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A30238 An expository comment, doctrinal, controversal, and practical upon the whole first chapter to the second epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthians by Anthony Burgesse ... Burgess, Anthony, d. 1664. 1661 (1661) Wing B5647; ESTC R19585 945,529 736

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life You may see this practised by the Church of Israel when she had smarted for her carnall confidence and dependance on outward helps so as to neglect God see in what an humble gracious manner she maketh her confession to God Hos 14. 3. Asshur shall not save us we will not ride upon horses neither will we say any more to the workes of our hands ye are our gods for in thee the fatherless findeth mercy Oh blessed and self-emptyed frame here the Church repenting and turning unto God of all the sinnes which she was guilty of doth instance in her carnall confidence as that which had most provoked God and therefore she doth renounce and disavow all civill confidence and trusting Asshur shall not save us c. And 2. All religious confidence They will no more make their applications to their gods and then here is the reason because in thee the fatherless finds mercy By this proclaiming that they looked upon themselves as so many poore fatherless Children that had not wherewith to help themselves If then an whole Nation do thus how much more ought every particular Christian though great though rich yet respectively to God to look upon himself even as that Infant the Prophet speaketh of New borne and exposed to danger and no wayes able to succor it selfe Thus he that would trust in God must begin here and lay his foundation thus low even as the Apostle saith 1 Tim. 5. 5. She that is a widdow indeed and desolate trusteth in God We cannot come to rest upon God till we look upon our selves as desolate and destitute of all humane succour The Bohemians when they lost their famous Captain Zisca called themselves Orphanes Thus when our helps our outward supports are removed then we are driven to look up unto God and not before The Heathens had a custome when they went into their Temples to pray that none would go in with a Sword or money in their Purse which was to denote that they did not put confidence either in strength or wealth but did rest upon their gods for relief only We then that are Christians who have the Word of God to be a guide unto us ought to have low thoughts of our selves and of all Creatures accounting of them as nothing respectively unto God 2. To trust in God is required in the next place a practicall Meditation concerning the greatness and goodness of God how infinitely able he is and how willing to help his people It is the not attending to this but the looking unto the power and strength of second causes that maketh us so full of distrust in God Is it not then for this reason that the Scripture doth so often delight to represent the greatness and majesty of God That all the Nations are but as a drop to him that they are less then nothing that he created the world out of nothing All this is to raise up the heart that it should have high and hopefull thoughts about God This maketh David attribute so many metaphoricall titles to God that he is his strength his rock his fortresse and strong tower Did we meditate upon these things did we with Abraham not consider the dead wombe but the power of God with what dependence on God and quietness of mind should we pass our lives But now we are tossed up and down with many waves we are like Noah's Raven sent out of the Ark we know not where to set our feet and all is because we do not settle on God omnis motus fit super immobili The soul cannot move unless it have a stedfast and immoveable foundation to stand upon and that is not the Creature but God only Thus David Psal 16. 8. I have set the Lord alwayes before me because he is at my right hand I shall not be moved and therefore Verse 2. expressing this act of trusting in God he saith thou art my Lord Adonai The word signifieth that which is the basis the foundation that keepeth up all things Oh then let nothing be great in thy thoughts but God Grotius Prologom in Epist ad Rom. would make that faith which the Apostle doth so much commend in his Epistle to the Romanes to be nothing but an high and eminent esteem of Gods power c. So that faith in this respect and not the obedience of Christ as apprehended by faith is by him that imputed righteousness Paul doth so much instance in But he is deceived therein and layeth this as a foundation for his other errors about Justification Though we do easily grant that in faith there is a most raised and elevated apprehension about the majesty and power of God 3. To trust in God there is required a peculiar and particular appropriation of God to our soules as our God as our Father to say as Thomas to Christ my God and my Lord. Thus David in the forementioned Psal 16. 2. when he had pressed God with this Argument to preserve him because he trusted in him he declareth what his trusting is Oh my soul thou hast said unto the Lord thou art my Lord. Thus we are particularly to apply and to say Thou art my Father thou art my God And this is the reason why the people of God are so full of distrust of despondent and dejecting feares They cannot say Oh my soul thou hast said to God thou art my Lord yea we look upon him as a judge that will condemne 4. To trust in God there is required some experimentall knowledge of God to be acquainted with his former works of mercy and deliverance to them for when we have both Gods promise and his providence seconding it this maketh us to have more vigorous trusting in God as David argued God had delivered him from the Bear and Lion and therefore would from the Philistin Thus the Apostle at the 10. Verse from the present deliverance doth argue that he trusteth he will deliver also Thus Psal 9. 10. They that know thy name will trust in thee It is for want of experience and practicall knowledge about God that maketh us so full of diffidence 5. To trust in God there is required a faithfull and diligent use of all those meanes that God hath required and by this it is fully distinguished from presumption which many take to be in their trusting in God for when you hear such who live impenitently in evill and ungodly wayes yet say they trust in Christ with all their heart for the pardon of their sinnes they do desperately presume for if they did trust in God they would be constant in the use of those meanes God hath required 1 John 3. 3. He that hath this hope in him purifieth himselfe as God is pure It s not their trusting in God but presumption which maketh thee expect such glorious priviledges and dost not walk in the way thereunto 6. To trust in God there is required a sound judgement and right understanding
it had beene better if Gods help had come sooner if he had not deferred so long but this is as if the patient should take upon him to direct the Physician when is the fittest time for the administration of his medicinal helpe Fourthly The people of God aggravate their mercies By comparing them with others miseries I have health how many are in paines and exquisite torments I have sufficiency and fullnesse how many Lazar's are there that would be glad of the crummes that fall from my Table As those Lepers that were ready to be famished but unexpectedly met with full provision in the Syrian's Camps said We doe not well 2 King 7. 9. let us informe the Kings houshold For alas they were ready to eat their own children through the famine while these had all plenty In the same manner mayest thou reflect with thy self How many are there even of the deare servants of God that are naked hungry persecuted and destitute of all hope There is scarce any so afflicted or in a low condition but he may look upon others who are more miserable than he This therefore will greatly sharpen thy affections to blesse God When thou shalt compare thy mercies with others miseries especially if you doe consider it in spirituals How many thousands sit in Paganisme and know nothing of Christ How many lye roaring in hell for the same sinnes or lesse sinnes it may be that thou hast committed Thus if thou set thy self to aggravate the mercy of God from every consideration thou wilt finde the circumstances will increase upon thee as the widows oyl did and thou wilt see thou hast more cause to blesse Ood then ever thou didst apprehend at first If I say thou didst this thou wouldst no more complaine of the coldnesse and chilnesse that is upon thy heart Nothing doth so much dull the heart as resting in generals blessing God in generals Take every mercy as thou wouldst some Watch or curious worke of Art and view every piece every part or as those that hehold some admirable Image they are intentive to every part thereof to observe the beauty life and proportion thereof Oh it is this and this onely will draw out thy soul and make thee have rivers of water flowing from thee It is this that will make thee say with Elihu Job 32. 18. I am full of matter the Spirit within me constraineth me my belly is as wine which hath no vent it is ready to burst like new bottles Thus five words of praise coming from an heart aggravating Gods mercy are more effectual then five hundred in a formal general way SERM. LXXV Privative and preventing Mercies are to be accounted of as Positive 2 COR. 1. 10. Who delivered us from so great a death and doth deliver IN this Text we have Paul celebrating the goodness of God to him in that extream trouble mentioned before wherein was observed First The holy thankefull temper of Paul studying to aggravate the mercy of God He leaveth out nothing unexpressed which may not make for the great exaltation of Gods goodness towards him There remaineth a second Doctrine which is That the children of God are to account of the privative and preventing mercies as much as positive Paul cals this deliverance a deliverance from such a death so great a death yet he was not actually killed he was onely in danger of it but because had not the mercy of God prevented death had surely seised on him Therefore this mercy of preventing death he doth judge to be as it were a positive deliverance from it That as we see God doth deal with his people He accepteth of a willing mind for the deed And Heb. 11. 17. Abraham is said to offer up his onely begotten sonne because it was in the immediate disposition and preparation of his heart he had done it had not God prevented it So it is here with the people of God Those mercies which keep off the dangers that are immediately issuing out upon us they take as if the mercy was it self positively done to them Divines have a saying Plures sunt gratiae privativae quàm positivae There are more privative favours of God than positive and this they apply to spiritual things And indeed if we consider how many sins God may keep thee from which others fall into how many temptations God doth preserve thee in which swallow up others we must needs acknowledge that we are no more able to reckon up these preventing mercies of God than we can count the stars or reckon up the sand upon the sea-shore That this truth may affect us and cause us more to imploy our thoughts in a thankfull way towards God concerning all that evil which might come upon us if God did not interpose Let us take notice of these particulars First That there are some mercies God doth vouchsafe to his people which do suppose evil to be actually come upon them As when Joseph was delivered out of prison Jonah out of the whales belly the Lord did not prevent which he could have done if he had pleased but suffered them to overtake those children of his Yea all the troubles which do befall the godly he could have prevented them if he had pleased He that can deliver out of them can also stop them from coming but God out of wise ends both relating to his own glory and the good of his people doth bring these exercises upon them Then on the other side There are mercies which do not suppose evil actually to come upon us but ready and prepared to fall on us if the Lord did not forbid That as we see it was with the Angel when he had his drawn sword and was ready to strike Jerusalem with the plague as well as other places the Lord did mercifully command the Angel to put up his sword Now no doubt but David did account this preventing mercy this stopping of the plague to be as great as if they had been delivered in the midst of it For in regard of the preparation to this judgement they were but as so many dead corpses So that the people of God are of too narrow and streightned a spirit when they look onely to what troubles they have been in and God hath delivered them Oh consider further how many might have fallen upon thee yea would certainly have bruised thee had not the Lord kept them off Secondly These preventing mercies do empty themselves in a two-fold chanel For they are either Temporal evils or Spiritual evils that these mercies do relate unto and thus preventing mercies do compasse us about all the day long what evil might not have fallen upon thee every moment This disease that casualty such a sudden and unexpected calamity Insomuch that thou canst not hear of any misery fallen upon any living but it also might have come upon thee Doth any sit mourning and wringing their hands crying out O ye that passe by see if
the discriminating mercy of God he killeth and maketh alive he maketh poor and maketh rich So that all these things are distributed according to the wisdome and pleasure of God If so how then cometh it about that thou escapest such a misery and another doth not Afflictions rise not out of the dust neither doth preferment and honour God then giveth a cup of gladness and joy or a cup of gall and wormwood to drink off Now then look about thee and behold how many sit in darkness and have no light how many are bereaved of senses of their understandings and of all comforts even brought to be like Dives in hell asking for a drop of water and cannot obtain it but it is light in thy Goshen while darknesse with others Doth not this preventing mercy melt thy soul Art thou not made of brasse and iron if thy preservation from the miseries of others especially the damnable and sinfull wayes do not exceedingly move thee How canst thou carry such live coales in thy bosome as these thoughts are and not be wholly inflamed with them 3. Acknowledge this likewise That whatsoever God in justice might inflict upon thee and yet doth not therein is also preventing mercy It may amaze us to consider what objects of wrath and examples of Gods vengeance there have been in the world Cain was in the beginning of the world God made him like an Anatomy-lecture for all succeeding evil men to beware of his impieties Pharaoh also God saith of him For this cause have I raised thee up or as some contend I have kept thee alive in the midst of those many judgements that destroyed round about him Rom. 9. 17. Exod. 9. 16. Now let any thankfull godly heart meditate on these Histories Consider these examples Why wast not thou a Cain thou a Pharaoh Why should not God make thee an example of his wrath to be a pillar of salt to season others as well as others are to thee Oh the depths of this preventing mercy how incomprehensible and unsearchable are they Must not this astonish thee to think that whatsoever God in the way of wrath hath done to any man in the world the same God might have done to thee and no more have wronged thee than he did them Account this therefore upon the riches of his mercy that these things have not come upon thee Look upon all such mercies as priviledges and exemptions God doth otherwise with thee than many others he punisheth their sins he animadverteth their iniquities they are howling under his anger and thou art preserved It is true God is no accepter of persons and therefore Cain cannot expostulate with God why he did not make him Abel nor can Pharaoh complain of God because he was not David nor yet can Judas find fault with the Lord because he was not Peter because as Aquinas observeth well in things of meer bounty and liberality there cannot be any accepting of persons seeing that if no munificence to any at all were extended there was no cause of grievance And thus it is wholly with God he is no debtor nor obliged in any way of justice to man and therefore if he do what he pleaseth with his own Shall thy eye be evil because he is good So that God must needs be justified by these different dispensations onely thou whom the Lord doth thus spare and exempt from his way of wrath look upon it as so much mercy as if God had said to the damned in hell as he did to Lazarus in the grave Come forth 4. Not onely whatsoever God doth in a way of justice but also in a providential way which we call chance bring upon others and not upon thee this also is a preventing mercy We reade that if a man were cutting a tree and the Axes head fall off and kill another it is said The Lord delivered that man into his hand Exod. 21. 13. compared with Deut. 13. 19. Although to man there be such a thing as contingency and casualty such sad things fall out many times that no wisdom of man could fore-see yet in respect both of Gods knowledge and providence no thing is uncertain to God and therefore those casual things are as much under Gods providence as necessary things What can be more inconsiderable than an hair Yet not one of these fals from the head without Gods will This being so let a godly man but think with himself How many casual murders how many sudden and unexpected deaths have many met withall in the world What sad changes have been made in families in relations by some accidents that were never thought of yea it may be the like never fall out again Now then cast up thy accounts ô child of God see how much is owing to God in this very particular Count every such preventing mercy as much as a positive one 5. Whatsoever the frailty imbecillity and weaknesse of man would cast him into yet God keepeth thee from know this is a preventing mercy Man is such a poor infirm creature so many things are requisite to keep up life that we may wonder every man who goeth from home alive is not brought home dead at night How is it that this candle under so many puffs of wind is not extinguished How cometh this spark of fire to be kept in a sea of water So that thou mayest justly account every dayes life a resurrection from the dead Had man no other keeper or preserver than himself both in temporals and spirituals every moment he would die both in soul and body Say then O Lord my heart is affected my soul suffers violence within me If I had the tongue of men and Angels I could not exalt thy mercy according to the nature of it I look upon my self as brought out of the grave yea brought out of hell many times a day The Papists have an opinion about the Virgin Mary That she was borne in no original sinne nor ever committed any actual sinne and therefore say they when she called Christ her Redeemer that is by way of preservation not that she was actually redeemed from sinne but would necessarily have been if Christ had not preserved her This is an absurd and a foolish opinion Onely in the general we may say That Christ as he is a Redeemer to his people by actual deliverance so also by preservation Christ is a Saviour in that he preserveth thee from the sinnes thou wouldest have committed as well as those thou hast committed Yea all those iniquities thy heart thy temptations would have carried thee unto if God had not prevented thou art to blesse God for as well as the pardon of those sinnes actually committed by thee Fill thy soul therefore with the meditation of these things Say Lord what I am is a mercy what I am not is a mercy The removing of evil is a mercy the keeping of it off is likewise a mercy SERM. LXXVI Of the Necessity of Gods
continuing his Mercies to us as well as his conferring Mercies upon us 2 COR. 1. 10. And doth deliver THe Apostle having thankfully acknowledged the goodness of God to him in what was past he cometh to celebrate what was for the present for we see in this Verse the goodness of God extending it self to all differences of times If God should but once help us but once deliver us we should immediately fall into utter destruction Therefore the Apostle observeth that the mercies of God are chained together God doth not only begin to do good but he continueth it Hence he addeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and doth deliver Indeed Beza speaketh of the Syriack Interpreter as not reading this passage and also some Coppies and therefore addeth Fortassis hoc redundat it may be this is superfluous Chrysostome also taketh no notice of it but it being so generally received in most Copies and the Apostle nameing the past and future time it is likely he would also celebrate the goodness of God which he did injoy for the present for if the Lord did not continually deliver all our former deliverances would do us no good The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is observed by Varinus to be customarily used in Homer for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to keep keeping being a kind of deliverance Hesychius renders it by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but the most eminent and principall is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to save and hence in the Scripture Christ who is the Sauiour is called Rom. 11. 26. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 out of Sion shall come the deliverer Now when Paul speaketh thus in the present tense he doth deliver it supposeth that that as he was as yet in troubles as he saith We suffer even to this present hour 1 Cor. 4. 11. Paul needeth deliverance continually because he is in troubles continually though happily for the present they were not so great as those he formerly conflicted with Again In nameing the present tense he implyeth That if God did not daily keep him the same or the like decumane waves would overwhelme him But lastly With which sense I close this signifieth that it is not enough for God to vouchsafe mercies once to his people unless he continue to do so all the day long From whence observe That Gods continuing of his mercies is as necessary as his first bestowing of them If the Lord should deliver us from any evill and afterwards leave us to our own strength and wisedome to preserve our selves how inevitable would our ruine be Therefore we must turne this Text into Prayer O Lord thou who hast delivered still deliver go on and continue thy helping hand To illustrate this let us consider 1. In what particulars this word in the Text is used in the holy Scriptures for we are apt to look only to bodily deliverances to externall mercies Whereas we shall find a soul deliverance and spirituall deliverance principally spoken of in Gods word and for which Christ is called the deliverer so that the consideration of this should raise us up into spirituall and heavenly Meditations And 1. For a bodily deliverance This Paul speaketh off 2 Tim. 4. 17. I was delivered 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from the mouth of the Lion a Lion and the mouth of the Lion he was in the very mouth little hope of salvation When the danger is so extreame whether he meant it particularly of Nero or whether by that he would allegorically express some eminent danger to be sure he meaneth Gods helping hand and that in bodily misery Thus also Paul 2 Tim. 3. 11 enumerating severall persecutions he concludeth but out of them all God delivered me Although therefore spirituall evils are judged by the godly the greatest evills and spirituall deliverances the greatest deliverances yet the godly being men consisting of flesh and blood they also are sensible of externall evils and thereupon do greatly need Gods mercies towards them in their outward deliverances Davids Psalmes do for the most part glorifie and praise God in respect of temporall deliverances and therefore such Psalmes have the most powerfull influence and do most affect the heart when we come to be in the same dangers and feares with him so that in all our outward deliverances we are to acknowledg God only not our own wisedome or our own power Not unto us Lord but unto thy name be all glory given 2. There is also a spirituall deliverance the Scripture mentioneth and this ought diligently to be headed by us 1. There is Christs sperituall deliverance of us 1 Thess 1. 10. in respect of the wrath and vengeance to come we are there said to wait for Jesus which deliuered us from the wrath to come What is that wrath to come even the day of judgement wherein God will be avenged upon all impenitent wicked men adjudging them to those externall torments prepared for the Devill and his Angels Oh how little do men think of the wrath to come so they may enjoy their present pleasures their present lusts and advantages they never remember what wrath is to come for all this Oh let the prophane man say to his soul in the midst of all jollities well for all this there is wrath to come put not this out of your mind day and night but to the godly the Apostle saith he hath delivered us from this wrath to come We may truly say with Agag The bitterness of death is over yea the bitterness of Hell and damnation is over Oh what an unspeakeable deliverance is this who art thou that God should deliver thee from that wrath which consumeth so many thousands how can the believing soul ever let this mercy slip out of his mind When others shall hear that dreadfull sentence depart ye cursed into everlasting fire then shall they be called to inherit everlasting glory Though now for the present for want of saith those future things are not realized to us Yet at that great day when we shall see all these terrible things transacted before our eyes Oh the thoughts of heart that then will work in us what outrages to Mountains and Hils if possible to save them from this wrath The godly are said to be already delivered from it because Christ hath purchased their deliverance and they have right thereunto by the promise of God so that they are as firmely to conclude of it as if it were already done Even as we are said to sit already in heavenly places with Christ 2. There is a spirituall deliverance from the Bower of sinne and Satan We are by nature captives and slaves unto him we are in bondage to every lust and we greedily fullfill the desires of our own corrupt hearts But by Christ we obtain a deliverance we are set free faom the power our former sinnes had over us Col. 1. 13. Who hath delivered us from the power of darknesse and translated us into the kingdome of
though it be thy duty to humble thy self for sinne to confess and bewail thy iniquities yet it is also a duty To rejoyce in the Lord alwayes and till the heart be fitted by this joy thou canst nor bless God with that hearty affection as thou oughtst to do Psal 103. David saith Blesse the Lord O my soul and all within thee praise his holy Name All within thee You see to praise God is heart-work as well as lip-work all within us must move and be affected Thy heart cannot boil over as the Psalmist sometimes expresseth it unless this fire of joy doth inflame it Oh then know that a grieving disquieted soul cannot bless God it hinders you from that duty which the Apostle presseth Col. 3. 16. Admonishing one another in Psalms and hymns and spiritual songs singing with grace in your hearts What an Heaven is such an heart where there are these spiritual hymns and psalms But alas how often is thy heart like an howling wilderness where the cries and dolefull sounds of unbelieving and distrustfull fears do torment thee Sixthly To blesse God there is required faith and a resting of the soul upon God as a reconciled Father Alas can the damned in hell bless God Could Cain or Judas bless God By no means because there is no faith there is no resting upon God as a Father Hence you see the Apostle addeth The Father of our Lord Jesus Christ and the Father of all mercies To cursed and condemned sinners God is not a Father of mercies but of vengeance and fury a God of dreadfull judgments who is said to be angry with the wicked all the day long Hence David doth so often in the Psalms exercise those appropriating and applying acts of faith My God and my Tower my strong help and defence It was his faith that made him so thankfull For what is it to hear of Christ and all spiritual mercies by him if faith doth not apply them and make them my own And then we are stirred up to give God thanks for them insomuch that faith hath the greatest influence into our thankfulness Seventhly Faith of adherence is not enough to make the heart so throughly and affectionately thankefull as it should be unlesse also there be as some call it faith of evidence or a good and true perswasion that God is our God It 's the reflecting acts of the soul whereby it knoweth and is assured that God hath pardoned my sinne and hath forgiveth my iniquities that are like oil to the lamp of this duty David in some Psalms dependeth upon God and so many times the choisest of Gods servants they are supported to rest on him to build their hopes on Christ but then wanting this assurance not feeling this love of God shed abroad in their souls hence they are not fervent and zealous in these duties of blessing and thanksgiving as they ought to be Do you not see many of Gods people more forward to duties of humiliation and mourning more attending to self-debasement and self-abhorrency then they are to faith joy and blessing of God the one they are constantly in the other unless provoked and forced as it were they seldom accomplish Now this ought not to be so we are to rejoyce as well as tremble we are to put both together we are to bless God for pardon of sinne as well as confess sinne we are to rejoyce in giving of thanks as well as to humble our souls in acknowledging of our sinfulness Thou often saist Lord pity me Lord shew mercy to me but how seldom dost thou say O Lord I bless thee For thy mercy endureth for ever My heart hath been full of sorrow for sinne and now it is full of joy for the pardon of it I have prayed that my corruptions may be subdued and I bless God that prayer is graciously answered If you winne a mercy by prayer and do not wear it by praise you greatly offend God SERM. XXX Of Praising God and that for all but especially for spiritual Mercies 2 COR. 1. 3. Blessed be God even the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ c. FRom the method that Paul useth here and in the beginning of most of his other Epistles we have observed the Duty that lieth upon all the people of God to bē carefull and conscientious in this duty of blessing and praising of God which is as the legal ointment for the High-priest compounded of choice and sweet ingredients It 's an Angelical work to blesse God There remain further particulars that are constituent of this comfortable and profitable duty As First The heart that is duly fitted to praise God though it be thankefull for every mercy even the least mercy yet it keeps an order in its thankesgiving according to the dignity of its objects so that it praiseth God chiefly and principally for spiritual mercies and then secondarily for temporal mercies And this argueth the difficulty of this duty and that also only the regenerate and spiritual man can in a Scripture-way blesse God for he only doth preferre heavenly things above earthly When the Psalmist had spoken of outward mercies to a people Psal 144. 12 13 15. great mercies in sons and daughters rich abundance and plenty he corrects all at last Happy is that people that is in such a case yea happy is that people whose God is the Lord. So that you see all the outward desirable mercies that are are but in a subordination to Gods favour When thou art breaking forth after this manner I bless God for my children for my health for my outward contents Oh but above all Lord that I have any spiritual mercy that thou hast loved my soul converted me to thy self saved me from the evil wayes of the world in this my soul is overwhelmed So then as we see it is in matter of Petition Seek ye first the Kingdom of Heaven Thus it is also in Thanksgiving whatsoever heavenly mercy God hath bestowed on thee bless God for that in the first place Thus the Apostle doth praise God in a most divine manner Eph. 1. 3. Blessed be God who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in Christ Insomuch that this may be a good Touchstone of the truth of grace in thee whether thy soul be most affected and enlarged towards God for soul-mercies that thou canst truly say O Lord in that thou hast made me in a saving manner to know thee in that thou hast revealed thy Son to me I do more rejoyce in this and bless thee for it then if thou hadst given me all the glory of the world Doest thou see a natural worldly man boast in his riches in his birth in his greatness above others and knoweth nothing at all of Gods favour and spiritual mercy to his soul This is like a beast that is crowned with Garlands but yet prepared for the slaughter Canst thou say O Lord I judge all the outward mercies I have to be but husks and empty
