he doth is to this end that his grace may be manifested to his greater glory And to this end is the glory of Christ and the glory of Christians referred Why Lord that this should be thy plot to save my soul that my soul should praise the glory of thy grace that thy grace should before all worlds think on me for good O how should I but think on thee and thy free-grace How should I but admire it adore it praise it exalted it above Sun and Moon and Starres how should I but cry out with the Apostle Oh the depth of the riches of thy grace for of him Rom. 11.36 and through him and to him are all things to whom be glory for ever and ever Amen 2. Consider the counsels of God about thy salvation Ephes 1.11 he worketh all things after the counsell of his own will and with him is counsel and with him is understanding This counsel as we have discovered was primarily about that reconciliation of the riches of his grace and the glory of justice Consider this O my soul thy sin put all the attributes of God to a kind of conflict hereupon was that great and mighty counsel how God should make way for his love and goodness and yet satisfie his truth and justice at last the wisdome of God found out that glorious and wonderful expedient the Lord Jesus Christ Rom 3.25 is not this the meaning of the Apostle whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his Blood to declare his righteousness for the remission of sins Pouder and weigh these words God sets not forth Christ to be a propitiation to declare only his mercy in the forgiveness of sinnes how is there any thing but mercy in the forgiveness of sins yes there is something else there is righteousness also and therefore he hath set forth Christ to be a propitiation that he might declare his righteousness v rs 26. nay see it repeated to declare I say his righteousness that he might be just and the justifier of him which believeth in Jesus not that he might be merciful but that he might be just in justifying him that believeth in Jesus This Text Luther had a great deal ado to understand and he prayed much before he could get the right meaning of it This is the great mystery of the Gospel no wonder if a poor man could not reach it This is that which set the infinite wisdome of God on work from all eternity how to find a way to save sinners and to be infinitely righteous notwithstanding Nay yet O my soul consider a little further not only is the mercy of God in this way glorified but the glory of his justice is as much yea more then if the sinner were eternally damned It is made good thus 1. When God appointed a surety his Son and charged our debts upon him to satisfie his justice in that God would not spare his Son the least farthing token I mean not the least degree of punishment hereby the Lord shewes a stronger love to justice then if he had damned ten thousand thousand creatures Suppose a Malefactor comes before a Judge the Judg will not spare the Malefactor but commands satisfaction to the Law this shewes that the Judge loves justice but if the Judges own Son be a delinquent and it appears before all the Country that the Judge will not spare him the Judge now doth more honour justice in this than in condemning a thousand others So when the Lord shall cast many thousands to Hell there to be tormented for ever and ever and ever this shewes that God loves justice but when his own Son shall take our sins upon him
Mat. 26.65 as making himself equal with God yea see how the high Priest rends his clothes saying he hath spoken blasphemy Surely all this he endured that very blasphemers may find mercy if they will but come in and believe in Jesus I might instance in other sins art thou a Traytor a glutton a drunkard a wine-bibber a thief a seducer a companion of sinners why see now how Jesus Christ was for thy sake thus called reputed accounted whatever the sin is there 's something in Christ that answers that very sinfulness thou art a sinner and he is made sin to satisfie the wrath of God even for thy sin thou art such and such a sinner and he is accounted such and such a sinner for thy sake that thou mightest find in him something suitable to thy condition and so the rather be encouraged to believe that in him and through him all thy sins shall be done away Away away unbelief distrust despair you see now the brazen serpent lifted up you see what a blessed object is before you O believe O look up unto Jesus O believe in him thus carrying on the work of thy salvation in his death SECT VI. Of loving Jesus in that respect 6. LEt us love Jesus as carrying on the great work of our Salvation for us during his sufferings and death What! did he suffer and dye Rom. 5.8 Greater love than this hath no man that a man should give his life for his friends but God commendeth his love towards us in that while we were yet sinners Christ dyed for us Why here 's an argument of love indeed how should we but love him who hath thus loved us in prosecution of this I have no more to do but first to shew Christ's love to us and then to exercise our love to him again 1. For his love to us had not God said it and the Scriptures recorded it who would have believed our reports yet Christ hath done it and it is worth our while to weigh it and consider it in an holy meditation Indeed with what less than ravishment of Spirit can I behold the Lord Jesus who from everlasting was cloathed with Glory and Majesty now wrapped in rags cradled in a manger exposed to hunger thirst weariness danger contempt poverty revilings scourgings persecution but to let them pass into what extasies may I be cast to see the Judg of all the world accused judged condemned to see the Lord of life dying upon the tree of shame and curse to see the eternal Son of God strugling with his Fathers wrath to see him who had said I and my Father are one sweating drops of blood in his agony and crying out on his cross my God my God why hast thou forsaken me Oh whither hath his love to mankind carried him had he only sent his creatures to serve us had he only sent his Prophets to advise us in the way to Heaven had he only sent his Angels from his chamber of presence to attend upon us and to minister to us it had been a great deal of mercy or if it must be so had Christ come down from Heaven hnmself but only to visit us or had he come only and wept over us saying Oh that you had known even you in this your day the things belonging to your peace Oh that you had more considered of my goodness Oh that you had never sinned this would have been such a mercy as that all the world would have wondered at it but that Christ himself should come and lay down his blood and life and all for his people and yet I am not at the lowest that he should not only part with life but part with the sense and sweetness of God's love which is a thousand times better than life Psal 63.3 Thy loving kindness is better than life that he should be content to be accursed that we might be blessed that he should be content to be forsaken that we might not be forsaken that he should be content to be condemned that we might be acquitted O what raptures of Spirit can be sufficient for the admiration of this so infinite mercy be thou swallowed up O my soul in this depth of Divine love and hate to spend thy thoughts any more upon the base objects of this wretched world when thou hast such a Saviour to take them up Come look on thy Jesus who dyed temporally that thou mightest live eternally who out of his singular tenderness would not suffer thee to burn in hell for ten twenty thirty forty an hundred years and then recover thee by which notwithstanding he might better and deeper have imprinted in thee the blessed memory of a dear Redeemer no no this was the Article betwixt him and his Father That thou shouldst never come there see but observe but Christ's love in that mutual agreement betwixt God and Christ Oh I am pressed saith God with the sins of the world as a cart is pressed that is full of sheaves come my Son either thou must suffer or I must damn the world Accordingly I may imagine the Attributes of God to speak to God Mercy cryes I am abused and Patience cryes I am despised and goodness cryes I am wronged and Holyness cryes I am contradicted and all these come to the Father for Justice crying to him that all the world were opposers of his Grace and Spirit and if any be saved Christ must be punished In this case we must imagine Christ stepped in nay rather than so saith Christ I will bear all and undertake the satisfying of all And now look upon him he hangs on the cross all naked all torn all bloody betwixt Heaven and Earth as if he were cast out of Heaven and also rejected by Earth he hath a Crown indeed but such a one as few men will touch none will take from him and if any rash man will have it he must tear hair skin and all or it will not come his hair is all clodded with blood his face all clouded with black and blew he is all over so pittifully rent outwards inwards body and soul I will think the rest alas when I have spoken all I can I shall speak under it had I the tongues of men and Angels I could not express it Oh love more deep than hell Oh love more high than heaven the brightest Seraphims that burn in love are but as sparkles to that mighty flame of love in the heart of Jesus 2. If this be Christ's love to us what is that love we owe to Christ Oh now for an heart that might be some wayes answerable to these mercies Oh for a soul sick of love yea sick unto death how should I be otherwise or any less affected this only sickness is our health this death our life and not to be thus sick is to be dead in sins and trespasses why surely I have heard enough for which to love Christ for ever The depths of God's grace are
Devil and man as well as betwixt the Devil and the woman but because the woman had more tampered with Satan and being deceived by Satan was first in the transgression therefore is she onely named I will put enmity between thee and the woman 2. Betwixt Satans seed and the seed of the woman I will put enmity not onely between thee and the woman but also between thy seed and her seed q.d. This enmity shall not cease with the death of the woman but it shall continue to her seed and to her seeds seed even to the end of the World We see to this day how the Serpent and Serpents seed are striving and warring against the Church and a wonder it is considering the malice of the enemy that there is a Church upon Earth but onely that we have Christs promise The gates of Hell shall not prevaile against it and lo I am with you alwayes even to the end of the World 3. Betwixt Christ and the Serpent O this a bloody conflict on both sides he shall bruise thy head and thou shalt bruise his heel 1. He shall bruise thy head Christ shall break thy power thy power i.e. the power of the Serpent or of the Devil himself he fights not so much with the seed as with the Serpent if Satan be overthrown his seed cannot stand 2. Thou shalt bruise his heel thou shalt afflict him and his thou shalt cast out of thy mouth a flood of persecutions thou shalt make warre with him Rev. 12.17 and all them which keep the Commandments of God and have the testimony of Jesus Christ I have held you a while in the explication of this first promise and the rather because of the darkness of it and the much sweetness that is contained in it it is full of Gospel-truths strike but the flint and there will fly out these glorious sparkles 1. That a Saviour was promised from the beginning of the world 2. That this Saviour should free all his Saints from sin death and hell the head and power of the Devil 3. That to this end this Saviour should be a Mediator for God would not grant an immediate pardon but the promised seed must first intervene 4. That this Mediator should be of the seed of the woman that is a man and yet stronger then the Devil indued with a Divine power and so he is God 5. That this Man-God should according to his Priestly office be a Sacrifice for sin the Serpent should bruise his heel he should suffer and dye for the people and yet accordingly to his Kingly office he should overcome Satan for he should bruise his head overthrow his Kingdom and make us more than Conquerors in him that loved us 6. That this promise of Christ and of our justification is free God of meer mercy and free-grace brings forth this promise there could be now after the fall no merit in man and even now he promiseth remission of sins and life Eternal in for and through the Lord Jesus Christ No question but in belief of this promise the Patriarchs and Fathers of old obtained life glory and immortality By faith the Elders obtained a good report by faith Abel obtained witness that he was righteous by faith Enoch was translated that he should not see Death by faith Noah became heir of the righteousness of Christ how should it but revive us in these last times to hear that the first thing that ever God did after the World was fallen it was this act of mercy to make a promise of Christ and to reconcile lost man to himself through the same Jesus Christ surely he began to do that soon which he meant to be alwayes a doing even to the end of the World Thus far of the promise as it was manifested from Adam to Abraham SECT III. Of the Covenant of promise as manifested to Abraham THe second breaking forth of this gracious Covenant was to Abraham and now it shines in a more glorious light then it did before at first it was propounded in very dark and cloudy termes not easie to be understood and most things sparingly expressed but in this second rise and manifestation we have it laid down in plainer termes I will establish my Covenant between me and thee and thy seed after thee in their generation Gen. 17 1● for an everlasting Covenant to be a God to thee and to thy seed after thee For the right understanding of this we shall examine these particulars 1. What a Covenant is 2. What is the establishing of this Covenant 3. Betwixt whom is the Covenant to be established 4. For what time is the established Covenant to endure 5. What are the priviledges of this Covenant 6. What is the condition of this Covenant 7. Who is the head both as undertaker and purchaser and treasurer upon whom this Covenant is established 1. What is a Covenant It is a contract of mutual peace and good will obliging parties on both hands to the performing of mutual benefits and offices Thus was the Covenant betwixt God and Abraham there was a mutual stipulation in it on Gods part to performe his promises of temporal spiritual and Eternal grace and on Abrahams part to receive this grace by faith and to performe due obedience and thankfulness to God Hence a little nearer we say the Covenant is a mutual compact or agreement betwixt God and man whereby God promiseth all good things especially Eternal happiness unto man and man doth promise to walk before God in all acceptable free and willing obedience expecting all good from God and happiness in God according to his promise for the praise and glory of his grace Others describing the Covenant of grace for with the Covenant of works we will not meddle they give it thus The Covenant of grace is a free and gracious compact which God of his meer mercy in Jesus Christ hath made with sinful man promising unto him pardon of sins and eternal happiness If he will but repent of sin and embrace mercy reached forth by faith unfeigned and walk before God in willing faithful and sincere obedience In this description many things are considerable As 1. That the Author of this Covenant is God not as our Creator but as our merciful God and Father in Christ Jesus 2. That the cause of this Covenant is not any worth or dignity or merit in man but the meer mercy love and favour of God 3. That the foundation of this Covenant is Jesus Christ in and through whom we are reconciled unto God for since God and man were separated by sin no Covenant can pass betwixt them no reconciliation can be expected nor pardon obtained but in and through a Mediator 4. That the party Covenanted with is sinful man the fall of our first Parents was the occasion of this Covenant and God was pleased to permit the fall that he might manifest the riches of his mercy in mans recovery 5. That the form of
for God will magnifie his grace and therefore he will do this great thing all that thou hast to do and all that God requires of thee in this case is onely to believe indeed thou hast no part in Christ no part in the covenant of grace if thou wilt not believe faith is the condition of the covenant of grace and therefore either believe or no covenant I know it is not easie to believe nay it is one of the hardest things under heaven to perswade a soul into faith What Will the great God of heaven make a Covenant with such a wretch as I am I cannot believe it Why What 's the matter Ah my sins my sins my sins God is a consuming fire against such he cannot endure to behold iniquity little hopes that ever God should enter into a covenant with me But to help on or to allure a soul in consider O thou soul of these following passages 1. Consider of the sweet and gracious nature of God that which undoes broken hearts and trembling souls it is misconceivings of God we have many times low diminishing ex enuating thoughts of Gods goodness but we have large thoughts of his power and wrath now to rectifie these misapprehensions consider his name and therein his nature the Lord the Lord Merciful and Gracious Long-suffering and abundant in Goodness and Truth keeping mercy for Thousands forgiving Iniquity Transgressions Sins and will by no means clear the guilty visiting the Iniquity of the Fathers upon the Children and upon the Childrens Children unto the Third and Fourth Generation O terrible Text Exod. 34.6 7 sayes the Soul alas I am guilty of thousands of sins and if this be his Name I am undone woe to me and mine unto the Third and Fourth Generation But consider again and in this description of God we shall find an Ocean of Mercy to a Drop of Wrath a Sea of Oyl to an half drop of scalding Lead For 1. God doth not begin the Lord the Lord that will by no means clear the guilty but the Lord the Lord Merciful and Gracious Long-suffering this is the first and greatest part of his Name God is loath to speak in justice and wrath he keeps it to the last m●rcy lies uppermost in Gods heart if the sentence must come it shall be the last day of the Assize 2 Many words are used to speak his goodness Merciful Gracious Long-suffering and abundant in Goodness keeping Mercy for Thousands forgiving Iniquity Transgression and Sin here be six several phrases to shew the Riches of his Goodness but when he speaks his wrath what haste makes he over it there 's only two expressions of that it was a Theam he took no delight in Judgment is his Work his strange Work Isa 28.22 for he doth not afflict willingly nor grieve the Children of Men. 3. There 's a difference in the expression when God speaks of mercy Lam. 3.33 he expresseth it thus abundant in Mercy keeping Mercy for Thousands But in visiting sins it is not to thousands but only to the Third or Fourth Generation Surely Mercy rejoyceth against Judgment God would shew Mercy to Thousands Jam. 2.13 rather than he would destroy three or four 4. What if by no means God will clear the guilty stubbornly guilty yet never will he destroy humble souls that lye at his feet and are willing to have mercy on his easie terms How shall I give thee up Ephraim how shall I deliver thee O Israel Hos 11.8 9. how shall I make thee as Admah How shall I set thee as Zeboim My heart is turned within me my repentings are kindled together I will not execute the fierceness of Mine anger I will not destroy Ephraim for I am God and not Man the Holy One in the middest of ●●ee O my soul why standest thou at a distance with God Why dost thou fancy a Lion in the way O b●lieve in God believe in Jesus and believe thy portion in this Covenant of grace have sweet and delightful thoughts of Gods nature and thou wilt not thou canst not sly from him some are of opinion that a soul may fetch more encouragements to believe from the consideration of Gods gracious and merciful nature than from the promise it self 2. Consider of the sweet and gracious nature of Jesus Christ our thoughts of God are necessarily more strange than of Jesus Christ because of our infinite distance from the Godhead but in Christ God is come down into our nature and so infinite goodness and mercy is incarnate art thou afraid O my soul at his name Jah and Jehovah O remember his name is Emanuel the Lyon is here disrobed of his garment of terrour his rough hair is turned into a soft wooll see thy God disrobed of his terrible Majesty see thy God is a man and thy Judg is a Brother mince Jehovah with Jesus and the Serpent wi●l be a rod O that Balsamy name Jesus that name that founds healing for every wound settlement for every distraction comfort for every sorrow but here 's the misery souls in distress had rather be poring on hell than heaven rather frighting themselves with the terrours of justice than staying themselves with the fl●ggons of Mercy O my soul how canst thou more contradict the nature of Christ and the Gospel-description of Christ than to think him a destroyer of men b●t wherein appears the gracious nature of Christ I answer in his being incarnate O how could Jesus have manifested more willingness to save than that the God-head should condescend to assume our nature surely this is ten thousand times more condescention than for the greatest King to become a sly or a toad to save such creatures as toads and flyes 2. In his tender dealing with all sorts of sinners he professed th t he came into the world not to condemn the world but that the world through him might be saved He wept over Jerusalem saying O Jerusalem Je●usalem Mat. 23.37 how oft would I have gathered thee as an Hen gathereth her chickens under her wings but ye would not I would but ye would not And when his Disciples would have had fire come down from Heaven to consume tho●e that refused him he reproves them and tells them they know not of what spirits they were of 3. In his care of his own not caring what he suffered so they might be saved Alas alas that the Lord Jesus should pass through a life of misery to a death more miserable to manifest openly to the world the abundance of his love and yet that any soul should suspect him of cruelty or unwillingness to shew mercy Ah my soul believe never cry out my sins my sins my sins there is a gracious nature and inclination in Jesus Christ to pardon all 3. Consider of that office of saving and shewing mercy which Christ hath set up this is more than meerly a gracious inclination Christ hath undertaken and set up an office
man have a quarrel against any even as Christ forgave you so also do ye 1 Pet. 1.15 16. And as he which hath called you is holy so be ye holy in all manner of conversation because it is written be ye holy for I am holy Against this some object how can we be holy as Christ is holy first the thing is impossible and secondly if we could there would be no nee● of Christ But I answer to the first the thing if rightly understood is not impossible we are commanded to be holy as Christ is holy not in respect of equality as if our holiness must be of the same compass with the holiness of Christ but in respect of quality our holiness must be of the same stamp and truth as the holiness of Christ as when the Apostle saith That we must love our neighbor as our self the meaning is Rom. 13.9 not that our love to our neighbor should be Mathematically equal to the love of our self for the Law doth allow of degrees in love accordingly to the degrees of relation in the thing beloved Rom. 12.9 Do good unto all men specially to those of the houshold of faith love to a friend may safely be greater than love to a stranger or love to a wife or child may safely be greater than to a friend yet in all our love to others it must be of the self same nature as true as real as cordial as sincere as solid as that to our selves We must love our neighbor as our selves i.e. unfeignedly and without dissimulation Again I answer to the second Christ is needful notwithstanding our utmost holiness in two respects 1. Because we cannot come to full and perfect holiness and so his grace is requisite to pardon and cover our failings 2. Because that which we do attain unto it is not of or from our selves and so his spirit is requisite to strengthen us unto his service We must be holy as Christ is holy yet still we must look at the holiness of Christ as the sun and root and fountain and that our holiness is but as a beam of that sun but as a branch of that root but as a stream of that fountain For the third how we must conform to this life I answer 1. Let us frame to our selves some Idea of Christ let us set before us the life of Christ in the whole and all the parts of it as we find it recorded in God's Book It would be a large picture if I should draw it to the full but for a taste I shall give it in few lines Now then setting aside the consideration of Christ as God or as Mediator or as Head of his Church 1. I look at the mind of Christ at his judgment will affections such as love joy delight and the rest and especially at the compassions of Jesus Christ O the dear affections and compassions which Christ had towards the sons of men this was his errand from Heaven and while he was upon the earth he was ever acting it I mean his pitifulness Luke 4.18 Psal 147.3 I mean his affections and compassion in healing broken hearts so the Psalmist He healeth the broken in heart and bindeth up their wounds it is spoken after the manner of a Chirurgion he had a tender heart towards all broken hearts he endeavoured to put all broken bones into their native place again nor speak I thus only of him in respect of his office but as he was man he had in him such a mind that he could not but compassionate all in misery O what bowels what stirrings and boylings and wrestlings of a pained heart touched with sorrow was ever upon occasion in Jesus Christ Matth. 14.1 Mark 6.34 peruse these texts and Jesus went forth and saw a great multitude and he was moved with compassion towards them and he healed their sick And Jesus when he came out saw much people and was moved with compassion towards them because they were as sheep not having a shepherd Mark 1.40 41. And there came a leper to him and kneeling down to him and saying to him if thou wilt thou canst make me clean and Jesus moved with compassion put forth his hand and touched him saying I will be thou clean Then Jesus called his disciples unto him Mat. 15.32 and said I have compassion on the multitude And for the two blind men that cried out Have mercy on us O Lord thou son of David Matth. 20.34 Luke 15.20 it is said that Jesus stood still and he had compassion on them and touched their eyes And the poor prodigal returning When he was yet a great way off his Father saw him and had compassion and ran and fell on his neck and kissed him How sweet is this last Instance that our sense of sinful weakness should be sorrow and pain to the bowels and heart of Jesus Christ you that are Parents of young Children let me put the case if some of you standing in the relation of a Father should see his Child sweat and wrestle under an over-load till his back were almost broken and that you should hear him cry Oh I am gone I faint I sinck I dye would not your bowels be moved to pity and would not your hands be stretched out to help or if some of you standing in the relation of a Mother should see your sucking Child fallen into a pit and wrestling with the water and crying for help would you not stir nor be moved in heart nor run to deliver the Child from being drowned Surely you would and yet all this pity and compassion of yours is but as a shadow of the compassions and dear affections that were and that are in the heart of Jesus Christ O he had a mind devoid of sin and therefore it could not but be full of pity mercy and tender bowels of compassion 2. I look at the grace in Christ O he was full of grace yea full of all the graces of the Spirit Cant. 1.13 14. A bundle of Mirrh is my well-beloved to me My Beloved is unto me as a cluster of camphire in the vineyards of Engedi a bundle of Myrrh and a cluster of camphire denote all the graces of the Spirit as many flowers are bound together in a nosegay so the variety of the graces of the Spirit concenter'd in the heart of Jesus Christ ex gr Matth. 21.5 1. In him was meekness He cometh unto thee meek he had a sweet command and moderation of his anger Num. 12.3 he was meek as Moses nay though Moses was very meek and very meek above all the men that were upon the face of the earth yet Christ's meekness exceeded Mose's as the body doth exceed the shadow 2. In him was humility he saved not the world by his power but by his humility in his incarnation Christ would be humble and therefore he was born of a poor Virgin in a common Inn in his
wide Ocean of delights there is room enough but herein I must leave thee in the duty for I can but point at the several particulars whereon thou mayst enlarge O think on it that Christ and Christ's blood and Christ's prayers should be all at work that Christ should play the Advocate and plead thy cause and perfume thy duties with his Incense and take thy person in an unperceivable way to God his Father and cry there O my Father be merciful to this sinner pardon his sin and save his soul for the sake of Jesus O blessed mediation O blessed is the man that on this blessed object knows how to meditate both day and night 8. Consider of the power and prevalency of Christ's intercessions with his Father Is he not to this puropose a Priest to God and called thereto by God is he not the Son of God yea God himself is he not God's Darling God's Commander as well as Petitioner nay is not the hand of God himself in this design is not the Fathers heart as much towards us and our salvation as Christ's own heart as sure then as Christ is gone into Heaven with thy name engraven on his heart so sure shalt thou follow him and be with him where he is Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God's Elect who is he that condemneth where Christ becomes Patron to defend against the sentence of damnation it is in vain for Sin or Law or Sathan to attempt any thing for as an innocent person is safe so long as he hath his learned Advocate to answer all Objections so it is with Believers who have Christ himself both Judge and Advocate a sure Advocate he ever prevails in whatsoever he undertakes he was never yet cast in any suit he hath for these Sixteen Hundred years carried away all the causes of hundreds thousands and millions of souls why he is so dear and near to his Father that he can work him to any thing he will And O my soul if thou hast any relation to Jesus Christ is not here comfort I dare in the Name of Christ be thy warrant and give it under my hand that if Christ pray for thee Christ will be sure to save thee he never yet failed he never will fail in any of his suits to God Oh consider of this 9. Consider of the reasons of Christ's intercession many are given but this may be sufficient It is Gods own Ordinance the very wisdom of God found out this way to save our souls viz. that an High-Priest should be appointed who should die for sinners and afterward present his death to his Father by way of intercession in their behalf Some may look upon this as needless what could not God have pardoned our sins and saved our souls without a Priest I shall not dispute God's power but if any will let such a one tell me what way could his own wisdome have found out to heaven between the wrath of God and the sin of man I believe it would have posed all the wisdom of the world of Men and Angels to have reconciled God's mercy in the salvation of man and his justice in the condemnation of sin to have poured out hell upon the sin and yet to have bestowed heaven upon the sinner now then if God himself did study to find out this way and that he hath said This is my pleasure that Christ my Son shall be a Priest and that he shall offer himself and Present himself and his offering and his prayer to me for his People O my soul rest on this as the very ordination of God admire at the contrivance of God say O the depth question no further only Meditate and ponder and consider of it till thou feelest Christ's intercession darting its influence and efficacy on thy sin-sick soul SECT III. Of desiring after Jesus in that respect 3. LEt us desire after Jesus carrying on this work of our salvation in his intercession I cannot but wonder what a dulness seizeth on my heart and on all the hearts of the Sons of men that we have no more longings after Christ whose heart is ever panting and longing after us Surely we do not set our selves to find out experimentally the sweetness that is in Christ if there were not another object to think upon but only this one of Christ's intercession is not here enough to put us all into a teeming longing frame O my soul rouze up and set this blessed object before thy face take a full view of it untill thy affections begin to warm and thou beginst to cry Oh for my part in Christ's intercession Oh I would not be left out of Christ's heavenly prayers for ten thousand worlds come and be serious the object is admirably sweet and precious long for it pant after it God understands the Rhetorick of thy breathing as well as of thy cry But what is there in Christ's intercession that is so desirable I answer 1. In Christ's intercession lyes the present transaction of our souls salvation Such passages as hitherto we have spoken of are done and past the transactions of eternity were at an end when time began the transactions of Christ promised had their period when Christ was incarnate the transactions of Christ's Birth and life and death and resurrection and ascension are now above a thousand and six hundred years old I know the vertue and influence of all these transactions continue and will continue for ever and ever but the several actings had their periods and only Christ's session and mission of his spirit and his blessed intercession both were and now are the very present imployment of Jesus Christ If it were possible that we could see into Heaven if with Stephen we could look up steadfastly and see the Heavens opened if our eyes by an extraordinary power were carryed through that azure sky and through all till we come to the Holy of Holies and to Jesus Christ in his glory what should we see but Christ interceding Christ busie with his Father in his poor Saints behalf now he prayes now he presents his person merits intercession interpellation q. d. Father here are a company of Rebels justly fallen under thy displeasure they deserve to be set at an eternal distance from thee but I must needs have them pardoned and received into thy bosom come make thine own terms let justice require never so great satisfaction I have paid a price sufficient for all and effectual for them give them what laws thou pleasest I will undertake they shall observe them and to this purpose away away holy spirit go to such and such souls enable them to their duties yea enable them in duty and sanctifie them throughout in souls bodies and spirits Why this is the present transaction of Jesus Christ and therefore most desirable methinks I long to know what Christ is now a doing in Heaven for my soul and is it not thus is not all his time spent either
be one person and in that person he was born and lived and died and rose again and ascended into Heaven there now he hath been sitting sending down the Holy Ghost and interceding for his Saints for above one thousand six hundred years And in this last work he will continue till the end of the World and then he will come again to judge the World and to receive his Saints to himself that where he is they may be with him to see and enjoy him to all eternity This is the epitome of all I have said onely in every particular I have set down Christ's actings towards us and our actings towards Christ in various formes and out-goings of his love he hath acted towards us and in various formes and out-goings of our souls we have been taught fitly and suitably to act towards him Now in all these actings How doth the free grace of God in Christ appear Ye are saved by grace Ephes 2.5 saith the Apostle Eph. 2.5 the decree the means the end of our salvation is grace and onely grace The decree is grace and therefore it is called the election of grace Rom. 1.5 2 Tim. 1.9 Rom. 3.24 Rom. 6.23 Eph. 1.7 Eph. 2.7 the means are of grace and therefore we are called according to his grace and we are justified freely by his grace And the end is of grace for eternal life is the gift of God both beginning and progress and execution is all of grace This is the riches of his grace the exceeding the hyperbolical riches of his grace the conclusion of all is this God's free grace which was first designed will at last be manifested and eternally praised by Saints and Angels the same free grace which from the beginning of the age of God from everlasting drove on the saving plot and sweet design of our salvation will at last be glorified to purpose when Heavens inhabitants will be ever digging into this golden-mine ever rolling this soul-delighting and precious stone ever beholding viewing enquiring and searching into the excellency of this same Christ and this free grace Now all is done shall I speak a word for Christ or rather for our selves in relation to Christ and so an end if I had but one word more to speak in the World it should be this Oh let all our spirits be taken up with Christ let us not busie our selves too much with toyes or trifles with ordinary and low things but look unto Jesus Surely Christ is enough to fill all our thoughts desires hopes loves joys or whatever is within us or without us Christ alone comprehends all the circumference of all our happiness Christ is the pearl hid in the large field of God's Word Christ is the scope of all the Scriptures all things and persons in the old World were Tipes of him all the Prophets foretold him all God's love runs through him all the gifts and graces of the Spirit flow from him the whole eye of God is upon him and all his designs both in Heaven and Earth meet in him Eph. 1.10 the great design of God is this That he might gather together in one all things in Christ both which are in heaven and which are on earth even in him All things are summed up in one Jesus Christ if we look on the creation the whole world was made by Christ if we look on providences all things subsist in Christ they have their being and their well-being in him Where may we find God but in Christ where may we see God but in this essential and eternal glass 2 Cor. 4.6 Heb. 1.3 Christ is the face of God the brightness of his glory the express image of his Fathers person the Father is as it were all Sun and all Pearl and Jesus Christ is the substantial rayes the eternal and essential irradiation of this Sun of glory Christ outs God as the seal doth the stamp Christ reveals God as the face of a man doth reveal the man so Christ to Philip He that hath seen me hath seen the Father q. d. I am as like the Father John 14.9 as God is like himself there is a perfect indivisible unity between the Father and me I and the Father are one one very God he the begetter and I the begotten Christ is the substantial Rose that grew out of the Father from eternity Christ is the essential wisdom of God Christ is the substantial Word of God the intellectual birth of the Lord 's infinite understanding Oh the worth of Christ compare we other things with Christ and they will bear no weight at all cast into the ballance with him Angels they are wise but he is wisdom cast into the ballance with him men they are lyars lighter than vanity but Christ is the Amen the faithful witness cast into the scales Kings and all Kings and all their glory why he is King of Kings cast into the scale millions of tallents-weight of glory cast in two Worlds and add to the weight millions of Heavens of Heavens and the ballance cannot down the scales are unequal Christ out-weighs all Shall I yet come nearer home what is Heaven but to be with Christ what is life eternal but to believe in God and in his Son Jesus Christ where may we find peace with God and reconciliation with God but onely in Christ God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself 2 Cor. 5.19 where may we find compassion mercy and gentleness to sinners but onely in Christ it is Christ that takes off infinite wrath and satisfies justice and so God is a most lovely compassionate desirable God in Jesus all the goodness of God comes out of God through this golden pipe the Lord Jesus Christ It is true those essential attributes of love grace mercy goodness are onely in God and they abide in God yet the Mediatory manifestation of love grace mercy and goodness is onely in Christ Christ alone is the Treasury Store-house Magazene of the free goodness and mercy of the God-head In him we are Elected Adopted Redeemed Justified Sanctified Saved he is the ladder and every step of it betwixt Heaven and Earth he is the way the truth and the life he is honour riches beauty health peace and salvation he is a suitable and rich portion to every man's soul that which some of the Jews observe of the Mannah that it was in taste according to every man's pallate it is really true of Christ that he is to the Soul whatsoever the soul would have him to be All the spiritual blessings wherewith we are enriched are in and by Christ God hears our prayers by Christ God forgives our iniquities through Christ all we have and all we expect to have hangs onely on Christ he is the golden hinge upon which all our salvation turns Oh how should all hearts be taken with this Christ Christians turn your eyes upon the Lord Look and look again unto Jesus Why stand ye gazing on the toyes of this World when such a Christ is offered to you in the Gospel can the World dye for you can the World reconcile you to the Father can the World advance you to the Kingdom of Heaven As Christ is all in all so let him be the full and compleat subject of our desire and hope and faith and love and joy let him be in your thoughts the first in the morning and the last at night Shall I speak one word more to thee that believest Oh apply in particular all the transactions of Jesus Christ to thy very self remember how he came out of his Fathers bosom for thee wept for thee bled for thee poured out his life for thee is now risen for thee gone to Heaven for thee sits at God's right hand and rules all the World for thee makes intercession for thee and at the end of the World will come again for thee and receive thee to himself to live with him for ever and ever Surely if thus thou believest and livest thy life is comfortable and thy death will be sweet if there be any Heaven upon Earth thou wilt find it in the practise and exercise of this Gospel-duty in Looking unto Jesus A Poem of Mr. George Herbert in his Temple JESV JESV is in my heart his sacred Name Is deeply carved there but th' other week A great affliction broke the little frame Ev'n all to pieces which I went to seek And first I found the corner where was J After where ES and next where V was graved When I had got these parcels instantly I sate me down to spell them and perceived That to my broken heart he was I ease you and to my whole is JESV FINIS