our works and giving all to the grace of God who worketh according to his own purpose and will Oh what coals of fire will this be in thy bosome To think why doth God do this to me What moveth him Is God necessitated to it Can he not do otherwise Would he be unjust if he did it not And this further will be aggravated when we consider the mercy comparatively with others that want such if for spiritual mercies we compare them with the damned Angels that are utterly cut off from the least crum of any spiritual mercy though so noble and excellent creatures may not this astonish thee And if thou sayest These are not of the same nature with thee How many are there of the same flesh and bloud in the same vicinity where thou livest of the fame calling and profession yea of the same parentage and yet they are forsaken by God and left to their natural deserts whereas he hath pitched his favour upon thee to justifie sanctifie and at last to glorifie thee Certainly thou art a stock and a stone if such discriminating mercy as this doth not affectionately possess thee In the last place The universality of the mercies thou enjoyest will much heighten in the consideration of them All that thou seest thou hearest thou eatest thou feelest yea thou thinkest and apprehendest is a mercy There is nothing within thee without thee or about thee but it is a mercy To hear is a mercy to see is a mercy to think without madness and distraction is a mercy Every thing that is not hell is a mercy to thee All the creatures as Psal 8. the Sunne the Sturres the beasts of the field are wholly mercies if then a man set himself to meditation after this manner will he not find the goodness of God like Ezekiels waters To ascend higher and higher till they come over his head But to finish at last this Subject take notice of the encouragements to this duty of a thankful blessing and praising soul that so if thy heart at last be throughly raised up to this duty thou mayest praise God for this truth that provoketh thee to praise him And First The more thou blessest God the more wilt thou have cause to blesse him For to the thankfull heart God multiplieth his mercies as many times because thou doest not take notice of his goodness to thee or lookest upon his mercies as a debt to thee or thou takest the mercies God hath given thee and usest them as weapons against him therefore he taketh away thy mercies from thee to make thee prize them the more whereas to the soul that taketh every mercy as the hen every drop of water and immediately looks up to Heaven that will take up every fragment that nothing be lost As thou blessest God declaratively God will bless thee really Christ will bless thee as he did those few loaves by multiplying of them Secondly Consider this is all thou canst do to God for all his several mercies What doth God require of thee after all that he hath done for thy soul and body Is it any thing else but to magnifie his name to give him the glory of it And this doth not at all adde unto the greatness of God he is not made the more perfect and blessed in himself by all the glory thou givest to him So that indeed it is the greatest glory that thou art capable of that God will accept of blessing from thee that he will own praises out of thy mouth that he doth not rebuke thee as Christ did the Devils when they confessed He was the Son of the living God Thirdly This blessing and praising of God will keep thee in a joyfull active and fruitfull way Those that sing at their work dispatch it with greater facility And thus it is the soul filled with cordial thankfulness to God doth more for God then many others who are clogged with dejecting and discouraging thoughts See whether the cause of all thy heaviness yea the prevailing of lusts and passions upon thee be not want of chearfull blessing of God The joy of the Lord is our strength Lastly Consider the example of David how unwearied he is in this work never thinking that his soul doth enough herein and therefore because he cannot discharge this duty to his desire he calls upon all the creatures of the world almost to help him therein yea the very Ice and Snow and such inanimate creatures how much more Angels and men must joyn with him to praise God In Austin's time some were named Deo gratias certainly we should so abound in this duty that it may be truly said unto God as Psal 22. Thou inhabitest the praises of Israel SERM. XXXI How Christ is the Sonne of God And how the consideration thereof is the foundation of all a Christians comfort 2 COR. 1. 3. Blessed be God even the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ THe Duty of Blessing with the Object of it being dispatched let us now come to that Amplification and Illustration which the Apostle ufeth in describing of it And The first is From a personal and relative respect The Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Even the Father 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That particle is by way of interpretation and explication What he meaneth by God viz. That he doth not take the word as it is often absolutely for the essence of the Divine Nature as common to the three Persons but relatively and in the distinct personality of the first Person and therefore said to be The Father of our Lord Jesus Christ For the particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Stephanus observeth may be rendred by Et sed tunc etiam c. as the subject matter requireth The Apostle doth in other places delight to use this expression Rom. 15. 6. 2 Cor. 11. 31. Ephes 3. 14. In which places the Apostle seemeth with much affection and cordial enlargement to make mention of this relative Title in God the Father for this is the treasure of our comfort herein are all our mercies contained that we and Christ have the same Father he by Nature and we by Grace So that we are not to consider of Gods paternal relation to Christ as a speculative doctrinal truth but as practical and the ground of all consolation to us Hence John 20. 17. Christ by way of comfort tells them He ascends to his Father and their Father And indeed without Christ we cannot behold him as a Father but as a severe and dreadfull Judge Only when we say this Doctrine of the Fathers relation to Christ a Sonne is so full of comfort you must not understand it absolutely and nakedly as the second Person in the Trinity but as assuming the humane Nature into a Personal Subsistency Therefore he saith The Father of Jesus Christ which is the description of his Person in both his Natures So that we must not look upon the Sonne as the second Person alone in
is implied The real and lively working of it The father though he pity his child yet cannot give him the mercy of health much less the mercy of grace Ministers though they be spiritual Fathers they can only pray for mercy preach of mercy but to give you pardon of sinne to give you comfort of conscience and assurance that they cannot do but God is the Father of these mercies he can give joy to the soul and neither Devil or sinne can discomfort As the whole creation came out of the womb of nothing at first when God said Let there be light immediately there was light and as God is called The Father of rain Job 38. 28. because he can open the bottles of Heaven and refresh the parched earth when he pleaseth so also he is the Father of mercies because he can turn thy darkness into light thy hell into Heaven yea he doth it that so what many Sermons many Ordinances could not do that God suddenly and insuperably doth he comforts irresistibly as well as converts irresistibly But of this more in the next property viz. A God of all consolation Fifthly In that he is the Father of mercies there is implied That it 's onely from himself that he pitieth us that he hath something within him to provoke to compassion when we have enough to provoke him And this is represented in that precious Parable of the Prodigal sonne returning to his Father Though there was cause enough from the sonne to alienate the Father to upbraid him with his prodigality and rebellion saying Whence come you Where are all the goods I gave you Yet for all that The Father runneth to meet him kisseth and imbraceth him who might have chastized him receiving him with as much readiness as if he had never been such a prodigal sonne but what moved him all this while The affection of a Father It 's not then for the godly soul to be poring and puzling it self alwayes what is there in me that may make God shew mercy to me What have I What find I in me that may prevail with God Oh foolish and unwise Christian Think rather what is in God to love thee to pity thee I will go to my Father saith the Prodigal Though I have lost the obedience of a son yet he hath not the bowels of a Father the bowels of a Father are ready to beget him again Think what a fountain his goodness is to issue forth rivers of mercies So that it is with thee as some parched dry wilderness it hath no springs no streams to refresh it self with till clouds from above fall upon it Thus thy heart is scorched and even burning like hell till God give thee not a drop of water but Christs bloud to cool thy afflicted soul Thus you see what is in this a Father of mercies a Father In the second place what briefly is in the object a Father of mercies in the plural number and that implieth 1. That there is no mercy but it comes from God Every good and perfect gift is from him Jam. 1. For if so be any creature were the original of mercy though it be but the least as to that particular it would be the Father of mercy if the Sunne of it self were the highest cause of giving light to thee if it were not God that did cause this Sunne to shine on thee that Sunne would be the father of the mercy of light Although therefore God hath appointed natural causes moral causes yea and supernatural means of mercy and comfort to thee yet take heed of calling these Father Thy food would not be a mercy to thee thy house a mercy no thy senses thy understanding would not be a mercy to thee were it not for this Father of mercies So that wheresoever and whensoever thou meetest with any mercy look higher than the creature see an hand from Heaven giving it thee As Gerson a devout Papist speaketh of his Parents how that they to teach him while a child That every mercy was from God had a devise that from the roof of the chamber should be conveyed to him every apple or nut or such childish refreshments he desired but Christ himself Matth. 5. when he pressed against carefull distrustfull thoughts he saith Your heavenly Father knoweth what you want So that it is not thy own natural father that is a mercy to thee but thy Father in Heaven As that good man in Ecclesiastical History when they brought him news his father was dead Define blasphemias loqui pater eminens immortalis est Thus are we to call nothing a Father of mercy to us but God himself So that what our Saviour saith Mat. 23. 9. Call no man father on earth in respect of faith and obedience neither are we in respect of our mercies Oh but how difficult is it not to have other fathers of mercies besides him SERM. XXXIII Of the Multitude Variety Properties and Objects of Gods Mercies 2 COR. 1. 3. The Father of mercies VVE are further to explicate what is comprehended in this sweet and comfortable Attribute The Father of mercies We have already declared what is in the word Father and gave one instance what is in the word mercies The second thing comprized in it is the multitude of them he doth not say The Father of mercy but of mercies it is not one or two but mercies many mercies innumerable mercies that he is Father of Even as David doth sometimes call God The God of his salvations in the plural number because of the frequent and many deliverances God vouchsafed to him The Lord therefore is not straitned in mercy no more than in power but as nothing is impossible to him so every kind of mercy is easily producible by him The multitude of Gods mercies is that which David doth often mention Psal 106. 7 45. Psal 51. 1. And indeed were not these mercies many our sins would be more than they and exceed them in number David complaineth That his iniquities were more than the hairs of his head and yet at another time acknowledgeth that such were the benefits of God towards him that he is never able to reckon them up We cannot then come and say to God about mercies as Esau did to his father about blessings Hast thou but one blessing O my father Hast thou but one mercy Woe would be to us if God had not multitude of mercies for we have multitude of sins and miseries Oh then let the broken humble heart who groaneth under this that he hath many sins they are not one or two but many yea the multitudes of them are like so many locusts and caterpillars in Egypt he cannot look this way or that way but sinne doth compasse him about Let such remember that there are more mercies for them then sins against them If thou hast multitude of sins God hath multitude of mercies to cover them so as thou doest not cover them but confess and bewail
thine He that could immediately be avenged on them he that could command legions of Devils to drag them to hell presently yet with much patience suffereth them God is so patient that as Tertullian Ipsa sibi detrahit ●●de pat His patience detracteth from him he seemeth to be a loser by it For people sinne the more obstinately and wilfully because they meet with impunity Because vengeance is not speedily executed therefore the heart of the wicked is encouraged to evil Eccles 8. 11. It is true indeed if we speak properly we cannot attribute the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to God as if that were an attribute in him The Scripture useth other words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but never 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because God being most absolutely blessed and happy in himself he cannot be under any misery So as to be said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be patient under it neither can God be said to pati to suffer in a passive sense yet his goodness his forbearance these are called patience And from the patience of God we may be encouraged to a conformity thereunto Should God be as impatient of thee should he as little endure thy failings as thou canst his dispensations thou hadst been with Dives calling for a drop of water long before this time and not able to partake of it Christ also is a wonderfull examplar cause of patience for him to lay aside the manifestation of his glory to be born of a Virgin to be exposed to such an ignominious death in all which he did seem as Tertullian expresseth it Contumeliosus sibiipsi Injurious and reproachfull to himself which made the Marcionites say He had only a phantastical body thinking it a reproachfull and dishonourable thing to him to have a true real body of the Virgin Mary But this exinanition and emptying of himself doth the more commend and make his patience illustrious Hence 1 Pet. 2. 23. and in other places Christ is commended as a patern to us of patience in all our sufferings and certain never may we more shame and abhorre our selves for all our repining and impatient workings of soul then when we set Christ before our eyes he was as a sheep in the hands of the shearer that opened not his mouth Yet how much did he suffer both from God and man and that without any cause in respect of himself though justly in respect of Gods Covenant with him as our Surety Now though all this was for us enemies to him such who would contemn his love and be ready to crucifie him over and over again yet in these great agonies and unspeakable sufferings he is not impatient Thus we have heard of a patience greater than that of Job even of Christ himself and let his patience shame thee out of thy impatience SERM LIV. Motives exciting us to a patient Submission unto God under all the Afflictions he layes upon us 2 COR. 1. 6. Which is effectual in enduring of the same sufferings which we also suffer WE are yet treating on the manner How the Salvation of believers is promoted by their sufferings which is said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In enduring or in patience in a patient enduring It is not my purpose I told you to enlarge my self according as this Subject of patience might require Some things have been spoken to declare the nature of it I shall adde at this time some motives and encouragements to be patient under the most extream sufferings we are put upon And First This consideration may greatly calm and compose our spirits If we sensibly affect our selves with what we have deserved All-impatiency and turbulency of heart ariseth because we are not throughly humbled under our own guilt and unworthinesse for if this were taken notice of we would wonder why dogs should have childrens bread why we should have the least drop of mercy who deserve the deluge of Gods wrath Doest thou at any time find repinings and frettings of heart within thee Do thou presently possesse thy soul with thy wretchednesse and unworthinesse Say Who am I Lord that it is no worse This is not hell nor everlasting damnation that I am in and yet I have a thousand times over deserved that It was this that quieted David's heart under that sour affliction he conflicted with when Absolom had made such a strong conspiracy against him 2 Sam. 16. 11. when Shimei cursed him with such a grievous curse that Abishai had no patience to bear it Why should this dead dog curse my Lord the King saith he let me go and take off his head Who but a David would have been avenged But what tameth Davids heart Let him alone let him curse for the Lord hath bidden him David knew that it was for his sins that Absolom rebelled Shimei cursed and therefore he dare not grudge nor mutter So 2 Sam. 15. 26. while David is compassed about with the same difficulties see how soft his heart is ready to receive any impression But if he say I have no delight in him behold here I am let him do to me as seemeth good to him Thus David's heart is like the vessel cast into the fire it may be put into any form or fashion and what is the reason of it A true humbled spirit under all its unworthinesse Thus the Church Lament 3. 22. though she be in such desolations that she cals to all the passengers who come by to see if there were ever any affliction like hers yet saith she It is of the Lords mercies that we are not consumed As wretched as we are we might be worse It is the Lords mercy that we do but taste of his cup of wrath that we do not drink up the dregs Here is a good patern to write after Let thy troubles and exercises be like Nebuchadnezzars furnace heated seven times hotter then ordinary yet thou wilt have cause to say if thou regard thy own guilt It is of the Lords mercy that it is no worse And vers 39. Wherefore doth a living man complain a man for the punishment of his sins Art thou a living man not a damned man and doest thou complain Think what if thy condition were like those that are chained up in everlasting darkness gnashing their teeth and roaring out for the endlesse torments that are upon them Wouldst thou not then judge this condition thou art in though afflicted and troublesome to be a mercy Certainly if the damned in hell are bound to acknowledge the justice of God and to give him the glory thereof though it be in their confusion How much rather art thou bound to give God the glory of all his Attributes in these dispensations to thee though bitter to flesh and blood Take heed then of being like Jonah of saying Thou doest well to be angry It is an ease to pour forth thy complaints For what doth God do thee any wrong Doth not the
there be any afflicted with bitterness as I am And is not this thy case Is not thy house a house of mourning for dead fathers or dead husbands as well as others Is not all this from the preventing mercy of God The second chanel in which these mercies may be discovered is In spiritual things And certainly here we may cry out also That they are more than can be numbred For what sinne what temptations what terrours and troubles of heart what wounds and gashes of soul do any of the godly fall into and thou mayest not also be plunged into the same Who maketh thee to differ Why must not the branch ingraffed in insult over that which is broken off but take heed and tremble Is it not because God may break off those also Oh then with bleeding and melting hearts acknowledge and say O Lord what would have become of me if left to such a passion if forsaken in such a temptation Why is it that I have not the guilt the condemnation that others lie under Is it not because thy goodness did keep me Even as David was preserved in respect of that busines● of the men of Keilah he asketh of God Whether they would deliver him into Saul's hands and God telleth him they would certainly do it thereupon David will not commit himself to them It is thus often in respect of thy soul if thou go to such a place if thou art put into such a temptation if placed in such a condition or relation God knoweth that this would prove a snare to thee it would be a ruine to thee Therefore the Lord doth so order by his mercy that thou shalt not come into that condition Divines have one kind of grace that they call Gratia praeveniens which doth prevent us it cometh upon us before we have any thought any will or desire about it As God said He was found of those that sought him not And truly such preventing grace we do not only need at our first conversion but all our life long as much as our daily bread Grace must prevent our mind our will our affections otherwise some sinne some lust or other would immediately fasten upon us Let then the godly soul remember what a deep and vast ocean this is of preventing grace the bottome whereof thou canst never dive into As Paul said By the grace of God I am what I am so saith Austin he might have added By the grace of God I am not what I am not It 's the grace of God that thou art not a withered tree a barren wilderness It is the grace of God keepeth thee from Hypocrisie and from Apostasie what a sinner and evil wretch thou art not it is wholly by the grace of God Thirdly Although the godly do thus judge of preventing mercies as well as of positive mercies yet because we are apt to account of mercies by sense and feeling we have hence it is That the godly are exceedingly-forgetfull many times about preventing mercies It is often said We never prize a mercy till we want it How precious is health to a diseased man ease to a tormented man And so also we never account any evil grievous but while we feel it while it is upon our backs and thereupon we are most sensible of such mercies which do take off this burden from us Thus it is indeed because we judge of all things according to our sense but if we did let judgement work then the godly soul would be likewise greatly enlarged for the keeping of evil as well as removing of it The evil we never felt yet because ready to come upon us had not the mercy of God kept it off is affectionately taken notice of by that soul which delights to search out the works of God towards it The godly ought not be so bruitish as to be taught only by thorns or to be like the horse which must have alwayes the bit and bridle Preventing mercy is as real a mercy as a positive one God is as truly good in keeping of evil from thee as removing of it Shall God therefore lose such of his glory and honour because thou wilt judge only by sense Fourthly That therefore the children of God may know It is their duty to go further in the way of praise to God then usually they do Let them consider these ensuing rules concerning preventing mercies And 1. Perswade thy self of this That whatsoever evil thou hast deserved by thy sinnes and is not brought upon thee look upon this as a preventing mercy and be affected wit it as much as with any positive mercy And truly this very particular may be like a live coal from the Altar to warm and purifie thy heart For hast thou not deserved all the curses threatned in the Law As soon as ever as thou hast sinned may not the Law of God immediately challenge thee take thee by the throat and hale thee to hell Well if so consider this preventing mercy of God that keepeth thee from them Mayest thou not truly say remembring the deserts of thy sinne not onely the God who deliuereth from so great a death but also so great an hell and so great a damnation Were not thy heart like a clod of earth like a stone how greatly wouldst thou be affected in this particular saying It 's the Lords mercy I am not in the grave It 's the Lords mercy I am not roaring in hell for the Law curseth me I have transgressed that there is nothing keepeth off the execution of that dreadfull sentence but the meer mercy of God And therefore if thou wert dead and raised again if damned in hell and yet delivered out Would not thy mouth and heart be filled all over with blessing and praising of God Why not then when God keepeth thee out of this destruction every moment It 's observed as the demonstration of Gods great power and mercy that the waters of the sea being higher than the earth yet they are so checked and bounded by the power of God that they do not overflow the earth This is the meer preventing mercy of God Insomuch that Luther said The Inhabitants of the earth are as wonderfully preserved from destruction by the sea as the people of Israel were in their passage to Canaan when the waters stood like walls on both sides And thus it is in any mercy we enjoy if we consider what the Law threatens how that curseth what we have deserved It 's a wonder of wonders that every houre we doe not fall into hell Therefore if thou findest thy heart not affected with these preventing mercies lay this particular close to thy soul 2. Consider That whatsoever evil doth actually fall upon any other in the world and not on thee this is a preventing mercy Is another sick and not thou Is another poor not thou This is a privative mercy For what reason can there be given of thy difference from others but onely
for they have not returned to glorifie me It is love to our selves it 's a self-seeking that makes us pray but it would argue love to God and an honouring of him when we returne praises to him It is therefore the duties of Ministers to press you upon the duty of praising of God as well as of praying unto him Many are horribly negligent in both some are more often in prayer then they are in thanksgiving Whereas God is said to inhabit the praises of his people Psalm 22. 3. as well as he is the God that heareth prayers Psalm 65. 2. God dwelleth in the praises of Israel that is in or amongst Israel continually praising of him or else it is to shew that as a man dwelleth in his house constantly residing there so God is daily administring matter of praises to his people implying thereby that there is no time no place no condition wherein we ought not to bless and praise God Those many Psalmes which David made declare how necessary a duty it is and how much the people of God are to exercise themselves therein Hence it is that David professeth he will never intermit this duty as we are to pray without ceasing so to praise God without ceasing Psalm 145. 1 2. I will bless thy name for ever and ever I will bless thee every day See what an ardent affection David hath to this For although the Apostle James saith Is any man afflicted let him pray is any man merry let him sing Psalmes James 5. 13. implying thereby that there are speciall times wherein one duty is to be exercised more than another yet there is no time wherein the Lord doth not give his people occasion to give thanks to him That your hearts may be both rightly instructed in the manner of this duty and awed against all slothfullness therein take notice of these ensuing particulars 1. What is required to this Duty And 2. The Motives thereunto And First To praise God there is required an acknowledgement by faith that God and God alone is the Author of all the mercies both temporall and spirituall that we do enjoy Hence an Atheist can never be thankfull because he owneth no God the giver of mercies And the practicall Atheist who liveth as if there were no God he like the Swine eateth indeed upon the fruite that he findeth upon the ground but never looketh up to the tree from whence it falleth Now this practicall Atheisme doth raign every where and that causeth the universall ingratitude that is in the world men take these mercies as so many debts belonging to them They look upon them as the things of a naturall course not as the dispensations of a free and voluntary Agent even the great God who giveth them and denyeth them at his pleasure David therefore in his Psalmes doth so often magnifie God by many glorious Titles thereby professing that From God cometh every good and perfect gift Hence also the Apostle James Cap. 4. 15. maketh it the duty of every one in their daily resolutions to buy and sell or to go to such a place to say if the Lord will declaring hereby that it is from God that we are inabled to performe any naturall or civill action I also add that it must be an acknowledgment of God alone because in spirituall mercies many corrupt Teachers have divided the kingdome between Gods gracious power and mans mans free-will Therefore the Papists the Socinians the Arminians these do either in whole or in part destroy the very foundation of thanksgiving to God in respect of spirituall mercies especially in that whereby one man differs from another That which the Apostle doth so evidently attribute to God only 1 Cor. 4. 7. that they appropriate to themselves the good use of free-will or the improving of grace offered is made mans work and then certainly we are to glory more in our selves then in God But if we are to give God thankes for every morsell of bread we eate shall we not much rather for every spirituall mercy to the soul It was Tullies observation that though their Ancestors praised God for their prosperity and success yet they never did for their vertuous actions thinking that absurd as if unless they were not done by their own power there was no commendation due to them and too much of this Heathenish and Philosophicall leaven doth still soure the minds of many Learned men in the Church Know then so much as thou settest up a free-will beyond Scripture bounds so farre thou takest off from the duty of praising and blessing of God Besides we say God must be acknowledged in every mercy temporall and spirituall Thou that prayest God would give thee thy daily bread wilt thou not praise God when he doth it yet how sottish and brutish are many persons and Families when they go to meales and rise from meales and no thankes or praises are given to God should not the example of Christ move thee when he had but some loaves of Barly and a little Fish yet he blessed God before he did eate thereof How then cometh it about that there should be such unthankfull wretches that take their food and yet never thank God that giveth it Thou wouldst account that poore man a proud or unworthy person to whom thou shouldst give some food in his necessity and he never so much as open his mouth to give one word of thankfullness to thee Thou dealest more frowardly and wickedly with God And if for temporall mercies then much more for spirituall if thy meate thy drink thy rayment be Gods mercy much more is thy regeneration thy justification which do so far transcend the power of nature 2. To this duty of praising God is not only required These generall acts of faith whereby we own him for the Jehova and the Creator of Heaven and Earth but also those particular Acts whereby we do apply and appropriate him as our God in particular For it is this particular applying Act of faith that maketh the heart full of praise and thanksgivihg Therefore you may observe David in his Psalmes not only calling God a buckler a refuge a strong tower but his buckler his strong tower his God Neither can we be thankfull in spirituall mercies about pardon of sinne support in temptations till with Paul Gal. 2 we say Who loved us and gave himself for us and this is one reason why we urge the People to take heed of diffidence not to give way to distrust and doubtfull perplexities of soul because while these are predominant they cannot walk thankfully and give the glory that is due to him 3. Love to God Because he heareth our prayers will raise up the heart exceedingly to thanksgiving Psal 116. 1. I will love the Lord because he hath heard my supplications That God should hear the prayers of one so unworthy and polluted as thou art that God should do thee good who art so evill this freeness
there are sinfull and unjustifiable grounds of some persons who do not joyn themselves to any Church-society and that may be either from a Corrupt Opinions or a Corrupt Heart though they seldom be separated from one another First From a Corrupt Opinion As 1. Of those who call themselves Seekers confessing they cannot yet find a Church to which they may joy●… For they affirm That since the Apostles dayes there are no Churches and therefore till they can see Apostles Apostolical gifts and miracles with the like effusion of the holy Ghost upon persons they cannot own any Church But this is against those Texts of Scripture which speak of a perpetuity of the Ministry and the duty of receiving Sacraments till the coming of Christ which could not be if there were no Church 2. Another corrupt opinion is of those who call themselves high Attainers These make themselves above the Church-ordinances they need them not yea some Anabaptists in Germany made themselves above the Bible living wholly upon spiritual revelations and called those who would leave to the Scripture as a Rule Creaturistae as depending upon a creature But the Scripture and Ordinances are necessary to quicken grace in the most holy and there are none so spiritual but they need them daily to comfort or instruct them yet such have their publick Assemblies wherein they deliver their opinions to be received But if people ought to be above all Ministry and teaching then also above theirs And certainly if those places of being taught of God and having an unction which teacheth us all things be against our Ministry it is also against theirs 3. There may be a corrupt opinion which though it be not against Church-communion absolutely yet they judge it Arbitrary and not necessary Of this opinion Grotius seemed once to be for he is thought to be the Author of that Book which asserts Quod non semper communicandum per symbola and Rivet in his Dialysis against him chargeth this upon him that he was not a member of any Church acknowledging it a just hand of God upon him that at his death when a Minister was brought to him he was wholly sensless So that he who in his life time cared not for Church-communion could not have any benefit by a Minister of the Gospel at his death 4. The last corrupt opinion by which men may not joyn to a Church may be from a superstitious conceit whereby men thinking it impossible to have salvation in the world have imprisoned themselves as it were in Cells and holes of Rocks thereby to give themselves wholly to divine Contemplation Thus the Monks Eremites and Anchorites of old For though some of the most ancient are excused as being driven thereunto by persecution yet the latter seemed to be transported wholly with superstition and therefore in that they lived solely not coming to the publick Ordinances of God in a Church way it was not justifiable by Scripture Indeed if they took their times to come to publick Societies and receive Sacraments as Rivet affirmeth against Grotius Dialys pag. 106. pleading their example for being of no Church then they are to be excused à tanto though not à toto The second unlawfull ground of keeping from Communion with Church-assemblies is A prophane Atheistical disposition that look upon a Church and a Church-assembly as humane devices to keep men in awe or if they be not so eminently Atheistical yet their love to their lusts and pleasures to the world and contents thereof make them weary of the Sabbaths and publick Ordinances as those in Amos 8. 5. When will the Sabbath be over that we may set forth wheat to sell How many are there that comes as seldome as ever they can to these publick Assemblies and when they do come it 's but for custom and fashion not that they ever found any spiritual good or expect and desire any Therefore let the Use be of Instruction that as ye are not to rest in any Church forms or external Communion to think that the very bodily doing of them will save you So on the other side Take heed of voluntarily and wilfully neglecting the publick Assemblies How have the godly when banished and driven from them bewailed their misery whereas thou dost voluntarily absent thy self Think how it may lie upon thee at thy death when thou shalt remember the many Sabbaths the many Ordinances thou hast neglected and now if God would give thee but one day or one hour to make thy peace with him thou wouldst judge it a great mercy The second Observation is from the Universality All the Saints There are none so mean so inconsiderable but this Epistle is directed to them as well as the most eminent From whence observe That the soul of the poorest and meanest Saint is not to be neglected That as the rain falleth upon the least spire of grass as well as the choisest flowers so ought all ministerial planting and watering to be to the meanest plant in Christs garden as well as the chiefest Though Christian Religion doth not abolish civil Polity nor the distinctions and relations of Magistrate and Subject of Master and Servant but strictly enjoyneth their respective duties yet in respect of religious considerations all are but as one Thus the Apostle notably Gal. 3. 28. There is neither bond or free male or female but all are one mark that in Christ Christ looketh upon all as one man And certainly if Christ in shedding his bloud for his people had an equal respect to the meanest with the greatest he died for the godly servant as well as the godly master the godly poor man as well as the godly rich man Then it behoveth all Christians to imitate him in this Whosoever is a Saint though he be never so contemptible do thou own and imbrace such else we do not love the brotherhood we do not love a godly man because he is godly but because he is great or rich or may advantage thee in the world Paul will not except or leave out one of the Saints in all Acbaia SERM. XXII How Grace and Peace and such like spiritual Mercies and Priviledges are to be desired before any temporal Mercies whatsoever 2 COR. 1. 2. Grace be to you and Peace from God our Father and from the Lord Jesus Christ HItherto we have considered the Inscription we now come to the Salutation which is in these words and it containeth matter of prayer It is not any earthly or temporal mercy he prayeth for but what is heavenly and spiritual The Apostle Paul doth constantly use this Salutation only in both those Epistles to Timothy and Titus which were Church-officers he interposeth Mercy between Grace and Peace Calvin thinketh he putteth it in his Salutation to Timothy because of his dear affection and love to him but why should he do it to Titus also Certainly it ought to be considered that only to Church-officers he useth
least cranny in his soul wherein the least glimpse of Gods favour can approach unto him Thirdly Such are capable subjects of Gods grace that are affected thankefully with the least discoveries and manifestations of it to the soul The Sunne is not more welcome to the world than the grace of God to a broken contrite heart If then the soul come to taste of the sweetness of it both heart and mouth will overflow in the acknowledging of this grace And indeed therefore doth the Lord do all out of grace to us that as the Apostle saith We might be to the praise of the glory of his grace Ephes 1. 6. And that we should shew forth the praise of him who hath called us out of darkness into his marvellous light 1 Pet. 2. 9. So that there is nothing so comely and beautifull for a soul partaking of this grace as to be calling upon his soul and all within him to praise God Yea because he cannot do it enough to call upon all other creatures Angels and Saints that they would joyn with him in this work And certainly the dullness and negligence of the godly is much to be lamented in this very particular David discovered this when Psal 103. he cals upon his soul to blesse God and in other places Psal 18. 2. Awake psaltery and harp I my self will awake early Why then is it thus with thee that in temporal mercies and deliverances thou art so cordially sensible of them If God of weak and sick make thee healthfull if he recover thee from the gates of death if he bless thy outward estate so that thou art freed from the former streights and perplexities thou wert in If I say God do thus for thee thou lovest to take notice of it thou canst with tears and joy speak of Gods goodness to thee herein but for those great and unspeakable riches of his grace in calling of thee and justifying of thee in beginning of grace in thy heart these things thou dost not meditate of so affectionately as thou oughest to do How farre otheawise was it with Paul whose heart was like a fountain never dry but did alwayes stream forth abundantly in blessing of God for those spiritual mercies Certainly were this grace of God rightly considered by us it would put us into holy ravishments it would take us off from all worldly comforts or discontents The soul possessed with thankfull thoughts about this grace of God will be even in Heaven it self Indeed we should account this our meat and drink and our only blessedness Oh then abhorre thy self for not being ravished more with this grace of God to thee Say Lord what a stone what frost and ice am I yea worse than they for David calleth upon them to glorifie and praise God and they do it in their kind but I am forgetfull and dull in this blessed work which is the only duty to be done to all eternity It may be then thou feelest no more of this grace of God because thou are no more thankfull for the present enjoyments of it and it argueth thy heart not only too dull and sluggish but too earthly and worldly that thou dost not bless God in the first and chiefest place for the workings of his grace towards thee Lastly Such only are capable of the benefits of this grace who do not abuse it or turn it into occasion of sinne The Apostle Jude 4. complaineth of some who did turn the grace of God into wantonnesse And the Apostle Paul Rom. 6. 1. speaketh of some who encouraged themselves to sinne because of Gods grace Oh take heed of falling into this Libertinism and licentiousnesse As the swee● and comfortable showrs of April breed frogs and other vermine as well as pleasant flowers Thus the grace of God when falling into a broken humbled soul makes him more godly and holy but dropping on the wicked and carnal heart it pampereth him and nourisheth him the more in his sinnes How many spiders get poison out of these sweet flowers How many do encourage themselves in their prophaneness and go boldly on in their manifest impieties hardening themselves with the thoughts of Gods grace Thus whereas bitter pils the judgements of God would have consumed their lusts those sweet and comfortable things of Gods grace do more confirm them in their impieties Oh take heed of being wicked because God is gracious For thou wilt find though he be infinitely gracious and that to great sinners when repenting and humbling themselves yet to such as abuse and turn his grace into an occasion of sinne the hottest flames of his anger will fall upon such In the next place Consider some Rules how rightly to understand and judge of this grace of God And First You must know that there are those who extreamly erre about the grace of God and yet are directly opposite to one another The Pelagian the Papist Arminian and Secinian all these do more or lesse diminish and nullifie the grace of God For howsoever they have many plausible and specious distinctions by which they would evade to be thought enemies to Gods grace yet unless we give all to grace we make it no grace at all Austin's known assertion is very true Gratia non est gratia ullo modo nisi sit gratuita omni modo The Pelagians of old did deceive the Eastern Church by granting That all those were to be anathematized who did not hold the grace of God necessary to every good work And the Papists with the Arminians do carry it so speciously as if they indeed did set up grace more than their Adversaries Let not therefore every one that speaketh of grace be presently accounted Orthodox and to endure the Scripture-proof and trial Again on the other side there are Antinomians who do erre grievously though they only would be thought to admire free grace condemning all as Legal Preachers and of an Old Testament spirit that do not speak of grace as they do Now God is so gracious these tell us to his people That he seeth no sinne in them that he doth not afflict for sinne They tell us of such a grace That God looketh upon us as if we were Christ himself and that he doth this from all eternity That Paul before his conversion while a persecuter and blasphemer was as much in the love and grace of God as after his conversion That the vilest and most wicked of men even while they are so are to receive Christ as a Saviour That neither sinnes or good works do at all marre or make our peace That faith justifieth only declaratively by manifesting unto us That God did from all eternity justifie us These and such like poisonous tenents they affirm and this they say is to preach free grace Thus you see the grace of God may be opposed on the right hand and on the left Therefore in the second place take this Rule That we must not exalt grace according to our own
we take Peace in the same sphere with Grace and as that did relate chiefly to spiritual things so also must this Peace in the Text. By it therefore is meant the fruit of Gods grace and favour viz. a quiet serene and calm joyfull frame of soul arising from the sense of Gods peace through Christ whereby we walk comfortably boldly and not daunted under sinne afflictions or death it self A most blessed and choice mercy it is putting a believer into an Heaven while he is on this earth his heart keeping as it were a perpetual Sabbath and rest within So that whensoever the godly find diffidence fears disquietness perplexities troubles and dejections of soul all this ariseth because this peace doth not prevail and keep all under in our hearts This 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this Peace and tranquillity of spirit some philosophers especially the Stoicks did greatly aim at and accounted it the chiefest good but being ignorant of Christ and faith in him they took the shadow of it for the substance Observe That peace from God and Christ is earnestly to be prayed for as a special and choice mercy To have an heart so evangelically affected through the apprehension of Gods love as a Father in Christ that as the young child can sleep sweetly and safely in its mothers arms So can we as boldly and comfortably by faith throw our selves into the bosom of our heavenly Father Oh why are there such tormenting fears such tumultuous conflicts such warres and confusions in thy soul when such a priviledge as this may be obtained at Gods hand But to direct you to this Peace which is a spiritual Philosophers 〈◊〉 turning all into gold if we have this peace then they are afflictions of peace exercises of peace yea death is peace then This quiets and composeth all Let us first take notice of the nature of it briefly And First This peace lieth in the favour and grace of God so that his anger and wrath because of sinne is wholly removed For where Gods wrath is upon a man where his face is set against him that man hath no peace Isa 57. 21. There is no peace saith my God to the wicked Therefore though wicked men are for a while in carnal jollity and in much security crying Peace peace to themselves as 1 Thess 5. 3. even then destruction shall suddenly surprize them The very Heathen could say of a wicked man That though he might be securus yet he was never tutus Though he might cast away all care and fear bidding his soul as Dives to take its ease yet he is never safe for in the midst of this security he heareth that dreadfull voice Thou fool this night thy soul shall be taken away Let then the wicked men tremble and quake like Belshazzar for they may see not one but many hand-writings not in a wall but in the word of God fore-telling them without repentance of their certain damnation This peace therefore begins first in Heaven and so descends into a mans heart God removeth his anger because of our sins he is become a gracious and reconciled Father and hence we have peace Therefore Rom. 5. 1. it is called Peace with God insomuch that if we had peace with all the Potentates of the world if we had peace with the world which yet Christs Disciples shall never have yet this is nothing to peace with God For how many have ventured to obtain outward peace as Spira and others by breaking this peace and thereupon have plunged themselves into a very Hell What peace can any in the world give thee if God cause his anger to break out against thee Secondly This peace as it doth consistin reconciliation with God so also it hath the sense and perswasion of this it brings a man to some comfortable knowledge and evidence of this For although Gods anger be removed our sins be forgiven and on Gods part all controversies are removed against us yet if we do not know this if we are not assured our hearts are us much troubled and disquieted as if God indeed were our adversary Hence it is that the Spirit of God is sent into our hearts enabling us to call God Abba Father For if we could not do so it would be as the Sunne though it casts forth glorious beams of light yet a blind man because he cannot see it it is all one as if it were midnight so unless the Spirit of God doth make thee to discern those gifts of the Spirit in thee as by the light of the Sunne we come to see the ●…e so also though God be our Father though we be his dear children yet if we are not assured of this still this peace is not in our hearts it must be therefore in Gods favour and our assurance of this faith Thirdly This peace therefore is not procured or wrought by our own strength If we would give ten thousand worlds when our hearts are seorched and burn like hell through the sense of Gods displeasure we are not able to refresh our souls with one drop of it That as all the men of the world are not able to make the Sunne arise if God forbid it Neither can the parched wilderness water it self till God prepare clouds to empty themselves upon it Thus it is with it ●…umble contrite heart praying groaning crying out for this blessed peace in soul Alas it cannot come till God command it Therefore he is so often called the God of peace Rom. 16 20. Heb. 13. 20. And peace is made the fruit of Gods Spirit Gal. 5. 22. Hence it is that the Apostle in this Text prayeth for it unto God as knowing the Corinthians can never have it unless it be given them from above This therefore should o●● us of our selves think not to have it by any works thou doest think not outward advantages can help then to it No it must be by a lowly humble dependance upon God Descendendo in Coelum ascenditur Fourthly As it is wrought by God so it is purchased by Christ our Mediatour For although he be also the efficient cause of peace called therefore Isai 9. The Prince of peace and The King of peace Heb. 7. 2. yet he is chiefly called our peace because by him our peace is purchased Ephes 2. 14. Colos 1. 20. Hence it was that upon Christs birth those Angels sang Glory be to God on High and peace on Earth good will towards men So that had it not been for Christ living and dying to remove the curse of the Law from us there had been no more hope of peace for us than the Devils and damned in Hell Though with Dives we had called but for a drop of water yet the gulph being not removed between God and us we could not have enjoyed it It 's then a peace through Christs bloud we have it at a very dear price Hence Isai 53. The chastisement of our peace is said to be upon him
fears and of all doubts they question their own sincerity and what Rock they are built upon hereupon they are pierced thorow with many wounding apprehensions and have no rest in their bones but when this peace from God doth begin to stirre in their hearts then all these fears vanish They see peace with God and remainders of corruption may stand together so long as they do not make provision for the flesh or give themselves up to sinne willingly but are captivated therein so long Gods favour and love is not removed from them This peace they now see is not bottomed upon a pure and perfect heart free from any evil at all for then no David nor Paul could have peace but from the grace of God through Christ mercifully forgiving those failings and imperfections which we are burdened with Lastly The godly mans peace is many times greatly interrupted from without because of the hatred and malice of the world But Christs peace is an excellent antidote against that also John 14. 27. John 16. 33. Christ there bequeaths his peace to them and from this ground Because in the world they shall have trouble Let the winds and clouds be never so impetuous yet they cannot molest the upper region that is above their reach So it is here Let men and Devils set themselves against the godly with all their rage and madness Let them revile them imprison them yea kill them yet they cannot take away their peace from them So that unless they could as Black would have done get God to curse his children All the curses and violent oppositions of the world are so farre from weakning that they rather increase and strengthen their peace Thus you see what large territories this peace of God hath that it doth extend it self into large dimensions And oh how blessed and happy is that man who hath this peace compassing him about in every respect This is not only Peace peace as Isa 26. 3. but three or four times Peace peace from every side from within and without Why then is not the true believer more folicitous to possess himself of this crown of mercies Thirdly This peace of God arising from Gods favour in Christ hath admirable and sovereign effects which may move us to the attainment thereof As 1. Where this peace of God is it will wonderfully compose and settle the soul This is the genuine and immediate consequent of Gods peace in the soul it putteth the whole soul into an excellent harmony There are not those waves and tumults those divisions and distractions of soul which many times do greatly perplex the godly Do we not see an universal want of this peace generally amongst believers Whence arise those troubles those concussions of soul Why doest thou need so often to chide and rebuke thy self saying Why art thou cast down O my soul and why art thou so disquieted within thee Do not all these things arise because thy heart is not at rest and quietness within thee The Heathens speak much of their Socrates because he was noted to be alwayes Eodem vultu of the same countenance if this were true it did not arise from this Christian peace but from some Stoical or other Philosophical principles which did speak much to this tranquillity of mind but yet pleased themselves with the shadow never enjoying the substance David doth notably express the effects of this peace Psal 48. I will both lay me down in peace and sleep because thou Lord alone makest me dwell in safety Likewise Psal 23. we have a large description of a serene and pacified mind without any dividing cares of soul As also Psal 112. 3. his Heart is fixed trusting in the Lord. Thus this peace of God keeps all quiet and subdueth all troublesome insurrections and motions of soul Hence Colos 3. 15. Phil. 4. 17. this peace of God is said to rule in our hearts and to keep our hearts as an Army Garison a Strong-hold so that none dare make any opposition or resistance Thus doth the peace of God it is of such sovereign dominion in our hearts that it keeps down unbelief and all unruly passions of soul Doe not then be a Magor-missabib to thy own self when God calleth thee to peace doe not thou set all at variance and discord within thy self 2. This peace of God worketh as a consequent from the former a gracious contentation of soul under all conditions and estates So that whatsoever befall him he is the Lapis quadratus he is built on a Rock nothing can overwhelm his peace grieved he may be sadded he may be because of some passages even from God against him yet his peace he is never to let go for that alone makes the soul contented Though his conditions alter and he is tossed up and down several wayes yet because of peace with God he can follow the Apostle Paul and though with disproportion say I know how to abound and how to want I can do all things through Christ that strengthens me Phil. 4. 12. Whereas if this peace of God be taken from the soul then is the heart of a man like one burning in an hot feaver tossing from one place to another hoping to find some ease but can obtain none 3. This peace of God filleth the heart with joy and boldnesse at the throne of grace For as when the Sunne ariseth the dark clouds they are scattered Thus when the peace of God doth shine into our souls then the heart is filled with joy in the holy Ghost 1 Pet. 1. 8. it is called unspeakable joy and full of glory Insomuch that such who live in this manner have Heaven and eternal life already begun in their souls It is not according to the Spirit of God that thou shouldst be heaping up sad thoughts against thy self Gods Spirit is a comforting Spirit as it doth all in us for holiness so also for consolation It is not Spiritus Calvinianus but Papisticus that may be truly called Melancholicus for the Calvinist Doctrine preacheth and presseth the assuring work of Gods Spirit to the soul the certainty of perseverance to such who have been partakers of the least true grace but Popish Doctrine and others commend doubtings deny certain perseverance of the true Saints and therefore upon this account as well as for other reasons they may be rejected because they tend to the utter overthrow of the consolation of Gods children Oh then know that a spiritual life is a life sutable to the Spirit of God is a comfortable glad walking as well as an holy and a sanctified one Lastly Where this peace from God is there is a greater incentive and quickning to all holinesse and godlinesse There the soul is carried out with more fervency and activity scruples and dejected thoughts they are like the taking off the Chariot-wheels there cannot be such improved godliness such zealous and laborious expressions of love and thankfulness to God as when this peace of