sunt quia nomen Jesu non est in illis Aug. Si scribas non sapit mihi nisi legero ibi Jesum Si disputes aut conferas non sapit mihi nisi sonuerit ibi Jesum Ber. 1 Cor. 2.2 commended them for their eloquence but he passed this sentence upon them They are not sweet because the name of Jesus is not in them And Bernards saying is near the same if thou writest it doth not relish with me unless I read Jesus there if thou disputest or conferrest it doth not relish well with me unless Jesus sound there Indeed all we say is but unsavory if it be not seasoned with this salt I determined not to know any thing among you saith Paul save Jesus Christ and him Crucified he resolved with himself before he Preached among the Corinthians that this should be the only point of knowledge that he would profess himself to have skill in and that in the course of his Ministry he would labour to bring them to this he made the bredth length depth height of his knowledge yea doubtless saith he and I count all things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord Ephes 3.18 Phil. 3.8 In this knowledge of Christ there is an excellency above all other knowledge in the VVorld there is nothing more pleasing comfortable more animating enlivening more ravishing soul-contenting only Christ is the sum center of all divine revealed truths we can preach nothing else as the object of our faith as the necessary element of our souls salvation which doth not some way or other either meet in Christ or refer to Christ only Christ is the whole of mans happiness the Sun to enlighten him the Physician to heal him the VVall of Fire to defend him the Friend to comfort him the Pearl to enrich him the Ark to support him the Rock to sustain him under the heaviest pressures As an hiding place from the Wind and a covert from the Tempest Isa 32.2 as Rivers of Waters in a dry place and as the shadow of a great Rock in a weary Land Only Christ is that Ladder betwixt Earth and Heaven the Mediator betwixt God and Man a Mystery which the Angels of Heaven desire to pry and peep and look into 1 Pet. 1.12 Here 's a blessed subject indeed who would not be glad to pry into it to be acquainted with it This is life eternal to know God and Jesus Christ whom he hath sent Come then let us look on this Sun of righteousness we cannot receive harm but good by such a look Joh. 17.3 indeed by looking long on the natural Sun we may have our eyes dazled and our faces blackned but by looking unto Jesus Christ we shall have our eyes clearer and our faces fairer Prov 15.30 if the light of the eye rejoyce the heart how much more when we have such a blessed object to look upon As Christ is more excellent than all the world so this sight transcends all other sights it is the Epitome of a Christians happiness the quintessence of evangelical Duties Looking unto Jesus In the Text we have the act and Object the act in the Original is very emphatical 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the English doth not fully express it it signifies an averting or drawing off the eye from one object to another there are two expressions 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the one signifies a turning of the eye from all other objects the other a fast fixing of the eye upon such an object and only upon such So it is both a looking off and a looking on On what That is the object a looking unto Jesus a Title that denotes his mercy and bounty as Christ denotes his office and function I shall not be so curious as to enquire why Jesus and not Christ is nominated I suppose the person is aimed at which implies them both only this may be observed that Jesus is the purest Gospel Name of all other names Jesus was not the dialect of the Old Testament the first place that ever we read of this title as given to Christ it is in Matth. 1.21 Mat. 1.21 Thou shalt call his name Jesus for he shall save his people from their sins Some observe that this Name Jesus was given him twice once till death Matth. 1.21 and afterwards for ever Phil. 2.10 the first was a note of his entering into Covenant with God to fulfill the Law for us to die for our sins the second was a note of so meritorious a person who for his humility was more exalted than any person ever hath been or shall be First Jesus was the humble name of his deserving grace now Jesus is the exalted name of his transcendent glory at first the Jewes did Crucifie Jesus and his name the Apostle did then distrust whether Jesus was the true Jesus but now God hath raised him from the dead Luk. 24.21 Phil. 2.9.10 hath highly exalted him given him a name above every name that at the Name of Jesus every knee should bow of things in heaven and things in earth and things under the earth My meaning is not to insist on this Name in contradistinction to any other names of Christ he is often called Christ and Lord and Mediatour and Son of God and Emmanuel Why Jesus is all these Jesus is Christ as he is the annointed of God and Jesus is Lord as he hath dominion over all the world and Jesus is Mediatour as he is the reconciler of God man and Jesus is the Son of God as he was eternally begotten before all worlds and Jesus is Emmanuel as he was incarnate and so God with us Only because Jesus signifie Saviour and this name was given him upon that very account For he shall save his people from their sins I shall make this my designe to look at Jesus more especially as carrying on the great work of our salvation from first to the last This indeed is the glad-tidings the Gospel the Gospel-priviledge and our Gospel-Duty Looking unto Jesus CHAP. II. SECT I. The Duty of looking off all other things confirmed and cleared Doctrine 1 BUT first we must look off all other things the note is this We must take off our mind from every thing which might divert us in our Christian Race from looking unto Jesus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the first word or first piece of a word in my Text speaks to us thus hands off or eyes off from any thing that stands in the way of Jesus Christ I remember 't was writ over Plato's door 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there 's none may come hither that is not a Geometer but on the door of my Text is written clean contrary 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 No earthly minded man must enter here not any thing in the world be it never so excellent if it stand in the way of
you more 2. For the godly are not they careless of this Duty O their excursions from God! sad dejections of spirit inordinat affections of the world and in the mean-while O the neglect of this Gospel-ordinance even amongst Saints themselves I know not whether through want of skill or through want of will but sure I am this duty lies dormant neglected of most of the people of God their faults I may express in these respects 1. In not sending out their understandings in not pointing their minds towards Jesus I write unto you said the Apostle to stir up your pure minds by way of remembrance it is in the Original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Pet. 3.1 Psal 57.8 Judg 7.12 to awaken your pure minds and it was but need See how David calls upon himself Awake my glory and see how Deborah calls upon her self Awake awake Deborah awake awake utter a song Awaking is a word that imports rouzing as birds that provoke their young ones by flight to make use of their wings now how few are there that thus call upon themselves it was the Prophets complaint no man stirs up himself Isa 64.7 to take hold of God O what a shame is this is it fit that our understandings which God hath entrusted us withal should be no more improved is it fit that our minds those golden cabinets which God hath given us to be filled with heavenly treasure should either be empty or stuft with vanity nothing worse then nothing O that such glorious creatures as our souls should lacquey after every creature which should be in attendance upon Christ which should be like Angels waiting and standing in the presence of our God! O that such glorious things as our immortal spirits should run after vanity and so become vain which if rightly improved should walk with Angels should lodge themselves in the bosom of the glorious God! Do we not see how Christ is sending out to us continually the thoughts of his heart are love eternal love and shall not we send out our thoughts towards him shall not we let our minds run out towards him 2. In not bending of their minds to this work It may be the mind looks up but it 's so feeble that like an arrow shot from a bow weakly bent it reacheth not the mark It is the wise mans counsel Eccl. 9.10 Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do do it with all they might O that Gods people should be so lazie dull sluggish sloathfull in this spiritual work As Jesus said to the multitudes concerning John Matt 11.7 What went ye out into the wilderness to see So may I ask believers in their looking unto Jesus What went ye out to see when you crawle move as if you had no hearts nor spirits within you whom go ye forth to see what Heb. 1 3. him that is the Lord of glory what him that is the brightness of his Fathers glory and the express image of his person what are such heavy lazy aspects fit to take in such a glory as this is you see in what large streams your thoughts fly forth to other things are you only languishing weak and feeble in things of so great concernment Oh that Christians should be cold in spirituals hot in the pursuit of earthly temporal things 3. In not binding of their minds to this object in not staying the eye on Jesus Christ Some may give a glance at Christ but they are presently wheeled off again but why doth not the eye abide there at least till it come to some profitable issue is not Christ worthy on whom our souls should dwell Certainly if we love our Jesus that love will hold us Christ then will be in our thoughts and minds and we cannot off him as the load-stone having drawn the iron it keeps it fast to it self so if love draw our hearts it holds it fast to the object loved Christ himself acknowledgeth such an operation of love upon himself Turn away thine eyes for they have overcome me thou hast ravished my heart my sister my spouse with one of thine eyes Cant. 6.5 Christ was held in the galleries and captivated with love to his people so that his eyes was ever upon them nay he could not get his eyes off them Can a mother forget her child Isa 49.14 no more can I forget you and is Christ so tender in his love towards us that he ever minds us and shall our minds be so loose to him so fluttering and fleeting shall there be no more care to bind our selves in cords of love to him who hath bound himself in such cords of love to us 4. In not dayly exercising this blessed Duty it may be now and then they are awakened and they get up into heaven to see their Jesus but it is not dayly Oh consider Is this now and then going to heaven within the vail to live the life of friends is this to carry our selves as children what to be so strange at home but now and then once in a month in a year there to be seldom where we should always be is Jesus Christ such a mean thing that a visit now and then should serve the turn the Queen of Sheba hearing Solomons wisdom Oh said she 1 King 10.8 Blessed are those thy servants that always stand before thee and hear thy wisdom if she were so taken with Solomon remember that a greater than Solomon is here and shall we deprive our selves of that blessedness which we might enjoy by standing always in the presence of Christ to hear his Wisdom and to behold his Glory Oh my Brethren let us take shame to our selves that to this day we have been so careless in sending bending binding our minds to this blessed object Jesus Christ yea let us blush that we have not made it our daily business Psal 1.2 David describes the blessed man by his delighting in the law of the Lord and by his meditating on that Law day and night how then is he to be reproved that neither meditates on the Law of the Lord nor on the Lord the Law-maker day and night O alas we keep not a constant course we are not daily in the exercise of viewing Jesus nay I fear we look upon this Duty of looking unto Jesus as a questionable thing it seems to many as a Duty unknown unheard of unthought of it is not in their notice and how should it be in their practice But I leave this first Use SECT IV. Vse of Exhortation IS inward experimental Looking unto Jesus a choice and high Gospel-ordinance Vse 2 One Use of Exhortation I beseech you by the meekness and gentleness of Christ 2 Cor. 10.1 Rom. 12.1 Rom. 15.30 I beseech you by the mercies of God I beseech you brethren for the Lord Jesus Christs sake and for the love of the Spirit to look unto Jesus or if my beseeching will not prevail why yet
be perswaded to set our hearts on Jesus Christ Christians do you not perceive that the heart of Christ is set upon you and that he is still minding you with tender love even when you forget both your selves and him Do you not find him following you with daily mercies moving on your souls providing for your bodies and preserving both doth he not bear you continually in the armes of love and promise that all shall work together for your good doth he not give his Angels charge over you and suit all his dealings to your greatest advantage and can you find in your hearts to cast him by can you forget your Lord who forgets not you Fie upon this unkind Ingratitude When the Lord speaks of his thoughts and respects to us he gives this language Can a woman forget her sucking-child Isa 49.15 16. that she should not have compassion on the Son of her Womb yea they may forget yet will not I forget Behold I have graven thee upon the palms of my hands thy walls are continually before me But when he speaks of our thoughts to him the case is otherwise Jer. 2 32. can a Maid forget her Ornaments or a Bride her Attire yet my People have forgotten me days without number q. d. you would not forget the cloaths on your backs you would not forget your braveries your Ornaments your Attires and are these of more worth than Christ yet you can forget me day after day 8. Consider it 's a command of Christ that we should look to Jesus Behold me behold me lo I lo I A command not only backt with Authority but accompanied with special Ordinances appointed to this end what is Baptism and what is the Lords Supper 1 Cor. 11.24 25. but the representation of Jesus Christ Is it not Christs command in his last Supper Do this in remembrance of me and this do ye as oft as ye drink in remembrance of me In this Ordinance we have Christ crucified before our Eyes and can we forget him Or can we hold our eyes off him can we see the Bread broken the Wine distinctly severed from the bread and not call to mind according to the Scripture Christs Agony in the Garden and on the Cross can we take and eat the bread and take and drink the cup and not apprehend Christ stooping down from Heaven to feed our souls At such a time if we forget the Lord Jesus Christ it will argue our disaffection our ingratitude our disobedience every way Psa 73.28 Psal 104.34 9. Consider it 's both work and wages to look up unto Jesus Hence David professed it is good for me to draw near to thee and my meditation of him shall be sweet the word imports a sweetness with mixture like compound spices or many flowers Every thought of Jesus is sweet and pleasant nay it 's better than wine Cant. 1.4 we will remember thy love more than Wine there is more content in contemplating on Christ more refreshing to the spirit than wine gives to the body How precious are thy thoughts unto me O God Psa 139.17 look in what kind soever you account a thing precious so precious are the thoughts of God and Christ to a man whose heart is in a right frame Such a one loves every glance of Christ and the more it sees the more it loves It is said of one Eudoxius that he wished he might be admitted to come near the body of the Sun to have a full view of it though it devoured him he was somthing rash in his wish but there is somthing proportionable in a godly spirit he so loves Christ that he could be content to be swallowed up in the beholding of him Certainly there is a blessing in this work when we are bid to look unto Jesus it is but to receive from Jesus is it any thing else but to call and invite us to look on the most pleasing and delightful object That in the beholding of it it may convey it self unto us and we be delighted and filled with it it is all one as if he should bid us sit down by a well of Life and drink or if he should bid us be as the Angels are who are blessed in the beholding of this Jesus why come then if this be a blessed work why will we unbless our selves If the work will exalt us why will we debase our selves in not closing with it If we might live above heaven why will we live below certainly when thoughts of Christ are moving in us Christ himself is not far off he will come and enter too and how sweet is it for Christ to come and take up his habitation in our souls 10. Consider how the Angels exceedingly desire to look on Jesus they stoop down and pry into the Nature Offices and graces of Jesus Christ which things saith the Apostle the Angels desire to look into He alludes to the manner of the Cherubims looking down into the Mercy-Seat this is the study 1 Pet. 1.12 yea this is the delight and recreation of the Elect Angels to look on Jesus and to look into the several scopes of our salvation by Jesus Christ to behold the whole frame and fabrick of it to observe all the parts of it from the beginning to the end to consider all the glorious Attributes of God his Wisdome Power Justice Mercy all shining and glittering in it like bright Stars in the Firmament this I say is their work yea this is their Festivity and Pastime And shall not we imitate the Angels shall not we think it our honour to be admitted to the same priviledge with the Angels 11. Consider that looking unto Jesus is the work of Heaven V●ta contemplativa incipit in hoc seculo proficitur in futu●o Bern. it is begun in this life saith Bernard but it is perfected in that life to come not only Angels but the Saints in glory do ever behold the face of God and Christ if then we like not this work how will we live in Heaven the dislike of this Duty is a bar against our entrance for the life of a blessedness is a life of Vision surely if we take no delight in this heaven is no place for us 12. Consider that nothing else is in comparison worth the minding or looking after If Christ have not your hearts who or what should have them O that any Christian should rather delight to have his heart among Thornes and Briers than in the Bosom of his dearest Jesus Why should you follow after drops and neglect the Fountain why should you fly after shadowes and neglect him who is the true substance if the mind have its currant from Christ toward other things these things are not only of less concernment but destructive they are gone far from me and have walked after Vanity Jer. 2.5 and are become vain How unworthy the world is of the look of Christians especially when it
Thy Heritage Thou retainest not Thy Anger for ever Jer. because Thou delightest in Mercy And I am the Lord which exercise Loving-Kindness Judgment Righteousness in the Earth for in th●se things I delight saith the Lord. 2. Because of that Delight which God hath to be actively glorified by His Creatures voluntary Service and Subjection John 10.18 Ezek. 33.11 Herein is My Father glorified if ye bear much Fruit and I have no Pleasure in the Death of the Wicked but that he turn from his Way and live He delighteth most in unbloody Conquests when by His Patience and Goodness and Forbearance He subdueth the Hearts Affections and Conscienc●s of Men unto Himself He esteemeth Himself more glorified in the Services than in the Sufferings of Men and therefore in this Eternity he resolves not to destroy all Men lest there should be no Religion upon the Earth When the Angels fell they fell not all many were still left to glorify Him actively in their Service of Him but when Adam fell all Mankind fell in him so that there was no Tree in all this Paradise lest to bring forth any Fruit unto God And this is most certain that God would rather have His Trees for Fruit than for Fewel Hence He resolves that Mankind notwithstanding Sin should not be utterly destroyed Hereupon the Trinity calls a Counsel and the Question is What is to be done with poor Man The Learned here frame a kind of Conflict in God's holy Attributes by a Liberty which the Holy-Ghost from the Language of Holy Scripture doth allow them they speak of God after the manner of Men as if he were reduced unto some Straits and Difficulties by the cross Demands of His several Attributes Justice calls upon Him for the Condemnation of a Sinful and therefore worthily Accursed Creature which Demand is seconded by His Truth to make good that Threatning In the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt die the Death Mercy on the other side pleads for Favour and Compassion towards Man wofully seduced and overthrown by Satan and this Plea is seconded by Love and Goodness and the like Attributes at last when the Business comes to Determination Wisdom finds out a way which the Angels of Heaven gaze on with Admiration Astonishment how to reconcile these different Pleas of his Attributes together A Jesus is resolved on One of the same Blessed Trinity who by His Father's Ordination His own voluntary Susception and the Holy Spirits Sanctification should be fitted for the Business To this purpose this Jesus should be both a Surety and an Head over sinful Men a Surety to pay Mens Debts unto God and an Head to restore God's Image unto Man And thus in Him Mercy and Truth have met together Righteousness and Peace have Kissed each other Psal 83.10 This is the great Mistery of the Gospel this is that which the Angels as I tell you pry into nay this is that which the Angels and Saints too shall admire and bless God for to all Eternity this is that which set the infinit Wisdome of God on work from all Eternity If all the Angels in Heaven and all the Men in the World had been put to it to find out a way to answer this question how shall sin be pardoned the sinner reconciled and God glorify his justice they could never have done it this cost God dear it cost him the heart-blood of his own Son and that 's a sure sign that Gods heart was much in it and indeed we are not Christians until in some measure we see and have our hearts taken with the glory of God in this mistery O the wonder of Heaven and Earth here 's the case man is fallen through sin and ever since the fall man and sin are as inseparably joyned together as fire and heat yet God will have mercy on the man and he will take vengeance on the sin the Eternal Wisdome of God hath found out a way to translate this mans sins on another Person who is able to bear them and to interest this mans person in anothers Righteousness which is able to cover him so that now all 's one in regard of man as if the Law had been utterly abrogated and all 's one too in regard of God as if the creature had been utterly condemned And all this is done in our Jesus on him was executed the curse of the Law by him was fulfilled the righteousness of the Law for him was remitted the sin of man and through him were all things made new again the world was in Christ as in its Surety making satisfaction to the Justice of God and God was in Christ as in his Embassadour Rom. 11.33 reconciling the world unto himself again 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 O the depths of the riches both of the Wisdome and Knowledge of God how unsearchable are his judgements and his ways past finding out You have seen the Project and the counsels of God for mans salvation before all worlds Rom. 11.34 it is but dimly for who hath known the mind of the Lord or who hath been his Counsellour SECT VI. The foreknowledge OF the knowledge of God in this respect we read in Scriptures Acts 2.23 Rom. 8.29 Rom. 11.2 1 Pet. 1.2 Christ is said to be delivered by the determinate Counsel and foreknowledg of God And it is said of Christs members the called according to his purpose whom he did foreknow and elsewhere in the same Epistle God hath not cast away his people which he foreknew And Peter writes to the strangers Elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father Understand that foreknowledge is ascribed to God in respect of the creature properly but in respect of God there is nothing past nothing to come all things past and all things to come are present to him and therefore in that sense he cannot be said to foreknow any thing Now the Lord in respect of us is said in Scripture to foreknow things or persons two wayes Psal 139.16 1. Generally by a general knowledge of which Davids speaks thine eyes did see my substance yet being unperfect and in thy book all my members were written which in continuance were fashioned when as yet there was none of them 2. Specially by a more special foreknowledge which is a knowledge with love and approbation the very same which barely comprehendeth that we call Election Rom. 9.13 2 Tim. 2.19 Rom. 11.2 so Gods choosing is expressed by loving Jacob have I loved and Esau have I hated And this is that which the Apostle speaks of the Lord knoweth who are his i.e. the Lord from everlasting knoweth his with love and with approbation hath God cast away his people which he foreknew i. which he before loved and approved hence we gather that after the Project was laid and the Councels of God were agreed upon it then God foreknew or foresaw whom to embrace in his eternal love as his own
and God will not spare him that is the very word in the Scripture Rom. 8.32 he spared not his own Son this surely this declares Gods love to righteousness more than if all the World should be Damned 2. Suppose the sinner that is reconciled had been Damned then the justice of God had been but in satisfying and never had been fully satisfyed but in that way that God hath found out to save a sinner his justice is not onely satisfying but it comes fully to be satisfied to have enough As for instance suppose a man to be a creditor to one who owes him 100000 l. this man is poor and the utmost he can pay is but a penny a day suppose the creditor should lay him in the Goale until he had paid the utmost farthing it is true he would be receiving day after day but he would never be paid so long as the debtor lives now if another rich man should come and lay down an 100000 l. at once the creditor is presently satisfied Why here is the difference betwixt Gods satisfying his Justice upon sinners and upon Jesus Christ God comes upon the sinner and requires the debt of punishment because he did not pay the debt of obedience God casts him into Prison and the utmost he can pay is but as it were a penny a day and hence the poor sinner must still be paying and paying and paying to Eternity this is the ground of their Eternal punishment in Hell because in any finite time they can never pay enough But now comes Jesus Christ and he fully payes the debt at once so that justice saith I have enough I am satisfied Surely this is the greater Glory to the very justice of God These were the counsels of God from all Eternity how he should make way for his love and goodness and yet satisfie his Truth and Justice O my soul consider and wonder Jesus Christ was the Expedient and in Christ not only Gods mercy but his justice is Exalted yea more Exalted and more Glorified in thy salvation then ever it could have been in thy Damnation 3 Consider the fore-knowledge of God he knew from everlasting whom he would set apart for life and salvation All the Saints of God from first to last they were then present to him and before him and he did look on them in his Beloved Christ Before there was a World or a man or any creature in it he fore-knew Adam and Abraham and Isaac and Jacob and all the Patriarchs and all the Prophets and all the Apostles all the Disciples of Christ and Believers in Christ And O my soul if thou art one of Gods Elect he foreknew thee with a knowledge of love and approbation he had thee in his Eye Rom. 9.11 and Heart he had thoughts on Jacob when he was yet unborn and had done neither good nor evil Assure thy self the Lord works not without prevision or fore-knowledge of the things effected that cannot be in God which is not to be found in a wise and prudent man he that builds an house hath the frame of it first in himself and the Psalmist tells thee that the eyes of God did see thy substance yet being unperfect Psal 139.16 Rom. 9.13 in this Book of knowledge were all thy members written when as yet there was none of them yea he knew thee with a knowledge of singular love he embraced thee in his Eternal love as it is written Jacob have I loved but Esau have I hated ● will not say that this love was actually bestowed on thee till due time yet it was prepared for thee from all Eternity and hence it is called an everlasting love The Lord hath appeared of old unto me Jer. 31.3 saying I have loved thee with an everlasting love therefore with loving kindness have I drawn thee O muse and meditate and ponder on this love it contains in it these particulars as 1. The eternal good will of God what else is the love of God towards the Elect but his everlasting good will to shew them mercy to do them good and to save their souls hence the Angels sung that Antheam at Christs birth Glory to God in the highest Luk. 2.14 and on earth peace good will towards men 2. The Eternal pleasure and delight of God in the sons of men the greatest delight that God hath or ever had it is in communicating himself to his Son firstly and next unto his Saints nay such delight he takes in letting out his mercy to his Saints as that he was well-pleased with the death of his own Son as a means conducing thereunto O wonderfull one would think that the death of Christ should be the most abhorring to the heart of God of any thing in the world and yet saith the Scripture It pleased the Lord to bruise him Isa 53.10 he took a pleasure and delight in the very bruising of Jesus Christ the Lord saw this was the way for him to communicate himself in the fulness of his grace unto his Saints and therefore though it cost him so dear as the death of his own Son yet he was well-pleased with it 3. This love of God contains in it a fore-knowledg and approbation of all those effects of his love whether they be temporal concerning this life or Eternal concerning the life to come Concerning these effects of his love saith John 1 John 3.1 Behold what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us that we should be called the sons of God q. d. Behold it stand amazed at it that children of wrath should become the sons of the most high God for a beggar on the dunghil a vagabond a runnagate from God a prodigal a stranger to God whom the Lord had no cause to think on to be made a Son of God Almighty O divine love Pause a while and muse on this O my soul that God should fore-know thee from all Eternity with a knowledg of love and approbation it is admirable to consider I say it is admirable to consider 4. Consider the purpose of God concerning thy salvation 1 Thes 5 9 God hath not appointed or purposed us wrath but to obtain salvation by our Lord Jesus Christ As when we have a will to do any thing there follows upon this in the mind a setled purpose to effect it so when God hath loved some to life there is in God a setled purpose of bringing them to it that the purpose of God according to Election might stand or be sure Rom. 9.11 it imports Gods stability and steadiness and constancy and firmness in saving souls There is much inconstancy and fickleness in the love of man or in the love of a woman but the love of God to his people is a steady love as the Bridegroom rejoyceth over the Bride Isa 62.5 so shall thy God rejoyce over thee not only so doth thy God but so shall thy God rejoyce over thee
greatest part of thy Salvation already done to thy hand nay I 'le tell thee more poor soul then thus even Christ himself from all Eternity hath engaged for thee that thou shalt believe O then put not Christ to be challenged of his engagement by refusing the Gospel surely when thou believest thou makest Christs word good he that believeth not makes God a liar though in another sense and for ought he knoweth even in this that he frustrates Christs undertakings in the Covenant And therefore believe yea and cry Lord I believe help thou my unbelief increase my Faith till I come to full assurance of Faith Faith in this sense is the very Eye of the Soul reading is Name Written in the Book of Life it is an apprehension of our particular Election O believe till thou comest up to this fullness of perswasion of Gods Love in Christ SECT VI. Of loving Jesus in that respect 6. WE must love Jesus as carrying on that great work of our Salvation in that Eternity And this is the fruit or effect of Faith if once we believe that all those designs and transactions were for us even for us O then how should we but love that God and love that Christ who thus firstly and freely loved us God loved us before we loved him for he loved us in that Eternity before all Worlds surely then we are bound to love him First and above all things As the Diamond formeth and fashioneth the Diamond so love formeth and fashioneth Love or as fire converteth Fewel into Fire so this antient love of God and Christ may well cause our love again O Christ didst not thou love us who doubts it that but reads over the project councel foreknowledge purpose decree and covenant of God and Christ who doubts it that but reads the eternal designe of God that Christ should go out of himself and suffer an extasie through the vehemency of his love that Christ should so far abase his Majesty as to dye for us that we might not dye but live with him O then how should this but kindle in our hearts a most ardent love towards God and Christ what more effectuall motive to work mans love then to be prevented by the love bounty of another That this fruit doth spring from the sense of our Election Bernard observes who is righteous but he that requiteth the love of God with love again Bern. Epi. 107. which is never done except the holy Ghost reveale unto a man by faith Gods eternal purpose concerning his future salvation And hence it is that the heart is most in frame when it is a considering the eternal love of God in Christ 2 ●am 1.26 As David said of Jonathan thou hast been very pleasant to me thy love to me was wonderful so a poor soul gathering up all the goodness of God in that Eternity and feeding upon it and the variety of it it breaths out in that expression thou hast been very pleasant to me O God thy love to me hath been wonderfull O my soul that thou couldest so live by faith on these eternal passages as that thou mightest attain to the highest fruits of faith not onely to love God and Christ but to love them with a burning love with a mighty love such a love as lyes in the most vigorous prosecution after Jesus Christ and in the most faithful resignation of thy self to God such a love as works the most delightful aspect of God and Christ as makes a man to behold God and Christ with all cheerfulness such a love as works a man to extoll the praises of God O in these things lyes the strength of love But alas this is or at least this should be thy grief that thou canst not love so well and so warmly as thou art beloved Christ comes towards thee Skipping like the Hart or Roe on the Mountaines of spices Cant 8 14. but thy love towards Christ is creeping like the worme in the unwholsome valley Indeed the best affections have their fits of swooning it may be for the present thy love is cold O but come up to this fire consider how God and Christ loved thee in every of these 1. His project to save they soul sprung out of his love love was the first wheele that set all the eternall works of God a going what was that great designe of God but onely an expression of his love it was his pleasure to communicate himself and the rise of that communication was his love 2. The Counsels of God were all in love had not love been as President of the Counsel where hadst thou been when all the attributes of God were at a stand it was the love of God in Christ that resolved the question for thy salvation 3. The foreknowledge of God was a foreknowledge of love and approbation in his eternal love he embraced thee as his own he foreknew thee i. of his free love he set thee apart to life and to salvation God hath chosen us in Christ before the foundation of the World Ephes 1.4 he chose us in Christ but not for Christ nothing at all moved him to Elect thee but his own good pleasure and free love 4. The purpose of God was a resolution of love it speaks his love to be a constant setled abiding love John 13.1 no unkindness shall alter it for having loved his own he loves them unto the end nay he loves them without end from everlasting to everlasting 5. The decree of God was an order as I may call it or an act of love to give in time that grace unto his elect which before all time he decreed should be an effectual means to bring them unto glory 6. The covenant betwixt God and Christ was an agreement of love God and Christ struck hands to save our souls 2 Tim. 1 9. grace was given us in Christ Jesus before the World began Grace was given us that is the gracious love and favour of God in Christ was given us before all secular times This was Gods meaning from everlasting this was the designe yea the greatest designe that ever God had to set out the infinite glory and the riches of his love in Jesus Christ No question but he had other great designes in doing such great things as he hath done but above all the designes that ever God had in all his works this is the chiefe to honour his mercy to glorify the riches of his love and grace had it not been for this he would never have made the World and therefore in that World to come it will be the delight of God to shew his Saints and Angels what he is able to do for a creature yea he will to all Eternity declare to them to what an height of excellency and glory his love and mercy is able to raise poor souls so that the very Saints and Angels shall admire adore and magnifie the name of God