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ the Father of mercies and the God of all comfort THe Inscription hath been fully considered we proceed to the other parts of the Chapter which are 1. An Exordium 2. An Apologetical Narration against those calumnies that were charged upon him by the false Apostles This Text is part of the Exordium or his Introductory beginning to what matter he was delivering to them and it is by way of Doxclogie and Thanksgiving For the most part the Apostle begins his Epistles with cordial affectionate blessing and praising of God and that commonly for the gifts and graces which God had bestowed on them he writeth unto but here he blesseth God chiefly for those consolations and supports which he himself had from God and this he doth partly to give all glory and honour to God partly to animate and encourage all to suffer for Christ they would not be losers by it and partly to stop the mouths of his accusers when they should see that all the afflictions he underwent did turn to his and the Churches good Now in this Thanksgiving passage we may observe 1. The praise it self expressed in that word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Blessed 2. The Object of it God which is 1. Illustrated from his relative title to Christ The Father of our Lord Jesus Christ 2. From his Efficiency which is two-fold The Father of mercies 2. The God of all comfort So that this Text doth represent God in a most sweet comfortable and ravishing relation to us The Apostle stands as it were here upon Mount Gerizzim to bless the people of God we may here stand and see as it were the glory of God passe by It is not the God of all vengeance and fury It 's not the God terrible in his judgements that will not in any wise acquit the guilty but the Father of mercies and the God of all consolation Let then the troubled and grieved soul who looketh alwayes upon God as angry as ready to destroy bring with the widow its cruises and fill them with the pleasant oil that will runne out of this Text. Certainly if David say of Gods word in general That it 's sweeter than the honey or the honey-comb much more is it applicable to this verse I shall begin with the Praise it self in those words Blessed be God Paul you heard begins most of his Epistles in this manner and some have thought that all our prayers should begin with thanksgiving because the heart is hereby raised up sooner to Heaven The consideration of Gods love being like the fire that will put the soul into sweet distillations But certainly the method of prayer whether with confession first or thanksgiving is not commanded but left arbitrary Only this the soul must remember to be as diligent and carefull in praising of God as praying to God To open the word the Scripture speaks of a three-fold Blessing 1. Of Gods blessing of us 2. Of our blessing of God And these differ exceedingly For God blesseth us efficiently by exhibiting his mercies to us We bless God not by adding any good to him but declaratively only Gods benedicere is benefacere his words are works but our blessing as Aquinas on the place is only recognoscitium and expressivum an acknowledgment only and celebration of that goodness which God hath 3. There is mans blessing of man and that is two-fold either Charitativè Matth. 5. 44. which is to be done to our very enemies Psal 129. 8. Thus Job 31. 20. speaketh of it by way of comfort that the poor whom he had refreshed blessed him Or Potestativè and that is when Parents and Ministers such as are in Office and Power do bless their Inferiours and this God doth more solemnly ratifie and confirm Thus the Priests Numb 6. 23 24. were in a solemn manner to bless the people and in this sense the Apostle argueth The less is blessed of the better Heb. 7. 7. And because by blessing the greatness of a thing is set forth hence it is used sometimes for consecrating 1 Sam. 9. 13. Samuel is said to bless the Sacrifice So 1 Cor. 10. 15. The Cup of blessing which we bless Though we must not understand it of a Popish consecration although there 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may seem to be one thing And because those who did bless others did commonly come with presents and gifts hence it is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is used for gifts and the fruit of liberality 2 Cor. 9. 5 6. The Hebrew word to bless is observed by an Antiphrase to curse so it 's used three or four times in the beginning of Job and 1 King 21. Eustathius saith Aretius observeth also that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is sometimes used for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Heathens indeed had a superstition that they thought an ill omen in words hence was their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 expressing terrible things by gracefull names as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when they cursed so they called it Morbus sacer● But the Scripture doth not attend to that superstition It is for gravities sake that it useth such an expression Though a learned man maketh that phrase in Job to be a Metonymy of the consequent because those do sometimes depart from others to whom they used to wish well saying valere Afterwards that word came to be used for a renouncing of all former friendship so he thinketh the word to bless might signifie that is to renounce God and not own his worship more But come we to the Observation which is That to bless and praise God for all his mercies is a duty that the people of God ought to be carefull and diligent in This cordial hearty blessing of God is greatly neglected some are borne down with the sense of their sins and unworthiness Some are greatly bowed down under the several afflictions God exerciseth them with Others are devoured with the worldly cares and discontents of their soul So that it is a very rare thing to meet with a Christian that walks with such a chearfull humble and thankfull spirit that he studieth all the mercies of God to him and is not willing any fragment should perish As Flies stick always upon the rugged parts of the glass and fall from that which is smooth Thus even Gods own children if they have any affliction if they want but one mercy they would have this doth more trouble and torture them than the thousand mercies they have from God do refresh and revive them That therefore we may make conscience of this duty and be much in that we may as the Apostle enjoyneth Col. 3. 17. In all things whether in word or deed be giving thanks to God Let us consider how much goeth to make a thankfull spirit what will enable us that we shall not alwayes lie among the tombs as it were affright our selves with our own sad thoughts but entertain
comfortable and thankfull thoughts which shall constantly lodge in our souls And First To this duty of blessing of God there is required as the foundation stone A deep sense of our own unworthiness of the least mercy that God bestoweth upon us That is excellent of Jacob Gen. 32. 10. I am lesse than all thy mercies A man that would shoot his arrow high draweth it backward first The lower we are in our own eyes the more unworthy in our own thoughts then a very crum of bread a very drop of water will be acknowledged a great mercy Arminian Popish and Socinian Doctrins do all hinder a man in his thankfulness because they do not in a Scripture way level the mountains of our hearts they leave something of our own still that we must secretly uphold our selves with When God gave the people of Israel Canaan Deut. 9 4. How zealously doth Moses endeavour to take them off from their own righteousness They must take heed that they have not the least thought in their hearts about their righteousness Oh then consider what is that Locust and Caterpillar which devoureth all the sweet fruit of thy praise and thy joy in God Is it not want of a true consideration how unworthy thou art Wouldst thou not call thy self beast for murmuring and grieving under any burden God layeth upon thee if thou hadst a feeling of thy meanness and lowliness Those therefore who are constantly in a tender feeling and apprehension of their own unworthiness if God give them the least temporal mercy but especially if they have a drop of any spiritual mercy that the light of Gods countenance though but in glimpses shine upon them they cry out Who am I Lord and what am I that thou shouldst visit so unworthy a wretch Secondly He must not only be sensible of his unworthiness who would affectionately bless God at all times but he must also consider what wrath and vengeance he doth deserve Oh this would be like fire in thy bosom This would quickly cast out all those troublesom and disquiet thoughts What Oh my soul art thou disquieted for want of this or that What is thy own but hell and eternal torment Are any soul-soul-mercies are any body-body-mercies thy own Canst thou claim a right to them No the Law curseth thee because thou doest not continue in all things commanded so that thou mayest be cursed in soul in body at home and abroad Nothing but temporal spiritual and eternal curses might compass thee about Now then if when God might thus curse and damn thee he doth bless and pardon thee What joyfull songs should this fill thy heart and mouth with I have deserved death but behold life my merit is hell and damnation but the gift of God is grace and peace As a malefactor when thou mightst justly expect punishment behold God doth to thee as to Joseph who under expectation of punishment is raised up to the highest honour in the Kings Court Oh then awe thy soul saying Why am I so foolish and bru●●●sh I am not in hell I am not howling in those eternal flames which I might not be kept a moment from and yet how impatient and unquiet is my heart A full perswasion then of what we deserve will provoke the soul to a cordial blessing of God for every mercy Thirdly There is required the regeneration and renovation of the whole man As a wicked man cannot pray to God so neither can he praise God Therefore though natural men may have it often in their mouths they bless their good God and I praise my God yet to praise God requireth a principle of grace within a supernatural root as well as to pray to God Indeed they may externally sing Psalms and give praise to God even as they pray but all this while there is nothing at the root all is dead within Psal 147. 1. Praise is comely for the upright It 's a comely sutable thing for a man of an upright and gracious heart to bless God but for a carnal prophane man it is as unseemly as a pearl on the swines nose God is dishonoured and not pleased Oh then that this might awaken every natural man Thou canst neither pray to God or praise him Thou canst neither receive gifts from God aright or return praise to him aright So that this must be looked to as the principal and chief of all Hath God put his own image into me Hath God bestowed the life of grace upon me Then praise is seemly and comely for me Even amongst men the Rule is Laudari à laudat is laudabile est Fourthly To bless God and praise him there is required an heavenly raised frame of soul For though the principle of Regeneration be the foundation in every one whereby he is enabled to blesse God yet that is more remote and habitually only Hence it is that many of Gods children though in a state of grace yet are not in a praising thankfull temper they are as so many clods of earth they are not affected with Gods goodness their souls are not enlarged and therefore they mourn because they are such blocks and lumps of earth Therefore besides the fundamental principle of Regeneration there must be proxim and immediate dispositions which are as the whetting of the tool like the Cocks stirring of himself and clapping of his wings before he croweth and of all dispositions an heavenly heart is the most excellent Why is it that in Heaven the glorified Saints do spend all eternity in blessing and glorifying of God and are never weary of it Is it not because all is made perfectly heavenly within them If the earth though a dull and heavy element be at last transmuted into air or fire it loseth it's former gravity and dulness and ascends upwards Thus the soul when freed from the clogs and burdens of the earth doth with more ease and speed lift up it self to God The Lark all the while she sits on the ground scarce sings but when she riseth from the Earth and the higher and higher still she flieth the more sweetly and earnestly doth she sing Thus it is necessary if thou wilt really and daily bless and praise God then raise thy self above the Earth The nearer to Heaven thy heart comes the sweeter will thy meditations be the more joyfull will thy thoughts be Hence Fifthly Joy and gladnesse of heart is required to blesse God The Psalmist often calls to sing with joy And the Apostle Is any man merry let him sing Psalms Jam. 5. 13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they say cometh of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That heart which is filled with grief and sorrow is in no disposition to bless God As the strings of musical Instruments while wet and moist are not prepared to make any melodious sound To bless God with an heavy heart to praise God with a troubled disquieted soul is to contradict with our hearts what we say with our mouths Consider then that
shels in comparison of that Manna that spiritual favour I am made partaker of As therefore the spiritual man when in outward miseries and straights is not so much grieved under those outward calamities as because he hath sinned and God is offended So neither in outward mercies is the same gracious soul so much affected with the comforts it enjoyeth as that the light of Gods countenance doth shine upon him that he hath an evidence of propriety and interest in Christ this he would not lose for all the Kingdoms of the world Let us press this the more because even the most holy are apt to be affected more with sensible mercies than spiritual Nature teacheth them the one but Grace the other For as we are apt to desire temporal things above spiritual so also to be affected with and bless God for one more than another But take these few Motives to provoke thee to bless God for spiritual mercies which are of two sorts External as the means of grace and the Ordinances or Internal the inward sanctification and justification of our persons As 1. That if thou hadst more mercies than Solomon if thou hadst all thy soul can desire in these outward things yet if without spiritual mercies thou judgest thy condition is cursed and to be lamented Therefore Psal 4. when the natural persons of the world cried out Who will shew us any good David as knowing a better and more solid good prayeth God would lift up the light of his countenance upon him And therefore he that hath the least drop of grace is more bound to bless God then he that may have all the glory and plenty in the world Oh then why art thou not more sollicitous saying what is this wealth without Gods favor What is it to say this house is mine this estate is mine but am not able to say God is mine but if God doth evidence himself to thee then over-look all thy outward comforts put the Ecce the Selah upon what is spiritual This is like the Sunne which is farre above all the Starres It is this that makes all outward mercies mercies they are no wayes good to thee but snares and temptations to draw out thy sins So that thy condemnation in hell will be the hotter if thou doest not enjoy spiritual mercies with them 2. Be in the first place affected with spiritual mercies Because Christ shewed his love to thee most in these it was for these he died The Scripture doth exceedingly commend to us the love of Christ in his death Now what are the effects of Christs death Are they chiefly to make us rich great or honoured in this world No it is for remission of sinne it 's for holiness and power over the Devil Certainly if Christ died to purchase these for thee thou art very unthankfull if thy heart be not most inlarged to bless God for them 3. Spiritual mercies are the chiefest object of our praises Because these onely can truly satisfie the soul these only are a sound cause of rejoycing The heart of a man is never satisfied with temporal mercies but the more he drinketh of them the more thirsty still he is When Solomon hath made an experience of all his Motto is That they are vexation of spirit as well as vanity whereas the pardon of sinne and the Spirit of Christ working in us these afford uninterrupted causes of joy 4. The soul-mercies will abide for ever thou canst not lose thy title and interest in them but all these earthly comforts are as the flower which presently withereth thou hast them to day and they may be removed to morrow Be sure then that thy blessing of God keepeth that method which the nature of mercies doth require above all things Let thy soul melt with joy in blessing of God for what he hath done to thy soul Lastly Consideration remembring and fixed meditation upon the mercies of God is that which will greatly inflame the soul to give all glory and honour to him The heart is not easily and quickly put into a blessing frame there must be polishing and fashioning of it and there is no such way for this as true consideration When David calls upon himself so much to glorifie God this implieth that he found his soul dull heavy and unfit for that duty The heart will not boil over in meditation unless it be long upon this fire Psal 45. 1. David there calls his inditing the boyling or bubling of his heart we are apt to forget Gods mercies or when we do think of them they are but transistory and ambulatory It is Gods goodnesse or I bless God and there is all whereas when we bless God our souls should be raised up into divine inflammations we should be as Elijah who was carried up to Heaven in a Chariot of fire whereas the soul is at other times abridged or epitomized but in short characters in the praises of God it should be voluminous as you see David in Psalms 103 104 105 106 and 107. very large in the enumeration of all Gods benefits which intimateth That the soul ought to be extended in all its dimensions while it sets upon this work And certainly meditation is like the birds sitting on the egge not leaving it till it hath produced a live young one This will so often work upon the soul that at last there will be heavenly and supernatural life for several aggravations will the meditating heart find in every blessing it doth possess As 1. It will admire the power and strength of God in every mercy especially in soul-mercies That God should change such a stubborn heart as thine was That God should give thee eyes to see that hast been blind so long That God should give thee life who wast dead and putrifying in the grave of sinne This will make thee wonder at the glorious power of God Again The Wisdome of God if that be considered in every mercy this will also greatly inlarge to thankefulnesse Gods mercies are not only mercies in themselves but they come in such fit seasons they are at such times and opportunities that this maketh them double mercies and so some have observed this difference between blessing and praising of God Blessing of God is because of the goodnesse of the mercy Praising is for the wisdome and curious workmanship of God as it were in that mercy As if a friend who also was himself the maker of a curious Watch should bestow it upon you as a gift you would not only thank him for his love but praise his skill and art likewise Thus we are not only to consider the mercies God giveth us but the wisdome that God demonstrateth at that very time making every mercy to be with an aggravation Again Meditation will inflame by apprehending of Gods freenesse in every mercy and our unworthinesse We could do nothing that may provoke God especially this we are to aggravate in our spiritual mercies as Paul doth often excluding
sake and in his own Name but we are in Christs Name So that you see the redundancy of that paternal relation to Christ in his benefits even to us also Other properties we might enlarge in but it is easie to the good heart to suggest them to its self as the eternity and the unchangeablenesse of this relation to them as it was also to Christ Hence 1 Pet. 1. Christ being from all eternity and unchangeably fore-ordained to be their Head they were also then comprehended in that gracious Decree of God Only this difference you must alwayes observe That God becometh our Father otherwise than Christ for the Father begat him from eternity not by grace and from his meer free-will as if he might have 〈◊〉 begotten him No for he was the Sonne of his Father by a necessity o● immutability though some adde we may say his generation was both by nature and free-will as not being inconsistent with one another but as for us God makes us his sons from his meer good pleasure he might have refused to adopt any one to his Sonne he took infinite delight in his only Sonne which was from all eternity So that it was the riches of his grace and the freeness of his bounty to adopt us for his sons with Christ his natural Son Use of Instruction Is God our Father by being the Father of Christ Doth our union with Christ intitle us to that Father and other unspeakable benefits which he hath Then let the Christian soul meditate on this more Adam and Angels were the sons of God but that was by creation God is thy Father upon a more certain and enduring ground which is union with Christ What enemies are you to your own peace and grace while you look upon your selves as divided from Christ If the wife make her self a distinct person from her husband she hath no benefit by the Law she cannot recover any advantages but all must be done in her husbands name and in his title Thus it should be with thee pray in Christs name comfort thy self in Christ meditate upon God in Christ The time is coming when Christ only will be in request when at the day of Judgement the voice shall be Go ye cursed because not in Christ Depart into everlasting fire because not in Christ This then speaketh nothing but terror to the ungodly who are not branches in him they cannot have the least comfortable or hopefull thought of God being not in Christ they have none of Christs righteousness SERM. XXXII How God is a mercifull Father the Father of all mercies to his children 2 COR. 1. 3. Blessed be God the Father of mercies THe next considerable motive in God who is thus to be blessed is from his relative Attribute to us The Father of mercies if every mercy be a stream issuing from him the fountain if every favour be a ray which hath its emanation from that Sun then no wonder if always and in all things we are to bless and praise him It s Bernards observation he doth not say Pater ultionum c. the Father of revenge and of judgments which yet he is to all wicked men but of mercies that is to such as fear him So that the Apostle doth here represent God in the most sweet and lovely relation that may be to the truly godly They must not think fury and vengeance is in him towards them though sinners but that through Christ all enmity is taken away and they may with boldness come to him as to a Father even as the child doth securely rest in his Fathers bosome The words have no difficulty they are a fountain opened no stone is to be removed that the wearied soul may drink thereof Observe That God is a Father of mercies or a mercifull Father to those that are his So that our work will be to treat of that Attribute of God which renders the meditation and thoughts of him comfortable to us For if he be holy but not mercifull if infinite but not mercifull if omnipotent but not mercifull he would be a consuming fire to us It is good therefore for the contrite sinner to hear of this Attribute ineffabili desiderio teneor cum audio bonus Dominus To open this rich treasure that is able to enrich all who will come and take of it Consider First That God hath such an Attribute of mercy The Scripture doth not only represent him Wise Just and Almighty but Mercifull also Jam. 5. 11. God is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He is very pitifull and of tender mercy The former word is from the bowels that use to move when we are affected compassionately with any miserable object So that Gods mercies they are bowel-mercies he doth not only do good to us but to speak after the manner of men he is compassionately affected unto us while he doth so Hence Luke 1. 78. they are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The bowles of mercy But whether mercy may be attributed to God properly is disputed The Socinians they deny mercy to be an essential property to God even as they do vindicative Justice The Stoicks they denied mercy to their wise man Seneca grants clementia and benignitas but not misericordia for they defined mercy to be egritudo animi a sickness and grief of the mind which ariseth from anothers misery And why is it called misericordia Yarch Austin but because it doth make miserum cor Therefore if we stick to these definitions of mercy as it is in man who hath compassion because he hath passion we are not to attribute it to God but seclude all humane imperfections and look upon it as an Attribute in God whereby he doth will to help and relieve such as are in misery so it is ●●ivently in him and as there is none good but God so we may say there is none mercifull but God The mercy then of God is infinite as his own nature and do has rarre transcend all our sins and miseries as the Heavens do a mole-hill only there is not perturbation in the holy Nature of God which we find in our compassions Anselme expresseth it well Thou art mercifull O God Secundum nos non secundum te secundum sensum nostrum non tuum cum tu respicis nos miseros nos sentimus miserationis effectum tu non miseriae affectum God then is mercifull as well as just and thousands of places in the Scripture speak of this mercy of God very largely 2. It is good to know that the mercy of God is taken in Scripture sometimes Actively for that essential Attribute in him as Exod. 34. 6 7. where the Lord himself proclaimed his own Name Mercifull Grucious Long-suffering c. Though Divines do give notional differences between his Goodness Mercy Grace and Long-suffering yet I shall not attend to that Or Passively for the effects of his mercy as here in the Text The Father of mercies so when God doth threaten
to take away his mercies that is the effects of his mercy not the attribute of mercy This you must diligently attend to because the effects of Gods mercy are more and less but the attribute in God cannot be so God is not more or less mercifull neither doth Mercy as an attribute oppose Justice as an attribute but the effects of Gods Mercy may be and are contrary to the effects of his Justice 3. We must distinguish between Gods general mercy and his special His general mercy is extended to all the creatures The whole world is full of his mercies Psal 33. 5. So his mercy is said to be over all his works Would the world subsist for a moment when the Inhabitants thereof are so full of rebellion against God were it not for his mercy All that we see we hear we taste we feel is nothing but mercy His special mercy is to rational creatures men and Angels and that again is two-fold More special and most special More special is the vouchsafing of the Gospel and means of grace both to the wicked and the good This Kingdom of Heaven is set open for both But then there is the most special mercy and that is vouchsafed only to the elect by which means they are converted justified and shall be glorified and of this it is the Apostle speaks Rom. 9. 15. I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy Thus much may suffice for the Doctrinal information about this truth Let us in the next place take notice what is comprehended in this expression Father of mercies For this is a box of ointment to be opened and bestowed upon poor souls and while this glory of God doth pass by we can see but the back parts of it First When he is said to be the Father of mercies this implieth That he only giveth mercies and receiveth none So that as the father giveth being to the child but receiveth nothing of the child Thus God he is the Father of mercies because he is absolutely sufficient in himself he needeth nothing from any because then there would be a superiour to God And this consideration may greatly aggravate the glorious Nature of God in being mercifull in that he himself is like the Sun giving light but receiving none at all We cannot say of Angels they are the Fathers of mercies because though they be ministring spirits to serve us An Angel was sent to comfort Christ yet they need mercy as well as we The river needs the spring but the spring is the last and needeth not the river and so Angels and men they need mercy every way but God he needeth none only he is the giver of all It being more blessed to give than to receive even in this sense Secondly When he is called the Father of mercies it implieth The voluntariness and readiness in God to it Psal 103. Like as a father pitieth his children c. We do not intreat or hire a father to pity a miserable child his own bowels perswade him to it Now this is much more in God For as the Psalmist argueth He that made the eye shall not he see So he that giveth bowels and pity to parents shall not he much rather be mercifull So that as it is for holiness if all the holiness of men and Angels were put together it would be but a drop to what is in God So if all the mercy and all the compassions of all the fathers and mothers in the world were joyned together it would be nothing to God Oh what dishonour doth thy unbelieving fearfull heart do to this mercifull Father Thou thinkest he hath but the mercy of a man thou judgest of his bowels according to thy own no Gods mercie is as much above thy sinnes and miseries as his Essence is above thy being O nomen misericordia sub quo nemini desperandum But of that more presently Only when he is called a Father of mercies that denoteth the readiness in God and willingness in him and this is remarkable in Gods mercies over what is in mans our mercy is many times because the object miserable is of our own flesh and nature with us It moveth the heart to see one of the same nature with us to be thus miserable but God he is infinitly above man he hath no communion in nature with us and yet he is merciful Again Mercy amongst men is often because we have been under such miseries ourselves They that have the pain of the stone commiserate those that are in the like manner troubled because they know what it is Thus many eminent Ministers of the Gospel are exercised with soul-temptations and desertions that they may know how to mourn with bleeding bowels over those that are so tempted Thus the mercy of Christ as Mediator differs from the mercy of God as absolutely considered For he was tempted like us in all things sinne only excepted Heb. 4. 15. and the reason of this the Apostle giveth That he might be touched with a feeling of our infirmities Christ knoweth what the meaning is of every groan and every sigh that comes from a child in darkness crying out Why hath my God forsaken me Thus Christ as Mediator is mercifull in another way then God is yet this advanceth still the mercy of God that whereas his blessed and perfect Nature cannot know experimentally what it is to be miserable what it is to need mercy yet for all that his breasts are full and no womon is in greater pain to be eased of her burden then God to bestow his mercies Thirdly In that he is a Father of mercies a Father there is implied That he doth lay our misery to heart For although he cannot be passionately affected as man nor is sensible of our infirmities as Christ was yet this doth not hinder but that our misery is taken notice of as really so as to be succoured by him as if it were in the most compassionate Father that is That expression of God concerning the Israelites miseries under bondage is remarkable Exod. 2. 24 25. He heard their groaning he remembred his Covenant he looked upon his children he had respect or knew them See here ears eyes memory and mind all are affected with their trouble So Isa 63. 9. it is said In all their afflictions he was afflicted As then anger against wicked men though in God it be not the ebulsition of bloud about the heart or accompanied with a pale countenance yet it is more really and dreadfull in God than in man Therefore better have all the men of the world angry with thee than God So it is in his mercy in him mercy though it have not humane concomitants yet it 's more real operative and efficacious than all the mercifull fathers in the world is and thou hadst better have God shew mercy to thee than all the men of the world For In the fourth place when he is said to be the Father of mercies there