stepped in he will not leave man without hope he tells the Devil who begun this mischief I will put enmity between thee and the woman and between thy seed and her seed it shall bruise thy head and thou shalt bruise his heel At the very instant when God was pronouncing judgment upon the several delinquents in the fall nay before judgment was pronounced on the persons tempted Jesus is hinred the Covenant of grace is proclaimed O the infinite riches of the mercy of God in Christ But you will say how comes Jesus in how carried he on the great work of our salvation in this dark time I answer 1. By assuming and taking upon him the form and shape of man and so discharging some special offices in that respect We read often of Christs apparition before his Incarnation and then especially when he had to do with this great Nego●iation of mans Eternal happiness Some think it not improbable that Christ assumed the form of man when he first created man and so he made man not only in his own image which he had as God In holiness and true righteousness but in respect of that form which he had assumed Howsoever this we find that after man had sinned Christ then appeared first to Adam then to Abraham then to Isaac then to Jacob then to Moses c. first he appeared to Adam in the garden and they heard the voice of the Lord God walking in the garden in the cool of the day God as he is God hath neither voice to speak nor seet to walk but assuming the form and shape of a man he exercised both and so he was the first that published that first promise to the World It shall bruise thy head 2. He appeared to Abraham in the plain of Mamre where the Lord talked with Abraham and Abraham calls him the Judge of all the Earth which can be ascribed to none but Christ the Judge of quick and dead Some from that saying of Christ your Father Abraham rejoyced to see my day and he saw it and was glad do gather that Abraham saw Christ not only with the eyes of faith as all the rest of the Patriarchs and Prophets did but also in a visible shape which he assumed like unto that whereunto he was afterwards to be united And so it was Christ that renewed the Covenant with Abraham saying I will establish my Covenant between me and thee and thy seed after thee in their generations for an everlasting Covenant to be a God unto thee and to thy seed after thee 3. He appeared to Isaac Gen. 26.2 and to Jacob Gen. 32.24 30. and to Moses Exod. 20.1 2 3. and to many others of which I shall comment in order And these apparitions of Christ were as praeludiums of his Incarnation But this is not the way I shall insist upon 2. Christ carried on the great work of our salvation in that dark time not by himself exhibited as when he was Incarnate but onely promised The great King would first have his Harbingers to lead the way before he himself would come in person As the Lord had observed this method in creating the World that first he would have darkness and then light and as still he observes this method in upholding the world that first he will have dawning and then clear day so in the framing and upholding of his Church he will first have Christ held forth in Ceremonies Rites Figures Types Promises Covenants and then like a glorious Sun or like the day-spring from on high he would visit the world to give light to them that sit in darkness To this purpose we read that as Christ so the Covenant of grace which applies Christ to us was first promised and then promulgated the Covenant of promise was that Covenant which God made with Adam and Abraham and Moses and David and all Israel in Jesus Christ to be Incarnate crucified and risen from the dead and it was meet that the promise should go before the Gospel and be fulfilled in the Gospel that so a great good might earnestly be desired before it was bestowed In a time of darkness men desire light as the morning-watch watcheth and longeth for the morning so the obscure revelation of Christ in a promise raised the hearts of the Patriarchs to an earnest desire of Christ his coming in the flesh But in this obscurity we may observe some degrees before the Law given by Moses the promise was more obscure the Law being given even to the time of the Prophets the promise was a little more clear in the time of the Prophets even to John the Baptist it was clearer yet as the coming of the messias did approach nearer and nearer so was the promise clearer and clearer still Just as the approach of the Sun is nearer or further off so is the light that goes before it greater or lesser In like manner was the Revelation that went before Christ more dim or clear as the rising of the Sun of righteousness was more remote or nigh at hand It was the good pleasure of God to manifest the riches of his grace by degrees and not all at once we see to this very day that God in his several approaches of mercy and goodness draws nearer and nearer to his Church Even now in this marvellous light of the Gospel we have our divine Ceremonies and Sacraments we see him afar off we know but in part but time shall come even before his second coming that we or our children shall see him more clearly perfectly immediatly My present businesse is to hold forth Jesus in the Covenant of grace as promised and because the promise receives distinction of degrees according to the several breakings out of it to the dark world we will consider it as it was manifested 1. From Adam till Abraham 2. From Abraham till Moses 3. From Moses till David 4. From David till the Babylonish Captivity or thereabout 5. From the Captivity or thereabout till Christ In every of these periods will appear some further and further discoveries of Gods mercy in Christ of the Covenant of grace of our Jesus carrying on the great work of mans Eternal salvation in that dark time You heard before of the Covenant betwixt God and Christ concerning our salvation but that was not the Covenant of grace which God immediately made with man as fallen but a particular Covenant with Christ to be the Mediator Or so far as it was a Covenant of grace it was then made betwixt God and Christ and after to be made betwixt God and us for a time we were hid in the womb of Gods Election and not being then capable to enter into Covenant with God Christ undertook for us but yet so that when we come to be regenerate we are then to strike Covenant our selves And hence we read expresly of Gods Covenanting with sundry particular persons as with Adam and Abraham and Moses and David c. Of which in
to be incarnate who is called the Angel of the Covenant Mal 3.1 and the Angel of his presence Isa 63.9 was he that uttered and deliver'd the Law unto Moses ●cts 7.38 ●cts 7.39 and to this purpose are produced these Texts This Moses is he that was in the Congregation with the Angel which spake to him in the Mount Sinai Now this Angel was Christ as it is cleared in the following verse whom or which Angel our Fathers would not obey but thrust him from them and in their hearts turned back again into Egypt They would not obey the Angel but thrust him from them i. they tempted the Angel whom they should have obeyed and who was that but Jesus Christ as it is cleared more fully and expresly by the Apostle Cor. 10.9 Neither let us tempt Christ as some of them also tempted and were destroyed of Serpents Some of the Learned are of opinion that Christ the Son of God did in the shape of a man deliver the Law But I leave that 2. In the Law it self as it is a Covenant of Grace we find something of Christ in the preface he proclaims himself to be our God and in the first Commandment we are bound to take this God to be our God and in the second he gives us a double Reason or Motive to obey for I the Lord thy God am a jealous God I shew mercy unto thousands of them that love me and keep my Commandments And in the fifth Commandment he gives a promise of long life in Canaan which is either to be look'd at as a type of Heaven or literally for a prosperous condition here on earth but howsoever it is by virtue of the Covenant and as a testimony of Gods love now all these promises are made in Christ God is not our God but in and through Jesus Christ God will not shew mercy unto thousands nor unto one of all the thousands of his Saints but as they are in Jesus Christ God will not give us long life here or eternal life hereafter but in for and through the Lord Jesus Christ what if Moses writ not down the word Christ yet certainly Moses writ of Christ his words imply Christ as Christ himself told the Jews John 5.46 Had ye believed Moses ye would have believed me for Moses wrote of me and as Philip told Nathanael we have found him of whom Moses in the Law and the Prophets did write John 1.45 Jesus of Nazareth John 1.45 Surely Christ was if not the only subject yet the only scope of all the writings of Moses and therefore in the Law it self you see we find something of Christ 3. In the Exposition of the Law as Moses gives it here and there we find something of Christ Yea if we observe it Moses brought something more to the expression of Christ and of the Covenant of Grace than ever was before in the first promise it was revealed that Christ should be the Seed of the woman in the second manifestation of the promise it was revealed that Christ should be of the Seed of Abraham but in Moses writings and Moses time we learn more expresly that Christ was to be incarnate and to have his Conversation amongst men Ex. 29.45 46 The promise runs thus And I will dwell among the Children of Israel and will be their God and they shall know that I am the Lord their God that brought them forth out of the land of Egypt that I may dwell amongst them Lev. 26.11 12 I am the Lord their God The same promise is renewed or repeated and I will set my Tabernacle amongst you and my Soul shall not abhor you and I will walk among you and I will be your God and ye shall be my people this promise was punctually fulfilled when Christ was incarnate for then was the Word made flesh and dwelt amongst us John 1.14 John 1.14 or if it be referred to the habitation of God by his Spirit amongst the spiritual seed of Abraham then it implies the incarnation of Christ because that was to go before the plentiful habitation of Christs Spirit in the Saints Again Moses writing of Christ Deut. 18.15 The Lord thy God saith he will raise up unto thee a Prophet from the midst of thee of thy Brethren like unto Me unto him shall ye hearken VVas not this a plain expression Peter in his Sermon to the Jews preacheth Jesus Christ and he tells the Jews that this Jesus Christ was preached unto them before when before even in Moses time and for proof he cites this very Text Acts 3.20 22 For Moses truly said unto the Fathers a Prophet shall the Lord your God raise up unto you of your Brethren like unto Me him shall ye hear in all things whatsoever he shall say unto you 4. In the confirmation of the Law we find something of Christ It was confirmed by Seals and Sacrifices c. What were all these but a type of Christ in the formed expression of the Covenant we found the Seal of Circumcision but now it pleased God to add unto the former another Seal for Confirmation of their Faith sc the Passeover and was not this a type of Christ the immaculate Lamb of God which taketh away the sins of the world Again in this manifestation Moses brought in the Priesthood as a setled Ordinance to offer sacrifices for the people and was not this a type of Christ our true and unchangeable High Priest I have sometimes seen the Articles of a believing Jews Creed collected out of Moses Law as thus I believe that the Messiah should die to make satisfaction for sin this they saw in their continued bloudy Sacrifices and their deliverance from Egypt by the death of a Lamb taught them no less 2. I believe that he shall not die for his own sins but for the sins of others this they might easily observe in every sacrifice when according to Law they saw the most harmless birds and Beasts were offered 3. I beleive to be saved by laying hold upon his merits this they might gather by laying their right hand upon the head of every Beast that they brought to be offered up and by laying hold on the horns of the Altar being a Sanctuary or Refuge from pursuing vengeance Thus we might go on No question the Death and Resurrection of Christ the Priesthood and Kingdom of Christ were prefigured and typed by the Sacrifices and the Brazen Serpent and the Priesthood of Aaron and the Kingdom of Israel And I cannot but think that the godly spiritual Jews understood this very well and that these did not rest in Sacrifices or Sacraments but that by faith they did really enjoy Christ in every of them 5. In the intention of Gods giving the Law we find something of Christ The very end of God in holding forth the Law was that upon the sense of our impossibility to keep it and of our danger to break
Covenant before his coming in the flesh It is not enough to know and consider but we must desire Thus is the order of Gods work no sooner hath his Spirit clearly revealed the goodness of the Promise that we come to know but the soul considers of it turns it upside down views it in all its Excellencies weighs it in the Ballance of its best and deepest meditation This done the Affections begins to stir and the soul begins thus to reason O happy I that I see the goodness of this gracious Promise but miserable I if I come to see this and never have a share in it O why not I Lord Why not my Sins Pardoned VVhy not my Corruptions Subdued VVhy not the Law Written in my Heart and put into my inward parts Why may not I say my Lord and my God or I am my Beloveds and my Beloved is mine VVhy not this Covenant established between God and me Now my Soul thirsts after this as a thirsty Land my affections hunger after Jesus in a Covenant of Grace Oh I would fain be in Covenant with God for this is all my Salvation and all my desire 2 Sam. 23.5 But here is an Objection The Object Object of this desire is apprehended as absent and distant we do not covet those things that we do enjoy if they are present we rather rest in them than move towards them or desire after them how then should David or any soul already in a Covenant of grace desire after the Covenant What is this He hath made with me an everlasting Covenant 2 Sam. 23.5 ordered in all things and sure for this is all my Salvation and all my Desire Answ It is true the Object of desire qua tale is something absent yet not alwayes absent in the whole but in the parts and degrees of it the very presence of a good thing doth in some sort quicken the desires towards the same thing so far forth as it is capable of improvements or augmentation As we see in external Riches of the Body none desire them more eagerly than those that possess them and the more gracious the Soul is the more is the heart enlarged in the appetition of a greater measure of Grace as the putting in of some water into a Pump doth draw forth more no man is so importunate in praying Lord help my unbelief as he that can say Lord I believe things may be desired in order to improvement and further degrees of them Again things present may be the Object of our desires unto continuance as he that delighteth in a good thing that he hath he desireth the continuance of that delight so the soul of a man having a reach as far as immortality it may justly desire as well the perpetuity as the presence of those good things it enjoyeth Come then O my soul and whet on thy desires in every of these respects as 1. Desire after thy interest in the Covenant 2. Desire after thy improvement of the Covenant 3. Desire after the continuance of thy Covenant-state 4. Desire after Jesus the great business or the all in all in a Covenant of Grace 1. Desire after thy interest in the Covenant O say in thy self is it thus prov 1.22 23 is the Lord willing to receive me to his Grace was that his voice in the streets how long ye simple ones will ye love simplicity turn ye at my reproof Isa 55.1 3. behold I will pour out my Spirit unto you was that his Proclamation Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters encline your ear and come unto me and I will make an everlasting Covenant with you even the sure mercies of David and are these the promises offered in the Covenant I will put my Law into their inward parts Jer. 31.33 and I will write it in your hearts and I will be your God and ye shall be my People Deut. 33.29 psal 144.15 Oh the Blessed condition of those People that are in Covenant with God! Blessed art thou O Israel who is like unto thee a People saved by the Lord Oh happy is the People that be in such a case yea happy is that People whose God is the Lord. But ah what can I say no sin like unto my sin no misery like unto my misery alas I am an alien to God I am separated from his People I am out of the Covenant like a poor Prodigal I dye for hunger whilst those that are in my Fathers house have bread enough Oh that I were in their condition never did David long more for the waters of the well of Bethlehem than my Soul now touched with the sense of Sin doth desire to be at peace with God and in Covenant with God O I thirst I pant I gasp after him I long for Communion and Peace with him Jsa 26 9 with my soul do I desire thee in the night yea with my Spirit within me do I seek thee early 2. Desire after the Improvement of the Covenant it may be God hath given thee an interest in it but alas thy hold is so weak that thou scarce knowest the meaning of it the Lord may answer but yet he speaks darkly as sometimes he spake to the woman go thy way and Sin no more it is a middle kind of expression John 8.11 neither assuring that her Sin was pardoned nor yet putting her out of hope but it might be pardoned so it may be God hath given thee some little ease but he hath not spoken full peace go on then and desire more and more after confirmation say in thine heart O Lord thou hast begun to shew grace unto thy Servant but oh manifest to me all thy goodness thou hast given me a drop and I feel it so sweet that now I thirst and long to enjoy the Fountain thou hast given me a kiss of thy mouth and now I pant to be united to thee in a more perfect and consummate marriage thou hast given me a taste Rom. 8.23 but my appetite and desire is not thereby diminished but enlarged and good reason for what are these drops and tastes but only the first fruits of the spirit and earnests of the spirit Ephes 1.14 oh then what are those harvests of Joy what are those treasures of wisdom and free grace hid in God I have indeed beheld a feast of fat things of fat things full of marrow of wines on the lees of wines on the lees well refined but O what a Famine is yet in my spirit O Lord I have longed for thy Salvation I am ready to swoon for further union and clearer manifestation of my share and interest in this Covenant of grace come Lord Jesus come quickly 3. Desire after continuance of the Covenant-state many a sweet soul cannot deny but that the Lord hath shewed mercy on him but he fears that he shall not hold out he feels within such a Power of corruption such
Spirit with a chearful Excitation Fear not q. d. Let those fear who know they are in Displeasure or know not they are gracious Thine happy Estate calls for Confidence and that Confidence calls for Joy What should they fear that are favoured of Him at whom the Devil 's Tremble O Mary How should Joy but enter into thy Heart out of whose Womb shall come Salvation I question not but these very words revived the Virgin What remote Corner of her Soul was there into which these Beams of Consolation did not shi●e Luke 1.31 32 33. 4. Here is the Foundation of her Comfort and our Happiness Behold thou shalt Conceive in thy Womb and bring forth a Son and shalt call His Name Jesus Never was Mortal Creature thus honoured that her VVomb should yield that Flesh which was personally united to the Godhead that she should bear Him that upholds the World There 's one VVonder in the Conception another in the Fruit both are marvellous but the latter I take it is more Mysterious and fuller of Admiration the Fruit of the VVomb is Jesus a Saviour the Son of the Highest a King God shall give Him a Throne and He shall Reign for ever for of His Kingdom there shall be no End Here was a Son and such a Son as the World never had before and here was the Ground of Mary's Joy How could she but rejoyce to hear what her Son should be before He was Surely never was any Mother so glad of her Son Born as this Virgin was of her Son before He was Conceived The Ground of this Joy lay more especially in that Name Jesus Here Christians Here is the Object that you are to Look unto The first Title that the Angel gives our Saviour it is Jesus a Saviour O come let us dwell a little here Without Jesus we had never known God our Friend and without Jesus God had never known us for any other than His Enemies This Name Jesus is better to us than all the Titles of God Indeed there is Goodness and Greatness enough in the Name Jehovah but we merited so little Good and demerited so much Evil that in it alone there had b●en small Comfort for us but in the Name Jesus there is Comfort and with the Name Jesus there is Comfort in the Name of God In old times God was known by His Names of Power and of Majesty and of His Nature but His Name of Mercy was reserved till now when God did purpose to pour out the whole Treasure of his Mercy by the Mediation of his Son And as this Name is exalted above all Names so are we to exalt his Mercy above all his Works O it is an useful Name In all Depths Distresses Miseries Perplexities we beseech God by the Name of Jesus to make good his own Name not to bear it for nought but as He is a Saviour so to save us And this is our Comfort that God will never so remember our wretched Sins as to forget His own Blessed Name and especially this Name Jesus O it is the Highest the Dearest the Sweetest Name to us of all the Names of God The reason of this Name was given by the Angel to Joseph Matth. 1 21. Thou shalt call his Name Jesus for He shall save His People from their Sins But why from their Sins We seem rather willing to be saved from Poverty Ignominy Plague Prison Death Hell the Devil Sin is a thing that troubles but a few O how few how very few be there that break their sleep for their Sins Alas alas Sin if we understand is the very worst of Evils There is no Poverty but Sin there is no Shame but Sin there is no Plague to that of Sin there is no Prison but that Prison is a Paradise without Sin there is no Death that hath any Sting in it but for Sin The Sting of Death is Sin saith the Apostle take out the Sting 1 Cor. 15.56 and you may put the Serpent in your Bosom Nay I 'le say more there is no Hell but for Sin Sin first kindled the Fire of Hell Sin fuels it take away Sin and that tormenting Flame goes out And for the Devil Sin is his Instrument whereby he works all mischief How comes a Man to be a slave to Satan but by Sin But for Sin the Devil had no Business in the World but for Sin he could never hurt a Soul What abundance of Benefits are here in one word He shall save His People from their Sins There is no Evil incident to Man but it ceaseth to be Evil when Sin is gone If Jesus take away Sin he doth bless our very Blessings and sanctifie our very Afflictions He fetcheth Peace out of Trouble Riches out of Poverty Honour out of Contempt Liberty out of Bondage He pulls out the Sting of Death puts out the Fire of Hell As all Evils are wrapt up in Sin so he that saves us from Sin he saves us from all Evils whatsoever But Is not Christ as precious a Name as Jesus is I answer No For 1. Christ is not the Name of God God as he is God cannot be anointed but Jesus is the Name of God and that wherein He more especially delights 2. Christ is Communicated to others Princes are called Christs but Jesus is proper to Himself There is no Saviour but He. 3. Christ is anointed To what End but to be a Saviour Jesus is therefore the End and the End is alwayes above the Means Why this is that Jesus the Son of God's Love the Author of our Salvation In whom alone God is well pleased and whom the Angel published afore He was Conceived Thou shalt Conceive and bring Forth a Son and shalt call His Name Jesus SECT II. Of the Conception of Christ 2. THe Conception of Christ was the Conclusion of the Angel's Message No sooner had the Virgin said Be it to me according to Thy Word but according to that Word it was immediately the Holy Ghost over-shadowed her and Forms our Saviour in her Womb. Now Christians Now was the Time of Love especially if we relate to His Conception and Birth Well may we say Now was it that the Day brake up that the Sun arose that Darkness vanished that Wrath and Anger gave place to Favour and Salvation Now was it that Free-Grace came down from Heaven Thousands of Angels waiting on her the very Clouds part as it were to give her way the Earth springs to welcom her the Flouds clap their Hands for Joy the Heavenly Hosts sing as she goes along Glory to God in the Highest Peace upon Earth Good Will towards Men Truth and Righteousness go before her Peace and Prosperity follow after her Pity and Mercy waits on either Hand and when she first sets Foot on the Earth she cryes a Jesus a Saviour Hear ye Sons of Men The Lord hath sent me down to bring you News of a Jesus Grace and Peace be unto you
Father-virgin is this the Babe whom we look unto as our Jesus is this a Mother as Austin scarce fourteen years of age is this the Father that knew her not until she had brought forth her first-born Son Mat. 1.25 what a strange birth is this Look on the Babe there is no Cradle to rock him no Nurse to Lull him no Linnens to swaddle him scarce a little food to nourish him look on the Mother there 's no Mid-wives help no downy pillows no linnen hangings scarce a little straw where she is brought a-bed look on Joseph the reputed Father he rather begs than gives a blessing poor Carpenter that makes them a Chamber of an Oxe-stall and carves him a Cratch to be his Cradle Mary that sees with her eyes and ponders all in her heart how doth modest shame fac'dness change her colours so often as her imagination works she must bear a Son an Angel tells her the Holy Ghost overshadows her the dayes are accomplished and she is delivered each Circumstance is enough to abash a modest Virgin But who will not wonder a Maid believes a Maid conceives a Maid brings forth and a Maid still remains How might we descant on this Subject but I shall contract my self and reduce all wonders to this word I am the Vine John 15.5 It is a blessed Parable in which under the shadow of a Vine Christ elegantly sets forth himself Christ in many resemblances is a precious Vine but why a Vine rather than a Cedar Oak or some of the strongest tallest trees Many reasons are given as 1. Because of all Trees the Vine is the lowest it grovels as it were on the ground 2. Because of all Trees the Vine is weakest hence they that have Vines have also their Elms to support them and hold them up 3. Because of all Trees the Vine hath the meanest Bark and outside it is of little worth or reputation 4. Because of all Trees Psal 128.3 the Vine is fruitfullest and therefore it is called the Fruitful Vine In every of these respects Christ is called a Vine who by his Incarnation took upon him the lowest condition and made himself by emptying himself of no Reputation but he was the fruitfullest Vine that ever the earth bore Phil. 2.7 and in this respect no Vine nor all the Vines on the Earth were worthy to be compared with him or to be so much as resemblances of him I shall not prosecute the resemblances throughout for so I might pass from his Birth to his Life and from his Life to his Death when the blood of the Grapes was pressed out only for the present wee 'll take a view of this Vine 1. In its Plant. 2. In its Bud. 3. In its Blossom 4. In its Fruit and so an end 1. For the Plant the way of Vines is not to be sowed but planted that thus translated they might better fructifie so our Jesus first sprung from his Father is planted in a Virgins womb God from God coeternal with God but by his Incarnation made that he was not and yet remaining that he was God of his Father and Man of his Mother before all time yet since the beginning Bernard tells us that this Vine sprung of the Vine Ber. de Passione Dom. is God begotten of God the Son of the Father both coeternal and consubstantial with the Father but that he might better fructifie he was planted in the Earth i.e. he was conceived in a Virgins womb There is indeed a resemblance in this in this resemblance we must be careful to observe that communication of properties of which I told you we may truly say that God was planted or conceived but not the Godhead God is a concrete word and signifies the Person of Christ and his Person was planted or conceived not simply as God but in respect of the Manhood united to it and thus he that is infinite was conceived and he that is eternal even he was born the very fulness of all perfection and all the properties of the Divine Essence are by this communication given to the nature of man in the Person of the Son of God no wonder therefore that we say that this Vine the Son of God is planted in Mary I know some would have the Plant more early and therefore they say that Christ was a Vine planted in Adam budded in David and flourished in Mary but I take this but for a flourish all before Mary were but Types now was the Truth now in Mary was Christ planted and not before as in the beginning there was not a Man to Till the Ground but out of the ground the Lord made to grow every Tree and a River went out of Eden to water the Garden so there was no man that tilled this Ground but out of this Ground the Virgin the Lord made to grow this Plant watering it by his Spirit The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee Luke 1.35 and the Power of the Highest shall overshadow thee Of this conception and of the Holy Ghosts efficiency I believe spake the Prophet when there was such longing after Christ's coming in the flesh Isa 45.8 Drop down ye Heavens from above and let the Sky pour down Righteousness let the Earth open and bring forth Salvation But of this Conception before 2. For the Bud the nature of Vines is to Bud before it Blossom or bring forth its fruit Psal 85.11 so was it said of Christ before he came Truth shall Bud out of the Earth now what was this budding of Truth out of the Earth but Christ born of a Woman What was the Truth saith Irenaeus and Augustine but Christ Iraen l. 3. c. 5. and what the Earth but our flesh and what Truth budding but Christ being born Here let us stay a while surely it is worth the while as the Spouse said in another place to get up early to the Vineyards and to see how the Vine did flourish Cant. 7.12 and how the tender Grape did open In Christs carrying on the great Work of our Salvation before all Worlds we told you of Gods Councils as if he had been reduced to some straits and difficulties by the cross demands of his several Attributes but Wisdom found out a way how to reconcile these differences by propounding a Jesus and in him Mercy and Truth met together Righteousness and Peace kissed each other Psal 85.10 That reconciliation was in the Counsel of God from all Eternity but for the execution of this Counsel it was now in the fulness of time even at this time when Christ was born Now in deed and in truth in execution and performance was the reconciliation of all differences and of this time was the Psalmists Prophecy more especially meant Mercy and Truth shall meet together Righteousness and Peace shall kiss each other Psal 85.10 12 and Truth shall bud out of the Earth and Righteousness shall look down from Heaven In
these words we find first a meeting of Gods blessed Attributes and secondly this meeting at a birth the birth of Truth at which meeting thirdly was that glorious effect that Righteousness looked down and indeed came down from Heaven I desire a little to invert the words and shall first speak to Christs Birth secondly to the effects of his Birth of Righteousness looking down from Heaven thirdly to the meeting and agreement of all Gods Attributes as the issue and effect of all When Mercy and Truth met together and Righteousness and Peace kissed each other 1. For his Birth our Vine doth Bud Truth shall Bud out of the Earth i. Christ shall be born upon the Earth or Christ shall be born of a Woman for Truth is Christ Bud is born and the Earth is a Woman 1. Truth is Christ I am the Way and Truth John 1.4 6 said Christ he is the truth of all Types and the truth of all Prophesies and the truth of all promises for in him are all the Promises Yea and Amen 2. Bud is born the Vine budding is the first putting forth of the Grape so Christ being born was Truth budding out of the Earth he then first shewed himself to the World and was first seen like the Vine springing forth above ground 3. The Earth is the Woman Isa 45.8 thus some render that Text Let the Earth bring forth a Saviour look how the Field-flowers spring forth of themselves without any Seed cast in by the hand of Man so the Virgin brings forth Christ It is observable that in the Creation of Adam was laid the Prognosticks of this future birth begin with the first Man Adam and you may see him parallell'd in this second Adam Christ Adam was created of the Virgin-Earth Christ was born of a Virgin-Mother the Earth had no Husbandman yet brought forth without Seed Mary had no Husband yet brought forth without Seed of Man in the Creation God said Let us make Man and now saith the Holy Ghost the Word is made flesh Gen. 1.26 John 1.14 or the Word is Man indeed those were but Types but Christ is the Truth he is the Vine that Buds the Messias born the Angels own him the Star designes him the Prophets foreshew him the Devils confess him his Miracles declare him the Sages seek him and Heaven and Earth Rings with the News that Truth is Budded out of the Earth 2. For the effect of this Birth Righteousness shall look down from Heaven No sooner Christ born but Righteousness looked down from Heaven she cast her eye upon Earth and seeing Truth freshly sprung there she looked and looked again certainly it was a sight to draw all the eyes of Heaven to it It is said of the Angels that they desired to look into these things they looked wishly at them 1 Pet. 1 12● as if they would look through them no question but Righteousness looked as narrowly and piercingly as the Angels Some observe that the Hebrew word she looked down signifies that she beat out a window so desirous was Righteousness to behold the sight of the Vine Budding of Christ being born that she beats out a Window in Heaven before this time she would not so much as look down towards the Earth Righteousness had no prospect no window open this way she turned away her eyes and clapt to the Casement and would not abide so much as to look on such sinful wretches forlorn sinners as we are her eye was purer than to behold Iniquity she abhorred it and us for it and therefore would not vouchsafe us once to cast off her eye O but now the case is altered no sooner doth our Vine Bud upon the Earth but she is willing to condescend and so willing that she breaks a Window through the Walls of Heaven to look down upon this Bud and nomarvail for what could Righteousness desire to see and satifie her self in that was not to be seen in Jesus Christ He was all righteous there was not the least spot of sin to be found in him his Birth was clean and his Life was holy and his Death was innocent both his Soul and Body were without all sin both his Spirit and his Mouth were without all guile whatsoever satisfaction Righteousness would have she might have it in him lay Judgment to the Line and Righteousness to the Balance and there is nothing in Jesus but Streight for the Line and full Weight for the Balance 3. For the meeting and agreement of all Gods Attributes as the issue and the least effect of this budding Vine the Verse before tells us that Mercy and Truth are met together Righteousness and Peace have kissed each other This meeting presupposeth a distance before they met for they that meet come from divers coasts Here then are two things considerable first the distance and secondly the meeting But you will say how came this distance Are they not all the Attributes of Gods undivided essence are they not all four in the bosom of God from all eternity I answer Yes they are undivided in themselves but they were divided about us it was Adam's sin and ours in him that first divided Heaven yea the very Attributes of God and in a sort God himself I shall speak to both these that you may first see the Differences and then the Agreement and blessed Harmony of these glorious Attributes 1. The Difference immediately after the Fall the great question which before you heard of in the Decree and Councils of God was actually propounded What should be done with sinful Man in this case we must speak of God after the manner of men and I hope you will give me the liberty that others I suppose warrantably take Come saith God What shall be done with sinful Man He hath violated my Law broken my Command and as much as lies in him unpinn'd the Fabrick of the World spoiled my Glorious Work of Heaven and Earth and Sea and all therein undone himself for ever and ever and ever O what shall be done with this sinful rebellious forlorn unhappy Creature Man Silence being a while in Heaven and all struck into amaze to see the great God of Heaven stirred up in wrath at last Mercy and Peace stand up and they seek with sweet gentle intreaties to pacifie Gods Anger but Righteousness and Truth are on the contrary side and they provoke God Almighty to go on and to manifest himself as he is indeed a consuming Fire a sin-revenging God The Plea is drawn up and reported at large by Bernard Andrews and others 1. Mercy began for out of her readiness to do good she is ever formost her inclination is to pitty or rather she her self is an inclination to pity those that are in misery and if she can but relieve them let them deserve what they will be sure she will relieve them for she looks not to the party what he is nor what he hath done nor what he he
deserved but which is the comfort of us miserable sinners she looks at what he suffers and in how woful and wretched a case he is Her Plea was thus What Lord hast thou made all Men in vain wilt thou now destroy him for whom thou madest the World shall the housholder be cast out and thrown into prison and there remain till he hath paid the utmost Farthing shall all the Men and Women in the World from first to last be damned for ever and ever alas What profit is in their Blood What will it avail to crowd Men and Devils together in Hell-flames Will not those Devils the grand Enemies of God rejoyce at this And what then will become of thy great Name on Earth Is not this thy Name The Lord the Lord Merciful and Gracious Long-suffering and abundant in Goodness and Truth keeping Mercy for Thousands forgiving Iniquity Transgressions and Sins What will the Lord undo his Name Will the Lord cast off for ever And will he be favourable no more Is his Mercy clean gone for ever Will he be no more entreated hath God forgotten to be gracious Hath he in Anger shut up his tender Bowels With these and such like holy whisperings or mutterings did Mercy enter into Gods bowels and make them yern and melt again into compassions But 2. Truth must be heard as well as Mercy and she layes in matter of exception and her Plea was thus What is God but his Word Now this was thy word to Adam In the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt die the death and this was thy word to all the Sons of Adam 〈◊〉 17. 〈◊〉 8.10 the soul that sinneth that soul shall die And God may not falsifie his word his word is truth falsifie truth That may not be all men are liars but God is true even truth it self This Plea of Truth is seconded by Righteousness and thus she bespeaks God shall not the Judge of all the world do right Thou hast declared thy self over and over to be just and righteous 〈◊〉 15. 〈◊〉 19.13 〈◊〉 6.5 7. 〈◊〉 ●5 17 O Lord God of Israel thou art righteous Righteous art thou O Lord and upright are thy Judgments Thou art righteous O Lord which art and wast and shall be Even so Lord God Almighty true and righteous are thy Judgments Yea the Lord is righteous in all his wayes and holy in all his works and wherein consists this righteousness but in rendring to every one according to his due And what is the sinners due 〈◊〉 ● 23 but Death The wages of sin is Death What shall not those sinners die the Death That were as before to make Truth false so here to do Right Wrong These were the Controversies at that time so that Peace could not tell how to speak a prevailing word amongst them nay the controversie grew so high that they made it their own cases what shall become of me said Mercy if God spare not sinners and what shall become of me said Justice if God do spare sinners what shall become of me said Mercy If God will shew no mercy And what shall become of me said Justice if God will do no Justice why alas perish said Mercy if thou wilt not pity if man die I die also and I perish said Justice if thou wilt have mercy surely I die if man die not To this it came and in these terms brake up the Assembly and away they went one from another Truth went to Heaven and was a Stranger upon Earth Righteousness went with her and would not so much as look down from Heaven Mercy she staid below still for where should Mercy be if not with the miserable As for Peace she went between both to see if she could make them meet again in better terms in the mean while our Salvation lies a bleeding the Plea hangs and we stand as Prisoners at the Bar and know not what shall become of us for though two be for us yet two are against us as strong and more stiff than they so that much depends upon this meeting for either they must be at peace between themselves or they cannot be at peace with us nor can we be at peace with God Many means were made before Christs time for a blessed meeting but it would not be Sacrifice and Burnt-Offering thou wouldst not have Heb. 10.5 these means were not prevalent enough to cause a meeting Where stuck it you will say Surely it was not long of Mercy she was easie to be intreated she looked up to Heaven but Righteousness would not look down and indeed here was the business Righteousness must and will have satisfaction or else Righteousness should not be Righteous either some satisfaction for sin must be given to God or she will never meet more better all men in the World were damned than that the Righteousness of God should be Unrighteous And this now puts on the great transaction of our Saviours Birth Well then our Saviour is born and this birth occasions a gracious meeting of the Attributes such an attractive is this Birth this Bud of Christ that all meet there indeed they cannot otherwise but meet in him in whom all blessed Attributes of God do meet It is Christ is Mercy and Christ is Truth and Christ is Righteousness and Christ is Peace 1. Christ is Mercy thus Zacharias prophesied Luke 1.78 That through the tender Mercy of our God the day-spring or Branch from on high hath visited us And God the Father of Christ is called the Father of mercies as if Mercy were his Son who had no other Son but his dearly boloved Son in whom he is well pleased 2 Cor. 1.3 John 14.6 2. Christ is Truth I am the Way and the Truth and the Life That Truth in whom is accomplished whatsoever was prefigured of the Messiah God shall send forth his Mercy and his Truth Psal 57.3 Psal 64.7 Exod. 34.6 Deut. 32.4 Psal 86.15 John 1.14 17. Jer. 23.6 Mal. 4.2 1 Car. 1.30 Heb. 7.2 Isa 9.6 Eph. 2.14 2 Thes 3.16 And O prepare Mercy and Truth And this is his Name the Lord the Lord abundant in Goodness and Truth He is a God of Truth saith Moses plenteous in Mercy and Truth saith David full of Grace and Truth saith John for the Law was given by Moses but Grace and Truth came by Jesus Christ He is Truth by Name and Truth by Nature and Truth by Office 3. Christ is Righteousness This is his Name whereby he shall be called the Lord our Righteousness And unto you that fear my Name shall the Son of Righteousness arise with healing under his Wings And Christ of God is made unto us Wisdom Righteousness and Sanctification and Redemption And according to his Type Melchisedech this was his Style King of Righteousness 4. Christ is Peace This is his Name wherewith he is called wonderful Councellor the Mighty God the everlasting Father the Prince of Peace And Christ
11.26 Moses reason of esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasure of Egypt was for that he had respect unto the recompence of reward he had respect in the original he had a fixed intent Eye there was in him a Love of the reward and yet withal a Love of God and therefore his Love of the reward was not mercinary but this I say though there were no reward at all a Child of God hath such a principle of Love within him that for Loves sake he would Obey his God he is led by the Spirit and therefore he Obeys now the Spirit that leads him is a Spirit of Love and as many as are led by the Spirit of God are the Sons of God Rom. 8.14 3. The Sons of God imitate God in his Love and Goodness to all Men. Our Saviour amplifies this excellent property of God He causeth his Sun to shine upon good and bad and thence he concludeth Be ye perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect Mat. 5.48 Goodness to bad men is the highest degree of Grace and as it were the perfection of all O my Soul Canst thou imitate God in this Consider how thy Father bears it though the wicked provoke him day by day yet for all that he doth not quickly revenge vengeance indeed is only his and he may in justice do what he will that way and 't is the opinion of some that if the most patient man in the world should but sit in Gods Throne one day and see and observe the doings and miscarriges of the Sons of Men he would quickly set all the World on Fire yet God seeth all and for all that He doth not make the Earth presently to gape and devour us He puts not out the glorious Light of the Sun He doth not dissolve the Work of Creation He doth not for Mans Sin presently blast every thing into Dust What an excellent pattern is this for thee to Write after Canst thou but forgive thy Enemies Do well to them that do evil to thee O this is a sure sign of Grace and Sonship It is storyed of some Heathens who beating a Christian almost to Death asked him What great matter Christ did ever do for him Even this said the Christian That I can forgive you though you use me thus cruelly here was a Child of God indeed It is a sweet resemblance of our Father and of our Saviour Jesus Christ to Love our Enemies to Bless them that Curse us to do Good unto them that Hate us to Pray for them that Despitefully use us and Persecute us O my Soul look to this 5.44 consult this ground of Hope if this Law be written in thy Heart write it down amongst thy Evidences that thou art Gods Son yea that even unto thee a Son is given To Review the Grounds What is a Child born to me and a Son given to me What am I indeed new born am I indeed Gods Son or Daughter do I upon the search find in my Soul new desires new comforts new contentments What are my words my works and affections and conversation new is there in me a new nature a new principle hath the Spirit by way of infusing or shedding given me a new Power a new Ability a Seed of Spiritual Life which I had not before do I upon the search find that I fear God and love God and imitate God in some good measure in his love and goodness towards all Men can I indeed and really forgive an Enemy and according to opportunity and my ability do good unto them that do evil unto me Why should I not then confidently and comfortably hope that I have my share and interest in the birth of Christ in the blessed incarnation and conception of Jesus Christ Away away all despair and dejections and despondencies of Spirit If these be my grounds of Hope it is time to hold up head and heart and hands and all with cheerfulness and confidence and to say with the Spouse I am my beloveds and my beloved is mine SECT V. Of Believing in Jesus in that Respect 5. LEt us Believe on Jesus carrying on the great work of our Salvation at his first coming or incarnation I know many staggerings are oft in Christians What is it likely that Christ should be incarnate for me That such a God should do such a thing for such a sinful woful abominable wretch as I am Ah my Soul put thy propriety in Christs incarnation out of dispute that thou mayst be able to say As God was manifest in the flesh and I may not doubt it so God is manifest in me and I dare not deny it But to help the Soul in this choice Duty I shall first propose the hinderances of Faith 2. The helps of Faith in this Respect 3. The manner how to act our Faith 4. The encouragements to bring on the soul to believe its part in this blessed incarnation of Jesus Christ For the first there are but three things that can hinder Faith As 1. The exceeding unworthiness of the soul and to this purpose are those complaints What Christ incarnate for me for such a dead Dog as I am What King would dethrone himself and become a Toad to save Toades and am not I at a greater distance from God than a Toad is from me hath not sin made my soul more ugly in Gods Eye than any loathsome Toad can be in my Eye O I am less than the least of all Gods Mercies I am fitter for Hell and Devils than for Vnion and Communion with God and Christ I dare not I cannot Believe 2. The infinite exactness of divine justice which must be satisfied a soul deeply and seriously considering of this it startles thereat and cries O what will become of my soul one of the least sins that I stand Guilty of deserves Death and eternal Wrath The wages of sin is death and I cannot satisfie though I have trespassed to many millions of talents I have not one mite of mine own to pay O then how should I believe What thoughts can I entertain of Gods Mercy and Love to me-ward God's Law condemns me my own Conscience accuseth me and Justice will have its due 3. The want of a Mediator or some suitable Person which may stand between the Sinner and God If on my part there be unworthiness and on Gods part exact and strict and severe Justice and withall I see no Mediator which I may go unto and first close withall before I deal with the infinite glory of God himself how should I but despair and cry out O wretched man that I am O that I had never been or if I must needs have a being Oh that I had been a toad or serpent or any venomous creature rather than a man for when they dye they perish and there 's an end of them but the end of a reprobate sinner is torments without end O wo and alas I cannot believe
not Christ come down sinners could not have gone up into Heaven and therefore that they might ascend he descends 2. I come down from Heaven not to do mine own will Heb. 3.1 2. but the will of him that sent me his Father had sent him on purpose to receive and to save sinners and to this purpose he is called the Apostle of our profession who was faithful to him that appointed him as also Moses was faithful in all his house His Father could not send him on any errand but he was sure to do it his Fathers mission was a strong demonstration that Christ was willing to receive those sinners that would but come to him Again Jesus stood and cryed saying if any man thirst John 7.37 let him come unto me and drink the very pith heart and marrow of the Gospel is contained in these words the occasion of them was thus on that last day of the Feast of Tabernacles the Jews were wont with great solemnity to draw water out of the fountain of Siloam at the foot of Mount Sion and to bring it to the Altar singing out of Isaiah Isa 12.3 With joy shall ye draw water out of the wells of Salvation now Christ takes them at this Custom and recalls them from earthly to heavenly waters alluding to that of Isaiah Isa 55.1 3. Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters Incline your ears and come unto me and your souls shall live The Father saith come the Son saith come the Spirit saith come yea Rev. 22.17 the Spirit and the Bride say come and let him that heareth say come and let him that is a thirst come and whosoever will let him drink of the water of life freely All the time of Christs Ministry we see him tyring himself in going about from place to place upon no other errand than this to cry at the markets Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters if any sinners love life if any will go to heaven let them come to me and I will shew them the way to my Fathers bosom and endear them to my Fathers heart Again hither tend all those Arguments of God and Christ to draw souls to themselves Thus God draws 1. From his equity Hear now O house of Israel Ezek. 18.25 is not my way equal or are not your wayes unequal q. d. I appeal to your very consciences is this equal that sinners should go on in sin and Trespass against him that is so willing to receive and save poor sinners 2. From our ruine in case we go on in sin Ezek. 18.31 Cast away from you all your Transgressions whereby ye have Transgressed and make you a new heart and a new Spirit for why will ye dye O house of Israel 3. From his own dislike and displeasure at our ruine I have no pleasure in the death of him that dyeth Ver. 32. saith the Lord God wherefore turn your souls and live ye 4. From his mercy and readiness to pardon sinners Isa 55.7 Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him return unto the Lord and he will have mercy upon him and to our God for he will abundantly pardon Hos 14.4 John 3.16 5. From the freeness of his love I will love them freely and God so loved the world so fully so fatherly so freely that he gave his only begotten Son c. and I will give unto him that is athirst of the fountain of the water of life freely 6. From the sweetness of his Name Rev. 21.6 Exod. 34.6 7. Isa 48.18 19. The Lord the Lord merciful and gracious long-suffering and abundant in goodness and truth keeping mercy for thousands forgiving iniquity Transgression and sin 7. From the benefits that would follow O that thou hadst hearkened to my commandments then had thy peace been as a River and thy righteousness as the waves of the Sea thy seed also had been as the Sand and the off-spring of thy bowels like the gravel thereof 8. From his Oath As I live saith the Lord I desire not the death of a sinner but rather that he should turn from his wickedness and live O happy creatures saith Tertullian for whom God swears O unbelieving wretches if we will not trust God swearing Ezek. 33.61 Ezek. 33.11 Mich. 6.3 Isa 5.4 Isa 5.3 9. From his expostulations Turn ye turn ye from your evil wayes for why will ye dye O house of Israel O my people what have I done to thee and wherein have I wearied thee testifie against me what could I have done more for my vineyard than I have done wherefore when I looked that it should bring forth grapes brought it forth wild grapes Mich. 6.2 10. From his appeals Judge now O ye inhabitants of Judah and Jerusalem and hear O ye mountains the Lords controversie and ye strong foundations of the earth Deut. 5.29 for the Lord hath a controversie with his people and he will plead with Israel 11. From his groans Oh that there were such an heart in them that they would fear me and keep my commandments alwayes Deut. 32.29 that it might be well with them and their children for ever And oh that they were wise that they understood this that they would consider their latter end 12. Hos 11.8 From his loathness to give men up How shall I give thee up Ephraim how shall I deliver thee O Israel how shall I make thee as Admah how shall I set thee as Zeboim my heart is turned within me my repentings are kindled together O the goodness of God! And as God the Father so God the Son draws Arguments to win souls to himself 1. From his coming it was the very purpose and design of his coming down from Heaven to receive sinners 1 Tim. 1.15 This is a faithful saying sayes Paul and worthy of all acceptation that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners 2. From his fair demeanour and behaviour towards sinners this was so open and notorious that it was turned to his disgrace and opprobry Mat. 11.19 Behold a friend of Publicans and sinners And the Scribes and Pharisees murmured at him Luke 5.30 and his Disciples saying Why do ye eat and drink with Publicans and Sinners 3. From his owning of sinners and answering for them in this respect Luke 5.31 32. And Jesus answering said unto them they that are whole need not a Physitian but they that are sick I came not to call the righteous but Sinners to repentance 4. From his rejoycing at sinners conversion indeed we never read of Christs Laughter and we seldom read of Christs joy but when it is at any time recorded it is at the Conversion of a poor soul he had little else to comfort himself in being a man of sorrows but in this he rejoyced exceedingly Luke 10.21 In that hour Jesus rejoyced in Spirit
it was in that hour when he saw an handsel of the fruit of his Disciples Ministry as an earnest of the many thousands that should afterwards come in John 11.15 And I am glad for your sakes that I was not there said Christ when Lazarus was dead But why was he glad It follows to the intent ye might believe He rejoyced if any of his got faith a little more faith more and more faith Luke 19.41 42. 5. From grief in case of sinners not repenting witness his tears over Jerusalem and those speeches of his And when he was come near he beheld the City and wept over it saying if thou hadst known even thou at least in this thy day the things which belong unto thy peace but now they are hid from thine eyes Look as it is with a man carrying to be buried his wife weeps his children weep his friends weep so our Saviour follows Jerusalem to the grave and when he can do no more for it he rings out this doleful passing-bell Mat. 23.37 O that thou hadst known c. 6. From his wishes groanings O Jerusalem Jerusalem thou that killest the Prophets and stonest them which are sent unto thee how often would I have gathered thy children together even as an hen gathers her Chickens under her wings and ye would not In this Argument before we pass it observe we the several passages here 's first the groan Oh! this Aspiration argues a compassionate pang of grief it ran to the very heart of Christ that Jerusalem had neglected their souls salvation Oh Jerusalem Secondly here 's an ingemination or a double calling on Jerusalem O Jerusalem Jerusalem the name doubled expresseth great affection in the speaker as when David doubled the name Absolom it is said the King was much moved 2 Sam. 18.33 and so he cryed O my Son Absolom my Son my Son Absolom thirdly here 's the monstrous sin wherewith the Lord charges Jerusalem Thou that killest the Prophets and stonest them which are sent unto thee Jerusalem was the very slaughter-house of the Prophets in so much that very few of the Prophets had been murthered elsewhere and so comparatively Christ speaks it cannot be that a Prophet perish out of Jerusalem Fourthly Luke 13.33 here 's Christs willingness to save Jerusalem which he discovers 1. In his frequent applications to it how often q. d. not once nor twice nor thrice but many and many a time have I come to Jerusalem and spoke to Jerusalem and wooed Jerusalem how often 2. In the acting exercising and putting forth of his will how often would I have gathered thy children together The will of Christ was serious though not absolute I know his divine will absolutely considered could not have been resisted but this was * There is voluntas absoluta efficax deceinens infalibiliter producens effectum volitum voluntas conditionata revelata approbationis simplicis complacentia August tract 15. in John not his absolute will but only a will of divine complacency and so he would not have the death of any but that all should live or he speaks here of his humane ministerial will say some and not of his divine many a Sermon had he preached and many an Exhortation had he dropped and every Sermon every Exhortation proclaimed his willingness I would yea that I would have gathered thy children together 3. In resemblance of his willingness Christ would have gathered Jerusalems children as the hen gathers her chickens under her wings in the metaphor Christs care is admirably displayed 1. As the hen with her wings covers the unfeathered chickens 2. As the hen provides for their food not eating her self till they are filled 3. As the hen defends her chickens from the ravenous birds so that to blood she will fight in their defence so hath Christs care been for Jerusalem No bird saith Austin expresseth such tender love to her young ones as the hen doth no fowls so discover themselves to be mothers as hens do other birds we know to be mothers when we see them in their nest but no other way only the hen discovers her self to be a mother when her chickens do not follow her for then her feathers stand up her wings hang down she clocketh mournfully and goeth feebly now in respect of this singular love Christ compares himself to an hen As an hen gathers her chickens so would I have gathered Jerusalem 4. In that he adds so dolefully but ye would not I would but ye would not q. d. in me no care so great as to save your souls in you no care so little as your souls Salvation I strove towards you in acts of love and you strove towards me in acts of ingratitude I would have done you good but you would not receive it I would yea how often would I but ye would not 2. Christs reception of sinners appears yet more in his practise How welcome were all sorts of sinners unto him He casts out none that acknowledged him for the Messiah he turned none away that gave up their souls to be saved by him in his own way This he manifests 1. Parabolically 2. Really 1. Parabolically especially in those three Parables of the lost Groat and of the lost Sheep and of the lost Son I shall instance in this last Luke 15.20 which may well serve for all the rest When the Prodigal was yet afar off his Father saw him and had compassion on him and ran and fell on his neck and kissed him In these words observe 1. His Father sees him before he sees his Father no sooner a sinner thinks of Heaven but the Lord spies him and takes notice of him 2. The Lord sees him whiles he was yet a great way off he was but in the beginning of his way his Father might have let him alone till he had come quite home to his house and it had been a singular mercy to have bid him welcome then but he takes notice of him yet a great way off sinners may be far off from God in their own apprehensions and yet the Lord even then draws near whiles thus they apprehend 3. His Father had pity or compassion on him the Lords bowels even yearn and work and stir within him at the sight of his returning prodigals when Ephraim had bemoaned himself Thou hast chastised me and I was chastised Jer. 31.18 19 ver 20. as a bullock unaccostomed to the yoak why then cries God Is Ephraim my dear son is he a pleasant child for since I spake against him I do earnestly remember him still therefore my bowels are troubled for him I will surely have mercy upon him saith the Lord. 4. His Father run there is much in this As 1. It had been mercy though his Father had stood still till his Son had come 2. What a mercy is this that his Father will go and give his Son the meeting 3. But above all oh what abundant mercy
himself which Jesus knowing for he understood his thoughts as well as words first he makes her Appology and then his own the scope givign us to understand that Christ was not of the same superciliousness with the Pharisees but that repenting sinners should be welcome unto him Ver. 47. Ver. 48. Ver. 50. Vse and this welcome he publisheth first to Simon Her sins which are many are forgiven and then to the woman Thy sins are forgiven thee thy faith hath saved thee go in peace I have been long in the proof but a word of use and I have done What is Christ most willing to receive sinners O then be exhorted who would not come to Jesus Christ methinks now all sinners of all sorts should say though I have been a drunkard a swearer an unclean person yet now I hear Christ is willing to receive sinners and therefore I will go to Jesus Christ This is my exhortation O come unto Christ come unto Christ behold here in the name of the Lord I stand and make invitation to poor sinners O will ye not come how will ye answer it at the great day when it shall be said the Lord Jesus made a tender and offer of mercy to you and you would not accept of it Oh come to Christ and believe on Christ as Christ is willing to receive you so be you willing to give up your souls to him the motives to this I may lay down in these particulars 1. The Doctrine of Christ Come unto me and him that cometh unto me I will in no wise cast out All the arguments of God and Christ of which you have heard the practice of Christ whiles he was upon earth and the heart of Christ now in Heaven lay these together and apply them to your own souls Oh what work will they make 2. The calls of God and Christ as they are frequent in Scriptures consider that Text Ho every one that thirsts come ye to the waters Isa 55.1 Ho he begins proclamation-wise we usually say vocations interjections speak very affectionate motion towards the distressed certainly Christ's love is a very affectionate love he layes his mouth to the ears of those that are spiritually deaf and cryes aloud Ho every one Christ invites all As many as ye shall find bid them to the Marriage Matth 22.9 As the Heavens are general in their influence not one grass on the ground but 't is bedewed so are Christs invitations to his feast not one man in the world but he is invited Ho every one that thirsteth so the Apostle Let him that is athirst come and whosoever will let him take the water of Life freely Revel 22.17 A thirst and a will is one and the same it is your will that makes up the match if you will but sit down at God's Table if you will but have the honey-comb with the honey if you will but drink his Wine with his milk if you will drink yea drink abundantly of the flaggons of the new wine of his Kingdom why then come Come ye to the waters come unto me and drink Christs arms are spread abroad to receive sinners he calls and knocks and calls and waits and calls and beseeches every word here hath so much sweetness and dearness in it as it plainly speakes him free and willing to receive you if you will but come 3. The wooings of Christ to gain your hearts consider him bowing the Heavens and coming down and laying aside his Robes of Majesty and putting on your filthy garments consider him going about from place to place on no other errand but to gain your hearts and win your Souls and whoever spake such effectual words as Christ spake when he was upon the earth who ever gave such precious jewels to a Bride as Christ gave to his Spouse whoever put on such apparrel as Christ did when he wooed his Church the Prophet wonders at it Who is this that cometh from Edom with dyed garments from Bozrah Wherefore art thou red in thine apparrel Isa 63.1 2. and thy garments like him that treadeth in the Wine Fat Isa 63.1 2. Whoever gave such a love-token as Christ gave when he laid down his Life Oh consider him living or dying and say Never like Love to this Ah poor sinner see your Jesus hanging on the Cross dropping out his last blood breathing out his last breath stretching out his dying armes to incircle sinners and come Oh come and throw your selves into his bleeding armes away with all prejudicate opinions who shall say Christ is not willing to save him and not blaspheme eternal love speak truth corrupt hearts speak truth say not Christ is unwilling but you are unwilling I would but ye would not 4. The weepings of Christ if he cannot prevaile Thus we find him in the Gospel expressing himself Luke 19.41 not only in words but in tears And when he was come near Jerusalem he beheld the City and wept over it Luke 19.41 Christ coming to the City and seeing it and foreseeing the desolation that should come upon it his bowels yearned within him towards the People and he mourned secretly within himself q. d. O Jerusalem thou hast had many Priests to advise thee and many Prophets to instruct thee in the wayes of life but now those dayes are gone and past nay the great Prophet of the World is come to woo thee but yet thy heart is hardened and thou wilt not receive the things belonging to thy peace and therefore I will turn my preaching into mourning and sighing O that thou hadst known even thou at least in this thy day the things belonging to thy peace and then his heart even breaks and he weeps again but now are they hid from thine eyes sinners suppose Christ should come and weep over you as he did over Jerusalem saying O ye sinful souls had but you known even you in this your day the things belonging to your peace and suppose that you should see one tear trickling down after another what Christ to weep for you over you Methinks if you had hearts of stone it should melt your hearts surely it is no light matter that makes Christ weep Children weep often but Wise-men seldome yet here the wisest of men weeps for them that would not weep for themselves O Jerusalem Jerusalem SECT IV. Of Christ's easie Yoak and light Burthen 3. FOr the easiness of Christs Yoak and the lightness of Christs burthen Christ delivers it in these words Take my Yoak upon you and learn of me for my Yoak is easie Mat. 11.29 30. and my Burthen is light See the actings of Christ this year in reference to our souls health 1. He commissionates his Apostles to call sinners in 2. He stands ready to receive them if they will but come in 3. He sweetens the way of Christianity to them when they are come in Many fears and jealousies are in the hearts of men of the difficulty austerity and severity
ruddy Cant. 5.10 the chiefest of ten thousands As in the fairest beauty there is a mixture of these two colours white and ruddy so in Christ there is a gracious mixture and compound of all the graces of the Spirit there is in him a sweet temper of gentleness purity righteousness meekness humility and what not In him are hid all the treasures of Wisdom and Knowledge Col. 2.3 and I may add of all other gifts and graces not a grace but it was in Christ and that in an higher way than in any Saint in the World and therefore he is called fairer than all the children of men Observe There was more habitual grace in Christ than ever was or is or shall be in all the Elect whether Angels or Men. He received the Spirit out of measure there was in him as much as possibly could be in a creature and more than in all other creatures whatsoever As the Sun is the Prince of Stars as the Husband is the head of the Wife as a Lion is the King of the Beasts so is this Sun of Righteousness this Head of the Church this Lion of the Tribe of Judah the chiefest of ten thousands if we look at any thing in Heaven or Earth that we observe as eminently fair by that is the Lord Jesus in respect of his inward beauty set forth in Scriptures he is the Sun of Righteousness the bright Morning-Star the Light of the World the Tree of Life the Lilly and the Rose fairer than all the Flowers of the Field than all the precious Stones of the Earth than all the Lights in the Firmament than all the Saints and Angels in Heaven You will say What 's all this to us Certainly much every way the Apostle tells you That the Law of the Spirit of Life which is in Jesus Christ Rom. 8.2 hath freed me from the Law of sin of Death let us enquire into these words the law of the Spirit of life the Spirit of life is here put for life as else where After three dayes an half Rev. 11.11 the Spirit of life coming from God shall enter into them Now life is that whereby a thing acteth and moveth it self and it is the cause and beginning of action and motion and this Spirit of life or life it self being here applied to Christ it is that in Christ which is the beginning and cause of all his holy actions and what was that but his Original holiness or the holiness of his humane Nature But why is the holiness of Christs nature called the Spirit of life I answer 1. Because it was infused into his manhood by the Spirit of God The holy Ghost shall come upon thee therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee Luke 1.35 shall be called the Son of God 2. Because it is a most exact and absolute and perfect holiness the Scripture-phrase setting out things in perfection or fulness usually adds the word Spirit unto them as the spirit of pride the Spirit of truth and the Spirit of error so then the meaning of the Spirit of life is all one with the most absolute and most perfect purity and holiness of the nature of Christ It is briefly as if the Apostle had said the law of the Spirit of life or the power of the most absolute and perfect holiness of the nature of Christ hath freed me from the law of sin and death hath acquitted me from the power of my sinful nature and from the power of death due to me in respect of my sinful and corrupt nature We might draw from hence this conclusion that The benefit of Christ's habitual righteousness infused at his first conception is imputed to believers to their justification As the obedience of his life and the merit of his death so the Holyness infused at his very conception hath its influence into our justification it is by the obedience of his life that we are accounted actually holy and by the purity of his conception or habitual grace that we are accounted personally holy But I must not stay here Thus much of the Holiness of Christ's Nature SECT IV. Of the Holiness of Christ's Life Rom. 5.19 2. FOr the holiness of Christs life the Apostle tells us that by the obedience of one many shall be made righteous here 's the obedience of Christ and its influence on us 1. The obedience of Christ is that whereby he continued in all things written in the book of the Law to do them Matth. 5.17 John 8.29 Acts 3.14 Observe Christ's life was a visible commentary on Gods Law For proof Think not that I am come to destroy the Law or the Prophets saith Christ but to fulfil them And the Father hath not left me alone saith Christ for I do alwayes those things that please him Hence Christ in Scripture is called Holy and Just and the Holy One Acts 2.27 The most Holy Dan. 9.24 by his actual holiness Christ fulfilled in act every branch of the Law of God he walked in all the Commandments of God he performed perfectly both in thought word and deed whatsoever the Law of the Lord required I do not cannot limit this obedience of Christ to this last year of his Ministry for his whole life was a perpetual course of obedience he was obedient unto death Phil. 2.8 saith the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 even until his death and yet because we read most of his holy actings this year and that this was the year wherein both his active and passive obedience did most eminently shine and break forth the year wherein he drew up all the dispersions of his precepts and cast them into actions as into sums total therefore now I handle it and I shall make it out by the passages following only in this one year As 1. Now he discovered his charity in feeding the hungry as at once five thousand men with five Loaves and two Fishes John 6.9 10 11. John 6.9 10 11. and at another time four thousand men with seven Loaves and a few small Fishes Matth. 15.32 Matth. 15.32 2. Now he discovered his self-denial and contempt of the World in flying the offers of a Kingdom when the people were convinc'd that he was the Messiah from that miracle of feeding five thousand men with five Loaves presently they would needs make him a King but he that left his Fathers Kingdom for us he fled from the offers of a Crown and Kingdom from them John 6.15 as from an enemy When Jesus perceived that they would come and take him by force to make him a King he departed again into a Mountain himself alone 3. Now he discovered his mercy in healing the Womans Daughter that had an unclean spirit Mar. 7.26 27. the Woman was a Greek a Syrophenician by Nation and in that respect Christ called her a Dog and yet Christ gave her the desire of her soul O the
8. Consider Christs ordination of his Apostles He chose twelve whom he Named Apostles and what was the office of these Apostles but to Go and teach all Nations The Gospel was first Preached in Jewry but afterwards the sound of it came unto us Out of Zion shall go forth the Law Mich. 4.2 and the Word of the Lord from Jerusalem Gildas affirms plainly That Brittain received the Gospel in the time of Tiberius under whom Christ suffered and that Joseph of Arimathea after the dispersion of the Jews was sent of Philip the Apostle from France to Brittain and here remained in this Land all his time Niceph. l. 2. c. 40. Nicephoras adds That Simon Zelotes did spread the Gospel Christ to the West Ocean and brought the same into the Isles of Brittain Howsoever it was brought hither of this we are sure that Christ was first discovered to his Apostles and from the Apostles was discovered to our fore-Fathers and from them unto us and from us will be the discovery to others to the end of the world O the goodness of God in Christ What That repentance and remission of Sins should be preached in his Name beginning at Jerusalem Luke 24.47 and afterwards among all Nations Of what near concernment O my soul is this to thee What art thou but a sinner of the Gentiles Understand that term When the Apostle would express the greatest sinners that the World had he calls them Sinners of the Gentiles Gal. 2.15 Why the Gentiles knew not God the Gentiles were unacquainted with Christ the Gentiles walked in nothing but sin O then what a love is this that God should ever have thought of good will towards thee surely this is one of the great mysteries of Godliness 1 Tim. 3.16 God manifested in the flesh Justified in the Spirit seen of Angels preached unto the Gentiles What that sinners and the worst of sinners should be made the subjects of the utmost discovery of Christ and the Gospel of Christ this is a mystery indeed had Christ sent his Apostles to proclaim the riches of his Grace to some Jews only or to some unspotted souls among the Gentiles if any such were whose hearts might presently have fallen down before it this had been something sutable but that sinners of the Gentiles that Children of wrath should be the subject of this great design O the Mystery q. d. Go my Apostles into all the Nations of the world and amongst them all go into Brittain into that corner of the world England and there open the mystery of Christ there preach life and reconciliation and redemption and Glorification to those poor Souls lay you or at least some of you the foundation of the Christian Fath amongst those heathens those sinners of the Gentiles and after you I will raise up some other Ministers of the Gospel to confirm the same Yea in the last times I will raise up many Worthyes as Juel Vsher Downham Perkins Hooker Rogers Shepheard Bolton Ash Whittaker c. who shall be as bright Stars in the Firmament of that Church and after them I will raise up others to discover this great design to their generations amongst whom shall live such and such men such and such women and herein O my soul think of thy self and if thou wilt of thine own family and relations for I owe a good will towards England it shall be said of England as sometimes of Zion Psal 50.2 out of England the perfection of beauty hath God shined O my Soul how shouldst thou be ravished in this one meditation what that Christ should cause the Sun of his Gospel to come into this Zodiack and that now in these latter times when the Sun is set in Zion where it first arose it should make a Noon with us and shine more brightly here for ought I know or c●n yet learn than in any other Nation Country Kingdom throughout all the World Rom. 11.33 O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and councel of God how unsearchable are his judgments and his wayes past finding out 9. Consider Christ's reception of sinners He sent forth his Apostles to call them in and if they would but come how ready was he to receive them John 6.38 39. This was Christ's errand from Heaven this was the work he came to do I came down from Heaven not to do mine own Will but the Will of him that sent me and this is the Fathers Will which hath sent me that of all which he hath given me I should lose nothing He must receive all his Father gives him but he must lose none John 17.22 Christ must give an account to God the Father of all which he hath given him and this will be his account Those that thou gavest me I have kept and none of them is lost Ah poor Soul why shouldst thou despair because of sin look on Christ as spreading out both his armes to receive thee to him look on the Gracious Nature and Disposition that is in Christ look on the Office of Christ it 's an office of saving and shewing mercy that Christ hath undertaken Luke 19.10 it 's an Office to receive sinners yea to seek and to save that which was lost to bring home straying souls to God to be the great peace-maker between God and man to reconcile God to man and man to God and so to be the Head and Husband of his people Certainly the Devil strangely wrongeth many a poor troubled Soul that he can bring them to have hard thoughts and suspicious thoughts of Jesus Christ how can they more contradict the Office of Christ how can they more contradict the Gospel-description of Christ than to think him a destroyer of his Creatures one that watcheth for their haltings and one that hath more mind to hurt than help them Away away with all prejudicate opinions resolve O my soul to throw thy self on him for life and for Salvation why if thou wilt but come he hath promised freely to make thee welcome all the day long he stretcheth out his armes and would fain gather thee and all others into his sweet embraces 10. Consider the easiness of his yoak and the lightness of his burthen Psalm 40.8 1 John 5.3 Psal 34.8 Many a one is willing to take Jesus as their Saviour but they are unwilling to take him on his own sweet terms O they imagine it an hard task and an heavy burthen Who may indure it it was otherwise with Christ I do delight to do thy will O my God and 't is otherwise with Christians for his Commandments are not grievous saith John Act. Mon. fol. 1361. and therefore David calls on others to try this truth Oh taste and see how good the Lord is It is said of Master Sanders that a little before his death and martrydome he told his Wife that he had no riches to leave her but that treasure of tasting