them Secondly In this expression of Father of mercies is not only comprehended the multitude of them but the diversity also he is the Father of all kind of mercies God hath an unexhausted treasure of mercy Therefore the Scripture calls God rich in mercy Ephes 2. 4. Though God be rich in wisdom in power yet the Scripture calls him only rich in mercy as if herein he did most excell Now from this treasury arise all kinds of mercies Do not say God may by his mercy help me in this particular and in that respect he can give me bodily mercies but can he give soul mercies He can give private mercies but can he give publick mercies Yes we have too low and narrow thoughts of God if we limit him to any kind of mercy he can do the greatest as well as the least Let us instance in some kind of mercies As 1. There are common mercies and there are special mercies Common mercies are those the whole world is full of He maketh the Sunne to shine upon the good and the bad Therefore our Saviour presseth us To love our enemies because God is thus mercifull even to his enemies Is not the whole earth every Village every Town full of the common mercies of God How come so many to live to subsist upon his cost and charges Whence is it that all the people in the world are provided for Is it not from the mercy of God Lam. 3. 22. It 's the Lords mercies that we are not consumed That famine warre plague and other judgements do not sweep away all the inhabitants of the earth That the whole world doth not fall into ruines This is from Gods meer mercy That all are not roaring in hell it 's the mercy of God Now this common mercy is the more admirable if ye consider what kind of persons they are to whom he is thus mercifull even to his very enemies that hate God and if it lay in their power would destroy him that he should not have a being Oh the mercy of God that is continued to many a prophane beast and many a malicious Devil to what is good Why is it that every liar is not stricken dead with Ananias Why is it that every drunkard quaffing in his pots doth not see a terrible hand-writing in the wall against him Why is it that the earth doth not open to swallow thee up while thy mouth is full of cursing and swearing Is not all this from the mercy of God Oh how little doth this mercy of God lead you to repentance whereas it is vouchsafed to you for that end Let it not be despised because it is common For though God be thus often mercifull yet sometimes his judgements are terrible to prophane men They are suddenly destroyed while they are in their drunken fits and it is Gods mercy that what hath befallen others doth not also come upon thee but after thy impenitent heart Thou treasurest up wrath against the day of wrath Now is the day of mercy but then will be a day of wrath There are special mercies such as the godly are only partakers of To be called to be justified to be sanctified c. Oh what heart or tongue can express the happiness of those who have these mercies How sacrilegious are those Doctrines that do not make God wholly and solely the father of these mercies but they make themselves and their own free-will to be yoynt-fathers with God in these mercies But as Austin of old urged If I cannot make my self a man which is the lesser can I make my self an holy man which is the greater If there is not the least temporal mercy that thou canst procure by thy own power not a morsell of bread not a drop of water canst thou by thy own strength obtain the greatest of all Though it be said The sword of the Lord and of Gideon yet it cannot be said the vocation the justification by Paul and by Christ but Christ alone doth these things in us and for us though by his grace we are also sanctified and inabled to do that which is holy Again There are soul-mercies and there are bodily-mercies There are spiritual and there are temporal mercies now God is the Author of both We may sinne by unthankfulness for either of them if thou takest thy bodily-mercies as due thy health thy sleep thy preservation from daily dangers in this thou wrongest the goodness of God for if he take away his hand but for a moment thou canst not subsist And as for soul-mercies whether the natural ones of it as thy wit thy understanding thy fancy thy senses God is the Father of them Or the spiritual ones there he is much more if thou hast repentance faith assurance a gracious contented heart in every condition these are mercies of mercies but God alone is the Father of them Furthermore There are preventing or privative mercies and there are positive mercies Now the Rule is Plures sunt gratiae privativae quam positivae more privative favours than positive Did not God prevent what innumerable evils might arise every day to destroy thee When we pray for daily bread in that we comprehend all kind of outward bodily mercies so that if the Lords hand were not alwayes giving we could not abide a day Now seeing that by sinne we are made obnoxious to all the curses in the Law To be cursed at home and cursed abroad How manifold are Gods preventing mercies to us What evil might every day bring forth to thee What a sad night might every night be to thee if Gods preventing mercies did not compass thee about Lastly We might instance in private mercies and publick mercies But what hath already been spoken may abundantly confirm us That God is the Father of mercies In the next place Let us consider the Property of Gods mercy And 1. He is infinite in mercy as well as in other attributes So that this fountain can never be drawn dry he hath mercy enough for thee and me and for all the humbled sinners in the world If all the Nations of the world are but as a drop to him so neither are all the sins of the world but as a drop to his mercy No sins are too many or too great for Gods mercy And truly this consideration alone is that which doth revive and establish the drooping soul for if it were but the mercy of a creature if it were finite mercy that thou hadst to do with woe and again woe would be unto thee The Prophet Isaiah speaks fully to this Chap. 55. 7 8 9. where there is an encouragement given to the wicked To forsake his evil wayes because God will have mercy yea he will abundantly pardon or multiply to pardon and whereas the sinner might think Surely God will never do so to such an hainous and wretched sinner as I am the Prophet tells us Gods thoughts are not as our thoughts but as the Heavens are higher
than the earth so are his ways viz. of mercy to our wayes As then the earth is but like a pins head in respect of the vast dimensions of the Heavens so are all our sins comparatively to Gods mercy If then thou hast great thoughts about thy sins saying They are greater than thou canst bear yet have as great thoughts of Gods mercy and know they are not greater than mercy can take away 2. As it 's infinite mercy so they are tender mercies bowels of mercies Psal 40. 11. David prayeth God would not take away his tender mercies from him Hence he is compared both to a Father and a Mother Oh take heed then of dishonouring God by hard distrustfull and unbelieving thoughts about him Think not of him as an austeer Judge who reapeth where he doth not sow The Devil and our guilty consciences are apt to represent God otherwise than he is Indeed while thou art secure and stupid in thy sins thou thinkest of God as an Idol-god having no eyes to see or thou presents him only a mercifull God to thy self as if he were not also holy and just but when once sinne burneth in thy heart like fire when God makes thee a terrour to thy self because of thy wickedness then all is turned Thou thinkest of the justice and vengeance of God only as if he had no mercy but when thy sins are a burden to thee and thou doest in the sincerity of thy heart forsake them then think of God only as the Scripture represents him then hearken what mercy comfort and peace he speaks to such a contrite soul as thou art 3. They are sure mercies to all the godly Isa 55. 3. They are called The sure mercies of David For all necessary mercies either for soul or body they are bound up in Gods promise and therefore they may well be called sure mercies even those thou hast not yet are as sure mercies as if thou wast already possessed of them Glorification and salvation are the sure mercies of God to thee though for the present thou art in a valley of tears sighing under thy miseries 4. They are free mercies such as God doth only for his Names sake when we have nothing but sinne in us that may justly provoke God to turn his mercies into judgments yet for his own sake he will be mercifull Though we have lost our grace yet he hath not that attribute of mercy Thus Psal 6. 4. Psal 31. 16. David still prayeth Save me for thy mercies sake So that this may greatly encourage thee when thou thinkest Oh what a barren and dry wilderness am I Oh what matter do I find in me to displease God for ever In the midst of these thoughts remember Gods mercies are free They have no other original or rise but from himself Think though I have degenerated from my holiness yet God can never lay aside his mercy But you will say Is this truth to be indifferently published to all May we tell every one that God is the Father of mercies to him Will not this be to make the heart of the wicked glad whom yet God would have made sad To answer it therefore first It cannot be denied but that God is very mercifull even to wicked men and that while they continue in their obstinacy Doth not experience confirm this And this mercy of God is not only seen in temporal things he giveth them health life and wealth so that they can never plead against God but also he is mercifull to many ungodly wretches and that in spiritual mercies he giveth them the kingdom of grace he giveth them the Ministry of the Gospel he alloweth them the day of grace whenas they might have been alwayes kept up in darkness Hence it is that the Scripture doth so often complain of the unprofitableness of the unthankfulness and forgetfulness towards him even worse than of the bruit creatures But in the next place There are the most special mercies of his complacency and delight and these are vouchsafed only to true believers So that we cannot properly say God is a Father of mercies to any but to the upright in heart For though wicked men do taste of many mercies from God yet he is not a reconciled Father to them They come not from him as a Father in Christ and therefore though in themselves they may be called mercies yet if you consider the event of them how the wicked abuse all mercies and increase their sins by them it will be at last confessed they were not mercies but judgements to them The mercies then which arise from Gods favour none have but those that are godly and we may in brief take these Characters of such who are Objects of his mercy First Such as are of a broken contrite heart for sinne such who forsake and cast it away in their lives To these only God is a Father of mercies For as for the wicked it 's said God is angry with the wicked every day To whom doth the justice of God the curse of the Law belong but to those that are thus guilty of sin The doubt then is not Whether God be mercifull but whether thou art the fit subject of mercy whether thou art the man God will honour Secondly Such only are the Objects of his mercy that have faith in him that hope in his mercy Hence David doth so often profess his trust in Gods mercy For there is either a pharisaical self-righteousness in us whereby we are apt to trust in our righteousness and in the works we do We see by the Jews of old and most Christians at this day that they are so full of themselves that they never trust alone in Gods mercy or else if sin be set home upon the conscience then many prove Cains and Judasses they flie from the mercies of God in Christ and damn themselves for fear of damnation so that presumption makes most and despair some few the unfitted objects of Gods mercy misery alone doth not prepare thee for mercy The Devils and damned in hell are miserable enough yet cannot obtain one drop of mercy but there must be a debasing of thy self because of sin and then raising up of thy self to catch hold on mercy SERM. XXXIV How God is the God of comfort yea of all comfort and consolations to all those that are his 2 COR. 1. 3. And the God of all comfort THe next ground why God is to be blessed is because he is a God of all comfort Now although this might seem to be the same with the former when he is stiled the Father of mercies Yet we may make that distinction which Aquinas upon the place giveth viz. That he is a Father of mercies because he doth either prevent or remove those miseries that our sins do deserve but he is the God of all conselation in that though our afflictions and tribulations be not taken away yet while we are in them he doth give many consolations and
to hell from these jollities all true comfort is from God 2. There is implied That God hath a store-house of all kind of comforts whatsoever thy necessity and wants are he can comfort thee It is not every comfort that will heal every wound but God hath a treasury of all if thy soul need comfort he can comfort that if thy body need comfort he can do that Oh then let not these consolations of God seem a small thing to you Job 15. 11. SERM. XXXV Some Propositions clearing the Doctrine of Gods Mercy from both Doctrinal and Practical Objections 2 COR. 1. 3. The God of all comfort VVE shall now put both these descriptions of God joyntly together having already considered them severally For seeing in the mercy of God is all our hope Christ hath this Rainbow about his Throne And although it may affect us to hear that God is Wise Omnipotent of glorious Majesty yet nothing is so sutable and proper for poor sinners as to hear of Gods mercy Therefore I shall at this time enlarge further about it and so conclude And that which I shall deliver shall be laid down in so many Propositions which will be to obviate either Practical or Doctrinal Objections And First The mercy and comforts of God this glorious Nature of his whereby he is ready to pity those that are miserable is so to be managed in the publick preaching thereof that it be a sovereign Antidote against all despair and yet a curb against all presumption For so it falleth out that we can hardly open the treasures of Gods mercy and discover the glory of his grace and goodness to the humbled sinner but presently the carnal prophane heart is ready to encourage himself thereby It is therefore the part of a wise Dispenser of this glad tidings to consider the subjects with whom he hath to do and accordingly to publish terrour to whom terrour is due wrath to whom wrath is due And then on the other side peace to whom peace belongs mercy to whom mercy belongs Though therefore God style himself The God of the fatherless and the widow that he is pitifull to such as are miserable Though very wicked it may be and prophane yet this is with a general mercy onely his peculiar and special mercies are onely to those that fear him If then a man go on wilfully in his ungodly wayes if he will still retain his transgressions he must not think to find God mercifull to him he will find David's prayer fulfilled Psal 59. 5. Be not mercifull to any wicked transgressour This bread is for children not for dogs yet how difficultly can we keep such off from applying this mercy to themselves Those are commonly most confident of it to whom it doth not belong therefore beastly men are barred off from coming near this Mount This pearl is kept from Swine When we meet with broken contrite hearts here we display the mercy of God with all our might To such we say Gods mercies are infinitely more than their sinnes That although they had the sinnes of all the men in the world yet they were but as a drop to the Sun-beams of his mercy which will quickly dry them up To such we say God doth as easily pardon great sinnes as little as the Sun doth enlighten one place with as much ease as another To such we say That it 's their duty to hope in Gods mercy that they cannot dishonour God more than by looking upon him as one who is hardly brought to remit offences That it is Gods will we should come to this fountain and drink abundantly of it We tell them that they cannot think so much of sinne to condemn them as they may of the multitude of Gods mercies to save them To such we say That when they have thought all they can yet there is more in Gods mercy than they can go to the bottom of God is said to forget sinnes but he cannot forget his property of mercy Thus you see that mercy is so to be held out as the cloud was in the wilderness it was light to the people of Israel to guide them but darkness to the Egyptian The Doctrine of mercy is indeed matter of terrour to every presumptuous sinner for he hath nothing to do with it but it is full of beauty and reviving to the wounded heart Hence the whole drift of the Scripture is to represent this grace and mercy of God to an humbled sinner This is the main scope of it For who could or dare think of God any otherwise but a consuming fire till the Scripture hath revealed him otherwise And indeed the Parable of a Shepherd fetching home his lost sheep is comfortable yet Christ exceedeth that Shepherd for he sought for his sheep as goods that he needed that he wanted but Christ doth for us whom he doth not want he is well enough without us Again that also is a refreshing Parable of the Father entertaining so mercifully his prodigal Sonne but yet Christ exceedeth that Father also for there the Sonne came first and humbled himself and intreated for favour but God he doth first seek us out by his mercy We do not choose him but he chooseth us Though Vorstius doth distinguish of special grace to believers calling one ordinary which God vouchsafeth to those who seek him in the use of means and another extraordinary which God he saith sometimes but rarely vouchsafeth and that is while men never think of God yea in wayes of opposition to God as the Gentiles and Paul yet indeed we may say of all that are converted That God thinketh of them before they think of God It is he that prevents them his grace finds them out and prepareth them for mercy Again Christ compareth himself to the Physician but what Physician healeth as he doth Other Physicians they make their Patients sick and bleed to help them to health but Christ he himself is wounded and his bloud is shed for to save us All this is to shew That we cannot imbolden and incourage the sincere converts enough but the more hopefull and confident thoughts he hath of Gods mercy the more pleasing it is to God Secondly We must not judge of Gods mercy without Scripture-light and guidance for if we do we sholl thereby encourage our selves in wicked wayes and yet say God is mercifull And truly this is the poyson that many suck down they judge of Gods mercy according to their own humane pity and compassion and thereupon never consider his Justice his Wisdome his Holiness as well as Mercy So that this is diligently to be considered that we must not apprehend of God as full of mercy and comfort any otherwayes than the Scripture doth manifest him and that will be salt to season you against the abuse of Gods mercy so as to turn his grace into wantonnesse How many are there undo themselves for want of a Scripture consideration of Gods mercy both Doctrinally and
which yet David in every Psalm almost though never so cast down doth in some degrees and sparks as it were discover but here is nothing but disconsolateness yet this Heman was a godly man a Penman of some Psalms yea he was accounted one of the most eminent wise men that lived in that age for 1 King 4. 30 31. Solomons wisdom is said to exceed all others yea four wise men are instanced whom Solomon did surpass and this Heman was one Whereas then we are apt to judge such as want the sense of Gods comfort and go in a disconsolate manner fools and melancholly such as will go out of their wits You see here a godly man and one of the wisest men in Solomons times yet afflicted with the terrors of the Lord and can obtain no comfort This then being laid down as a foundation let us consider what is to be said to the doubt To answer the Objection you must know in what sense this is a doctrinal truth That God comforteth his in all their troubles and to that purpose observe these particulars 1. That comfort especially when we are sensibly affected and enlarged therewith is not of the essence of grace nor is it absolutely necessary to salvation It is indeed for the benè esse and is like oil to the wheels it doth wonderfully quicken and expedite the soul in wayes of holiness but yet a man may be in the state of grace and may have an unquestionable claim to Heaven yet for all that be destitute of such sensible comfort for these consolations do commonly flow from assurance of Gods grace and the sense of his love shed abroad in their hearts Now it is not this assurance that doth justifie us but it supposeth us justified already we may rest on Christ we may believe on him and yet want this faith of evidence as some call it while we have the faith of adherence and dependance Seeing therefore that this comfort is not an inseparable quality from a godly man we must then understand the promises of God for comfort as we do of other things which are separable from true grace God promiseth health outward peace long life yea of all outward mercies godliness hath a promise but yet the godly do not alwayes partake of these there are many of them sick weak poor and distressed though under such promises And the reason is because these are not necessary to salvation They are not required as Christ and grace is for then no godly man should be without them yea they may be an impediment an hinderance and therefore it 's a mercy sometimes when God denieth them Thus it is in regard of our comforts it is for our good to be sometimes without them God in much mercy suffereth his people to be in darknesse and to have no light So that you may no more wonder to see them sometimes without joy then to see them sometimes without the outward mercies of the world Yet you must understand when I thus compare these soul-consolations to bodily ones that I make them not of the same nature with temporal outward mercies as if they were no more spiritual than wealth or health are No I do not compare them in their nature but in their property of separability they neither are of the essence of grace nor of absolute necessity to salvation and herein they are alike otherwise these consolations they are spiritual mercies seated in the soul and have intimate connexion with the graces of Gods Spirit Gerson calls them Gratiae gratis datae and indeed they are the gifts of Gods Spirit and are highly to be prized yet as degrees in grace are of Gods Spirit but not necessary to salvation the truth of grace is but not every degree of grace for then no godly man could be saved that is weak in faith and in other graces Thus it is with this comfort in some respect They are gifts of God they are wrought by his Spirit yet so as that they do not necessarily accompany our salvation and in this sense you must understand the Doctrine 2. There is a two-fold joy which I may call a direct and reflex one The one is when we are carried with delight to that which is holy and good The other is when we know and feel that we are thus carried out joy is a fruit of faith 1 Pet. 1. 8. In whom believing ye rejoyce with joy unspeakable Now as faith acteth two wayes so also doth joy Faith acteth directly by going directly to Christ and then faith acts reflexly by looking upon this that I do rest on Christ Thus there is a joy that doth directly go to God and Christ by way of delight and enlargement being thus apprehended by faith Of such a joy in holy things Solomon speaketh Prov. 21. 15. The Prophet Isaiah also Chap. 64. 5. And then there is a joy flowing from the apprehension of this that we do delight in holy things For a man may rejoyce to find he can rejoyce in what is good a man may be comforted in finding that Christ and heavenly objects are matter of delight to him Now as it is with those two acts of faith the former which is the direct one that is absolutely necessary by that we are justified by that Christ is made ours by that we are in him and he in us but the latter is not of the same necessity It is no where said If ye know that ye do believe and if ye be assured that ye do believe but if ye do believe then ye shall be saved It would be sad with many of Gods children if none were justified but he that knoweth he believeth Thus it is also for joy joy in its direct acts it 's a necessary grace It is our duty to rejoyce in God and heavenly things as well as love them And indeed there cannot be any grace of love but there is also the grace of joy Hence Gal. 5. joy is made the fruit of the Spirit with other graces And Rom. 14. The Kingdom of Heaven is said to consist in righteousness and in joy in the holy Ghost So that there is a joy which being a grace is part of the new creature and there cannot be godliness without it as is our love so is our joy But then there is joy as a priviledge which as you heard ariseth from the knowledge of our being in the state of grace and this is communicable at Gods pleasure Those that have the most of Gods grace may for a time have the least of it in sense as we see in Christ himself So that we are to distinguish between joy as a grace and joy as a priviledge It 's of the latter the Doctrine is to be understood 3. Yet further The joy that Gods people partake of may be considered either as seated in the soul or as in the sensitive part The one is rational and spiritual The other is sensitive and corporeal For the
then he only that hath the experimentals either of the bitternesse of sinne or the sweetnesse of the Gospel is only able with a tender heart and hand to cure a wounded soul And certainly if the Apostle make this an Argument Gal. 6. 1. to rejoynt as it were one that is overtaken in a fault because the most spiritual may be tempted how much rather when thou hast been tempted So that this experimental way in holy things worketh much commiseration and sympathizing with those who groan under the hand of God upon them When Judas was in that perplexed agony crying out I have sinned in betraying the innocent blood with what stony and seared hearts did the Pharisees reject him saying What is that to us look thou to that It 's a mercy for broken-hearted sinners to fall into the hands of a tender experienced Believer who hath felt what they feel and so is able to conceive of their sad estate And indeed even as for instruction of the ignorant there needeth much patience so there doth also pitty which will put thee upon unwearied diligence to comfort the dejected For it is not a work soon done they must bear with many infirmities they are full of subtile objections and when they are for a while comforted they loose all presently again insomuch that he must have tender bowels who is not wearied out with their weaknesses Thirdly Such experienced ones are only able to deal with tempted souls to instruct and comfort them because the afflicted find such only reall Such are in earnest He that hath experimentally felt the bitternesse of sinne maketh it manifest to others that it 's not meer Oratory or Eloquence that sets him against sinne but something within that he feeleth burning like fire within The very Heathen could say Si vis me flere dolendum est primo tibi A man that hath not inwardly felt the power of truth upon his heart he is so cold so formall so lazy that you cannot tell whether he believeth the things he preacheth to be true or no. And so also for comfort must it not much satisfie the dejected soul to meet with one under the same temptations under the same fears and yet now prayeth with joy heareth with joy Thou canst find all thy heart as it were in him and yet he is delivered he is comforted who thought it as impossible as I do Whereas if a man be a stranger to these workings of God the tempted soul flyeth off saying He knoweth not how to judge of these things I can give no credit to him Fourthly Such are only able because they alone are faithfull They dare not flatter them they dare not sooth them They will give them no comfort if there be no cause for it Now the truly broken soul loveth this faithfull dealing better then flattery There is a woe to those that made the heart of those merry whom God would have made sad And there are many in the ministerial Office that are unworthy and flattering in this case comforting every one that lyeth a dying though never so prophane Now he that is truly humbled careth not for such a mans comfort he knoweth he will not deal faithfully he will send me to hell with comfort And whereas it is one rule that experienced Divines give to tempted souls That under their fears and doubts they must believe the judgment of the Ministers of God about their condition rather then themselves this must be understood of sound faithfull and experienced Ministers otherwise it is a most dreadfull thing to fall into the hands of fawning flattering Ministers who will encourage them and send them to Heaven when they themselves know not either what true sorrow for sinne or true Evangelical comfort meaneth Use 1. Of Exhortation to the Ministers of Gods Word not to think learning study reading of Books enough to qualifie thee for a Ministerial employment but implore much the work of Gods Spirit herein A good heart a gracious heart will help as well as good Books Do not rest only upon studied and acquired gifts but pray also for infused and inspired Use 2. Of Instruction to the people of God How usefull it is to communicate their gracious experiences one to another much edification much consolation may come hereby Whose sadnesse hast thou comforted Whose deadnesse hast thou quickned It may be thou hast learned a precious receit how to cure such a sinne such a temptation and why doest thou not help others SERM. XLIII It is a special Duty incumbent upon every one both Minister and Christian to apply comforts to the Afflicted in a right manner 2 COR. 1. 4. That we may be able to comfort them which are in any trouble IN this final cause we considered the Subject who are fit for this comfort and they are said to be such who are in any trouble Those that abound in mercies need no comfort we are not to give honey to such full stomacks But the troubled the afflicted these are they whose condition we are to commiserate From whence observe That it is a special duty in a right manner to comfort those that are in trouble We are not only to seek the conversion of such who go astray but also to regard the consolation of those that lack it Hence Lam. 1. the Church complaineth That she had none to comfort her The Apostle speaketh of this duty often 1 Thess 4. 18. Comfort one another with these things 1 Thess 5. 11 14. Comfort the feeble minded You see by this pressing this duty so often that we are seriously and diligently to practise it lest as God will judge for neglect of corporal alms to fit objects of charity so also he will call to account for the not dispencing of these spiritual alms Thou hast not visited those who were spiritually imprisoned by the guilt of their sins neither fed those with the bread from Heaven who were hungry Hence it is that the Apostle speaking concerning the incestuous person who was now deeply humbled for his sinne 2 Cor. 2. 7. exhorts them to comfort him lest he be swallowed up with too much sorrow We have a notable instance for this in Jobs friends Job 2. 11. who when they heard of all the evil that was come upon him they made an appointment together to come and mourn with him and to comfort him Thus you see that it is a special duty we are carefully to discharge to refresh the souls of others who are cast down That as the custom was among the Jews and Solomon he giveth a precept about it Prov. 31. 6 7. Give wine unto those that are of an heavy heart that he may drink and remember his misery no more So we are in a spiritual consideration to give the wine of the Gospel to such as mourn for their sins To discover this truth Consider First The troubled as you heard formerly are of two sorts Those who are afflicted in soul as the