saw thee in danger of death through thy own unbelief for except thou sawest in his hands the print of the nails and put thy finger into the print of the nails except thou hadst clear manifestations of Christ even to thine own sense thou wouldest not believe he condescends so far to succour thy weakness as to manifest himself by several witnesses three in heaven and three on earth yea he multiplies his three on earth to thousands of thousands so many were the signes witnessing Christ that the Disciple which testified of them John 21.25 could say If they should be written every one the world could not contain the Books that should be written 4. When he saw the buying and selling in the Temple yea making Merchandize of the Temple it self I mean of thy Soul which is the Temple of the holy Ghost he steps in to whip out those Buyers and Sellers those Lusts and Corruptions O cries he will you sell away your souls for Trash O what is a man profitted though he gain the whole world and lose his own Soul Prov. 30.2 3. 5. When he saw thee like the horse and mule more brutish than any man not having the understanding of a man thou neither learnedst wisdom nor hadst the knowledge of the most holy he came with his instructions adding line unto line and precept on precept teaching and preaching the Gospel of the Kingdom and sealing his truths with many Miracles Mat. 4.23 that thou maist believe and in believing thou mightest have life through his Name and Oh! what is this but to make thee wise unto salvation 6. When he saw thee a sinner of the Gentiles a stranger from the common-wealth of Israel and without God in the world he sent his Apostles and Messengers abroad and bad them preach the Gospel to thee q. d. Go to such a one in the dark corner of the world an Isle at such a distance from the Nation of the Jews and set up my Throne amongst that people open the most precious Cabinet of my Love there and amongst that People tell such a Soul that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners of whom he is one O admirable Love 7. When he saw thee cast down in thy self and refusing thy own Mercy crying and saying what is it possible that Jesus Christ should send a Message to such a dead Dog as I am why the Apostles Commission seems otherwise Go not into the way of the Gentiles Mat. 10.5 6. or into any City of the Samaritans enter ye not but go rather to the lost sheep of the House of Israel O I am a lost sheep but not being of the House of Israel what hope is there that ever I should be found He then appeared and even then he spred his arms wide to receive thy soul he satisfied thee then of another Commission given to his Apostles Go teach all Nations And he cried even then Come unto me thou that art weary and heavy laden with sin and I will receive thee into my bosom Mat. 28.19 and give thee rest there 8. When he saw thee in suspence and heard thy complaint But if I come shall I find sweet welcome I have heard that his ways are narrow and straight Oh it is an hard passage and an high ascent up to heaven Many seek to enter in but shall not be able Luke 13.24 Oh! what shall become of my poor Soul why then he told thee otherwise Prov. 3.17 that all his ways were ways of pleasantness and all his paths peace he would give thee his Spirit that should bear the weight and make all light he would sweeten the ways of Christianity to thee that thou shouldest find by experience that his yoke was easie Mat. 11.29 and his burden was light 9. When he saw the wretchedness of thy Nature and original pollution he took upon him thy Nature and by this means took away thy original sin O here is the lovely Object What is it but the absolute holiness and perfect purity of the Nature of Christ This is the fairest Beauty that ever eye beheld this is that compendium of all Glories now if Love be a motion and union of the Appetite to what is lovely how shouldst thou flame forth in loves upon the Lord Jesus Christ this is rendered as the reason of those sparklings Thou art fairer than the children of men Psal 45.2 10. When he saw thee actually unclean a transgressor of the Law in thought word Heb. 10.9 and deed then he said Lo I come to do thy will O God and wherefore would he do Gods will but meerly on thy behalf O my Soul canst thou read over all these passages of Love and dost thou not yet cry out O stay me comfort me for I am sick of Love Can a man stand by an hot and fiery furnace and never be warmed Oh for an heart in some measure answerable to these Loves Surely even good natures hate to be in debt for love and is therein thee O my soul neither grace nor yet good nature O God forbid awake awake thy ardent love towards the Lord Jesus Christ why thou art rock and not flesh if thou beest not wounded with these heavenly darts Christ loves thee is not that enough fervent affection is apt to draw love where is little or no beauty and excellent beauty is apt to draw the heart where there is no answer of affection at all but when these two meet together what breast can hold against them See O my soul here is the sum of all the particulars thou hast heard Christ loves thee and Christ is lovely his heart is set upon thee who is a thousand times fairer than all the children of men doth not this double consideration like a mighty loadstone snatch thy heart unto it and almost draw it forth of thy very breast O sweet Saviour thou couldst say even of thy poor Church though labouring under many imperfections Thou hast ravished my Heart Cant. 4.9 10. my Sister my Spouse thou hast ravished mine heart with one of thine eyes with one chain of thy neck how fair is thy love my Sister my Spouse how much better is thy love than wine and the smell of thy oyntments than all Spices Couldst thou O blessed Saviour be so taken with the incurious and homely features of the Church and shall not I much more be enamoured with thy absolute and divine Beauty It pleased thee my Lord out of thy sweet ravishments of thy heavenly love to say to thy poor Church Turn away thine Eyes from me for they have overcome me but Oh let me say to thee Turn thine eyes to me that they may overcome me my Lord Cant. 6.5 I would be thus ravished I would be overcome I would be thus out of my self that I might be all in thee Thus is the Language of true love to Christ but alas how dully and flatly do I speak
Mat. 26.69 Ver. 71. Ver. 73. this fellow was also with Jesus of Nazareth and after a while they that stood by spake themselves surely thou art one of them for thy speech bewrayeth thee q. d. thy very Idiom declares thee to be a Galilean thou art as Christ is of the same Countrey and Sect and therefore thou art one of his Disciples Peter thus surprized without any time to deliberate he shamefully denies his Lord and 1. He doth it with a kind of subterfuge Ver. 70. I know not what thou sayest he seems to elude the Accusation with this Evasion Ver. 72. I know not thy meaning I understand not thy words I skill not what thou sayest 2. At the next turn he goes on to a licentious boldness denying Christ with an Oath I know not the man and lastly he aggravates his sin so far that he grows to impudence and so denies his Lord with cursing and swearing I know not the man here 's a Lie an Oath and a Curse the sin is begun at the voice of a Woman a silly Damosel not any of the greatest Ladies she was only a poor serving-maid that kept the doors but it grew to ripeness when the Men-Servants sell upon him now he swears and vows and curses himself if he knew the Man O Peter is the man so vile Ver. 74. that thou wilt not own him Hadst thou not before confest him to be the Christ the Son of the living God and dost thou not know him to be Man as well as God say is not this the Man-God God-Man that called thee and thy brother Andrew at the sea of Galilee saying follow me and I will make you fishers of men Is not this he whom thou sawest on Mount Tabor shining more gloriously than the Sun Is not this he whom thou sawest walking on the water and to whom thou said'st Lord if it be thou Mat. 14.28 bid me come unto thee on the water How is it then that thou saist I know not the man Surely here 's a sad example of humane infirmity i● Peter fell so foully how much more may lesser stars And yet withal here 's a blessed example of serious through repentance no sooner the Cock crew and Christ gave a look on Peter but he goes out Ver. 75. and weeps bitterly The Cock was the Preacher and the look of Jesus was the Grace that made the Sermon effectual O the Mercy of Christ he looked back on him that had forgot himself he revives his servant's memory to think on his Master's words he sends him out to weep bitterly that so he might restore him mercifuly to his favour again Let us learn hence to think modestly and soberly of our selves yea Vse 1 Cor. 10.12 Rom. 11.20 let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall If Peter could first dissemble and then lie and then forswear and then blaspheme and curse O let not us be high-minded but fear And in case we fall indeed as Peter did yet let us not despair as Judas did but still upon our repentance let us trust in God When Christ looked on Peter he wept bitterly notwithstanding our sins are great yet one look of Christ is full of virtue and enough to melt us into tears O let us not sink in despair but look up to him that he may look down on us Pliny tells us of some Rocks in Phrygia Plin. hist that when the Sun doth but shine upon them they send out drops of water as if they wept tears Peter signifies a Rock and whilst Peter persisted in his sin of denying Christ his heart was hard as the Rock but when Christ the Sun of Righteousness looked uqon him his heart was softned and he dropped tears continually Such is the vertue of Christ's look it turns the Rock into a standing Water and the Flint into a Fountain of Waters Psal 114.8 Lastly let us not decry repentance but rather be in the use and practise and exercise of it Is not here a Gospel precedent † Flevit quidem tanta lachrymarum inundatione ut in maxillis profundos sulcos haberet per quos quasi per quosdam canales aut aquae ductus lachrymae ejus defluebant Clem Quoties galli cantum audiebat in lachrymas prorumpebat per totum vitae tempus negationis culpam frequenter adeo plauxit Idem Mat. 26.67 68 Luke 22.65 Hier. ut citat Guliel statione tertia Christi patientis Mallon de flagellatione Christi c. 6. Clement an ancient Writer of whom Paul makes mention Phil. 4.3 expresseth Peter's repentance to have been so great that in his Checks he made as it were furrows in which as in certain Channels his tears run down the Text tells us he wept bitterly and Clement adds that while he lived as often as he heard a Cock crow he could not but weep and bewail his denial David is another like example All the Night said he I make my Bed to swim I water my Couch with my tears Psal 6.6 David makes mention of his Bed and Couch because there most especially he had offended God It was on his Bed that he committed Adultery and it was in his Couch that he designed and subscribed with his own hand that Vriah must die and hence is it that he waters his Bed and Couch with his tears the very sight of his Bed and Couch brings his sin into his remembrance as the very hearing of the crowing of the Cock ever after awakened Peter to his task of tears that Repentance is a Gospel-Duty we have spoke elsewhere O take heed of decrying it as we are often sinning so let us often repent it concerns us near to be frequent in this duty of bewailing sin and turning to God 6. For the abuses and delusions of the base Attendants offered to Christ the Evangelist tells us then did they spit in his face and buffetted him and others smote him with the palms of their hands saying Prophesie unto us thou Christ who is he that smote thee and as Lude adds many other things blasph●mously spake they against him what those many other things were it is not discovered only some ancient writers say that Christ in that night suffered so many and such hideous things that the whole knowledge of them is reserved only for the last day of Judgment Mallonius writes thus after Caiaphas and the Priests had sentenced Christ worthy of death they committed him to their Ministers warily to be kept till day and they immediately threw him into the dungeon in Caiaphas 's House there they bound him to a stony pillar with his hands bound on his back and then they fell upon him with their palms and fists Others add that the Souldiers not yet content they threw him into a filthy dirty puddle where he abode for the remainder of that night of which the Psalmist Psal 86.6 Psal 69 2. Cant. 3.7 Thou hast laid me in the
by his very silence 3. Because Herod had the year before put John the Baptist to death who was that Voice crying in the Wilderness now that Voice being gone Christ the Word will be silent he will not give a Word 4. Because Herod had been sottishly careless of Jesus Christ he lived in the place where Jesus more especially had conversed yet never had seen his Person or heard his Sermons It gives us to learn thus much that if we neglect the opportunities of Grace and refuse to hear the voice of Christ in the time of Mercy Christ may refuse to speak one word of comfort to us in our time of need if we during our time stop our ears God will in his time stop his mouth and shut up the springs of Grace that we shall receive no refreshment no instruction no pardon no salvation 5. Because Christ was resolved to be Obedient to his Father's Ordinance he was resolved to submit to the doom of death with patience and silence for this purpose he came into the world that he might suffer in our stead and for our sins and therefore he would not plead his own cause nor defend his own innocency in any kind he knew that we were guilty though himself was not 3. This silence they interpret for simplicity and so 1. They despised him And 2. Luke 23.11 they dismist him And Herod with his men of war set him at nought and mocked him and arrayed him in a gorgeous robe and sent him again to Pilate They arrayed him with a white glittering gorgeous rayment the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies gorgeous bright resplendent such as Nobles and Kings used to wear The Latines sometimes render it splendidam vestem and sometimes candidam or albam vestem we translate it a gorgeous robe and the Ancients call it a white robe in imatation whereof the Baptised were wont to put on a white rayment which they called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but whether it were white or no I shall not controvert The Original yields thus far that it was a bright and resplendent garment such as came newly from the fulling many mysteries if it be white are found out here some say this held forth the excellency or dignity of Christ White colour is most agreeable to the highest God he many times appeared in white but never in any other colour and the Saints in heaven are said to be cloathed in long white Robes Rev. 4.4 and Peers Kings and Coesars were usually cloathed in white saith Jansenius Others say this held forth the innocency of Christ and that they were directed herein by Divine providence declaring plainly against themselves that Christ should rather have been absolved as an innocent than condemned as a malefactor But to leave these mysteries the meaning of Herod was not so much to declare his excellency or innocency as his folly or simplicity certainly he accounted him for no other than a very fool and ideot a passing simple man The Philosophers sayes Tertullian drew him in their Pictures attired by Herod like a fool with long Asses ears his nailes plucked off and a book in his hand c. O marvellous madness Oh the strange mistakes of men Mat. 12.19 Mark 2.7 Mat. 12.24 John 8.48 in his life time they account Jesus a glutton a drinker of Wine a Companion of Sinners a Blasphemer a Sorcerer and one that cast out Devils through Belzebub Prince of Devils yea and one that himself was possessed with a Devil And now towards his death he is bound as a thief he is struck in the house of Caiaphas as an arrogant and saucy fellow he is accused before the Sanhedrim of Blasphemy he is brought before Pilate as a malefactor a mover of sedition a Seducer a Rebel and as one that aspired to the Kingdom he is transmitted unto Herod as a jugler to shew tricks and now in the close of all he is accounted of Herod and his men of War as a fool an ideot a bruit not having the understanding of a man But soft Herod is Christ therefore a fool because he is silent and art thou wise because of thy many words and many questions Solomon a wiser man than Herod is of another mind In the multitude of words there wanteth not sin Prov. 10.19 Prov. 17.27 28. but he that refraineth his lips is wise Again he that hath knowledg spareth his words and a man of understanding is of a cool Spirit even a fool when he holdeth his peace is counted wise and he that shutteth his lips is esteemed a man of understanding Ah poor Herod consult these texts and then tell me who is the fool what thou that speakest many words and questionest about many things which in time will turn to thy greater condemnation or Christ Jesus that was deeply silent to the worlds eternal Salvation Paul was of another Spirit and of another judgment concerning Christ in him was knowledg nor is that all in whom was wisdom and knowledg nor is that all in him were treasures and all treasures of wisdom and knowledg Col. 2.3 In him are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledg and yet that is not all neither not only is wisdom in him but he is wisdom it self for that is his name and title in the book of Proverbs and yet by Herod and his Courtiers he is reckoned arrayed and derided as a meer simple man 2. They dismist him in this posture they sent him away again to Pilate to all their former derision they added this that now he was exposed in scorn to the boys of the streets Herod would not be content that he and his men of war only should set him at naught but he sends him away through the more publick and eminent streets of Jerusalem in his white garment to be scorned by the people to be hooted at by idle persons And now was fulfilled the Prophesie of Christ I was a derision to all my people Lam. 3.14 and their song all the day Of this let us make some use Was the eternal Word of God Vse and the uncreated wisdom of the Father reputed a fool no wonder if we suffer thousands of reproaches We are made a spectakle unto the World and to Angels and to men we are fools for Christ's sake saith the Apostle We are made as the filth of the world 1 Cor. 4.2.10 13. and are the off-scouring of all things unto this day Christians must wear the bage and livery of Jesus Christ we cannot expect to fare better than our Master why then should we despond I never knew Christians in better heart than when they were stiled by the Name of Puritans Precisians Hypocrites Formalists or the like 2. Let us not judg of men and their worth by their out-side garments wisdom may be and often is clad in the Coat of a fool As beggarly bottles oft-times hold Rich Wines so poor robes contain sometimes many precious Souls
of men that he is the Standard-bearer and there is none like to him that if you will have but Jesus Christ you need no more yet do not many of you say in your hearts as Pilate here What shall I do with Jesus that is called Christ or as the devils said elsewere What have we to do with thee Jesus thou Son of God nay hath not many times the secret grudgings of your reluctant souls accounted the gracious offers of speedy repentance to be but as a coming of Christ to torment you before your time Why alas what is this now but to prefer Barabbas before Jesus you that swear as the Devil bids and as Christ forbids you that prophane Sabbaths that revel drink to excess or it may be to drunkenness surely your vote goes along with the Jews Not this Man but Barabbas 2. Give me leave to look on the love and mercy of God in Christ our Jesus was not only content to take our nature upon him but to be compared with the greatest malefactor of those times and by publick sentence yea votes and voices of the People to be pronounced a greater delinquent and much more worthy of death than wicked Barabbas Levit. 14 4 5 6 7. O the love of Christ we read in Leviticus that in the dayes of the cleansing of the Leper the Priest was to take two Birds or two Sparrows alive and the one of them must be killed and the other being kept alive must only be dipt in the blood of the Bird that was slain and so it must be let loose into the open field Barabbas say some but all Believers say we are that live Sparrow and Jesus Christ is the Sparrow that was slain the lot sell upon him to dye for us all our sins were laid upon his soul so that in this sence Jesus Christ was the greatest sinner in the World yea a greater sinner than Barabbas himself and therefore he must dye and we being dipt in the Blood of Christ must be let loose and set at liberty was not this love he dyed that we might live it was the voice of God as well as men Release Barabbas every believing Barabbas and crucifie Jesus Another hour is gone let us make stand for a while and the next time we meet we shall see further sufferings SECT IV. Of Christ Stripped Whipped Cloathed in Purple and Crowned with Thorns ABout nine which the Jews call the third hour of the day was Christ stripped whipped cloathed with purple and crowned with thorns in this hour his sufferings came thick I must divide them into parts and speak of them severally by themselves 1. When Pilate saw how the Jews were set upon his death he consented and delivered him first to be stripped Mat. 27.27 Then the Souldiers of the Governour took Jesus into the common Hall and gathered unto him the whole band of Souldiers and they stripped him They pulled of his cloaths and made hm stand naked before them all He that adorns the Heaven with Stars and the Earth with Flowers Gen. 3.21 and made coats of skins to cloath our first Parents in is now himself stripped stark naked I cannot but look on this as a great shame it appears so by our first Parents Adam and Eve who no sooner had sinned and knew themselves naked but they sowed fig-leaves together and made themselves aprons Gen. 3.7 If Adam was so ashamed of his nakedness before his own Wife who was naked too as well as he what a shame and blush was it in the face of Christ when in the common Hall in view of the whole band or company of Souldiers he stands all naked My confusion is continually before me and the shame of my face hath covered me Psal 44.15 saith David in the Person of Christ It is reported in the Ecclesiastical story that when two Martyrs and holy Virgins they call them Agnes and Barbara were stripped stark naked for their execution God pitying their great shame and trouble to have their nakedness discovered made for them a veil of light and so he sent them to a modest and desired death but our Saviour Christ who chose all sorts of shame and confusion that by a fulness of suffering he might expiate his Fathers wrath and consecrate to us all kinds of sufferings and affronts he endured the shame of nakedness at the time of his scourging see here a naked Christ and therein see the mercy of Christ to us he found us like the good Samaritan when we were stripped and wounded and left half dead and that we might be covered he quietly suffered himself to be divested of his own robes he took on him the state of sinning Adam and became naked that we might first be cloathed with righteousness and then with immortality oh what a blessed use may we make of the very nakedness of Christ 2. Pilate gave him to be scourged this some think he did upon no other account but that the Jews being satiated and glutted with these tortures they might rest satisfied and think themselves sufficiently avenged and so desist from takeing away his life That he was scourged is without controversie for so the Evangelist relates Then Pilate took Jesus and scourged him John 19.1 and that Pilate might give him to be scourged on that account is very probable because that after the scourging he brings him out to the Jews proclaming I find no fault in him and before his scourging Ver. 6. Luke 23.15 16. he speaks it more expresly He hath done nothing worthy of death I will therefore chastise him and release him And it adds to this that howsoever the custome was that those that were to be crucified must first be whipped yet if they were adjudged to dye their stripes must be less and if they were to be set at liberty they must be beaten with more stripes Hier. in Mattheum Tom. 9. And Pilate endeavouring to preserve his life they scourged him above measure even almost to death In this scourging of Christ I shall insist on these two things 1. The shame 2. The pain 1. For the shame it was of such infamy that the Romans Exempted all their Citizens from it Act. 22.25 26. Is it lawful for you said Paul to scourge a man that is a Roman And when the Centurion heard that he went and told the chief Captain saying take heed what thou dost for this man is a Roman the Romans looked upon it as a most infamous punishment fit only for theeves and slaves and not for free-born or priviledged Romans and the Jews themselves would not suffer it above so many stripes lest a brother should seem vile unto them Deut. 25.2 3. If a wicked man be worthy to be beaten that the Judge shall cause him to lye down forty stripes he may give him and not exceed lest if he should exceed and beat him above these with many stripes then thy brother should seem
without great pain after his sore whipping his blood congealed and by that means stuck to his scarlet mantle so that in pulling off the robe and putting on his own rayment there could not but be a renewing of his wounds 2. They led him away Some say they cast a Rope or Chain about his neck Mat. 27.31 by which they led him out of the City to Mount Calvary and that all along the way multitudes attended him and a Cryer went before him proclaming to all hearers the cause of his death namely that Jesus Christ was a Seducer Blasphemer Negromancer a Teacher of false Doctrines saying of himself that he was the Messias King of Israel and the Son of God 3. He bore his Cross So John relates before it bears him he must bear it John 19.17 and thus they make good their double cry Crucifie him Crucifie him first Crucifie him with it as a burthen and then crucifie him with it as a Cross those shoulders which had been unmercifully battered with whips before are now again tormented with the weight of his Cross As a true Isaac bears the wood for the sacrifice of himself or Vriah-like he carries with him the very Instrument of his own sad death O the cruelty of this passage they had scarce left him so much blood or strength as to carry himself and must ●e now bear his heavy Cross yes till he faint and sink so long he must bear it and longer too did they not fear that he should dye with less shame and smart than they intended him Matth. 27.32 Mark 15.21 which to prevent they constrained one Simon a Cyraenean to bear his Cross after him How truly do they here again swallow the Cammel and strain at a Gnat the Cross was a Roman death and so one of their abominations hence they themselves would not touch the tree of infamy lest they should have been defiled but to touch the Lords anointed to Crucifie the Lord of Glory they make no scruple at all but why must another bear the Cross but to consign this duty unto man that we must enter into a fellowship of Christ's sufferings Mat. 16.24 1 Pet. 2.21 If any man will come after me let him deny himself and take up his Cross and follow me And therefore Christ hath suffered for us leaving us an example that we should follow his steps 4. He comforted the woman who followed weeping after him as he went along And there followed him a great company of people and of Women Luke 23.27 28. which also bewailed and lamented him but Jesus turning to them said Daughters of Jerusalem weep not for me but weep for your selves and for your Children In the midst of his misery he forgets not mercy in the midst of all their tortures and loudest out-cryes of contumely of blasphemy of scorn he can hear his following friends weeping behind him and neglect all his own sufferings to comfort them Weep not for me He hath more compassion on the Woman that follow him weeping than of his own mangled self that reels along fainting and bleeding unto death he feels more the tears that drop from their eyes than all the blood that flows from his own veins we heard before that sometimes he would not vouchsafe a word to Pilate that threatened him nor to Herod that entreated him and yet unaskt how graciously doth he turn about his blessed bleeding face to these weeping women affording them looks and words too both of compassion and of consolation Daughters of Jerusalem weep not for me but for your selves and yet observe he did not turn his face to them until he heard them weep nor may we ever think to see his face in glory unless we first bathe our eyes in sorrow It is a wonder to me that any in our age should ever decry tears remorse contrition compunction how many Saints do we find both in the Old and New Testament confuting by their practises these gross opinions the Promise tells us that They that sow in Tears shall reap in Joy he that follows Christ Psal 126.5 6. or goeth forth weeping bearing precious seed shall doubtless come again with rejoycing bringing his sheaves with him But what 's the meaning of this Weep not for me may we not weep for the death of Christ Deut. 34.8 Acts 8.2 do we not find in Scripture that all the People wept at the death of Moses that all the Church wept at the death of Stephen that the Woman lamented the death of Dorcas and if all Christ's actions be our instructions I mean not his miraculous or meritorious but his moral ones did not Christ himself weep for Lazarus and for Jerusalem nay is he not here weeping showers of blood all along the way and may not we drop a tear for all those purple streams of his O what 's the meaning of this Weep not for me but weep for your selves I answer the words are not absolute but comparative Christ doth not simply forbid us to weep for our friends but rather to turn our worldly grief into godly sorrow for sin as sin Christ herein pointed the women to the true cause and subject of all their sorrow which was their sins and thus we have cause to weep indeed Oh! our sins were the cause of the sufferings of Christ and in that respect Oh that our heads were fountains and our eyes rivers of tears Oh that our tears were as our meat and drink Oh that we could feed with David on the Bread of tears and that the Lord would give us plenteousness of tears to drink Oh that the Lord would strike as he did at Rephidim these rocky hearts of ours with the rod of true remorse that water might gush out Oh that we could thus mourn over Jesus whom we have pierced and be in bitterness for him Zach. 12.10 as one that is in bitterness for his first-born Mat. 27.34 5. No sooner he was come to the place of Execution but they gave him Vinegar to drink mingled with Gall in that they gave him drink it was an argument of their humanity this was a custom amongst Jews and Romans that to the condemned they ever gave wine to drink Prov. 31.6 Give strong wine unto him that is ready to perish and wine unto those that be of heavy heart But in that they gave him Vinegar mingled with Gall it was an argument of their cruelty and envy Theophil in Mar. Theophylact speaks plainly that the Vinegar mingled with Gall was poysonous and deadly and therefore when Christ had tasted it he would not drink chusing rather the death of the Cross to which he was destinated by his Father than any poysonous death Vse Ah brethren are not we apt to think hardly of the Jews for giving Christ so bitter a potion at his time of death and yet little do we think that when we sin we do as much See but how God himself
of the paradise of delights who hath thus troubled thee it is my sins O Lord that have so troubled thee my sins were the Thorns that pricked thee the lashes that whipped thee the purple that cloathed thee it is I Lord that am thy tormentor and the very cause of these thy pains 8. Consider Pilate's sentence that Jesus should be Crucified as the Jews required Now they had him in their will and they did to him what seemed them good Follow him from Gabbatha to Golgotha see how they lay the heavy Cross upon his tender shoulders that were so pitifully rent and torn with whips accompany him all the way to the Execution and help to carry his Cross to Mount Calvary And there as if thou hadst been frozen hitherto thaw into tears see him lifted up on that engine of torture the bloody Cross he hangs on nails and as he hangs his own weight becomes his own affliction O see how his arms and legs were racked with voilent pulls his hands and feet boared with nails his whole body torn with stripes and gored with blood And now O my soul run with all thy might into his arms held out at their full length to receive thee Oh weigh the matter because sin entred by the senses therefore the head in which the senses flourish is crowned with searching thorns because the hands and feet are more especially the instruments of sin therefore his hands and feet are nailed to the Cross for satisfaction O marvellous what King is he or of what Countrey that wears a Crown of Thorns what man is he or where lives he whose hands and feet are not only bored but digged into as if they had been digging with Spades in a ditch surely here 's matter for a serious meditation be enlarged O my thoughts and dwell upon it consider it and consider it again 9. Consider the darkness that spread over all the Earth now was the Sun ashamed to shew his brightness considering that the Father of lights was darkned with such disgrace the Heavens discoloured their beauty and are in mourning robes the Lamp of Heaven is immantled with a miraculous Eclipse the Sun in the firmament will simpathize with the Sun of Righteousness it will not appear in glory though it be mid-day because the Lord of Glory is thus disgraced And now hear the voice that comes from the Son of God My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Christ in the Garden tasted the bitter cup of God's fierce wrath but now he drunk the dregs of it he then sipped off the top but now he drunk all off top and bottom and all O but what 's the meaning of this My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Surely 1. This was not a total but a partial dereliction this was not a perpetual but a temporary forsaking of him the Godhead was not took away from the manhood but the union remained still even now when the Manhood was forsaken 2. This was not a forsaking on Christ's part but only on the Father's part the Father forsook Christ but Christ went after him God took away the sense of his love but the Son of God laid hold upon him crying and saying My God my God why hast thou forsaken me 3. This forsaking was not in respect of his being but in respect of the feeling of God's favour love and mercy certainly God loved him still Oh but his sense of comfort was now quite gone so as it never was before In his agony there was some inklings of God's mercy now and then at least there was some star-light some little flash of lightning to cheer him up but now all the sense and feeling of God's love was gone and not so much as any little star-light of the same appeared Christ now took the place of sinners and God the Father shut him out as it were amongst the sinners he drew his mercy out of sight and out of hearing and therefore he cryed out in a kind of wonderment My God my God why hast thou forsaken me After this he speaks but a few words more and he gives up the Ghost He dyes that we might live he is dissolved in himself that we might be united to his Father O my soul see him now if thou canst for weeping his eyes are dim his cheeks are wan his face is pale his head is bowing his heart is panting himself is dying come come and dye with him by a most exact mortification look pale like him with grief and sorrow and trouble for thy sins 10. Consider the piercing of his side with a spear whence came out a stream of blood and water O Fountain of everlasting waters methinks I see the blood running out of his side more freshly than those golden streams which ran out of the Garden of Eden and watered the whole World Consider the taking of his body down by Joseph the burying of it by Joseph and Nicodemus O here 's excellent matter for our meditation O my spirit go with me a little Christ being dead it is pitty but he should have a funeral according to the letter let Joseph and Nicodemus bear his corps let the blessed Virgin go after it sighing and weeping and at every other place looking up to Heaven let Mary Magdalen follow after with a box of precious Ointment in her hand and with her hair hanging ready if need were to wipe his feet again or that in this meditation I may be more spiritual let the Usurer come first with Judas's bag and distribute to the poor as he goes along let the Drunkard follow after with the spunge that was filled with gall and vinegar and check his wanton thirst let the young Gallant or voluptuous man come like his Master with bare foot and with the cown of thorns set also upon his head let the wanton person bear the rods and whips and wiers wherewith Christ was scourged and fright his own flesh let the ambitious man be cladin the purple robe the angry Person in the seamless coat my meaning is let every sinner according to the nature of his sin draw something or other from the passion of Christ to the mortifying of his sin yea let all turn mourners let all bow their heads and be ready to give up the Ghost for the Name of Christ and let not Christ be buried without a Sermon neither and let the Text be this John 10.11 The good shepherd giveth his life for the sheep and in the end of the Sermon whether it be in use or no let the Preacher take occasion to speak a word or two in the praise of Christ let him say with the Spouse that he was the chiefest among ten thousands that he was altogether lovely Cant. 5.10 16. that being God above all Gods he became man beneath all men that when he spake he began ordinarily with verily verily I say unto you that he was an holy man that he never sinned in all his