Gods promise to doe such things for us yet if he had not the supreame power to order and worke all things when he pleaseth but were subordinate to some higher power then we could not trust in him Hence we justly charge the Papists with Idolatry for trusting in the Virgin Mary whom they call their hope in prayer as also in the other Saints For although they would elude by a distinction of trusting in one as the primary efficient cause and in one as a secondary and instrumental cause in which latter sense they onely trust in the Saints as they would perswade us yet that is against the very nature of divine trust which must have for its object onely that which is supreame and omnipotent So that unlesse they will distinguish of a primary God and a secondary God they cannot so distinguish about trusting in the same manner Even as it is with the other act of faith as it giveth a divine assent to any truth The Schoolmen generally say That the Ratio formalis fidei is Revelatio Divina and Suprema veritas So that we cannot with a Divine Faith believe upon any thing but a Divine Testimony Thus it is in this other act of faith which we call trusting It must be a Divine Promise a Divine Power else we cannot put this holy and divine trust in it As therefore the Psalmist said Some put their trust in their horses some in chariots but we will trust in the Name of the Lord Psal 20. 7. Thus let us Some trust in Angels some in Saints some in great men in wise men but we will trust in the Lord. From hence also it is that we do clearly confute the Socinian who denieth the Eternal Deity of Christ For if Christ were not God if he were onely the best of creatures yet as a creature it would be unlawfull to trust in him we should be guilty of great Idolatry to put confidence in him Now it is plainly a duty to trust in Christ as well as in God the Father Romans 15. 12. Though the root of Jesse yet in him shall the Gentiles trust and that is because he is not a meer man but God as well as man Ephesians 1. 12. So they are called The first fruits of Achaia who first trusted in Christ This then is a plain demonstration of the Godhead of Christ because it is our duty to trust in him You see by all these glorious properties in God which are the full reason of our trusting in him that it is not lawfull under any nice and subtil distinctions whatsoever to put our trust any where but in the Lord. Secondly As God is the object in whom we trust So the matter for which we are to trust in him is all the good things we want There is not any one mercy whether for soul or body but we are to trust in God alone for it Now the good things we want empty themselves in two streames The spiritual mercies and the temporal mercies and we are to trust in God for all these There is not a crumme of bread or a drop of drinke but we are to trust and depend on God for it We are not to trust in our labour in our barne and store but are to lie in prayer at the throne of grace every day as Lazarus did at Dives his gate even for a crum of spiritual mercies and they are of many sorts 1. That which is the ultimate and last end of all grace and holinesse here which is Eternal Life and Everlasting Glory The trusting in God for this is that which should keep up our hearts in all the streights we are to meet with 1 Corinth 15. If we had hope onely in this life saith the Apostle we were of all men most miserable So Titus 1. 2. and 3. 7. there is the hope of eternal life The trusting by faith and by hope are of so near union that one may well be brought to confirme the other Now let a Christian be frequently putting forth these vigorous trustings in Christ for everlasting glory what heavenly joyfull and undaunted resolutions will it work in him 2. There are mercies that are the meanes to lead to this end such as Justification and Sanctification of our natures daily remission of sinnes and a daily preservation in the state of grace that we may never fall away For these things we are certainly to trust for at Gods hand We have Gods promise for these things and who dare question whether God be thus able to keep us to salvation or no Thus remission of sinne is by faith in his blood Rom. 3. Yea the life of a godly man as to his spirituals and supernaturals is wholly in this trusting Thus the just you heard liveth by his faith And Paul professeth aloud That the life he did live Galat. 2. 20. though in the flesh was by faith in the Sonne of God Oh that this spiritual truth were received and digested more by the godly Doe you not look more into your selves then up to God Doe you not more live in the thoughts of your owne graces than of Gods promises Truly the right improving of this Doctrine about trusting in God it would be like Solomon's North-winde to blow away the rain to dispell all sinfull sorrow SERM. LXXII What is required in our trusting in God ex parte subjecti And of the excellency of this grace 2 COR. 1. 9. But in the Lord. WE are treating of this choice and necessary duty of trusting in God and severall things have been spoken to acquaint us with the nature thereof we proceed therefore and as we have told you what is required ex parte objecti to cause this trusting in the Lord from the next place let us declare what is ex parte objecti necessary to this duty And for the explicating of that there are these things concurrent to our trusting in the Lord. 1. There must be a serious and powerfull apprehension of our own inability yea and of the weakness of all Creatures to help us or to do good to us for till this foundation be laid that all power wisedome righteousness and whatsoever the Creature can affoard is but a shadow a reed that can do no good at all it is impossible that we should trust in the Lord. So that by this we may see the difficulty and rarity of this grace for how hard a matter is it thus to be affected about all the meanes that are in the world about all the Creatures we do injoy to look upon them but as those Instruments of Musick which cannot sound any longer then they are blown into How difficult to possess our soules with this principle to look upon thy self and all Creatures no otherwise then the poore creple that lay by the Poole side that could not at all help or move it self That do behold all things as Sarahs dead wombe or Ezekiels dry bones unless the Lord quicken and give
especially when we speake of spirituall mercies such as justification and reconciliation with God Aegid Coninck de arteb supernat de spe a Popish Writer maketh a threefold hope or trusting in God One he calleth Pelagian and that is when we rest upon God only because of our own merits and our own strength and this he doth reject as well he may for this is not to trust in God but in our selves A second hope he calleth Lutheran and that is when he trusteth only in the grace of God excluding all merits this also he rejects and thereby also the only hope the Scripture commends to us The third hope he cals the Catholick trusting in God and that is partly upon the grace of God and partly upon our own merits yet wrought also by the grace of God But to think of merits or to speak of merits when we come into the presence of so great and holy a God whose Law we break daily and in all our best duties faile exceedingly is to play the Pharisee and not the Publican who yet only was accepted with God The second way of trusting therefore viz. only in the grace of God excluding all our own strength is that which is approved of by the Word of God So that till we be sound in our judgement about this Point we cannot rightly trust in God In the next place a second main particular to cleare the Doctrine about this trusting is to consider the excellency of their grace that so we may thereby be the more exercised therein For 1. It is many times put for the whole worship of God because he that doth trust in God he will be sure to performe all those other duties God doth require Thus Psal 115. 9 10. when the house of Israel and Aaron are exhorted to trust in the Lord by that is meant the whole worship of God even as to fear God is sometimes also put for the whole service of God The excellency and dignity of the grace appeareth herein 2. It is therefore excellent because the Lord so delighteth to put us upon the daily practice of it Insomuch that whatsoever he doth for his people either in spirituall or temporall mercies they do obtaine it wholely by trusting What is that great way whereby we are justified before God how come we to obtain this blessed priviledge It is only by faith And what is this faith but a trusting and resting upon Christ alone So that the most noble and essentiall consideration in justifying faith is that it doth make the soul rest and depend on the Lord Jesus God would not justifie us by any other way by working by doing but by trusting which doth greatly demonstrate the acceptableness of this grace to God So also for temporall mercies that assertion twice or thrice used The just shall live by faith doth in part relate to those temporall promises which God maketh for the preservation and support of his people and now God will have these performed to such who wait on him who trust on him It is not the just shall live by love by repentance but by faith God therefore would have us wholly depend upon him for every mercy we have hence we are commanded to pray for our daily bread trust not in thy store or treasure trust not in thy labour and skill but be every day at the Throne of grace begging for every mercy thou desirest Oh but what dishonour is there to God in this respect Doth not the rich man look more to his revennues then Gods promise Doth not the Tradesman look more to his custome and his gaines then Gods power yea the labouring man is apt to trust in his health and strength as if he needed not to depend upon God all the while he hath that Sanitas pauperis est patrimonium a poore mans health is his patrimony his freehold and he is apt to make it his god to trust in What excellency then is in this grace when no mercy either spirituall or temporall can be obtained but by the exrecise thereof For the soul you must trust God and the mercies thereof for the body you must trust God and the mercies thereof And observe the deceitfullness of thy heart herein who trusteth in Christ for thy justification and salvation but art full of disquieting cares and feares about thy externall preservation and maintenance Oh foolish and unwise which is greater salvation then rayment and food and yet thou art perswaded God will do the greater but doubteth about the lesser 3. It is excellent because it doth indeare God to us and in a peculiar manner obligeth God to look to us For when the soul can say O Lord I renounce all other helps I trust not in any other support I leave all things to adhere to thee this doth in particular manner ingage God to look upon us as his own and so to defend us Thus David argueth Psal 16. 1. Preserve me O Lord for I trust in thee Psal 7. 1. In thee O Lord I put my trust save me so 1 Chron. 5. 20. it is said of the Sons of Reuben when they were in great distress yet the Hagarens were delivered into their hands because they did put their trust in God It is also attributed unto Hezekiah as a great and glorious honour to him 2 Kings 18. 5. That he trusted in the Lord God of Israel and Verse 7. The Lord was with him and he prospered Therefore the committing of our selves into Gods hands is a speciall way to secure us 4. The excellency of this grace is seen in the difficulty of it and transcendency to flesh and blood for if Aristotle could say homo was magis sensus quam intellectus more sense then understanding putting forth the acts thereof more then of reason we may say much rather he is more reason then faith The difficulty of it maketh the People of God oftner in distracting feares and carking cares then in any other sinnes David who professeth his trust in God yet how often tempted to difidence Asa a good man 2 Chron. 16. 12. is blamed that in his disease he sought not to God but to the Physicians It was lawfull for him to seek to them but because he rested wholly on them and not on God therefore is he thus taken notice of seeing then it s our duty to use meanes and not to expect that God will in a miraculous and immediate manner work all things for us Hence is the great difficulty in this matter so to use them as not to put confidence in them Alas all the Creatures all the second causes by their own power without Gods blessing could do us no good our cloathes would not warme us our food nourish us unless God command it Hence our Saviour saith Man doth not live by bread alone but by every word proceeding out of Gods mouth Matth. 4. 4. It is not then the Creatures it is not the conditions and
us from so great a death and doth deliver in whom we trust that he will yet deliver us THe Apostle having formerly discovered his humane feares and diffidence under that great trouble which came upon him in Asia doth now recollect himself and revive out of his swoonings The Sunne that was in an Eclipse doth now begin to shine forth in glorious lustre He had informed us that the end of that heavy tribulattion was That he should not trust in himself but in God And now in this verse we see this blessed effect took place in him For by the experience of Gods mercy to him at this time he is encouraged to trust in God for the future he hath doth and will deliver One favour from God is a pledge of more to come In this verse then we see Paul got above and conquering that weaknesse and imbecillity which he found in himself and acknowledging the goodnesse of God and his power to him Paul found God able to raise the dead by what he had done to him in his particular In the Text then we may take notice of 1. Paul's solemn acknowledgement of the goodness and power of God to him in delivering of him And 2. His Encouragement from thence to trust in God for the future In the former part we have his celebration of Gods goodnesse to him and this he aggravateth from the hopelesnesse and desperatenesse of his estate which he calleth a Death not a sicknesse but a death Yea Chrysostome observeth That he doth not say Who hath delivered us from such dangers but such death to shew the extremity Chrysostome reads it in the plural number 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 deaths but the general Copy is otherwise Now Paul doth not onely call it death but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 such death The word is used in the New Testament about three times besides in this place and it is alwayes applied to the great aggravation of a thing so as we are to admire it as if the like had never been heard of Thus Revel 16. 18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is such an Earthquake as never had been before James Chap. 3. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are ships very great And Hebr. 2. 3. How shall we escape if we neglect 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so great salvation then which there cannot be a greater The Apostle therefore in using this word doth intend to aggravate the goodnesse of God towards him to leave out no circumstance that may not heighten the mercy It is not enough with him to take notice of the mercy but the aggravation of his mercy and this maketh his heart seven times hotter as it were in praising of God than otherwise it would be From whence observe That the children of God do not onely acknowledge the mercy of God to them but they also consider of every circumstance that may make the mercy appear greater They will take up every crumme and the fragments as it were that Gods miraculous power may be more demonstrated They doe not content themselves with a beholding of the mercy in the bulke but they weigh every particular ingredient and so of one mercy make many mercies That as the godly in their humiliation for sinne thinke it not enough to humble themselves in the general but they endeavour to bring to minde every circumstance that may aggravate it and so make themselves more abominable and loathsome in their own eyes Thus they do also in matter of thanksgiving They doe not take the mercy in the grosse but they looke through it and about it to espie out every particular that may be like a coale of fire in their bosomes Thus we have the thankfull Psalmist Psal 136. severing every particular mercy of God to Israel by it self and then addeth For his mercy endureth for ever Sihon King of the Amorites for his mercy endureth for ever Og King of Basan for his mercy endureth for ever He reckoneth them up one and by one though he might have satisfied himself with that expression vers 24. Who hath redeemed us from all our enemies But a gracious heart dare not rob God of his glory in any one benefit that he hath from him For if he must say with Jacob He is lesse than the least of his mercies It is not for him to passe it by for every little mercy is farre above his deserts to him belongeth all the curses of the Law whatsoever is not hell and damnation cometh from the meer bounty of God But let us illustrate this truth in the particulars shewing wherein the people of God use to make their aggravation And First The children of God use to enlarge their thoughts in praises of God from the low weak and impotent condition they of themselves were in Now the more the disease is found out to be desperate and incurable the greater is the art and skill of the Physician Thus Psal 136. 23. Who remembred us in our low estate The blackest Eclipse makes the Sunnes light when recovering more glorious The lower and weaker in thy self the more is God thereby acknowledged So Psal 34. 6. This poor man cryed and the Lord heard him This aggravateth the mercy of God that though a very Lazar yet God would not despise him So Psal 142. 3. When my Spirit was overwhelmed within me then thou knewest my path Nothing is more ordinary then such passages in the Psalmes to aggravate the goodnesse of God towards the godly from the lownesse and the impotency they were in Oh if God had not come in at that time I had utterly perished How many low conditions have many of Gods people been in sometimes in respect of their outward sometimes in respect of their inward yet God hath delivered them from those whales bellies Your affections to praise God will be very cold and dull till you possesse your soules with this thought Oh how low was it with me Little did others know how it fared with me One step further would have cast me into utter horrour and then when I could bear no longer God supported me Many Psalmes may the chilren of God make as it were I was in such a sad temptation but God rescued me For his mercy endureth for ever I was in such an outward streight and the Lord made a way to escape For his mercy endureth for ever Thus the thoughts of thy low condition will greatly advance the help of God vouchsafed to thee Secondly The people of God doe aggravate the mercy of God not onely from the greatnesse of the danger they were in but also their sinfulnesse their unworthinesse that ever God should cast an eye of pity on them and this they doe whether in temporal or spiritual mercies And truly this is an excellent way to enlarge the heart in blessing of God when we shall consider how unworthy we are we that deserved cursing to meet with blessing See this humble frame in David 1 Chron. 17. 16. when
Nathan came to declare the good purpose of God towards him in raising up him and his posterity to glory see how humbly and in a self-emptied manner he addressed himself to God Who am I and what is my house that thou hast brought me hitherto As if he should say Oh Lord what am I and my family the meanest and most unworthy and wilt thou doe this to me Yea as if this were a small thing thou hast spoken of thy servants house for a great while to come and hast regarded me after the estate of a man of high degree What can David speake more Yea as it is 1 Sam. 7. he saith Is this the manner of men O Lord God implying that onely God vouchsafeth mercy to such as are unworthy As then he who would build high must lay a deep foundation So he that would exalt God on high must lay himselfe low And if it be thus for temporal mercies we are not worthy of a crumme of bread and though with Dives we should begg for a drop of water it might be denied us Then how much more in spiritual mercies if God bestow them upon us Shall not our affections be greatly kindled in blessing of God Take that fountain of all mercies the giving of the Lord Christ to believers to worke out their salvation by being made a curse for them How diligent is the Scripture to put an account as it were upon every passage therein That it should be as impossible for a believer to thinke of this love of the Father to us and not be ravished with it as for a man to carry hot coales in his bosome and they not burn him For the Scripture aggravateth it from the person who died for us even the onely begotten Sonne of God John 3. 16. For God so loved the world that he gave his onely begotten Sonne He so loved it if God would have denied any thing to mankinde it would have been this who would not think that he should rather suffer all men to be damned then to give up his Sonne to death And yet what astonishing love is here Dared a poor sinner of himself ever thought to have begged such a thing at Gods hand Rom. 8. 32. He spared not his owne Sonne Certainly thy heart may be amazed more than the Queene of Shebaes in seeing of Solomon's glory in meditating on this God to give his own Sonne his onely begotten Sonne his Sonne out of his bosome all which are aggravating circumstances If all the parts of the body if all the haires of thy head were turned into tongues could they speak enough of this goodnesse of God As God said to Abraham Now I know thou lovest me because thou hast not withholden thy onely sonne from me How much more may we conclude from Gods giving his Sonne to us As the Scripture aggravateth it thus from the quality of the person so also from the quality of those for whom Christ was thus given and that is for enemies and adversaries And here is an aggravating circumstance to enflame thy heart Rom. 5. 6. When we were without strength when we were enemies To die for righteous men to die for godly men would not have been such an aggravation but for sinners and enemies this is wonderfull Here then is another coale from the Altar to warme thy heart with when thou wouldest blesse God for Christ againe The Scripture to aggravate this mercy doth consider to what end he is given for us that is To die for us to die an ignominious death to be made accursed for us to bear the punishment of our sinnes upon himselfe This also doth deeply sinke into the heart This is like oyle to the Chariot wheeles of the soul This is like the Spirit in Ezekiel's wheele Thy heart cannot be quiet but it will exceedingly dilate it self in blessing of God for him That whereas he who would be our Saviour must purchase our salvation at so deare a rate yet he doth willingly make his soul an offering for our sinnes Lastly The Scripture aggravateth this comparatively That Christ did not take upon him the nature of Angels Heb. 2. 16. He did not so love them he died not for those Apostate Angels who yet were more glorious creatures than man and if redeemed would have brought God more glory but it was for sinfull wretched and weak man But this mercy of God in Christ can never be comprehended in the depth breadth and length thereof it being like Ezekiel's waters that will ascend higher and higher even till it covers our head We may instance in a second spiritual mercy viz. of Conversion or Effectual Calling us out of the damned world Oh the soul can never be affected with this How much doth it delight to speak of his owne vilenesse and unworthinesse once that so the riches of Gods grace in calling of us may be the more exalted We see it in Paul 1 Tim. 1. 13 15. how willing he is to speak what a blasphemous persecutour he had once been even the greatest and chiefest of sinners and therefore in him the grace of God was manifested even for the ages to come To this purpose also 1 Corinth 15. 8 9 10. he speaketh debasing himself That he was not meet to be called an Apostle because he persecuted the Church of God This discriminating and differing grace of God whereby God chooseth thee a poor contemptible worme and passeth by others many in the same Towne in the same family of the same profession yet converting grace layeth hold on thee and not on another As our Saviour said There were many widowes at that time besides she of Sarepta yet the Prophet was sent to her alone This comparative worke of grace passing by others and taking thee when if God would have regarded Externals or Internals there were richer there were more learned there were lesse vicious must for ever enlarge the soule yea so astonish her that she will cry out What shall I say to these things A third Aggravation of Gods mercy that the people of God take notice of is From the time and season that God doth it In the fullnesse of time God sent his Sonne And the Wiseman saith God doth every thing beautifull in its season To have mercy out of its due time is to give bread instead of stones It is like good Physick but not administred in its proper season Now the observing Christian who loveth to seek out the workes of God towards him and studieth all Gods dispensations towards him doth in this respect finde out infinite matter of praising of God that the Lord should put off to helpe so long that he should let Lazarus die and be buried all this is to make the soule affected with the seasonable timing of a mercy To have a mercy in its season maketh it a double mercy Onely you must remember that Gods seasons and fit opportunities are not alwayes well discerned by us We are ready to thinke