hope This is to undervalue Christ's redemption this is to think there is more in sin to damn than in Christ's sufferings to save whereas all thy Sins to Christ are but as a little cloud to the glorious Sun yea all the Sins of all the men in the world are but to Christs merits as a drop to the Ocean I speak not this to encourage the presumptuous sinner for alass he hath no part in this satisfaction but to comfort the humble sinner who is loaden with the sense of his Sins what though they were a burthen greater than he can bear yet they are not a burthen greater than Christ can bear there is in Christ's blood an infinite treasure able to sanctifie thee and all the World there is in Christs death a ransome a counterprice sufficient to redeem all the sinners that ever were or ever shall be the price is of that nature that it is not diminished though it be extended to never so many as the Sun hath fulness of light to enlighten all the world and if the blind do not see by it it is no any scarcity of light in the Sun but by reason of his own indisposition so if all men are not acquitted by Christ's death it 's not because that was insufficient as if it had not vertue enough to reach them as well as others but because they by their unbelief do reject this remedy Oh what large room hath saith to expatiate in sit down and dive and dive yet thou canst not come to the bottom of Christ's blood but as the Prophet Ezekiel saw still more and greater abominations so mayest thou in the sufferings of Christ observe more and more fulness See what a notable opposition the Apostle makes Rom. 5.15 16 17 18 19 20 21. between the first and second Adam proving at large that Christ doth super-abound in the fruits of his grace above the first Adam in the fruits of his sin he calls it grace and the abundance of grace and this abundance of grace reigneth to life Ver. 17. so that these Texts should be like so much oyl poured into the wounds of every broken-hearted sinner Oh is there any thing that can be desired more than this 5. There is in it remission of sins so saith Christ Mat. 26.28 This is my blood of the New Testament which is shed for many for the remission of sins Remission of sins is attributed to Christ's death as a cause it is not thy tears or prayers or rendings of heart that could pay the least farthing Heb. 9.22 Without shedding of blood saith the Apostle there is no remission God will have tears and blood also though not for the same purpose for all thy tears thou must flie to Christ only as the cause it is true thou must mourn and pray and humble thy self but it 's Christ's blood only that can wash us clean Oh remember this God will not pardon without satisfaction by the blood of Christ And surely this makes Christ's death so desirable Oh my sins afflict me cries many a one Oh I am loathsome in mine own eyes much more in Gods surely God is offended with my dulness slothfulness and my thousand imperfections I am all the day long entangled with this sin and that sin and the other sin but let this contrite spirit look on Christ's death and therein he may find all sin is pardoned see here what an Argument is put into thy mouth from these sufferings of Christ well mayest thou say O Lord I am unworthy but it is just and right that Christ obtain what he died for Eph. 2.13 14. O pardon my sins for his death's sake and for his precious blood sake 6. There is in it reconciliation and peace with God In Christ Jesus ye who sometimes were afar off are made nigh by the blood of Christ for he is our peace who hath made both one and hath broken down the middle wall of partition between us Rom. 5.10 Eph. 2.16 Col. 1.20 When we were enemies we were reconciled unto God by the death of his Son that he might reconcile both viz. Jews and Gentiles unto God in one body by the Cross And having made peace through the blood of his Cross by him ●o reconcile all things to himself This certainly should admirably support the drooping soul it may be thou cryest My sins have made a breach betwixt God and my soul I have warred against heaven and now God wars against me and oh what odds if the Lord be angry yea but a little what will become of my poor soul is a little stubble able to contend with the consuming fire how then should I contend with God but come now and look on Christ's death as the means and meritorious cause of reconciliation and thou canst not but say O this death is desirable When God the Father looks at a sinner in the bloody glass of Christ then saith God Oh now fury and wrath is not in me I have no more quarrel or controversie with this soul seeing Christ hath suffered it is enough I have as much as my justice can demand my frowns are now turned into smiles and my rod of iron into a Scepter of grace Why this is it that makes Christ's death and blood so desirable to the soul what shall Jacob so rejoyce in seeing Esau's face altered to him shall he say to Esau I have seen thy face as the face of God how much rather may the humble and believing sinner be filled with gladness when through Christ's blood shall be thus appeased and reconciled with him 7. There is in it immunity and safety from all the judgments and dangers threatned against our sins Surely if there were such force in the blood of the type that by the effusion of it the Israelites lay safe and untouched of the revenging Angel how much more in the blood of Christ Rev. 12.11 Satan himself is said to be overcome by the blood of the Lamb and God's revenge due to our sins is said to be removed by the blood of Jesus therefore it is called The blood of sprinkling that speaks better things than the blood of Abel Heb. 12.24 the blood of sprinkling was for safety and Christ's blood is for safety it cries not for revenge as Abel's blood cryed but for mercy and for deliverance from all misery 8. There is in it a blessed vertue to open Heaven and to make passage thither for our souls Having boldness or liberty to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus Heb. 10.19 it is the blood of Christ that rents the Vail and makes a way into the Holy of Holies that is into the Kingdom of Heaven without this blood there is no access to God it is only by the blood of Christ that heaven is open to our prayers and that Heaven is open to our persons this blood is the key that unlocks Heaven and lets in the souls of his Redeemed
bottomless they pass our understandings yet they recreate our hearts they give matter of admiration yet they are not devoid of consolation O God raise up our souls to thee and if our Spirits be too weak to know thee make our affections ardent and sincere to love thee Surely the death of Christ requires this and calls for this many other motives we may draw from Christ and many other motives are laid down in the Gospel and indeed the whole Gospel is no other thing than a motive to draw man to God by the force of God's love to man in this sense the holy Scriptures may be called the book of true love seeing therein God both unfolds his love to us and also binds our love to him but of all the motives we may draw from Christ and of all the arguments we may find in the Gospel of Christ there is none to this the death of Christ the blood of Jesus is not this such a love-letter as never never was the like read the words For his great love wherewith he loved us Ephes 2.4 or if you cannot read observe the Hyeroglyphicks every stripe is a letter every nail is a capital letter every bruise is a black letter his bleeding wounds are as so many rubricks to shew upon record Oh consider it is not this a great love are not all mercies wrapt up in the blood of Christ it may be thou hast riches honours friends means Oh but thank the blood of Christ for all thou hast it may be thou hast grace and that is better than corn or wine or oyl Oh but for this thank the blood of Jesus surely it was the blood of Christ that did this for thee thou wast a rebellious soul thou hast an hard and filthy heart but Christ's blood was the fountain opened and it took away all sin and all uncleanness Christ in all and Christ above all and wilt thou not love him Oh that all our words were words of love and all our labour labour of love and all our thoughts thoughts of love that we might speak of love and muse of love and love this Christ who hath first loved us with all our heart and soul and might what wilt thou not love Jesus Christ let me ask thee then whom wilt thou love or rather whom canst thou love if thou lovest not him if thou sayest I love my Friends Parents Wife Children Oh but love Christ more than these a friend would be an enemy but that the blood of Christ doth frame his heart a Wife would be a trouble but that the blood of Christ doth frame her heart all mercies are conveyed to us through this channel Oh who would not love the Fountain consider of it again and again our Jesus thought nothing too good for us he parts with his life and blood he parts with the sense and feeling of the love of God and all this for us and for our sakes Ah my soul how shouldst thou but love him in all things and by all means It is reported of Ignatius that he so continually meditated on the great things Christ suffered for him that he was brought entirely to love him and when he was demanded why he would not forsake Christ rather than suffer himself to be torn and devoured of wild beasts he answered that he could not forget him because of his sufferings Oh his sufferings said he are not transcient words or removable objects but they are indelible characters so engraven in my heart that all the torments of earth can never raze them out And being commanded by that bloody Tyrant Trajane to be ript and unbowelled they found Jesus Christ written upon his heart in Characters of Gold Here was an heart worth Gold Oh that it might be thus with us If my hands were all of love that I could work nothing but love if my eyes were all of love that I could see nothing but love if my mind were all of love that I could think of nothing but love all were too little to love that Christ who hath thus immeasurably loved me if I had a thousand hearts to bestow on Christ and they most enlarged and scrued up to the highest pitch of affection all these were infinitely short of what I owe to my dread Lord and dearest Saviour Come let 's joyn hands He loved us and therefore let us love him if we dispute the former I argue from the Jews when he shed but a few tears out of his eyes at Lazarus's grave then said the Jews John 11.36 behold how he loved him John 11.36 how much more truly may it be said of us for whom he shed both water and blood and that from his heart Behold how he loved us why then if our hearts be not Iron yea if they be Iron how should they chuse but feel the magnetical force of this Loadstone of love for to a Loadstone doth Christ resemble himself when he saith of himself And I if I be lifted up from the earth John 12.32 will draw all men unto me SECT VII Of joying in Jesus in that Respect 7. LEt us joy in Jesus as carrying on the great work of Salvation in his sufferings and death what hath Christ suffered for us hath he drunk off all the cup of God's wrath and left none for us how should we be but cheered Precious souls why are you afraid there is no death no hell Rom. 8.1 no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus There is no divine justice for them to undergo that have their share in this death of Christ Oh the Grace and Mercy that is purchased by this means of Christ Oh the waters of comfort that flow from the sufferings and obedience of Christ Christ was amazed that we might be cheered Christ was imprisoned that we might be delivered Christ was accused that we might be acquitted Christ was condemned that we might be redeemed Christ suffered his Fathers wrath and came under it that the victory might be ours and that in the end we might see him face to face in glory is not here matter of Joy It may be the Law and sin and justice and conscience and death and hell may appear as enemies and disturb thy comforts but is there not enough in the blood of Christ to chase them away Give me Leave but to frame the objections of some doubting souls and see whether Christ's death will not sufficiently answer and solve them all 1. One cries thus Oh I know not what will become of me my sins are ever before me against thee thee only have I sinned and done this evil in thy sight Psal 51.3 4. I have sinned against a most dear and gracious and merciful God and Father in our Lord Jesus O the aggravations of my sins are they not sins above measure sinful It may be so but the blood of Christ is a fountain opened for sins and for uncleanness in him we have redemption through his blood
even the forgiveness of sins Zach. 13.1 Eph. 1.7 Heb. 1.3 Heb. 9.26 Ver. 28. Levit. 16.21 22. He by himself purged our sins And now once in the end of the world hath he appeared put away sin by the sacrifice of himself And Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to bear away the sins of many As the Scape-coat under the Law had upon his head all the iniquities of the Children of Israel and so was sent away by the hand of a fit man into the wilderness so the Lord Jesus of whom that Goat was a type had all the iniquities of his Elect laid upon him by God his Father and bearing them he took them away Behold the Lamb of God John 1.29 that taketh away the sins of the world he bore them and bore them away he went away with them into the wilderness or into the land of forgetfulness See what comfort is here 2. Another cries thus Oh I know not what will become of me the Law is mine enemy I have transgressed the Law and it speaks terribly Gal. 3.10 cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the Law to do them Oh I have offended the Law and I am under the curse Say not so for by the death of Christ though the Law be broken yet the curse is removed the Apostle is clear Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law Gal. 3.13 being made a curse for us he was made a curse for us i.e. the fruits and effects of God's curse the punishment due to sinners the penal curse which justice required was laid upon Christ and by this means we are freed from the curse of the Law It is true that without Christ thou art under this Law Do or Die end if thou offendest in the least kind thou shalt perish for ever the curse of the Law is upon thee to the uttermost but on the other side if thy claim be right to the blood of Christ thou art freed from penalty not but that we may be corrected and chastised but what is that to the eternal curse which the Law pronounceth against every sin we are freed from the curse or damnatory sentence of the Law Rom. 8.1 There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus the Law is satisfied and the bond is cancelled by our Surety Christ O what comfort is this 3. Another cries thus Oh I know not what will become of me I have offended justice and what shall appeal from the seat of justice to the throne of grace my sins are gone before and they are knocking at heaven gates and crying justice Lord on this sinner I know not what will be the issue but either free Grace must save me or I am gone Say not so for by this death of Christ free grace and justice are both thy friends How e're some do yet certainly thou needs not to appeal from the court of justice to the Mercy-seat in this mystery of Godliness there may be as much comfort in standing before the Bar of justice as at the Mercy-seat i.e. by standing therein and through the Lord Jesus Christ yea this is the Gospel-way to go to God the Father and to tender up to him the active and passive righteousness of Christ his Son for an atonement and satisfaction for our sins in this way is the comfort of justification brought if we go to God in any other way than this it is but in a natural way and not in a true Evangelical way A man by nature may know thus much that when he hath sinned he must seek unto God for mercy but to seek unto God for pardon with a price in our hands to tender up the merits of Jesus Christ for a satisfaction to Divine justice here is the mystery of Faith and yet I speak not against relying on God's mercy for pardon but what need we to appeal from justice to mercy when by faith we may tender the death of Christ and so find acceptance with the justice of God it self come soul and let me tell thee for thy comfort if thou hast any share in the death of Christ thou hast two tenures to hold thy pardon and salvation by Mercy and justice free-grace and righteousness mercy in respect of thee and justice in respect of Christ not only is free-grace ready to acquit thee but a full price is laid down to discharge thee of all thy sins so that now when the Prince of this World comes against thee thou mayest say in some sense as Christ did He can find nothing in me for how can he accuse me seeing Christ is my Surety seeing the bond hath been sued and Christ Jesus would not leave one farthing unpaid as Paul said to Philemon concerning Onesimus if he have wronged thee or owe thee any thing put it on my account so doth Christ say to God if these have wronged thy Majesty or owe thee any thing put it on me Paul indeed added I Paul have written it with mine own hand but Christ speaks thus Gen. 2.17 I Jesus have ratified and confirmed it with my own blood 4. Another cries thus Oh I know not what will become of me the first threat that ever was in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die now sits on my spirit methinks I see the grizly form of death standing before me Oh this is he that is the King of fears the chief of terrors the inlet to all those Plagues in another world and die I must there is no remedy Rom. 8.94 Oh I startle and am afraid of it And why so it is Christ that dyed and by his death he hath took away the sting of death that now the drone may hiss but cannot hurt come meditate much upon the death of Christ and thou shalt find matter enough in his death for the subduing of thy slavish fears of death both in the merit of it in the effect of it and in the end of it 1. In the merit of it Christ's death is meritorious and in that respect the writ of mortallity is but to the Saints a writ of ease a passage into Glory 2. In the effect of it Christs death is the conquest of death Christ went down into the grave to make a back-door that the grave which was before a prison might now be a thorough-fare so that all his Saints may with ease pass through and sing O death where is thy sting Heb. 2.14 15. Oh hell where is thy victory 3. In the end of it Chri'sts death amongst other ends aims at the ruine of him that had the Power of death that is the Devil and to deliver them who through fear of death were all their life time in bondage Christ pursued this end in dying to deliver thee from the fear of death and if now thou fearest thy fearing is a kind of
suffered 5. For what end he suffered 6. With what mind he suffered Every one of these will make some discoveries either of his Graces or of his gracious actings in our behalf and who can tell how far this very Look may work on us to change us and transform us into the very image of Jesus Christ 3. Let us humbly bewail our defect exorbitancy irregularity and inconformity either to the graces sufferings or death of Christ As thus Lo here the profound humility wonderful patience fervent love abundant mercy admirable meekness constant obedience of Jesus Christ Lo here the tortures torments agonies conflicts extream sufferings of Christ for the spiritual immortal good of the preciou● souls of his redeemed ones Lo here the death of Christ see how he bowed the head and gave up the Ghost why these are the particulars to which I should conform But Oh alas what a wide vast utter distance disproportion is there betwixt me and them Christ in his sufferings shined with graces his graces appeared in his sufferings like so many stars in a bright winter's night but how dim are the faint weak Graces in my Soul Christ in his sufferings endured much for me I know not how much by thine unknown sorrows and sufferings felt by thee ' but not distinctly known to us said the ancient Fathers of the Greek Church in their Liturgy have mercy upon us and save us his sorrows and sufferings were so great that some think it dangerous to define them but how poor how little are my sufferings for Jesus Christ I have not yet resisted unto blood and if I had what were this in comparison of his extream sufferings Christ in his sufferings died his passive obedience was unto death even to the death of the Cross he hung on the Cross till he bowed his head and gave up the Ghost Rom. 6.10 he died unto sin once But alas how do I live in that for which he died To this day my sin hath not given up the Ghost to this day the death of Christ is not the death of my sin O my sin is not yet crucified the heart-blood of my sin is not yet let out Oh wo is me how unanswerable am I to Christ in all these respects 4. Let us quicken provoke and rouze up our Souls to this conformity let us set before them exciting Arguments ex gr The greatest glory that a Christian can attain to in this world is to have a resemblance and likeness to Jesus Christ Again the more like we are to Christ the more we are in the love of God and the better he is pleased with us It was his voice concerning his Son This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased and for his sake if we are but like him he is also well pleased with us Again a likeness or resemblance of Christ is that which keeps Christ alive in the world As we say of a child that is like his Father This man cannot die so long as his Son is alive So we may say of Christians who resemble Christ that so long as they are in the world Christ cannot die he lives in them and he is no otherwise alive in this nether world than in the hearts of Gracious Christians that carry the picture and resemblance of him Again a likeness to Christ in his death will cause a likeness to Christ in his Glory If we have been planted together in the likeness of his death Rom. 6.5 we shall be also in the likeness of his Resurrection As it is betwixt the Graft and the Stock the Graft seeming dead with the Stock in the winter it revives with it in the Spring after the Winter's death it partakes of the Spring 's resurrection so it is betwixt Christ and us if with Christ we die to sin we shall with Christ be raised to Glory being conformed to him in his death we shall be also in his resurrection Thus let us quicken and provoke our souls to this conformity 5. Let us pray to God that he will make us conformable to Jesus Christ Is it Grace we want let us beg of him that of that fulness that is in Christ we may in our measure receive grace for grace Is it patience or joy in sufferings that we want let us beg of him that as he hath promised he will send us the comforter that so we may follow Christ chearfully from his cross to his crown from earth to heaven Is it mortification our souls pant after this indeed makes us most like to Christ in his sufferings and death why then pray we for this mortification But how should we pray I answer 1. Let us plainly acknowledge and heartily bemoan our selves in God's bosom for our sins our abominable sins 2. Let us confess our weakness feebleness and inability in our selves to subdue our sins we have no might may we say against this great company that come against us 2 Chr. 20.12 neither know we what to do but our eyes are upon thee 3. Let us put up our request begging help from heaven let us cry to God that vertue may come out of Christ's death to mortifie our Lusts to heal our Natures to stanch our bloody issues and that the Spirit may come into helps us in these works Rom. 8.13 for by the Spirit do we mortifie the deeds of the body 4. Let us press God with the merits of Christ and with his promises through Christ for he hath said Sin shall not have dominion over us for we are not under the Law but under Grace Rom. 6.14 Rom. 8.2 and Paul experienced it The Law of the Spirit of Life in Christ hath freed me from the Law of sin and death 5. Let us praise God and thank God for the help already received if we find that we have gotten some power against sin that we have gotten more ability to oppose the lusts of the flesh that we are seldom overtaken with any breaking forth of it that we have been able to withstand some notable temptations to it that the force of it in us is in any measure abated that indeed and in truth vertue is gone out of the death of Christ Oh then return we praises to God let us triumph in God let us lead our captivity captive and sing new songs of praises unto God and even ride in triumph over our corruptions boasting our selves in God and setting up our Banners in the name of the most High and offering up humble and hearty thanks to our Father for the death of Christ and for the merit vertue and efficacy of it derived unto us and bestowed upon us 6. Let us frequently return to our looking up unto Jesus Christ to our believing in Christ as he was lifted up How we are to manage our Faith to draw down the vertue of Christ's death into our souls I have discovered before and let us now be in the practice of those rules certainly
with man I know no reason why we should exclude civil peace out of Christ's wish many many a promise and precept we have in the Word scattered here and there to this purpose Lev. 26.6 Job 5.23.24 And I will give peace in the land and ye shall lye down and none shall make you afraid and thou shalt be in league with the stones of the field and thou shalt know that thy Tabernacle shall be in peace Ier. 29.7 Heb. 12.14 and seek the peace of the City and pray unto the Lord for it for in the peace thereof shall ye have peace And follow peace and holiness without which no man shall see God Orbem pecatum was ever a clause in the prayers of the primitive Church Rom. 12.13 that the world might be quiet I am sure it is Christ's command if it be possible as much as lyeth in you live peaceably with all men 3. It speaks there peace among themselves peace one with another such is or should be the condition of the Church Jerusalem is builded as a City that is compact together Psal 122.3 or unity within it self the Apostle dwells in this unity there is one body Eph. 4.4 5 6. and one Spirit and one hope and one Lord and one faith and one baptism and one God and Father of all who is above all and through all and in you all The Church is a Court whose very pillars are peace the building of Christianity knows no other material to work upon if we look upon the Church it self there is one body if upon the very soul of it there is one Spirit if upon the endowment of it there is one hope if upon the head of it there is one Lord if upon the life of it there is one faith if upon the door of it there is one Baptism if upon the Father so it there is one God and Father of all who is above all and through all and in you all Mark 9.50 It was sometimes Christ's commands unto his Apostles have salt in your selves and have peace one with another and as a blessed effect of this salutation for I look upon them as words full of vertue the Apostles and Churches of Christ in primitive times kept a most sweet harmony the multitude of them that believed were of one heart Acts. 4.32 and of one soul 4. It speaks peace within peace of conscience the Apostles had exceedingly fallen from Christ one betrayed him and another denyed him but all run away and left him alone in the midst of all his enemies and yet to them he speaks this salutation peace be unto you I know not a better ground for comfort of poor humbled sinners than this is it may be you have dealt very unkindly with Jesus Christ you have forsook him denyed him forsworn him O but consider all this hindred not Christ's apparition to his Apostles he comes unexpected and quiets their spirits he stayes not till they had sued to him for mercy or pardon but of his meer love and free grace he speaks kindly to them all he stills the waves and becalmes their troubled Spirits working in them according to his words peace be unto you O the sweet of peace it is all wishes in one this little word is a breviary of all that is good what can they more than to have peace with God and peace with men and peace within Luke 2.14 sure there is much in it because Christ● is so much upon it at his birth the Angels sung Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace at his baptism the form of a dove lighted upon him and what meant this but peace in his life the sort of integrity was his court and what was here but peace near his death he gives peace as a legacy to his Church Iohn 14.27 peace I leave with you my peace I give you at his resurrection his first salutation to his Apostles is a wish of peace peace be unto you what can I say more to make us in love with peace Ioh. 17.2021 why all Christ did and all Christ suffered was for peace Luke 19.42 he prayed for it neither pray I for these alone but for them also which shall believe on me that they all may be one as thou Father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us And he wept for it if thou hadst known even thou at least in this thy day the things which do belong unto thy peace And he dyed to 〈…〉 but ye who sometimes were afar off are made nigh by the blood of Christ for he is our peace Eph. 2 13 14. Of this we need no other proof or sign but that of the Prophet Jonah when the sea wrought and was tempestuous what shall we do unto thee said the Mariners that the sea may be calm unto us and he said take me up and cast me into the sea so shall the sea be calm Jona 1.11 12. when that great enmity was betwixt God and us what shall I do said God that my justice may be satisfied and my wrath appeased and that there may be a calm why take me said Christ and cast me forth into the sea let all thy waves and thy billows go over me make me a peace off●ring and kill me that when I am dead there may be a calm and when I am risen I may proclame it saying peace be unto you You hear what he said 3. What he shewed this is the next passage he shewed unto them his hands and his side I look upon this as a true and real manifestation of his resurrection And we find that without this Thomas professed he would never have believed except I shall see in his hands the print of the nayls and put my finger into the print of the nayls John 20.25 and thrust my hand into his side I will not believe But a question or two is here raised as whether these wounds and prints of the nayls spear can possibly agree with a glorified body and why Christ retained those wounds and prints for the first whether those prints could agree with a glorified bo●y some affirm it with much boldness and they say that Christ not only retained those prints whilest he abode upon earth but now that he is ascended into heaven he still retains them for my part I dare not go so far because Scripture is silent but the day is a coming when we shall see Christ face to face and then we shall know the truth of this only I conceive that Christ's body yet remaining on earth was not entred into that fulness of glory as it is now in heaven and therefore he might then retain some skars or blemishes to manifest the truth of his resurrection unto his Disciples which are not agreeable to his state in heaven But this I deliver not as matter of Faith reasons are produced both
most peremptory Except he see in his hands the print of the nayles and put his fingers into the print of the nayles and thrust his hand into his side he will not believe Why should any sinner despair of Mercy thou sayst I am wicked and God saith to thee As I live saith the Lord God I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked but that the wicked turn from his way and live thou sayst I am an unbeliever Ezek. 33.11 I am shut up in the prison of unbelief under bolts and fetters that I cannot stir one inch towards Heaven Why so was Didymus and yet he obtained mercy and the Apostle tells us that God hath concluded all or shut up altogether in unbelief that he might have mercy upon all Rom. 11.32 He despiseth none rejects none abhors none unless they continue to despise reject and abhor the Lord Oh what a sweet point is here to gain sinners to move to melt to thaw hard hearts the incredulity of this Disciple turns to our profit and tends more to the confirmation of our faith if we are but weak than the very faith of all the other Disciples of Jesus Christ had not Thomas disbelieved we had not received so great encouragements to have believed in Christ as now we have Excuse me that I speak thus much to encourage sinners to come in to Christ I would be sometimes a Boanerges and sometimes a Barnabas a son of thunder to rouse hard hearts and a son of consolation to chear up drooping spirits All Ministers may learn of the great Shepheard and Bishop of our souls to have a respect in their minist●y to one sinner to one incredulous Thomas we cannot be ignorant of these Scriptures Rom. 14.1 Him that is weak in the faith receive you And to the weak I became as weak 1 Cor. 9.22 that I might gain the weak And we exhort you b●ethren warn them that are unruly comfort the feeble minded support the weak be patient towards all men 2 T●es 5.14 And of some have compassion making a difference and others save with f●ar pulling them out of the fire And brethren if a man be overtaken in a fault ye which are spiritual Jude 22.23 restore such a one in the spirit of meekness And the servant of the Lord must not strive but be gentle unto all men apt to teach patient in meekness instructing those that oppose themselves Gal. 6.1 if God peradventure will give them repentance Dear souls 2 Tim. 2 24 25. How do we long for your conversion and salvation how are you in our hearts in our Prayers in our Sermons My little children How do we travel in birth again until Christ be formed in you how gladly would we spend and be spent for you though the more abundantly we love you the less we are loved of you If I knew but one Thomas in the great assembly of God's people I should think it as a crown and the glory of my ministry to perswade this man into faith Gal. 4.19 2 Cor. 12.15 Christ in this apparition eyes one especially above all the rest When his Disciples were within and Thomas with them then came Jesus 4. The manner how he appeared 1. He came the doors being shut 2. He stood in the midst 3. He said peace be unto you All these we have dispatched in the former apparition I shall therefore proceed to that which is peculiar to this Then said he to Thomas reach hither thy finger and behold my hands and reach hither thy hand and thrust it into my side and be not faithless but believing In this apparition he argues his Resurrection Joh. 20.27 1. From words 2. From deeds 1. From words Thomas had said Except I see in his hands the print of the nayles and put my finger into the print of the nayls and thrust my hand into his side I will not believe 1. Now Christ repeats the very self-same words and therein gives in one argument of his resurrection for if Christ could know what Thomas had said how is he but alive and risen from the dead the dead have not sense much less the use of reason but least of all the knowledge of anothers mind but Christ hath sense and reason science and omniscience observe Though Christ be absent as in his bodily presence yet he understandeth all our thoughts and if need were he could repeat all our sayings word by word How then may this convince all unbelievers in the world that Christ is risen that he that was dead now liveth and that he is alive for ever more 2. He appears arguing his Resurrection from deeds wherein is an act and object 1. The act is Thomas seeing and feeling and q. d. Thomas thou wilt not believe except thou seest and feelest now this is against the nature of saith it consisteth not in seeing or feeling but on the contrary Faith is the substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen Indeed in things natural a man must have experience and then believe but in divine things a man must first believe and then have experience and yet to help thy unbelief saith Christ I am willing thus far to condescend Heb. 11.1 and yield unto thy weakness come feel the print of the nayls and of the spear Come reach hither thy finger and behold my hands and reach hither thy hand and thrust it into my side and be not faithless but believing Christ compassionates his children though full of weakness and wants He pities them that fear him for he knoweth our frame Ps 103.12 13. he remembreth that we are but dust 2. The object is Christ seen or felt his prints and skars are the very witnesses of our redemption and of his resurrection they declare that Satan is overthrown that death and hell are swallowed up in victory that He hath spoiled principallities and powers and to this purpose are these texts Who is this that cometh from Edom with dyed garments from Bozrah By Edom is meant death by Bozrah the chief City of Edom is meant the state of the dead or hell from both which Christ returned at his glorious resurrection For thou wilt not leave my soul in hell Col. 2.12 13. Isa 63.1 2 3. neither wilt thou suffer thy holy one to see corruption Psal 16.10 Now saith the Prophet or some Angel Who is this that cometh from Edom with dyed garments from Bozrah who is this that cometh so triumphantly with the keyes of Edom and Bozrah of death and hell at his girdle to which the answer is given I that speak in righteousness mighty to save as much as to say it is I Jesus Christ I that am righteous in speaking and mighty in saying whose Word is truth and whose Work is salvation it is I even I this answer given another question is propounded Wherefore art thou red in thine apparrel and thy garments like him
desirest no more good name repute or honour than Christ will afford thee or in case of death dost thou like Stephen resign up thy soul to Christ dost thou see death conquered in the resurrection of Christ dost thou look beyond death dost thou over-eye all things betwixt thee and glory O the sweet of this life of faith on the Son of God! if thou knowest what this means then mayst thou assure thy self of thy vivification 3. True vivification is a new life acting upon a new principle of hope of glory Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 1.3 4. which according to his abundant mercy hath begotten us again to a lively hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead to an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled that fadeth not away reserved in heaven for you By Christs resurrection we have a lively hope for our resurrection unto glory is not Christ our head and if he be risen to glory John 18.22 shall not his members follow after him certainly there is but one life one Spirit one glory of Christ and his members The glory which thou gavest me I have given unto them said Christ The soul that is vivified hath a lively hope of glory on several grounds As 1. Because of the promises of glory set down in the word now on these promises hope fastens her anchor if Christ hath promised how should I but maintain lively hope 2. Because of the first-fruits of the Spirit there are sometimes fore tasts of the glory drops of heaven poured into a soul whence it comfortably concludes if I have the earnest and first-fruits surely in his time Jesus Christ will give the harvest 3. Because of Christs resurrection unto glory now he rose as a common Person and he went up into heaven as a common Person whence hope is lively saying why should I doubt or despair seeing I am quickened together with Christ Eph. 2.5 6. and raised up together with Christ and am made to sit together with Christ in heavenly places Try O my soul by this sign Art thou lively in the hope of glory doth thy heart leap and rejoyce within at a thought of thy inheritance in heaven in a lively fountain the waters thereof will leap and sparkle so if thy hope be lively thou wilt have living joys living speeches living delights amidst all thy afflictions thou wilt say these will not endure for ever I my self shall away ere long Glory will come at last O the sweet of this life of hope if thou feelest these stirrings it is an argument of thy vivification 4. True vivification acts all its dutyes upon a new principle of love to Christ men not enlivened by Jesus Christ may do much and go far in outward service yea they may come to sufferings and yet without love to Christ all is lost all comes to nothing 1 Cor. 13.1 Though I speak with tongues of men and Angels though I have the gift of Prophesie and understand all mysteries and all knowledg though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor Ver. 2.3 and though I give my body to be burnt and have not love it profiteth me nothing All the rest may be from the flesh and for the flesh and fleshly ends but a true Gospel-love is from Christ and tends to the Glory of Christ For Love is of God and every one that loveth is born of God and knoweth God 1 John 4.7 But how may we know that all our actings are out of love to Jesus Christ I answer 1. If we act by the rule of Christ If ye love me keep my commandements He that hath my Commandements and keepeth them 1 John 14.15 21.23 24. he it is that loveth me If any man love me he will keep my commandements He that loves Christ he will look upon every act every service every performance whether it be according to the rule of Christ and then on he goes with it 2. If we act to the honour of Christ We may pray and hear and preach and act self more then the honour of Jesus Christ whiles Christ shewed miracles and fed his followers to the full they cryed up Jesus and none like Jesus but when Christ was plain with them ye seek me not because ye saw the miracles but because ye did eat of the loaves John 6.26 Ver. 66. and were filled when he pressed sincerity upon them and preparation for sufferings from that time many of his Disciples went back and walked no more with him It s no news for men to fall off when their ends fail only they that love Christ look not at these outward things in respect of the honour of Jesus Christ and hence it is that in all their actings they will carry on the design of the Father in advancing the honour of the Son whatever it cost them O my soul apply this to thy self if thou livest the life of love if in all thy actings duties services thou art carried on with a principle of love to Jesus Christ it is a sure sign of thy vivification For the second question whether we increase and grow in our vivification we may discover it thus 1. We grow when we are led on to the exercise of new Graces this the Apostle calls adding of one Grace unto another 1 Pet. 1.5 6 7. add to your faith vertue and to vertue knowledg and to knowledg temperance and to temperance patience and to patience Godliness and to Godliness brotherly kindness and to brotherly kindness charity At first a Christian doth not exercise all Graces though habitually all Graces may be planted in him yet the exercise of them is not all at once but by degrees Thus the Church tells Christ at our Gates are all manner of pleasant fruits new and old which I have laid up for thee O my beloved Cant. 7.13 she had all manner of fruits which she had reserved for Christ new and old she had young converts and more seetled professors or she had new and old Graces as others she added Grace to Grace she was led on from the exercise of one Grace unto another new Grace As wicked men are led on from one sin to another and so grow worse and worse so godly men are led from one Grace to another Rom. 5.3 4. and so they increase knowing that tribulation worketh patience and patience experience and experience hope 2. We grow when we find new degrees of the same Grace added as when love grows more fervent when knowledg abounds and hath a larger apprehension of spiritual things when faith goes on from mans casting himself on Christ to find sweetness in Christ and so to plerophory or full assurance of faith when Godly sorrow proceeds from mourning for sin as contrary to Gods holiness to mourn for it is as contrary to him who loves us which usually follows after assurance when obedience enlargeth its bounds Rev.