such a trouble that came in with so seasonable a deliverance and when thou knowest his name thus wilt thou not trust in him 3. It is a speciall way to keep the heart in a serene and quiet frame to exercise trust in God for the future Not only to bless God for the mercies we have and do enjoy but also as confidently and securely to trust in God for all future things that shall befall us as if we did for the present enjoy what we could desire We shall find that for want of this trusting in God for the future all our anxieties and disquietness doth arise We do continually create unto our selves constant molestations of spirit because we make suppositions about the future What if I should be brought into such a condition What if such a sad estate should befall me What if I be left unto such a temptation Thus constant conflicts about what is to come taketh off all joy and thankfullness for what we have for the present Therefore it is a speciall duty in the Children of God to be acting dependently upon God for the future as well as for the present Our Saviour Mat. 6. 25. doth by severall choise and precious Arguments indeavour to conquer that ill temper in his Disciples who were so sollicitous what would befall them to morrow how they should be cloathed hereafter how they should live hereafter Therefore the Child of God is to live with as much joy and contentation in respect of future things as if they were present And this is the reason why the promises in Scripture are sometimes expressed in the past tense and sometime in the present because we are also as much assured of every good thing promised as if we had it already in our hands 4. The good things we are to trust in the Lord for as future are both spirituall and temporall things Though Paul speakes here and David many times in his Psalmes of trusting in God for temporall mercies yet the most noble and excellent objects of our confidence is to be eternall glory or the injoying of God in that state of blessedness Hence it is that God is sometimes and everlasting glory is sometimes called our hope because in the expectation of these things the soul is daily supported and certainly if the Husbandman would not plow but in hope neither would a believer indure all those sufferings and afflictions for Christs sake but for this hope This trusting to have that unspeakable joy hereafter and to be for ever with God should be put forth more vigorously by us And we should find it excellently usefull to weane us from the world and to make us part with our dearest comforts for Christs sake yea as was hinted before we are to trust in God for these temporall things only as they are conducible thereby because God hath promised them no further and so farre they are absolutely promised insomuch that we may no more distrust God about temporall things so farre as necessary to our salvation then we may of spirituall and gracious things which may detect the Hypocrisie of our hearts whereby we please our selves as if we trusted on Christ for our justification and the salvation of our soules when in the mean while we distrust him about a morsell of bread or a drop of water Only it may be doubted how Paul and any godly man can trust in the Lord for the future about temporall mercies seeing that the godly may many times be without them and if Paul be delivered once by God it dothnot follow he must be delivered every time for then he could not have suffered Martyrdome as he did at last And why might not John the Baptist and James have trusted in the Lord to be delivered Which if they had done it had been a false trusting To this some say that we are as absolutely bound to trust in God for every temporall mercy as we are for any spirituall and that it is meerly for want of faith or trusting in God if we have not all the temporall deliverances we stand in need of If a man dye of the Plague they will say it is for want of faith in God but although no doubt the People of God are greatly to be blamed for their diffidence and for want of trusting in God they loose many outward mercies yet because temporall things are not so absolutely promised as spirituall therefore there cannot be such an absolute trusting for them Others they say that we are to trust in Gon conditionally To rest upon him for this and that mercy with this condition if God will But those that say we are absolutely to pray for temporall things these must also conclude that we are to trust in God for them absolutely likewise and therefore such do not like that expression by way of condition when we pray for these outward mercies They like not this expression in prayer Father if it be thy will recover such an one that is sick They think this is not a Prayer because from a conditionall supposition no certain thing is inferred Others therefore they conclude we are to pray absolutely for temporall things and by consequence we may also add to trust for them only there ought to be a submission in our spirits that if God give us not our requests we yield our selves up to his holy and wise will Thus with them though we may not pray with condition yet we ought with subordination and happily they that speak of this condition mean no more then subordination There is then a difference about trusting in God concerning spirituall and temporall things eternall glory absolutely and such a measure of grace as will beare us through all temptations that we shall not totally and finally be overcome by them temporall things with subordination yet so farre also absolutely ab out them that no good thing shall be withheld from us so that we may with Paul Rom. 8. in an holy triumph profess That neither life nor death neither things present or things to come shall separate us from the love of God in Christ SERM. LXXVIII Of Motives to trust in God and the Opposites to it Presumption and Despair 2 COR. 1. 10. In whom we trust he will yet deliver EXperiences of Gods mercies that are past you heard may justly excourage us to trust in God for the future Now although much hath been said concerning this necessary grace of trusting with the object in which and for which yet some particulars are to be added for further explication As First There are some peculiar and proper motives to trust in God which were the personal priviledges of some believers onely and there are general common ones which do belong to all the godly As for example when David in that place mentioned before argued that God who had delivered from the Bear and Lion would also from that uncircumcised Philistim We may very well conclude that David in that
we not to have done it 4. One chief motive which is to put us upon all holy obedience unto God is Thankfulness There are two great and principal parts of Divinity the one is De gratià Dei of the grace of God and the other De gratitudine hominis of mans thankfulnes There are indeed several reasons why we are commanded to abound in holy works but one of them is thereby to testifie our thankfulnes to God that though we cannot do anything to merit at his hands though Christ as Mediator hath purchased all spiritual priviledges so that we cannot do any holy duty as a cause to procure them yet to manifest our thankfulnes to God we are ready with delight to do his will 5. A thanksgiving heart is the most proper and sutable disposition to the Gospel dispensation wherein grace doth in so many wonderfull effects demonstrate it self Now praise doth properly answer to free grace and love Eph. 1. 16. Gods predestination and his adoption it is That we should be to the praise of the glory of his grace These new songs should alwayes be in our mouths And again v. 12. That we should be to the praise of his glory So that if you say Why did God predestinate thee It is to his praise Why doth he convert It is to his praise Thus he adopts he justifieth that we might be only to his praise Thus 1 Pet. 2. 9. we are a chosen generation a peculiar people that we should shew forth his praises The children then of free grace must be the children of praises and thanksgivings unto God Every power of the soul every part of the body should be a tongue as it were to glorifie God Were we more affected with the depth breadth and length of this grace of God we should be more abounding in this duty of blessing God David cals his tongue his glory though some apply it to the soul because of this work Lastly If we praise not God when mercies are obtained by prayer it discovereth a rotten and insincere heart It argued thou never didst pray for mercies upon right grounds to glorifie God to be thereby more instrumental in our service of him but only for our own ends and our own necessities For he that prayeth spiritually will praise God cheerfully he will more rejoyce in the favour of God because God heareth his prayers then the benefit obtained If then thou neglectest this duty of thanksgiving thou discoverest a prophane earthly heart that thou preferrest the mercy desired above the glory and honour of God and therefore it will be just with God never to hear thy prayers more For thankfulness is the only way to preserve mercies and to have more added SERM. LXXXII God is the fountain of all our Mercies they are his Gifts and why 2 COR. I. II. That for the gift bestowed upon us THe second part in order to be treated of is The Object matter for which or that for which Paul would have solemne thanksgiving after such solemn prayer The gift bestowed upon us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This temporal deliverance he calleth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because it came from the favour of God not from any merits or deserts in Paul Some make a difference between 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as if 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was applied onely to the common gifts of Gods Spirit especially those which Divines call Dona ministrantia Gifts of service and the Schools Gratiae gratis datae and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the grace and favour of God in a special manner or to the effect thereof which is inherent grace in the soul These graces are called Dona sanctificantia Gifts that doe truely sanctifie those that have them The Schooles falsly call them Gratiae gratum facientes But though 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be often applied to such common spirituall gifts as 1 Cor. 12. alibi Yet sometimes we must thereby understand sanctifying grace and justifying grace Rom. 5. 16. Rom. 11. 28. And indeed if we will make any difference it seemeth to be this rather that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is the Effect and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Cause as Rom. 12. 6. Having gifts according to the grace that is given to us Hence it is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is generally translated gift in the New Testament So Favorinus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So that what the Scripture other where calleth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jac. 1. 17. Act. 8. 21. Psal 1. 17. it may be the same with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 onely it doth properly signifie such a gift as maketh to the publick and spiritual advantage of the Church onely in this Text it may have the general signification and the special The general Paul's Deliverance was a temporal gift It was a mercy in these outward things a preservation from death either violent as the common exposition you heard is or from natural For Baldwin the Lutheran Expositor thinketh it may well enough be understood of some desperate sicknesse Paul was afflicted with Howsoever this outward mercy of preservation is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and it may have also the special signification of a Paul's life and preservation was a gift in this sense for hereby his ministerial labours might be more successefull But this latter consideration will come in in the close of this verse Let us take notice of the general one Paul's life and preservation it is a gift From whence observe That not onely spiritual mercies which are above natural causes but even our ordinary temporal enjoyments are the gift of God It 's not Gods gift onely to sanctifie us to justifie us but to give us our health our food our preservation so that we live wholly upon the meer bounty of God we are all so many Almes-men the world is an Almes-house Man doth not or cannot obtaine the least mercy with his owne wisdom and power without the blessing of God This is a necessary truth For we look more upon these ordinary mercies as the fruit of our own labour than as Gods meer free gift The Apostle Jam. 1. 17. saith Every good gift is from God Every gift whether natural or supernatural what have we that we have not received is true both in nature and grace For although in the sense that Pelagians did it was very erroneous to confound Creation and Nature with grace yet in this respect we may say That Creation and Preservation is of the grace and favour of God because he communicated of his goodnesse to the creature onely from his meer favour But to speake after the Scripture-language onely those spiritual favours and Church-priviledges which conduce to eternal blessednesse are called The grace of God So that health life and other mercies though they be The gifts of God yet are not called The grace of God However
that is not probable It is then for that deliverance vouchsafed to Paul that they are to be thankfull and the reason is clear because mercies vouchsafed to Paul were their mercies also From whence observe That the mercies vouchsafed to the pastors and guides of the Church are to be accounted the Churches mercies What advantage comes to the shepherd it redounds to the sheep The rain that fals upon the mountains descendeth to the benefit of the valleys Your life your comfort is bound up in theirs Paul indeed said We live if you stand fast It was his comfort his life to see them preserved from Apostasie by persecution 1 Thess 3. 8. And on the contrary the Church may say of her guides We stand fast if you live As mercies to the publick Magistrates are to be accounted the peoples mercies so the mercies of Church-officers are to be reckoned the Churches If the Pilotes be in danger it can never be well with the ship When Elijah was taken away the cry was The chariots of Israel and the horsemen thereof So great a mercy was one Prophet accounted to be We have a notable instance of the holy care of the Philippians about their Pastor Epaphroditus Phil. 2. 26 27. when he was sick unto death how heavily did they lay it to heart Insomuch that Epaphroditus was exceedingly grieved that they had heard of his being sick he knew it would so greatly afflict them Yea Paul accounted it a mercy to him also that God did heal him For though Paul did recover many out of their diseases yet this gift was not when they pleased and it was least of all extended to those that were of their intimate acquaintance but rather to such as were brought to them that so the truth of their miracles might be more manifested Use of Instruction How happy and blessed a thing it is when people are able to do their duty herein To look upon all the favours and good providences of God to the Ministers of the Gospel as their own mercies their health encouragements preservations as their owne but how bitterly doth Satan fill the hearts of some men who out of love to their lusts and their errours look upon their godly guides as the greatest burthens and would heartily rejoyce in any evil that should befall them This is clean contrary to those gracious loving and indeared affections which ought to be in people to their spiritual shepherds SERM. LXXXIV Of our Glorying and Rejoycing in our Gifts and Graces Why and how it is lawfull and how not 2 COR. 1. 12. For our rejoycing is this the testimony of our conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity not with fleshly wisdome but by the grace of God we have had our conversation in the world and more abundantly to you-wards THis verse as appeareth by the raciocinative particular or note of inference For is brought in as a reason of something which went before But Interpreters do differ about the coherence thereof Some make this to be a reason of that hope and trust he formerly spake of which he had in God Though he did trust in Gods mercies yet not in them alone but in his own endeavours also Hence Aquinas from this saith That hope doth arise from the mercy of God and mans merits But this doth not consist with Scripture Others do make it part of his Apologetical Narration defending himself as against that crime of inconstancy and levity which was cast upon him because of his promise to come to them which yet he did not and therefore they think these words look backward and not forward Calvin and others which is most probable referre it to the words immediately preceding viz. their prayers and praises to God in his behalf This is given as a reason why they should be thus tender about him because he had obtained grace to be faithfull he had not sought himself or his own glory he had not walked in hypocrisie and fraud but had been kept by the grace of God in all sincerity in his conversation in the world not only at Corinth but every where else Now it is a great motive and encouragement to pray for such The Apostle useth this argument Heb. 13. 18. Pray for us for we trust we have a good conscience in all things The connexion then being thus discovered we come to the Text absolutely considered and therein we may consider 1. The ground and reason it self 2. That which is affirmed and predicated of it And this is set down in the fore-part of the verse and therefore we shall begin with it The words are This is our rejoycing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is rendred by most our glory or our boasting The Apostle doth very often use the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it seemeth to come of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the neck and so is a metaphore signifying for the most part pride and loftinesse taken from horses whose pride will be discovered by their neck and therefore called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or as Homer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So that for the most part it is taken in an ill sense Hence Hesychius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and with Budaeus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is a proud boaster and bragger but with Paul it is used sometimes in a good sense as here For the word is used in a three-fold sense gradual to one another 1. To rest and relie upon a thing 2. From thence to rejoyce and to be glad in it 3. From thence to declare and publish this with boasting Now though Paul did not put confidence and trust in his good and sincere conscience yet from the perceiving of that he did rejoyce Whereas then we see Paul rejoycing and glorying from the testimony and evidence of that grace he had in him We may observe That an holy glorying and rejoycing in the graces of God we perceive in us is allowed and lawfull I say an holy glorying for the heart may quickly degenerate into a proud sinfull boasting Therefore this truth must be warily bounded So that the dejected and tempted soul may be quickned to its duty of comfort and not to deny the work of grace that it may feel and the proud pharisaical spirit may be debased The valley must be exalted and the mountain made low It is true indeed we have the Scripture saying Let him that glorieth glory in the Lord. Let not the wise man glory in his wisdome 1 Cor. 1. 31 And if Abraham had not wherewith to glory who can have Yea the Apostle saith expresly Rom. 3. 27. That glorying is excluded by the law of faith But in what sense this is to be understood will appear when we come to manifest how many wayes it is not lawfull to glory or to rejoyce no not in our gifts and graces Only this Text maketh it plain that in some sense our graces may be matter
22. How miserable are such a people who rejoyce in the greatest judgment that can befall them Rejoyce not in this but weep and mourn rather when those who should deal faithfully with thee do flatter and seduce thee daubing with untempered morter For God will destroy both such Prophets and such a People Thirdly We are to rejoyce in the spiritual success and prosperity of their work It is very sad to hear those complaints in the Scripture Who hath believed our report and All the day long have we stretched out our hands unto a rebellious people To have much rain fall upon the ground and nothing but bryars and thorns coming up thereupon When therefore we shall finde that God makes the Ministry a savour of life and not of death unto many this ought greatly to rejoyce us when thou findest it to be a mighty word upon thy own heart or upon the hearts of others wherein we ought to be exceeding glad For Is there any greater mercy can befall thee than to have the Word thus a converting and saving Word to thee Thou mayest admire thy Pleasures thy profit thy lusts and judg them sweet But know that the Saving efficacy of the Ministry upon thy soul will be the blessedness indeed that shall endure for ever and therefore when you hear men praise a Ministry admire that examine what is the spiritual good they have found thereby what Reformation what a change hath it made The Apostle telleth these very Corinthians 1 Cor. 5. 6. that their glorying was not good why so because they did not purge out the old leaven They did not cast out that wicked person from amongst them now all this while they gloryed in their able Teachers they magnified the wisdome and Eloquence of many that preached amongst them but saith he your glorying is not good where is the holy Order the godly Discipline the spirituall Reformation that you should have attained unto by the Gifts and Ministry of your Teachers This alone will cause us truly and solidly to rejoyce Use of Instruction How impossible is it for men upon true and spiritual grounds to rejoyce in the Ministry unless they have felt some special efficacy upon it in their hearts They may glory in the parts in the Eloquence in the abilities of men but not for the spirituall success of the work In Popery they will have their people glory in their Church-Officers because of the external pomp and stateliness they live in and so they become reverenced for their outward glory But this is wholly unsuitable with the Scripture-glory and the Scripture-rejoycing for this alone will make thee praise God if thou hast found his Ministers to be the happy Instruments of grace and peace to thy soul SERM. CIII Of the Rejoycing a faithfull Minister hath in an Obedient people 2 COR. 1. 14. That we are your rejoyeing as you also are ours in the day of the Lord Jesus THere remaineth the Second part of the Doctrine to be dispatched which is The Ministers rejoycing upon good grounds in his people For you heard how happy and blessed a thing it was when there was cause for a mutuall and reciprocall rejoycing in one another between Minister and People For God many times upon wise ends doth divide those who should be conjoyned sometimes he sends faithfull Embassadours to a froward and rebellious people as God in Ezekiel that the people were bryars and thornes to him and that he did dwell among scorpions yet he must not be afraid or dismayed at their lookes though they were a rebellious house Chap. 2. 6. Now what comefort could Ezekiel have from such a people They were so many bryars and thornes scratching and tearing of him so many scorpions that had stings and what danger was it to dwell with such Sometimes again there may be a godly and holy people highly prising the means of grace and yet God set over them dumb or wicked Pastors that are Idols and no shepherds Now when this is so their is little rejoycing in one another and if Jehoash the King of Israel 2 Kings 13. 9. compared an unequal Warr to an unequal and unfit Marriage the thistle in Lebanon with the Cedar in Lebanon which proved destructive immediately for the wilde beast in Lebanon came and trode down the Thistle How much more now is this true in this spiritual relation When an Ignorant or prophane Minister is over a gracious people then the Thistle is married to the Cedar but but this cannot hold long for the Devil which is like the wilde beast the roaring Lyon he will come and devour all so that what the Apostle speaketh 2 Cor. 6. 14. may well be applyed here Be not unequally yoaked what communion hath light with darkness It is then very uncomfortable when a Godly people hath an unfaithfull Minister or a faithfull Minister an ungodly and a froward people This will make him sadly to bewail his condition crying out with Isay Wo unto me for I dwel among men of polluted lips Isay chap. 6. 12. This maketh him like Lot to torment his righteous soul by seing and hearing the wickedness of those he dwelleth amongst 2 Pet. 2. 8. This is a bitter and sad Persecution as it were thou dost not onely persecute a Minister by the malicious opposition and violent courses against him but even thy ungodly life that thou wilt not be reformed that thou wilt not hear and humbly receive the word of God this maketh them grieved and wearied in their work This is a perfecution of their righteous souls as Jeremy said chap. 13. 17. If you will not here it my soul shall weep in secret places for your pride Thus the wickedness and ungodly wayes of a stubborn people are the very heart-breaking of a godly Minister while they deride and scorn his soul mourneth for them while they revile and reproach him maliciously he giveth himself to prayer for them Even as it is with some tender Father who hath a Son grievously distracted and bereaved of his wits while he rageth and raveth at his Father while he miscalleth him and striketh at him The Father stands by sadly affected weeping and praying for his childe that he might be brought to his sound minde again Thus doth a godly tender Pastor mourn over a wicked scornfull and rebellious People But let us proceed to shew Wherein a faithfull Minister of Christ hath cause to rejoyce over his people And first When they are a teachable and learning people very tractable and ready to receive Instruction This is a great joy and Incouragement There are many who as they are sottishly ignorant in matters of Religion so they will continue obstinately therein They are not desirous and hearkning after knowledg that say with those in Job 21. 14. unto God Depart from us for we desire not the knowledge of thy wayes Now it is for want of a true knowledg of God that iniquity and profaneness doth abound every where
of their hearts all the purposes and intentions of the soule in holy duties shall be made manifest it shall then be discovered who was faithfull and who was insincere and wilt thou anticipate this day Little doest thou thinke how much such as feare God in truth doe bewaile that partial hypocrisie and insincerity which is within them how greatly they feare lest they should deceive themselves and doe holy duties for false ends and not out of pure respect to God himselfe Such then shall have praise of God and their integrity manifested before Angels and men Thirdly There will be a change of mens thoughts as to the godly In respect of their external estate and condition They have for the most part the evil things of the world when the wicked enjoy the glorious things thereof Are not afflictions troubles and miseries as inseparably following the people of God as the shadow doth the body Doth not our Saviour fore-warn his Disciples of the great trouble that they shall meet with in the world Doth not Paul himself say 1 Corinth 15. 19. If we have hope in this life onely we are of all men most miserable Of all men Because other men will follow the pleasures and profits of the world Other men will suck out the honey that is to be had in the creatures They will escape all misery and persecution by becoming any thing in Religion and thereby save themselves out of danger but as for the godly they are as sheep appointed for the slaughter all the day long Their tender conscience and feare to sinne against God putteth them into many losses and disadvantages which the men of the world can imbrace Now it being thus with them this doth exceedingly prejudice men against godly men Their outward condition is many times dangerous they seeme to be cast off even by God himselfe as if he did not love them or owne them for his and this keepeth off many from walking in the pathes of holinesse If the applause honour and great things of the world did accompany the power of godlinesse then all would strive to enter in at such a broad gate but because it is with them as with Christ they appeare with no external glory and lovelinesse upon them Hence it is that of all men they will not owne such or joyne to such But this great day will make you have other thoughts of their condition when you shall see their sackcloth taken off and robes of honour put upon them when you shall see these Lazarusses with no more sores on them or desiring crummes from the Table but placed in Abraham's bosome This will make you then to wish Oh that we had endured the same hardship gone through the same wildernesse seeing they have now arrived at such a blessed Land as they are In the third and last place The thoughts and apprehensions of men about Christ will be greatly changed at that day from what they have at present in two particulars especially First When Christ is offered now to us and we may be made partakers of him yet we refuse him we will not receive him we had rather have our lusts than Christ we love father mother and life it selfe more than Christ Such low thoughts have we of him now But oh the time is coming when Christ and onely Christ will be in request At that day he is happy who shall have an interest in Christ Those Gadarens that intreated Christ to depart out of their coasts regarding their hoggs more than he with what confusion will they behold him at that day We shall then see there is good reason for that Doctrine He that loveth father more than me or he that loveth life it self more than me is not worthy of me Matth. 10. 37. For happily flesh and blood may for the present say This is an hard saying who can beare it To love Christ more than father that begat me and maintaineth me from whom happily I may expect great and large gifts Or better than life which is above all earthly mercies Will Christ be as good as these to me Shall I not lose by loving him more than these But if a man consider what Christ is How he will appeare at that day How happy are they who can claime an interest in him Then they will see reason why Christ should be preferred above all Now we are for Barabbas rather than Christ Now Christ knocketh at the door to come in and we will not open to him But who is there then that would not cry out Oh let Christ justifie me let him sanctifie me let him save me Thus the stone that is now refused will be the head corner-stone Secondly Many deceive themselves in their thoughts about Christ apprehending onely love and willingnesse in him to save They never thinke of Christ but as a Saviour Though never so polluted by sinne yet they call him their good Saviour their blessed Saviour but at this day thou wilt then have other thoughts Thou wilt then see he can damne as well save he can be a Lion as well as a Lambe This mercifull Saviour will be a severe and just Judge Thus Revelat. 6. 16 17. you have the great men and rich men of the earth hiding themselves in Dens and calling to the Mountaines and Rockes to fall upon them and hide them from the wrath of the Lambe for the great day of his wrath is come and who shall be able to stand Thus you see that your thoughts about Christ at that day will be wholly changed You that thinke onely of mercy that speak onely of mercy that look onely upon Christ as a Saviour What trembling will this be to you when you shall see him come as a Judge with ten thousand of Angels when you shall heare him pronounce his terrible sentence upon ungodly men then how will your hearts melt within you Then you will beginne to say within your selves Oh that we had not made an Idol-Christ that we had not fancied a Christ to our selves This is not such a Christ as we looked for This is not such a Christ as we expected Even as the Jewes looked for another Messiah then was indeed to come which proved their destruction So also many doe fancy to themselves such a Saviour made up onely of mercy at that great day And therefore whereas they promise to themselves peace they will meet with horrour and desolation And thus much for those particulars The next general Proposition is That there will be a wonderfull change upon mens thoughts in reference to Gods dispensations and his providence in this world Gods proceedings here below have beene the subject of many Heathens disputes Yea David and Jeremiah were ready to stagger and fall with the consideration of Gods various dealings in this world especially that particular went deep into them why God should let the wicked live in all prosperity and at hearts ease and in the meane while the