the flesh made under the Law 4. Faith must go to Christ not only as made under the directive part of the Law by his life but under the penal part by his death of all these before 5. Faith must go to Christ as God in the flesh made under the directive and penal part of the Law and as quickened by the Spirit He was put to death in the flesh saith Peter and quickened by the Spirit 1 Pet. 3.18 And accordingly must be the method and order of our faith after we have looked on Christ as dead in the flesh we must go on to see him as quickened by the Spirit 1 Cor. 15.17 if Christ was not raised or quickened saith the Apostle your faith were in vain q. d. to believe in Christ as only in respect of his birth life death and to go no further were but a vain faith and therefore shore up your faith to this pitch that Christ who dyed is risen from the dead to this purpose all the Sermons of the Apostles represented Christ not only as crucified but as raised In that first Sermon after the mission of the holy Ghost ye have crucified Christ said Peter to the Jews and then it follows whom God hath raised up having loosed the pains or chains of death Acts 2.23 24. because it was not possible that he should be holden of it In that next Sermon Peter tells them again ye have killed the Prince of life and then it follows whom God hath raised from the dead whereof we are witnesses In the next Sermon after this be it known unto you all said Peter and to all the people of Israel Acts 3.15 that by the Name of Jesus Christ of Nazzareth whom ye crucified and whom God raised from the dead is this man whole And in the next Sermon after this the God of our Fathers raised up Jesus whom ye slew and hanged on a tree Acts 4.10 And as thus he preached to the Jews so in his first Sermon to the Gentiles he tells them we are witnesses of all things which Jesus did both in the land of the Jews Acts 5.30 and in Jerusalem whom they slew and hanged on a tree him God raised up the third day and shewed him openly And as thus Peter preached so in that first Sermon of Paul at Antioch Acts 10.39 40. Acts 13.30 he tells them of the Jews crucifying Jesus and then it follows but God raised him from the dead And as concerning that he raised him up from the dead now no more to return to corruption he said on this wise I will give you the sure Mercies of David Ver. 34 35. and thou shalt not suffer thine holy one to see corruption And after this Paul as his manner was went into the Synagogue at Thesalonica and three Sabbath days reasoned with them out of the Scriptures opening and alledging that Christ must needs suffer and rise from the dead This was the way of the Apostles preaching they told them an history I speak it with reverence of one Jesus Christ that was the word of God and that was become man Acts 17.2 3. and how he was crucified at Jerusalem and how he was raised from the dead and all this in a plain simple spiritual way and manner and while they were telling those blessed truths the Spirit fell upon the people and they believed and had faith wrought in them Faith is not wrought so much in the way of ratiocination as by the Spirit of God coming upon the souls of people by the Relation or representation of Jesus Christ to the soul And this our Lord himself hints as Moses lifted up the Serpent in the wilderness even so must the Son of man be lifted up John 3.14 that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life When the people were stung God so ordered that the very beholding of the brazen Serpent should bring help though we know not how to those that were wounded and stung by those fiery Serpents so God hath ordained in his blessed wisdom that the discovery of Jesus Christ as crucified and raised as humbled and exalted should be a means of faith come then set we before us Christ raised not only Christ crucified but Christ raised is the object of faith and in that respect we must look up to Jesus 6. Faith in going to Christ is raised from the dead or as quickned by the Spirit it is principally and mainly to look to the end purpose intent and design of Christ in his resurrection very devils may believe the history of Christ's resurrection Jam. 2.19 they believe and tremble but the Saints and people of God are to look at the meaning of Christ why he rose from the dead now the ends are either supream or subordinate 1. The supream end was God's Glory and that was the meaning of Christ's prayer Father John 17.1 Rom. 6.4 the hour is come glorifie thy Son that thy Son also may glorifie thee with which agrees the Apostle he rose again from the dead to the glory of the Father 2. The subordinate ends were many As 1. That he might tread on the Serpents head 2. That he might destroy the works of the Devil 3. That he might be the first fruits of them that sleep 4. That he might assure our faith that he is the word and that he is able to keep that which we have committed to him against that day 5. That he might be justified in the Spirit as he was begotten in the womb by the Spirit led up and down in the Spirit offered up by the eternal Spirit so he was raised from the dead by the Spirit and justified in the Spirit at his resurrection Christ was under the greatest attainder that ever man was he stood publickly charged with the guilt of a world of sins and if he had not been justified by the Spirit he had still lyen under the blame of all and had been liable to the execution of all and therefore he was raised up from the power of death that he might be declared as a righteous person 6. That he might justifie us in his justificaon when he was justified all the elect were vertually and really justified in him that act of God which past on him was drawn up in the name of all his Saints as whatever benefit or priviledge God meant for us he first of all bestowed it on Christ thus God meaning to sanctifie us he sanctified Christ first and God meaning to justifie us he justifies Christ first so whatever benefit or priviledg he bestowed on Christ he bestowed it not on him for himself but as he was a common Person and one re-resenting us Thus Christ was sanctified instead of us for their sakes I sanctifie my self that they also might be sanctified through thy truth and thus Christ was justified in stead of us for as by the offence of one judgment came upon all
for condemnation even so by the righteousness of one the free gift came on all men unto justification 7. That he might regenerate us and beget us anew by his resurrection Joh. 17.19 blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ which according to his abundant mercy hath begotten us again by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead And this he doth Rom. 15.18 two wayes 1. As our pattern platform Idea or exemplar like as Christ was raised from the dead even so we also should walk in newness of life 1 Pet. 1.3 and likewise reckon ye also your selves to be alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord. 2. As the efficient thereof for when we were dead in sin he hath quickened us together with Christ Rom. 6.13 and ye are risen with him through the faith of the operation of God who hath raised him from the dead Ver. 11. O the power of Christ's resurrection in this respect if we saw a man raised from the dead how should we admire at such a wondrous power but the raising of one dead soul is a greater work than to raise a Church-yard of dead bodies Eph. 2.5 Col. 2.12 8. That he might sanctifie us which immediatly follows after the other but yield your selves unto God as those that are alive from the dead Rom. 6.13 and your members as instruments of righteousness unto God In our regeneration we are risen with Christ and it is the Apostles argument Col 3.1 2. if ye then be risen with Christ seek those things which are above set your affections on things above and not on things on the earth We usually reckon two parts of Sanctification viz. Mortification and Vivification now as the Death of Christ hath the special influence upon our Mortification so the Resurrection of Christ hath the special influence on our Vivification Eph. 2.5 6. he hath quickened us together with Christ and hath raised us up together with Christ O my Soul Look to this main design of Christ in his rising again and if thou hast any faith O set thy Faith on work to draw this down into thy Soul But here is a question how should I manage my Faith or how should I act my Faith to draw down the vertue of Christ's resurrection for my Vivification I answer 1. Go to the Well-head look into the resurrection of Jesus Christ This one act contains in it these particulars As 1. That I must go out of my self to something else this is that check that lyes upon that work of Grace to keep out pride that Faith sees the whole good of the soul in a Principle extraneous even the springs of Jesus Christ Alas if this Vivification were in me or in my power what swellings and excrescencies of pride should I quickly nourish God therefore hath placed it in another that I may be kept low and that I may go out of my self to seek it where it is 2. That I must attribute wholly Gal. 2.20 freely joyfully all that I am to Jesus Christ and to the effectual working of his Grace 1 Cor. 15.10 I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me And by the Grace of God I am what I am and I laboured more abundantly than they all yet not I but the grace of God which was with me The life of grace springs only from the life and resurrection of Jesus Christ and therefore as I must deny my self so I must attribute all to him from whom it comes 3. I must lye at his feet with an humble expectation of and dependency upon him and him alone for the supplies of grace this was the Apostles practice O that I may be found in him O that I may know him and the power of his resurrection O that by any meanes I might obtain unto the resurrection of the dead he lay at Christs feet with an humble expectation to feel the Power of Christ's resurrection in raising him first from the death of sin to the life of grace after from death of nature to the life of glory 2. Lay to these springs thy mouth of Faith it is not enough to have all the treasuries of grace all the actings of Christ for thee layd before thee but thou must act thy faith upon that object O then go to Christ's resurrection and believe make a particular application of those glorious effects of Christ's resurrection upon thy soul Say Lord thou dyedst that I might dye to sin and thou wast raised from the death that I might be raised to newness of life Come Lord and quicken my dying sparks give me to lay hold on Christ's resurrection give me to adhere to it and to rest upon it and to close with it I see without faith I am nere a whit the better for Christs resurrection and thy commands are upon me open thy mouth wide and I will fill it why Lord I believe help thou my unbeliefe This faith is necessary to our vivification as well as Christ Psal 81.10 Christ is the fountain of life but faith is the meanes of life Mark 9.24 the power and original of life is intirely reserved to Jesus Christ but faith is the radical band on our part whereby we are tyed unto Christ and live in Christ and thus saith Christ himself I am the resurrection and the life Is that all no he that believeth in me though he were dead yet he shall live And I am the bread of life Is that all Joh. 11.25 no he that cometh to me shall never hunger and he that believeth on me shall never thirst John 6.35 Isa 66.11 3. Suck and be satisfied milk out and be delighted Christ's resurrection is a brest of consolation there is in it abundance of life and glory and therefore we should not believe a little but much the word suck is as much as to exact on Christ draw hard from Christ the more we exercise faith the more we have of Jesus Christ and of Vivification there is a depth in Christs resurrection that can never be fadomed when the soul hath as much as its narrow hand can grasp whole Christ is too big to be inclosed in mortal arms onely the longer our arm of faith is the more we shall grasp of him and therfore suck and pull and draw harde And to this purpose 1. Pray for an increase of faith complain to Christ of the shortness of thy arm tell him thou canst not believe as thou wouldst thou canst not get in so much of Christ into thy soul as thou desirest thy Vivification is very poor and small Oh when Christ hears a soul complain of drawfishness in faith and grace then is he ready to let out of his fulness even grace for grace 2. Act thy faith vigorously on Christ's resurrection for a further degree of quickning activity and lively abillity of grace Christ is an ever-flowing fountain and he would have
have preached his resurrection oh no he himself would stay in person he himself would make it out by many infallible proofs that he was risen again he himself would by his own example learn us a lesson of love of meekness of patience in waiting after sufferings for the reward Methinks a few of these passages should set all our hearts on a flame of love we love earth and earthly things we dig into the veins of the earth for thick clay but if Christ be risen set your affections on things above and not on things on the earth Oh if the love of Christ were but in us Colos 3.1 2 as the love of the world is in base worldlings it would make us wholly to despise this world it would make us to forget it as worldly love makes a man to forget his God Nay it would be so strong and ardent and rooted in our souls that we should not be able voluntary and freely to think on any thing else but Jesus Christ we should not then fear contempt or care for disgrace or the reproaches of men we should not then fear death 1 Cor. 15.55 57. or the grave or hell or devils but we should sing in triumph O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory now thanks be to God which giveth us victory through Jesus Christ our Lord. SECT VII Of joying in Jesus in that respect 7. LEt us joy in Jesus as carrying on the great work of our salvation for us in his resurrection This is the great Gospel-duty we should rejoyce in the Lord and again rejoyce Phil. 4.4 yea rejoyce evermore A Christian estate should be a joyful and comfortable estate none have such cause of joy as the Children of Zion sing O daughter of Zion 1 Thes 5.16 shout O Jerusalem be glad and rejoyce with all thy heart O daughter of Jerusalem Zach. 3.14 And why so a thousand reasons might be rendred but here is one a prime one Christ is risen from the dead and become the first-fruits of them that sleep A commemoration of Christ's resurrection hath ever been a means of rejoycing in God 1 Cor. 15.20 Some may object what is Christ's resurrection to me indeed if thou hast no part in Christ the resurrection of Christ is nothing at all to thee but if Christ be thine then art thou risen with him and in him then all he did was in thy name and for thy sake Others may object supposing Christ's resurrection mine what am I better how do not all the priviledges of Christ flow from the power and vertue of his resurrection as well as death tell me what is thy state what possibly can be the condition of thy soul wherein thou mayst not draw sweet from Christ's resurrection As 1 Pet. 3.21 1. Is thy conscience in trouble for sin the Apostle tells thee the answer of a good conscience towards God is by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead Rom. 4.25 2. Art thou afraid of condemnation the Apostle tells thee he was delivered for our offences and he was raised again for our justification 1 Pet. 1.3 3. Dost thou question thy regeneration the Apostle tells thee he hath begotten us again by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead 4. Art thou distressed persecuted troubled on every side the Apostle tells thee wherein now consists thy confidence comfort courage to wit in the life of Christ in the resurrection of Christ 2 Cor. 4.10 11. We alwayes bear about in the body the dying of the Lord Jesus that the life of Jesus might also be made manifest in our body for we which live are alwayes delivered unto death for Jesus sake that the life also of Jesus might be made manifest in our mortal flesh And thus Beza interprets those following words knowing that he which raised up the Lord Jesus shall raise us up also by Jesus 14. i.e. unto a civil resurrection from our troubles Paul was imprisoned and in part martyred but by the vertue of Christ's resurrection he foresaw his enlargement And this interpretation Beza grounds on the word following and foregoing wherein Paul compares his persecutions to a death and his preservation from them to a life as he had done before also chap. 1. v. 9 10. 5. Art thou afraid of falling off or of falling away why remember that the immutable force and perpetuity of the new covenant is secured by the resurrection of Jesus Christ Isa 55.3 I will make an everlasting covenant with you even the sure mercies of David this the Apostle applies to the resurrection of Christ as the bottoming of that sure covenant and as concerning that he raised him up from the dead he said on this wise I will give you the sure mercies of David Act. 13.34 6. Art thou afraid of death hell and the power of the grave why now remember that Christ is risen from the dead and by his resurrection death is swallowed up in victory 1 Cor. 15.55 57. so that now thou mayst sing O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory now thanks be to God which hath given us victory through our Lord Jesus Christ It is the voyce of Christ thy dead men shall live together with my dead body shall they arise Isa 26.19 awake and sing ye that dwell in the dust for thy dew is as the dew of herbs and the earth shall cast out the dead David was so lifted up with this resurrection Psal 16.9 10. that he crys it out therefore my heart is glad and my glory rejoyceth my flesh also shall rest in hope for thou wilt not leave my soul in hell neither wilt thou suffer thy holy one to see corruption Job 19.23 24 25 26 27. But especially Job was so exceedingly transported with this that he breaks out into these extasies O that my words were now written O that they were printed in a book that they were graven with an iron pen and lead in the rock for ever for I know that my Redeemer liveth and that he shall stand at the latter day upon the earth and though after my skin worms shall destroy this body yet in my flesh shall I see God whom I shall see for my self and mine eyes shall behold and not another though my reins be consumed within me No man ever since Christ did speak more clearly of Christ's resurrection and his own than Job did here before Christ Observe in it O my soul Job's wish and the matter wished his wish was that certain words which had been cordial to him might remain to memory and this wish hath three wishes in one 1. That they might be written 2. That they might be registred in a book enrolled upon record as publick instruments judicial proceedings or whatsoever is most authentical 3. That they might be engraven in stone and in the hardest stone the rock records might last long
confusions distractions despondences staggering and sinking terrors Mat. 11.28 it will find it something yea it will look on it as a glorious work to discover but the morning Star through so much darkness any thing of life in such a valley and shadow of death 3. The understanding hath yet some brighter believing beams it confidently closeth with this truth that it is the will of the Lord that he should come and live and believe and lay hold on Christ it apprehends the particular designs of mercy to him and doth really principle the soul with this that God doth particularly call invite and bid him come to Christ the Fountain of life for life Now the understanding takes in general Gospel-calls in particular to himself It is my poor languishing soul which the Lord speaks to when he sayes come to me all yea that are weary and I will give you rest Ephes 5.14 Awake thou that sleepest and arise from the dead and Christ shall give thee light Surely this is a great work when set home by the Lord that the soul acts in its addresses to Christ in the strength of a particular call from God 2. And now the answer to this call is wrought up in the renewed will as thus 1. The will summons all its confidences and calls them off from every other bottom to bestow them wholly upon Christ and this consists in our voluntary renouncing of all other helps excepting Jesus Christ alone now the soul sayes to Idols Get ye hence Hos 14.3 Ashur shall not save us we will not ride upon horses neither will we say any more to the works of our hands ye are our Gods Ashur shall not save us Not only cannot but shall not save us now as the soul is dissatisfied in Judgment as to the resting on any thing but Christ alone so the heart and will is disaffected to all other helps but Christ alone now it renounceth its own righteousness and worthyness not only because of their inability to save but mainly because their glory is swallowed up in that unmatchable excellency which appears in the way of life and salvation by Jesus Christ It calls home dependance from every other object 2. Hereupon there is a willing and chearfull receiving of Christ and resignation of our selves to his actual dispose to quicken us and save us in his own way A great part of the answer of Faith to the call of Christ lyes in this for as Faith sees life and salvation in the hands of Christ so it considers it to be given forth in the methods of Christ and so believing lyes not only in assent but consent of heart John 1 1● that Christ shall save us in his own way this is called A receiving of Christ As many as received him to them he gave power to become the Sons of God Many a soul would be saved by Christ that sticks and boggles at his methods they will not pass to happiness by holiness nor set him up as a King and Lord whom they could consent to set up as a Saviour Oh but now Christ that stood at the door and knocked Rev. 3.10 is received in consent hath made up the match and the door is opened that never shall be shut again 3. Upon this follows the souls resting and relying the souls confidence and dependance upon Jesus Christ for life and for salvation this closeth up the whole business of believing unto righteousness those various expressions used in Scripture of committing our way and selves to God of casting our care upon God of rolling our selves on him of trusting in him of hoping in his mercy c. wrapt up faith in this affiance dependance not without some mixture of confidence and resolved resting upon Jesus Christ a clear beholding of God in Christ and of Christ in the promises doth present such variety and fulness of Arguments to bear up hope and affiance that the heart is resolved and so resolved that we commit our selves and give our souls in charge to Christ I know whom I have believed 1 Pet. 4.19 2 Tim. 1.12 and I am perswaded he is able to keep that which I have committed unto him against that day 4. The upshot of all is this that the same close which the soul makes in believing with Jesus Christ as to justification and righteousness is not fruitless to this effect of conveying life and vertue from Jesus Christ as to grace and holiness for that union which then and thereby comes to be enjoyned with Christ is such an union as is fruitful in begetting a quickening power and principle in the heart and this is that which we ordinarily intend by saying saving faith to be operative James 2.16 that faith which brings forth nothing of holiness what is it but a dead faith As the body without the Spirit is dead so faith without works is dead also Justification and sanctification are twins of a birth and hence it is that vivification which is one part of sanctification is wrought in the soul after the self-same manner As first the understanding is illighttened 2. The will is changed 3. All the Affections are renewed 4. The internals being quickened there ensueth the renewing of the body with the outward actions life and conversation And now is fulfilled that saying of Christ in a spiritual sense John 5.25 The hour is coming and now is when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God and they that hear shall live Now is the soul vivified now it begins to live the life of God now it feels the power of Christ's resurrection and is made conformable to it And immediately upon this joy is made in heaven by the Angels Luke 15.24 God himself applauding it For this my Son was dead and is alive he was lost and is found Thus is the state of vivification wrought I know it is not in all men after one manner for every circumstance the methods of God are exceeding various and we cannot limit the holy one of Israel I have sometimes concerning this desired the communication of other thoughts whom I looked upon as such who had more than ordinary communication with Christ's Spirit and from one of such I received this answer I must profess to you I have in all my speculations in divinity found dissatisfaction in the writings of men in nothing more than is the work of clear and distinct conceptions concerning regeneration which yet is of such a Cardinal importance is that the great doors of heaven move upon the hinges of it the Lord enlighten us more for we see but in part and prophesie but in part For the third question what are the means of this conformity or vivification which we must use on our parts I shall answer herein both to the state and growth of our vivification As 1. Wait and Attend upon God in the ministry of the word this is a means whereby Christ ordinarily effecteth
Ghost O consider of thy Country whence thou camest at first certainly thou never hadst such a divine and excellent being given thee to delight only in the flesh to be serviceable only to thy body O look up unto Jesus why this it is that turns the heart and sets the conversation on heavenly things 2. Because their best and choice things are already in Heaven As their Father is in Heaven and their Saviour is in Heaven thither he ascended and there now he sits at the right hand of God their Husband is in Heaven their Elder Brother is in Heaven their King is in Heaven their Treasure is in Heaven their Inheritance is in Heaven their Hope is in Heaven their Mansion is in Heaven their chief Friends are in Heaven their Substance is in Heaven their reward is in Heaven their Wages are in Heaven and all these things being in Heaven no marvel their conversations be in Heaven 3. Because they are going towards Heaven even whiles yet they are on Earth If the Nobleman as we formerly supposed do once know his condition and begins his travel homeward towards his Fathers Court will he not every morning that he rises converse with them that come from his father to conduct him home doth it not do him good to hear any man speak of his fathers Country is it not in his thoughts in his talk in his eye in his aim at every step O my soul if thou art indeed travelling towards Heaven how shouldst thou but have it in thy motions affections conversations how shouldst thou but daily commune with thy own heart Heaven is the place that I shall come to ere long I shall be there I know that in this world I am but for a while but in Heaven I shall be for ever and ever 1. Thes 4.17 we shall be caught up into the clouds to meet the Lord in the air and so shall we be ever with the Lord. Our very travel towards Heaven implies an heavenly conversation Psalm 84.7 They go from strength to strength till every one of them in Zion appears before God Luke 17.21 Heb. 10.34 4. Because much of Heaven is already in the Saints The Kingdom of Heaven is within you saith Christ And knowing in your selves that ye have a better and an enduring substance Surely if the Saints have much of Heaven within them it must needs be that their conversation is in Heaven but they know this in themselves they know it by what God hath revealed in their own hearts eternal life is already begun in the souls of God's people Heaven is in them and therefore no marvel if their conversation be in Heaven My meaning is not as if the Saints had no other Heaven but that within them I know there is an Heaven above but some pieces or earnests or seeds or beginnings of that Heaven above is within them Is there not a renewed nature an Image of God a spark of life a drop of glory in God's people Surely yes And if so all these will work heaven-ward principles of grace will have some actings of grace till we come to glory 3. By what means should we attain or come up to have our conversation in Heaven 1. Let us watch opportunities for heavenly exercises God now by his Ministers calls Isa 55.1 3. 2 Cor. 6.2 Come ye to the waters come ye buy and eat come buy wine and milk without money come to me and your souls shall live Why now is the accepted time behold now is the day of salvation whiles Ministers call and we live under the droppings of the Word these are opportunities for Heaven O then he that never prayed let him now pray and he that never heard let him now hear the Lord is now come near to us Christ Jesus is calling and mercy is entreating and love is beseeching and wisdom is even hoarse with crying after us O lay hold on these opportunities for heavenly exercises and then we shall come up to heavenly conversations 2. Take heed of resting in the formality of duties many souls that have enlightnings of conscience dare not but take opportunities for heavenly duties but then comes in the temptations of the Devil and corruptions of their own hearts and they say now duty is done or our task is over and what needs more Alas alas It is not what have we done but where have we been what have our souls been in Heaven with God and with Christ have we had any communion with the Father and with the Son in our duties O take heed of formality it will exceedingly hinder our conversation in Heaven O keep our eye still upon our heart ask in duty what affections have been acted how much are we got nearer Heaven thereby and by this means we shall come to an heavenly conversation 3. Let us look up unto Jesus as hanging on the Cross and as sitting on the Throne this is the Apostles rule Looking unto Jesus the Author and Finisher of our faith Heb. 12.2 who for the joy that was set before him endured the Cross despising the shame and is set down at the right hand of the Throne of God These two are the objects of a Christians look who studies an heavenly conversation viz. Christ's Cross and Christ's Session by the Cross he is Author and by the Throne he is the Finisher of our faith in the first is set down his love to us in the second is set down our hope of him with high wisdom hath the Holy Ghost exhorted us with these two motives to run and not to faint first here is love love in the Cross Who loved us Eph. 5.2 and gave himself for us a sacrifice on the Cross secondly Here is hope hope in the Throne To him that overcometh will I give to sit with me in my Throne Rev. 3.21 After Christ's death he rose again ascended and is now set down at the right hand of the Throne of God and the same is our blessed hope Christ's Throne is not onely his place but ours also the love of his Cross is to us a pledge of the hope of his Throne or of whatsoever else he is worth Come then and settle your thoughts and looks on this blessed object a sight of Christ's Cross but especially of Christ's Throne is a blessed means to wean us from the World and to elevate and raise up our affections to things above yea to form and frame our conversation towards Heaven 4. Let us wait for the appearing of Jesus Christ Phil. 3.20 Our conversation is in Heaven saith the Apostle from whence also we look for the Saviour the Lord Jesus Christ Where a man's conversation is there his expectations may be and where his expectations are there a man's conversation is and will be if we expect ere long that the Lord Jesus will appear in glory and that we shall see him not with other but with these same eyes the very waiting
suffered upon earth it had been ineffectual unto us had he not entred into heaven Heb. 9.24 to appear there in the presence of God for us Surely this Intercession is that which puts life into the death of Christ this Intercession is that which strikes the last stroak during this World in the carrying on of our souls Salvation Goodwin Christ set forth Rom. 8.34 and makes all sure It is a witty observation that one makes of these several steps of Christs actings for us as first there was an all-sufficiency in his death who shall condemn it is Christ that dyed 2. A rather in his Resurrection yea rather that is risen again 3. A much rather in his life and session at God's right hand for if when we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of Christ much rather being reconciled we shall be saved by his life Rom. 5.10 4. The Apostle riseth yet higher to a saving to the utmost and puts that upon his intercession wherefore he is able to save us to the utmost Heb. 7.25 seeing he ever liveth to make intercession for us If in the former were any thing wanting this intercession of Christ supplies all it is the Coronis which makes all effectual it saves to the uttermost for it self is the uttermost and highest step on earth Christ begins the execution of his office in heaven he ends it in his life and death Christ was the meritorious cause but by his intercession Christ is the applying cause of our souls salvation In this very Intercession of Christ is the consummation and perfection of the Priest-hood of Christ O then how requisite and necessary must this needs be 4. It is gracious and full of bowels Christ his intercession and indeed Christ's Priestly office is erected and set up on purpose for the relief of poor distressed sinners There is no mixture of terror in this blessed office of Jesus Christ and this doth distinguish it from his other offices Christ by his Kingly office rules over the Churches and over the World but all obtain not mercy whom he thus rules over Christ by his prophetical office comes to his own but many of his own received him not but now wherever the Priestly office of Jesus Christ is let forth upon a Soul that soul shall certainly be saved for ever O this Priestly office of Christ is an office of meer love and tender compassion Heb. 4.15 Christ saith the Apostle is such an high-Priest as cannot be but touched with the feeling of our infirmities Oh he is a merciful Heb. 2.17 and a faithful high Priest in things partaining to God to make reconciliation for the sins of the People He is mercifull and exceeding compassionate in all our afflictions he is afflicted Isa 63.9 and in his love and in his pity he Redeemed us and in his love and pity he intercedes for us SECT VIII Wherein the Intercession of Christ consists 8. WHerein more especially doth the Intercessions of Jesus Christ consist some suppose that Christs very being in heaven and putting God in mind of his active and passive obedience by his very presence is all that intercession that the Scripture speaks of But I rather answer is these particulars As 1. Christs intercession consists in the presenting of his Person for us he himself went up to heaven and presented himself the Apostle calls this an appearing for us Christ is not entered into the holy place made with hands but into heav●n now to appear in the presence of God for us Heb. 9.24 I believe there is an Emphasis in the Word appearing for us But how appears he for us I answer 1. In a publick manner whatsoever he did in this kind he did it openly and publickly he appears for us in the presence of God the Father he appears for us in the presence of his Saints and Angels heavens eyes are all upon him in his appearing for us 2. He appears for us as a Mediator he stands in the middle betwixt God and us hence it is that he is God-man that he might be a Mediator betwixt God and man 3. He appears for us as a Sponsor and a pledge surely it is a comfort for a man to have a friend at Court at the Princes elbow that may own him and appear for him but if this friend be both a Mediator and Surety a Mediator to request for him and a Surety to engage for him Phil. 9.10 ver 18 19. Oh what comfort is this thus Christ appeared in every respect he is a Mediator to request for us and he is a Surety to engage for us as Paul was for Onesimus a mediator I beseech thee for my Son Onesimus and a Sponsor if he hath wronged thee or owe thee ought put that on my account I will repay it So is Jesus Christ for his Saints he is the Mediator of a better Covenant Heb. 8.6 Heb. 8.6 and he is a Surety of a better Testament Heb. 7.22 Heb. 7. ●2 4. He appears as a Solicitor to present and promote the desires and requests of his Saints in such a way as that they may find acceptance with his Father He is not idle now he is in Heaven but as on earth he ever went about doing good so now in glory he is ever about his work of doing good he spends all his time in Heaven in promoteing the good of his people as from the beginning it was his care so to the Worlds end it will be his care to solicite his Father in the behalf of his poor Saints he tells God thus and thus it is with his poor Members they are in want in trouble in distress in affliction in reproach and then he presents their sighs sobs prayers tears and groans and that in such a way as that they may become acceptable to his Father 5. He appears as an Advocate if any man sin 1 John 2. ● we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous An Advocate is more than a Solicitor an Advocate is one that is of Counsel with an other and that pleadeth his Case in open Court and such an advocate is Jesus Christ unto his people 1. He is of Councel with them that is one of the Titles given him by the Prophet Isaiah Wonderful Councellour Isa 96. He councells them by his Word and Spirit 2. He pleads for them and this he doth in the high Court of Heaven at the Bar of God's own Justice there he pleads their case and answereth all the accusations that are brought in by Satan or their own Consciences but of this anon 6. He appears as a publick agent or Ledger-Embassadour what that is some tell us in these particulars 1. His work is to continue peace and surely this is Christ's work he is our peace saith the Apostle that is the author of our peace Eph. 2.14 he purchased our peace and he maintains our peace with
destruction O Christ thou that art the judge of Nations and the revenger of blood reward thou this man as he hath rewarded us he led us in the ways of wickedness and if it must be so let him be our ring-leader to Hell and upon his soul once buryed in Hell let this be the Epitaph the price of blood the price of blood if thou didst hear the blood of Abel being but one man forget not the blood of many now thou art judging the earth Why thus do the damned cry about thine ears and as for us say the Saints who were once thy people but now thy Judges we consent to their cry and to our Saviours doom go ye cursed into everlasting fire Men Brethren and Fathers I begin thus with the Ministers doom that you may see I would deal impartially and verily I believe it if our case come to this we of the Ministry shall be in a thousand times worse condition than any of you for besides the horrour due to the guilt of our own souls all the blood of those souls who have perished under our Ministry through our default will be laid to our charge little do you know or consider the burthen that lies upon us a burthen able to make the shoulders of the most mighty Angel in heaven to shrink under it Chrysostome was a glorious Saint Heb. 13.17 Hujus comminationis terror animum mihi concutit Chrys d yet casting his eye upon one only Text in the Bible Obey them that have the rule over you and submit your selves for they watch for your souls as they that must give account He professeth that the terror of this Text made his heart tremble Surely it is enough to make our hearts tremble if we seriously weigh our terrible doom in case that we should miscarry But now on the other side if the Minister be the Elect and sentenc'd to salvation and many of his people prove no better than Reprobates then shall the Minister say O miserable souls now you feel the truth of those comminations and curses which we opened and unfolded and discovered to you out of God's Word We dealt plainly with you 1 Cor. 6.9 10 11. that the unrighteous should not inherit the Kingdom of God we advised you again and again be not deceived neither Fornicators nor Idolators nor Adulterers nor effeminate nor abusers of themselves with mankind nor Theeves nor Covetuous nor Drunkards nor Revilers nor Extortioners shall inherit the Kingdome of God and such were you and notwithstanding all our threats warnings intreatings beseechings thus ye lived and thus ye dyed and there is the issue Christ now hath doomed you to hell and here am I set on a throne to judge your souls for the Saints shall judge the World as well as Christ himself Oh what shall I do Oh my bowels my bowels here 's a case beyond all the former each of them according to their relations judge another but here 's a multitude not one or two or ten or an hundred but many hundreds or thousands according to the number of such and such Congregations where I have preached In Christ's reasonings with the wicked we have heard of his sayings and their answers and of his replications to their answers much said on both sides to and again I may suppose the like here O what shall I do says the Minister what doom shall I pass on this Assembly of Reprobates can I absolve them whom the righteous God hath condemned can I say come along with me to heaven now Christ hath said go ye cursed into hell and oh now shall I turn my speech from my wonted wooing beseeching intreating exhorting to a direct dooming damning condemning these souls to the pit of hell sometimes indeed I opened to these souls the armoury of God's wrath I thundred and lightned in their Congregations but my design was to fright them out of hell-fire and knowing the terrours of the Lord to have perswaded them towards heaven and heavenly things but now if I speak condemnation no sooner shall I speak but their souls will sink down to hell O miserable souls what shall I say or what can you say for your selves Then shall they answer Oh Sir do not you aggravate the torment by your condemnation the weight of Christ's doom is already unsupportable but will you adde more weight Why remember we are some of us it may be of your flesh and blood many a time you told us that you unfeignedly loved us and that we were dearer to you then all worldly enjoyments many a time you told us that you were willing to spend your self for us as the candle that burns it self to give others light you were pleased to bestow your prayers tears sighs groans for our souls your very Books and Writings were high expressions and abiding monuments of your dear love to us you weighed not your strength and spirits in comparison of our souls and shall this fair comical scean end in a dismal doleful bloody Tragedy would you do or suffer any thing to save us and will you now condemn us Oh forbear Ah no saith the Minister I cannot forbear all is true that you say I loved you dearly and I was willing to spend or to be spent for you but this aggravates the more ah my travail pains books writings words fears sighs groans are in one volume together and this volume has been opened this day and now is the question put what have you profited by all my words prayers tears sighs and groans is not all lost and are not your souls lost and now do you tell me of love what did I ever love you more then Christ loved you were the drops of my tears to be compared with the showers of his blood were my pains for you equal with the pains of his Cross and hath he not condemned you to hell and shall not I be like-minded to Jesus Christ Surely the Lord's will must be my will he hath already judged you and he will make me to judge you so far am I from pitying you that if he that formed you will shew you no mercy if he that saves me and all the Elect people of God will not save you can I pity you or save you or discent from Jesus in his sentence upon you speak no more of flesh and blood of labours of love Christ's Sentence must stand and as I am a member of Christ and a Minister of Christ I cannot but approve of it and so judge you to hell Why then say Reprobates we will curse thee and blaspheme Jesus Christ in hell for ever cursed be the time that ever we heard of Jesus Christ or that ever we knew thee or thy Ministry do not thy Sermons send us deeper into hell had it not been easier for us at this day of judgment if we had lived in Tyre and Sydon where the Gospel never was Preached didst not thou harden our hearts in such and such
respect 4. LET us hope in Jesus as carrying on the great work of our salvation for us in his second coming Hope is of good things to come hope is an act of the will extending it self towards that which it loves as future onely the future good as it is the object of hope is difficult to obtain and therein it differs from desire for desire looks at future good without any apprehension of difficulty but hope respects the future good as it is gotten with difficulty Lazy hopes that will not be in use of means though difficult are not true hopes we see many desirable things set before us of which we may say Oh that we had our part and portion of them but shall we go on and search and find out the truth whether we have any part or portion in them or whether we have any hopes of any such thing oh this is worthy our pains come then let us yet make a further progress let us not only desire that it may be thus and so but let us say on some sure and certain grounds we hope it is thus and so we hope Christ will come again John 14.3 and receive us to himself that where he is there we may be also Heb. 9.12 Indeed there is the Christians stay and comfort such an hope is a sure Anchor that will hold the ship in a storm onely because our souls lie upon it we had need to look to it that our hopes be true the worst can say They hope to be saved as well as the best but I fear the hopes of many will be lamentably frustrated Our Saviour brings in many pleading with confidence at the last day for life who shall be rejected with miserable disappointment Many shall say to me at that day Lord Lord c. and I will confess unto them I never knew them depart from me Now to clear this point that our hopes are of the right stamp and not counterfeit hopes I shall lay down some signs whereby we may know that Christ's coming is for us and for our good and for the grace that is to be given us at the revelation of Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 1.3 4. 1. If we are born again then will his glorious coming be to glorifie us Blessed be the God and Father of Lord Jesus Christ who according to his abundant mercy hath begotten us again unto a lively hope to an inheritance incorruptible Whoever hath the true hope of Heaven John 3.3 he is one that is begotten again so our Saviour Except a man be born again he cannot see the Kingdom of God Many things may be done as Herod heard John the Baptist and did many things but except a man be born again those many things are in God's account as nothing When Peter had told Christ that he and his fellow-disciples had forsaken all Math. 19.28 and followed him Then Jesus said verily I say unto you that ye which have followed me in the regeneration when the Son of man shall sit in the Throne of his glory ye shall also sit upon twelve Thrones Judging the twelve Tribes of Israel q. d. Peter you have forsaken all and followed me but know that bare forsaking is not enough but you who have felt the Work of God regenerating your souls upon which ye have followed me ye shall sit upon twelve Thrones In those who are alive at the last day there will be a change and this change will be to them instead of death 1 Cor. 15.51 Behold I shew you a mystery we shall not all sleep but we shall all be changed Certainly in those who at the last day shall sit on Thrones with Christ there must be a change likewise in this life i.e. a new spirit and a new life must be put into them Oh what a change is this suppose a rational soul were put into a beast what a change would be in that Creature suppose an angelical nature were put upon us what a change would there be in us oh but what a change is this when a man is born again of water and of the spirit I must tell you that the highest degree of glory in Heaven is not so different from the lowest degree of grace here as the lowest degree of grace here is different from the highest excellency of nature here because the difference betwixt the highest degree of the glory of Heaven and the lowest degree of grace is only gradual but the difference that is betwixt the lowest degree of grace and the highest excellency of nature is a specifical difference Oh there 's a mighty work of God in preparing souls for glory by grace and this change must they have that must sit on Thrones Come then you that hope for glory try your selves by this is there a change in your hearts words and lives is there a mighty work of grace upon your spirits are you experienc'd in the great mystery of regeneration why here 's your evidence that your hopes are sound and that you shall sit upon Thrones to judge the world Heb. 9.28 2. If we long for his coming then will he come to satisfie our longings Blessed are they that hunger and thirst for they shall be satisfied how satisfied but in being saved Christ was offered to bear the sins of many and unto them that look for him shall he appear the second time without sin to salvation unto them that look for him or long for him shall he appear the second time unto salvation it is very observable how this looking for Christ is in Scripture a frequent description of a true believer in Christ Who are true sincere and sound Christians but such as live in a perpetual desire and hope of Christs blessed coming 2 Pet. 3.12 they are ever looking for and hasting unto the coming of the day of God Here are two signs in one verse looking for and hasting unto true believers are not only in a posture looking for the coming of Jesus Christ but also as it were going forth to meet Jesus Christ with burning Lamps Luther could say Mat. 6.10 That he was no true Christian neither could he truly recite the Lord's prayer that with all his heart desired not this day of the coming of Christ. It is true that whether we will or no that day will come but in the Lord's prayer Christ hath taught us to pray that God would accelerate and hasten the day of his glorious coming thy Kingdom come i.e. the Kingdom of glory at the Judgment as well as the Kingdom of grace in the Church It is true that the day of the Lord is a terrible day the Heavens and Earth and Sea and Air shall be all on a bone-fire and burn to nothing nevertheless we according to his promise look for new Heavens and a new Earth we that have laid hold upon God and laid hold on him by the right handle according to his promises we look for
In his mercy or free grace 1. His justice will be glorified especially in punishing the wicked here on Earth litle justice is done on most offenders though some publick crimes are sometimes punished yet the actions of closets and chambers the designs and thoughts of men the businesses of retirements and of the night escape the hand of justice and therefore God hath so ordained it that there shall be a day of doom wherein all that are let alone by men shall be questioned by God Shall not the judge of all the world do right Gen. 18.25 then all thoughts shall be examined and secret actions viewed on each side and the infinite number of those sins which escaped here shall be blazoned there all shall have justice and the justice of the judge shall be so exact that he will account with men by minutes and that justice may reign entirely God shall open his treasure I mean the wicked man's treasure and tell the sums and weigh the grains and scruples Deut. 32.34 Is not this laid up in store with me and sealed up among my treasures I will restore it in the day of vengeance saith the Lord. Oh how will God glorifie his justice at that day surely his justice shall shine and be eminently glorious in every passage 2. His mercy or free grace will be glorified in rewarding the Saints And this is the main the supreme end of his coming to judgment 2 Thes 1.10 He shall come saith the Apostle to be glorified in his Saints not but that the Angels shall glorifie the riches of his grace as well as Saints but because the Angels never sinned they have now kept their Robes of innocency their cloth of Gold above five thousand years without one spark of dirt or change of colour therefore the glory of his grace is more especially fastened on Saints that sometimes were sinners Oh what stories will be told at this day of graces acts I was a blasphemer 1 Tim. 1.13 and a persecutor and an injurious person said Paul but I obtained mercy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but I was be-mercied as if he had been dipt in a River in a Sea of mercy it may be he will make the same acknowledgment at the day of judgment I was a sinner but the grace of the Lord Jesus to me was abundant superabundant I obtained as much grace as would have saved a world Certainly free grace shall then be discovered in some purpose Rom. 5.20 then it shall be known That where sin abounded grace far more it over-abounded or more than over-bounded 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is a word borrowed from Fountains and Rivers which have over-flowed with Waters ever since the Creation then all the Saints shall exalt and magnifie and with loud voyces praise the glory of his grace they shall look on their debts written in graces book and then shall they sing and say O the mystery of grace O the gold-mines and the depts of Christs free love why this was the great design of our salvation at the first when God was willing to communicate himself out of his aloneness everlasting he laid this plot that all he would do should be to the praise of the glory of his grace Eph. 1.6 and now at his second coming having done all he will do the Saints for whom he hath done all admire esteem honour and sound forth the praises of his grace Is not this their everlasting song which they begin at this day Glory to the Lamb and glory to his grace that sitteth on the Throne for ever more not but that they glorifie him in his wisdom power holiness and his other attributes ay but especially in this it is his Grace in which he most delighteth even as vertuous Kings affect above all their other Vertues to be had in honour for their Clemency and Bounty so Jesus Christ the King of Kings affects above all the glory of his grace And to this purpose Heaven it self is an house full of broken men who have borrowed millions from Christ but can never repay more than to read and sing the praises of Free-grace Glory to the Lamb and glory to the riches of his grace for evermore Thus for directions one word of Application or a few motives to work Faith in you in this respect 1. Christ in his word invites you to believe these are his Letters from Heaven Come all to the marriage-supper of the Lamb Ho every one that thirsts come in Heaven-gate is open to all that knock but fools foolish Virgins foolish souls which have no Faith nor will have any to render them fit for Heaven This meets with some that scruple what will Christ come again to receive me to himself shall I enter with him into glory alas no unclean thing shall enter into that holy City and shall such a sinner as I am be admitted Oh believe believe thy part in this coming of Christ to receive thee to himself and no sin that thou feelest a burthen shall keep thee out of Heaven There is Rahab the Harlot and Manasseh the Murtherer and Mary that had so many Devils a man that hath many Devils may come where there is not one Luke 14.22 Lame and Blind and Halt may enter into Heaven and yet still there is room there is a great variety of guests above and yet one Table large enough for all no crouding and yet thousands and thousands of thousands sitting together Ah poor soul why dost thou make ecceptions where God makes none why shouldst thou exclude thy self out of these golden gates when God doth not believe onely believe in the Lord Jesus and the promise is sure and without all controversie thou shalt be saved 2. Christ by his Ministry intreats you to believe come say they we beseech you believe in your judge it may be you startle at this what to believe in him who is a coming to be your judge but if your judge be Jesus if the same person who dyed for you shall come to judge you why should you fear indeed if your judge were your enemy you might fear but if he who is your Lord and who loves your souls shall judge you there is no such cause will a man fear to be judged by his dearest friends a brother by a brother a child by a father or a wife by her husband consider is not he your Judge who came down from Heaven and who being on earth was judged condemned and executed in your stead and yet are ye fearful O ye of little faith Oh what an unreasonable sin is unbelief nay say the scrupulous if I were assured of this if I knew that my judge were my friend I should not fear but is he not my enemy have not I provoked him to enmity against my soul do I not stand it out in arms against my judge am not I daily sinning against him who justly may condemn me for my sin give this
call we this that the Father will not go but run If he would needs meet his Son might he not have walked towards him in a soft slow pace O no if a sinner will but come or creep towards Christ mercy will not go a foot-pace but run to meet him bowels full of mercy out-pace bowels pinched with hunger Gods mercy is over all his works and so it is over all our needs and over all our sins 5. He ran and fell on his neck i.e. he hugged and embraced him O wonder who would not have been loth to have touched him was he not in his loathsome stinking rags smelt he not of the hogs and swine he lately kept would not some dainty stomacks have been ready to have cast all up upon such embracements Ezek. 16.6 we see mercy is not nice When I passed by saith God I saw thee polluted in thy own blood and I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood live yea I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood live that very time of her blood was the time of love then the Lord spread his Spirit over her and covered her nakedness and swore unto her Ver. 8. and entred into a Covenant with her and she became his 6. He ran and fell on his neck and kissed him who would have brooked a person in so filthy a pickle what kiss those lips that have been so lately lapping in the hogs trough those lips that had so often kissed those base and beggarly and abominable Harlots one would think he should rather have kicked than kissed him there is a passage somewhat like this and Esau ran to meet Jacob Gen. 33.4 and he embraced him and fell on his neck and kissed him before he had thought to have killed him but now he kissed him it s not to tell how dear the Father was to his Prodigal Son when he ran and fell on his neck and embraced and kissed him The scope of the Parable is this that Christ is willing and glad to receive sinners Ezek. 33.11 Turn ye turn ye from your evil wayes for why will ye dye O house of Israel 2. Christ manifests this willingness in his practice really amongst many instances I shall insist only on one a notable instance of this year One of the Pharisees named Simon invited Christ to eat with him Luke 36.37 into whose house when he had entred a certain woman that was a sinner abiding there in the City heard of it a widow she was and prompted by her wealth and youth to an intemperate life she came to Jesus in the Pharisees house and no sooner come but she layes her burthen at Jesus's feet and presents him with a broken heart Ver. 38. and weeping eye and an Alabaster Box of Oyntment She stood at his feet behind him weeping and began to wash his feet with her tears and to wipe them with the hairs of her head and she kissed his feet and Anointed them with Oyntment 1. She stands at his feet a sign of her humility O what a change She that was before married to a Noble personage a Native of the Town Castle of Magdal from whence she had her name of Magdalen and she that now was a widow and therefore took her liberty of pride and lust who so proud and vile as Mary Magdalen at this time she comes in remorse and regret for her sins and throwing away her former pride she stoops and waits and humbly stands at Jesus feet 2. She stood at his feet behind him a blushing sign of faith it comprehends in it a Tacite confession of her Sins she knew her self unworthy of Christs presence she durst not look him in the face but believingly she waits behind him her shame speaks her repentance and her waiting on him and not flying from him bespeaks her faith 3. She stood at his feet behind him weeping her grief burst out in tears she heeds not the feast or feaster though usually they are accompanied with joy and mirth and musick and such feasts attended with such vanities she many a time had probably observed yet now she comes in trembling to this feast and falling down before Christ she weeps and weeps bitterly for her sins 4. She began to wash his feet with tears her tears were not feigned but fruitful she wept a shower of tears one considering her tears cries it out Terra rigat coelum the very earth bedews heaven her eyes that before were abused to lust are now fountains of tears she poures out a flood great enough to wash the feet of her blessed Jesus this was the manner of the Jews to eat their meat lying down John 13.23 and Leaning on their Elbows or if many eat together leaning in the bosoms of one another thus at the Passover it is said that there was leaning on Jesus bosom one of his disciples whom Jesus loved And in this posture Jesus sitting or lying at meat Mary had the convenience to weep on his feet which he had cast behind his fellow and O how she weeps a main the Tears so Trickle that she begins to wash Christs feet she not only waters them Jer. 6.1 but washes them that which Jeremy wished Oh that my head were waters and mine eyes a Fountain of Tears Mary fulfills for her head is waters and her eyes are fountains Rivers of Tears run down her eyes O she had pierced Christ with her sins and now she weeps over him whom she had pierced crying out as we may imagine O my sins and O my Christ O foul sins and O sweet Jesus 5. She wipes his feet with the Hairs of her Head her hair added to her beauty sometimes in curling rings or in seemly sheds she made it a snare for men but now she consecrates it to her Lord and makes it a Towel to wipe Christs feet withall O here 's a worthy fruit of serious repentance the Apostle calls it an holy revenge 6. She kissed his feet 2 Cor. 7.11 in token of her new chioce and new love and new affection her kisses had formerly been to wantons but now she bestows them on the feet of Christ 7. She anointed them with ointment which expression was so great an extasie of love and sorrow and adoration that to anoint the feet of the greatest Monarch was long unknown and in all the pomps of Roman prodigality it was never used till Otho taught it Nero. When Simon observed this sinner so busie in the expresses of her Religion he thought within himself that Christ was no Prophet that he did not know her to be a sinner for although the Jews Religion did permit harlots to live and to enjoy the priviledges of the Nation save that their oblations were refused yet the Pharisees who pretended to a greater degree of sanctity than others would not admit them to civil usages or to the benefits of ordinary society and hence Simon made an objection within
the fruit of Christ's death conferred upon him but this fruit is not of one kind for 1. Some fruit is common to every man as the earthly blessings which Infidels enjoy may be termed the fruits of Christ's death 2. Other fruit is common to all the members of the visible Church as to be called by the Word to enjoy the Ordinances to live under the Covenant to partake of some graces that come from Christ 2. Other fruit is indeed peculiar to the Saints of God as faith unfeigned regeneration pardon of sin adoption c. And yet this fruit is universal to all the Saints whether Jews or Gentiles in which sence speaks the Apostle Rom. 11.32 1 Tim. 2.6 Rom. 11.32 Rom. 5.18 Heb. 2.9 He spared not his own Son but delivered him up for us all And he gave himself a ransome for all and God hath concluded them all in unbelief that he might have mercy upon all And by the righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men unto justification of life He tasted of death for all men or distributively for every man All which texts are rightly interpreted by Caiphas He prophesied that Jesus should dye for that Nation John 11.51 52. and not for that Nation only but that also he should gather together in one the children of God that were scattered abroad And thus John brings in the four beasts and four and twenty Elders saying Thou art worthy to take the book Rev. 5.9 and to open the seals thereof for thou wast slain and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood out of every kindred and tongue and people and nation and thus Paul rightly argues Is he the God of the Jews only Rom. 3.29 is he not of the Gentiles also yes of the Gentiles also O the fulness of Christ's death many are apt to complain Would Christ dye for me why alas I am an alien I am not of the common-wealth of Israel I am a dog I am a sinner a grievous sinner Eph. 2.13 14 16. a sinner of the Gentiles And what then Ye who sometimes were afar off are now made nigh by the blood of Christ for he is our peace who hath made both one and hath broken down the middle wall of partition between us that he might reconcile both unto God in one body by the cross Oh what encouragement is this for thee to believe thy part in the death of Christ 2. Consider the worth the excellency of this glorious object Christ crucified There is an infinite of worth in the death of Christ and this ariseth first from the dignity of his person he was God-man the death of Angels and men if put together could not have amounted to the excellency of Christ's death stand amazed at thy happiness O believer thou hast gained by thy loss thou hast lost the righteousness of a creature but the righteousness of an infinite person is now made thine Rom. 10.3 2 Cor. 5.21 hence it is many times called the Righteousness of God both because Christ is God and because it is such a righteousness as God is satisfied with he looks for no better yea there can be no better 2. This worth is not only in respect of the dignity of the person but also in respect of the price offered O it was the blood of Christ one drop whereof is of more worth than thousands of gold and silver Acts 20.28 It was this blood that purchased the whole Church of God which a thousand worlds of wealth could never have done 3. This worth is not only in respect of the person and price neither but also in respect of the manner of the oblation 2 Pet. 1 18. Christ must dye on the Cross as it was determined the price in it self is not enough unless it be ordered and proportioned according to the will of him who is to be satisfied if a man should give for a captive prisoner an infinite sum of money sufficient in it self to redeem a thousand yet if not according to such a way as the conquerour prescribeth if not according to the condition it could not be called a satisfaction now this was the condition that Christ must die and dye that death of the Cross and accordingly he undertook and performed which set a lustre and glory and excellency and worth upon his death O the worth O the excellency of this death of Christ many are apt to complain O the filth of my sins Oh the injuries and unkindness that have been in mine iniquities it is not my misery my destruction that so much troubles me as that God is displeased Sweet soul turn thine eyes hither surely this death of Christ is more satisfactory to God than all thy sins possibly can be displeasing to God there was more sweet savour in Christ's sacrifice than there could be offence in all thy sins the excellency of Christ's death in making righteous doth super-abound the filthiness of sin in making a sinner Come on then and close with Christ upon this encouragement there is a dignity an excellency in this object of faith Christ crucified 3. Consider the suitableness of this blessed object The death of Christ There is in it a sutableness to our sinful condition whatsoever the sin is it is the cry of some They dare not believe they dare not touch Christ crucified they dare not approach to that precious blood because of this sin and that sin and the other sin Whereas in the death and blood of Christ if they could but take a full view of it they might find something suitable to their estate As for instance suppose thy sin the greatest sin imaginable except that against the holy Ghost art thou a murtherer hast thou had thy hands imbrued in the blood of Saints why see now how Christ for thy sake was esteemed of the Jews a murtherer and worse than a murtherer Barabbas is preferred before Jesus Barabbas is released and Jesus is murthered yea his blood is shed to wash away thy blood-shed art thou a Sorcerer a Negromancer is thy sin the sin of Manasseh of whom it is said 2 Chron. 33.6 that that he used inchantments and witchcraft and dealt with a familiar spirit and with wizards why see now how Jesus Christ for thy sake was esteemed of the Jews as an impostor an inchanter for so some say that he got the Name of God and sowed it in his thigh and by vertue thereof he wrought all his miracles and they commonly reported of him that he had a devil and that he cast out devils through Belzebub Prince of devils Art thou a blasphemer hast thou joyned with those in these sad times who have opened their mouths against the God of Heaven enough to make a Christian rend his heart and weep in blood why see now how Jesus for thy sake was judged of Caiaphas and all the Sanhedrim for a blasphemer of God and that in the highest kind of blasphemy