if thou finde that one Sermon passeth away after another yet there is no spiritual benefit accrewing to thy soul thereby But why do we speak of spiritual Edification in how many is not the ground-work of Conversion laid how can they have the second benefit who have not obtained rhe first How can they be nourished and grow who have not yet the Principles of Life infused into them Two great things are then to be done by our Ministry through the grace of God The First To Regenerate The Second is To grow and increase in the work of Grace If the foundation stone of this building be not laid thou art yet in thy ruines and rubbish thou art yet in thy sinnes Thou art to pray and to desire all others to pray that God would have mercy upon thy soul that he would take away thy stony heart that he would heal thy blinde eyes and open thy deaf eares But if God hath brought thee into this spiritual estate know there is a necessity to grow in grace as well as to be in grace and that for progress herein God hath appointed his Ministry and the Ordinances Cry out then and say Lord not the First time but the Second and Third yet all my life long make me to partake of this Heavenly Benefit SERM. CVIII All Christians especially Ministers ought to lay out themselves wholly for Gods Glory and others good 2 COR. 1. 16. And to passe by you into Macedonia and to come again out of Macedonia unto you and of you to be brought on my way toward Judea THis Text containeth the manner how Paul was to fulfill his purpose of coming to them which was first to go to Macedonia and upon a short abiding there then again to come back to them and to make a longer continuance with them For the state of the Church of Macedonia was not so corrupt as this of Corinth and therefore needed not so long a residence of Paul there as in this place For our holy Apostle had his whole heart carried out in the service of God and therefore did order his journeys and continuance in any place according as Gods glory and the advantage of the Church might require it So that when Paul speaketh here of his travails and setteth down as it were his several journeys in all these he did not consult with flesh and blood or look upon carnal advantages but his aim in all is to promote the Kingdom of Christ There is one great difficulty which Commentators are exercised with concerning this Text and that is How to reconcile this passage with that which is 1 Cor. 16. 5 6 7. where he saith He would come to them after he had passed through Macedonia and that he would not now see them by the way whereas here he saith he will though afterwards he would come and abide with them So that here seemeth to be a contrariety in his purposes Some as Aquinas and others think therefore that this purpose in the Text was either made in a former Epistle which is now lost or sent by a messenger to them And that afterwards Paul for urging reasons did alter his resolution And that this is spoken of in the former Epistle which they say is the second though with us it be the first Hence it 's affirmed by some that the Apostle wrote three Epistles to these Corinthians though we have but two But it is the judgement of the most able Divines That no part of the Canonical Scripture is lost They grant many books are now wanting which some holy men did write but of that which was by God appointed to be the Canon and Rule of our faith and manners none is perished And indeed to hold that opinion would open a door for many atheistical arguments at least it would gratifie the Popish party who thinketh if there were no Scripture yet the Church and her traditions would be a starre bright enough to guide us unto Heaven Others there are that grant in the former Epistle Paul had a contrary resolution to this in the Text and that it is no dishonour to him to change his mind for they distinguish between matters of Doctrine and matters of Fact In matters of Doctrine they were alwayes guided by the Spirit of God But in matters of Fact sometimes they did purpose according to humane considerations but prudential and rational yet in the event were over-ruled to other things then they purposed by some new dispensations of Gods providence Neither is this to be blamed no not in wise men For the Rule is Sapientis est mut●re consilium new emergencies which the wisdome of man could not fore-see may cause new resolutions Now it 's plain that either Paul did wholly change his purpose or else he did not fulfill it as soon as was expected by the Corinthians which made them so calumniate him for inconstancy and levity And this answer may very well be justified yet Musculus doth at large shew how both these purposes may be reconciled and that there is no contrariety in them which is too long here to insert Let us come to observe some practical and profitable instructions from this Text and from the general scope that Paul had in all this labour and travail which was to advance the glory of God to promote the good of the Church rejoycing like a Gyant to runne his race We may observe That it is the duty of all Christians and especially of Ministers to lay out themselves for the glory of God and good of others Was not Paul admirable in this See how he taketh one journey upon another travaileth from one Church to another and all this is that Christ might be exalted Both godly Christians and especially Ministers of the Gospel are to follow Christ in this who went up and down preaching the Kingdome of God and doing good whithersoever he came All his life was spent in doing the will of the Lord. First Let us consider it as the duty of all Christians in their several places and relations and herein these things are considerable First There is none though in never so mean a condition but hath several talents committed to him which are to be imployed for the honour of God and the good of others The known Parable of the Talents doth sufficiently confirm this For though there be a great difference some have five and some have ten and others but one or two yet none are to sit idle And therefore in that Parable Matth. 25. 24. the instance of an unprofitable servant is made in him who had but one Talent we would have thought it would have gone worse with those who had more Talents they were under many obligations it would be very difficult to improve all Doth not evperience teach us that where a man hath many relations and several trusts committed to him how hard it is to be faithfull in all Yet here in this Parable he only is
of God like Peters Angel doth break up all the strong bars of any prison we are in any difficulty we are afflicted with As Dalilah gathered Sampson loved her when he would manifest where his strength was so may we assure our selves of Gods love to us by revealing his promises oh if you bring the promises you binde the hands as it were of the Almighty he can do nothing against his promises when therefore any thoughts of Gods Majesty of Gods purity and holinesse may affright thee run to his promise and as the people of Israel when amazed under the terrible lightnings and thundrings at Gods presence in giving the Law cried out Let not God speak any more to us but Moses so do thou let not thy Majesty speak thy Justice speak thy Holinesse speak but thy Promise let that speak and we will hear Lastly The freenesse of Gods grace is made very glorious and resplendent in the promises of grace Free-grace is more than love or goodnesse and bounty for Adam while in the state of integrity had those but free-grace is only where a miserable and hopelesse sinner is Now to such an one belong only curses and threatnings when therefore in stead of a threatning like a roaring lion to devour thee thou meetest with a gracious promise to embrace thee this must needs rejoyce thy heart Go to the spring head of every promise and thou wilt finde it to be alone free-grace The Scripture useth these Arguments as equivalent to have a thing by grace to have it by a promise and to have it by faith for grace is the originall and fountain Promises are on Gods part the active and communicative means faith on our part is the receptive and applicative so that when we enjoy any mercy by Gods promise thereby is excluded all works and all boasting and thus God is altogether exalted and man debased Again if we come to the second particular there we shall see how that our Amen subscribed to the promises or our firm beleeving in them doth give glory to God and this is the more to be pressed because we are apt to have low thoughts of faith as we see in Popery where Charity is far preferred before it and withall to beleeve is accounted an easie thing Thus also the Papists charge us as if we made the way to heaven a broad way because we say they must beleeve that is the soul and life of all And further it is good to presse this because the people of God look upon faith as was hinted before only as their ease not as bringing any glory to God Hence though they never doubt whether they should repent of sinne or love God yet they do very much doubt about their duty of beleeving Now all this preposterousnesse ariseth from the want of consideration in this particular that Faith giveth glory to God as well as procureth mercies to our selves yea to beleeve in the promise is the great and signall eminent way of giving glory to God First because by beleeving in Gods promises we thereby proclaim our dependance upon him in all things that we live both spiritually and corporally upon him only so that faith in this consideration is the great duty of the first commandment That requireth us we should have no other Gods besides him Thus faith doth it taketh off from all supports of sence of second causes of all humane advancements and setleth us upon the promise of God alone Now must not this needs give glory to God when God alone is set up no creature no other help is looked upon This is that which maketh faith in the promises so difficult because it is so hard to be weaned from the breasts of the creature we know not how to swimme without these bladders Though we have ten thousand promises to support us yet one crosse providence doth more to unsettle us then all these promises to confirm and quiet us Some have observed that all the letters in the Name Jehovah are literae quiefcentes teaching us thereby to rest our souls alone upon him it may be that is too curious howsoever faith may be called the acquiescent or quietative grace therefore to beleeve in the promises is to give glory to God Secondly By beleeving in the promises we glorifie God because hereby we manifest him to be truth it self the supream and infallible truth Therefore the Scripture maketh the contrary to this a very hainous sinne highly dishonouring God as when it is said John 3. 33. He that receiveth the testimony of Christ which is by faith hath set to his seal that God is true Then on the contrary he that doth not receive it he setteth to his seal that God is a lyar Oh execrable blasphemy so much unbeleef is so much giving the lye to God and if this be so hainous a sinne then beleeving doth God as much honour And truly it must be unpardonable if we who do upon a mans promise rest our selves contented and never doubt of the performance especially when a just and honest man that we should not much rather rely upon God of whom the Scripture saith It is impossible he should lye Thirdly Herein doth beleeving in Gods promise so exceedingly glorifie God because it exalteth that Evangelicall way of our justification and salvation which God above all things purposed for his own glory The works of Creation are for the demonstration of Gods glory Whether we eat or drink we are to do all for the glory of God But the way of mans salvation is in a more signall and eminent manner ordered for Gods glory This is the mystery that hath astonished all the world This is that glorious truth which the Angels desire to search into more and more Now by faith this glory of God is published and acknowledged Take the despairing sinner look upon the damned in hell do they give God the glory of his grace and of his wisedom and mercy Do they with cordiall ravishments speak of the unsearchable riches of Gods grace in Christ No they cannot do it therefore the Beleever only is he who giveth God the glory due to him for all Gospel-wayes and all Evangelicall Priviledges Therefore hath God exalted Faith above all its fellow-graces because that above all graces doth give God the glory due to him Indeed in the state of Integrity their love of God had the preheminence as it shall also have in Heaven but in the state of grace there Faith hath the Excellency God hath taken off the royal Crown from that Vasthi and put it upon this Esther this despicable grace as it were and which hath no Pomp at all in it Only as it is said of Christ who being poor made many rich So this poor grace doth not onely enrich us but every way advanceth the Glory of God Insomuch that from the unbeleever God hath no more glory than if he had never sent his Sonne into the world No more
exhorteth all that hope in God Psal 31. 24. To be of good courage and God shall strengthen their hearts Of all temptations none are so grievous to be born as those which arise from Gods withdrawing of himself and hiding of his face from us then we apprehend no promises do belong unto us then we question very principles and so are like a ship tossed in the Sea without Pilot or Anchor Therefore spiritual fortitude to withstand these strong assaults is above all required How many have sunk irrecoverably into this pit of destruction So that unlesse Gods power settle us unlesse that compose our hearts we can as well remove mountains as this sad and sainting spirit of ours Lay then fast hold on Christ thou canst not sink in these waters if his arm doth uphold thee Thus Timothy is exhorted To be strong in the grace that is in Jesus Christ 2 Tim. 2. 1. there is his duty to be strong but how must he come to have this strength It is by Jesus Christ you would think the exhortation were superfluous for why must I be strong if it be the grace of Christ that must enable me But the exhortation is usefull howsoever for hereby we are taught our duty as also to go out of our selves renouncing our own strength and laying the faster hold upon Christ himself To this purpose we have the like exhortation Ephes 6. 10. Finally my brethren be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might when he had before laid down several precepts then knowing how impotent and unable we are he saith Be strong in the Lord. Here you see what we are commanded but it is the power of his might that is his mighty power that must confirm us and where this is present then we wonder how we are carried through such temptations led through such wildernesses as we have been we stand and admire to see what red Seas we have gone thorow and how the waters have yeelded unto us Thus Paul I can doe all things through Christ that strengthens me Phil. 4. 13. Fourthly Divine hope doth exceedingly conduce to stablish the soul upon the promises as you heard from those admonitions of David to his soul Hope thou still in God Faith is carried out to the truth of God and hope to the mercy and power of God and therefore he that hopeth in God is got into the Ark while others float in the waters Heb. 6. 19. it is compared to the Anchor of the soul both sure and stedfast and which entereth within the vail By this we see that hope doth notably settle the soul Faith indeed and hope are two sisters and twins and look so like one another that we can hardly make the difference yet faith establisheth the soul upon the promises by apprehending them as present so that the soul is in as holy a manner secure as if it were already in Heaven But hope doth settle the soul on Gods promises as the things promised are future and to come For seeing between Gods promises and the accomplishment of them there happen so many crosse providences in appearance yea so many difficulties and seeming impossibilities are in the way we need some divine grace to overcome all these and that is hope compared excellently to an Anchor for as that doth fasten the ship which otherwise would be tossed up and down and in danger of splitting upon every Rock so the soul of the most godly man is tossed up and down with such sad temptations that did not this hope bear up the heart all would fail within us But this spiritual anchor exceedeth all material ones for this is sure and stedfast Sure so that no outward violence of storms can break it and stedfast in respect from within there is nothing without or within that can disanu●l this But then whereas other anchors are fastened into the earth this is in Heaven in God and invisible things A godly mans hope cannot be seen by the bodily eye Take heed then of weakning this grace of hope it 's an excellent corroborater of the soul staying it up with that glory which will be revealed hereafter Lastly Another habitual principle whereby God doth exceedingly establish the heart on the promises is Spiritual joy and heavenly consolations This is one great reason say Divines why Angels and Saints in Heaven are so confirmed in that estate that nothing can tempt them off from God they never will be weary of the presence of God even because they are filled with so much infinite delight and joy that they cannot desire any better thing than God Now the godly they have the beginnings of these consolations here upon earth for by the spirit of adoption they are so filled with joy and delight that all the world is no more than an husk unto them they look upon the world as a wildernesse and Heaven as the Canaan So that spiritual consolations when wrought in the soul are like a mighty pillar to bear up the heart Hence the Apostle prayeth 2 Thes 2. 17. That God would comfort their hearts and stablish them First Comfort and then establish How hardly is the heart dejected and full of despondent thoughts established But comfort and joy is oil to the wheels Thus Nehemiah spake Neh. 8. 10. Be not ye sorry for the joy of the Lord is your strength So much sinfull grief as thou lettest in it is like the letting in of waters at some leak in the ship it may sink the ship at last Blesse God therefore for any gladnesse of heart for any consolations of soul through the Spirit of God these support the soul these make it rejoyce in the midst of all afflictions It is true sometimes the people of God for wise and holy ends are deprived of them but when they are vouchsafed they come like pleasant gales of winde to carry the ship to its Haven In the next place As God doth positively establish by these habitual principles so also by the actual motions of his Spirit upon us There is not only habitual grace but efficacious grace whereby the Lord worketh in us both to will and to do How many times do the principles of grace like Christ in the ship lie asleep in us insomuch that till they be awakened we are in danger of shipwrack Therefore when the Apostle exhorteth us To work out our salvation with fear and trembling Phil. 2. 13. he giveth a wonderfull reason for it 's God that worketh in you to will and to do and that of his good pleasure So that the confirming power of God lieth chiefly in this in actuating those habitual principles within us whereby we depend upon God continually as the beams of the Sun do upon the Sun This Doctrine Pelagians and Papists cannot relish but certainly if God come not with efficacious actual help as well as habitual the instances of the fals of Gods people in all ages will palpably declare they are undone
We have dominion over your faith no more than they can say We are the true and great Jehovah They cannot make a Religion make Sacraments but enjoyn the observance of that which is required in the Word and the reason which excludeth both spiritual and civil Governours is general to all We are not baptized into any mans name neither hath any Emperour or Church-officer died for us they have not been crucified for us neither have they power over our hearts to impose a command upon them which must necessarily be in the duty of faith neither can they damne or save men Hence the Apostle saith There is one Law-giver which is able to save and to destroy Jam. 4. 12. Fourthly Although divine faith be such a noble and excellent work coming from Heaven and ascending up to Heaven againe Yet it doth admit of degrees in the subject where it is Some have stronger faith some weaker some have more explicite and extensive faith than others yea and the most setled beleevers are subject to temptations they are often assaulted and that even in their faith about the principles and fundamentals about God about the Scriptures about the immortality of the Soul about the state of Glory and eternal Torments Fiery darts are sometimes injected for which the people of God doe abhorre and loath themselves Therefore we must distinguish between little faith and no faith between doubtings and Atheisme And truely for this end doth God suffer errours and heresies to arise in his Church that truth may be more confirmed and the approved may be made manifest It 's to exercise the spiritual wisdome and faith of the godly whether they can discerne of things that differ and can tell which is the strangers voice and which is the true shepherds It is a very grievous temptation to be assaulted about fiducial faith whether the promises belong to thee in particular but in some respects it is farre more terrible to be exercised in doubts about dogmatical faith for this tendeth to the razing of the foundations and the arguments or remedies to cure this distemper are more difficult Use of Instruction Is faith thus immediately respecting God above all instruments though making use of them Then First Theirs is not faith which doth wholly depend upon the Authority of a man though never so eminent We may not relie on Austine on Chrysostome neither doe we owne those expressions of Lutherans and Calvinists For although we acknowledge them eminent instruments in propagating of the Gospel yet we believe not upon their authority meerly because Luther and Calvin saith so It is true nothing is more ordinary than to admire mens persons and while we extoll their gifts and abilities we are secretly enticed to thinke of worthy men● above what we ought and finde an awe in our consciences to recede from any opinion they have delivered But we must take heed we doe not hereby become guilty of spirituall Idolatry setting up men as Idols in our hearts Secondly This instructeth that grosse ignorant men cannot have any divine faith for they feel nothing of any work of Gods Spirit or illumination upon their understandings hence they believe as other men believe as if a man were not to be saved by his own faith Thirdly It sheweth the Sceptical and Pyrrhonian man in Religion the meer Seeker that he hath no faith If he had the substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen upon his soul he would not be tossed up and down as he is Fourthly It sheweth that the meer carnal Politician hath no divine faith for he looketh upon Religion but as an humane device or a State-engine and therefore can transforme into all shapes and times How contrary is this to true faith FINIS AN Alphabetical Table CONTAINING The chief Heads of this Treatise A Administrations THe godly sometimes deceived about Gods Administrations towards them pag. 293 294 295 296 297 Reasons of it 298 Rules for the preventing it 299 300 Afflictions God comforts his people in all their Afflictions both spiritual 167 And temporal 168 'T is a special duty to comfort the Afflicted See Comfort The most eminent Saints when Afflicted need comfort 188 189 190 See Sufferings 'T is of great use to know what are the Afflictions of the people of God 256 Reasons of it ibid. What use is to be made of preaching about those Afflictions which Paul and others suffered from the Heathens 257 258 259 The Afflictions of the godly heavy and yet light 270 Faith and flesh passe different judgements upon Afflictions 270 271 Propositions clearing it 271 272 How we may know when flesh and when faith speaketh in Afflictions 274 275 276 'T is very usefull to know that 277 Natural strength not able to carry a man through all Afflictions 280 Propositions clearing it 280 281 282 See Troubles and Sufferings Anointing All true believers have a spiritual Anointing from God 620 Propositions clearing it 620 621 Apostle What an Apostle was 15 Two kinds of them ibid. They were appointed by Christ in the first building of the Church 16 The properties of an Apostle 16 17 18 19 Of the difference betwixt the Office of an Apostle and of an ordinary Pastour 506 507 Assurance A believer may be Assured he performeth duties with an upright heart 394 What is required to an Assurance of our being in a state of grace 395 396 The impediments of Assurance 400 401 Gods command to look after it 401 402 The effects of it 402 Cautions about it 403 B Blessing A Threefold Blessing mentioned in Scripture 127 Christians ought to Blesse God for all his mercies ibid. What is required to our Blessing God aright 128 129 130 131 We should Blesse God more for spiritual mercies than for other 134 See Praising God C Call THe divine Call of Ministers necessary to be known 19 Two things premised concerning a Ministers Call 20 What are the practical concernments which will follow those who have a true Call from God to the Ministers 21 To the people 22 The Call to Church-offices proceeds meerly from the will and pleasure of God 33 34 What is there meant by the will of God 34 35 36 Changing Of Changing in matters of Religion 546 Christ Why our Saviour called Christ 36 What it doth imply 27 He is the Sonne of God 135 Propositions explaining how Christ is the Sonne of God 136 137. 561 562 563 564 This truth is the foundation of all Christian comfort 138 139 Christ the onely object of all preaching 557 When Christ is preached 557 558 559 560 Jesus is the Christ the anointed of God 569 See Jesus Church Of the name Church 50 51 The nature and description of a Church 51 It is a society 52 Called of God 52 53 54 By the preaching of the Word to the profession of Christ and Church-communion 55 56 Wherein Church communion consisteth 56 57 The notes and signs of a Church 58 59 Why necessary
to be known ibid. All are not of equal necessity ibid. A latitude to be granted in the application of them 60 Of the twofold form of the Church internal and external ib. The marks of the visible not to be confounded with the properties of the invisible Church 61 Why Paul writeth to the Church and not to the Churches of Corinth 63 A Church is Gods people in a more peculiar manner 64 Seven things implied in the Churches being said to be of God 64 65 66 67 A Church sometimes gathered amongst the most prophane people 69 A Church may be a true one though defiled with many corruptions 70 Three propositions clearing it 73 Three reasons demonstrating it 76 What corruptions were in the Church of Corinth 71 72 The soundnesse and purity of a Church admits of degrees 73 The Church of God as 't is a Church doth farre surpasse all civil societies and temporal dignities 77 Three propositions clearing it 78 79 The grounds of it 79 80 'T is hard for Churches to keep within their proper bounds about Church administrations 80 'T is a Ministers duty by all lawfull means to promote the Church he is related to 81 All that are in the Church are Saints by profession 83 What is comprehended under Church-Saintship 84 85 All Saints ought to joyn themselves to Church communion 91 Yet some causes may excuse them 91 92 What are those sinfull grounds why many do not joyn themselves to Church communion 93 94 The best Churches changeable in their affections to their guides 464 Propositions clearing it 464 465 The causes of it 466 467 The Church esteems many things which the world despises 31 32 Church-officers Church-officers appointed by Christ as the head 28 Propositions clearing it 29 30 Two things Church-officers are to take heed of pride and idlenesse 30 31 How it concerns Church-officers to agree in matters of Religion 46 Three propositions clearing it 46 47 Three things conducing to that happy agreement 47 48 Comfort God a God of all Comfort to his 148 What is implied in that expression 149 What in the word Comfort 150 151 Propositions about the Comforts of God 152 It is so to be managed as to be made an antidote against despair and yet a curb to presumption ib. Comfort not to be judged of without Scripture-light 153 God actually Comforts his people 157 How God comforts his people 158 159 160 God a God of Comfort only to believers 161 Six propositions clearing the truth 162 163 164 165 God Comforts his people in all afflictions 166 167 No Philosophers ever had the true art or grounds of Comfort 169 God Comforts onely by the Scriptures 170 What are the grounds of Comfort in Scripture 171 172 173 How God is said to Comfort his people in all their afflictions notwithstanding they are oft disconsolate 174 175 176 177 Comfort not absolutely necessary to salvation 175 These only are fit to Comfort others who have the experimental work of Gods grace upon their own hearts 182 Four propositions clearing it 182 183 184 Four reasons confirming it 184 185 186 It is a special duty to Comfort the afflicted 187 Propositions clearing it 187 188 189 190 Two things required to the Comforting others in a right manner 190 191 The same grounds of Comforts which revive one may revive another also 191 What are the general grounds of Comfort in afflictions 192 193 Reasons of it 193 194 195 Our Comforts are and abound by Christ 209 210 How Christ makes our Comforts to abound in our sufferings for his sake 210 211 212 God commonly proportions our comforts to our sufferings 214 And sometimes makes them to exceed 215 The reasons of it 216 217 Why God often denies Comfort in trouble 217 218 Our Comfort is promoted by others suffering for Christ 223 224 225 226 227 'T is universal holiness that is the ground of Comfort 443 Communion Two sorts of Communion 251 Communion with the sufferers for Christ a good way to interest us in their glory ibid. Confidence self-confidence Self confidence a great sin 302 Propositions clearing the nature of Self confidence 302 303 304 A godly man sometimes guilty of it 309 310 Of the sinfulnesse of it 313 314 315 Confirme vide Establish Conscience Of the Conscience 384 The witness of a good Conscience a great ground of comfort 385 What is required to a good Conscience 385 386 387 388 389 How the Spirit witnesses with our Consciences 389 What are those effects of the Spirit by which our Consciences are rightly guided in witnessing to us 390 391 Distinctions concerning Conscience and its testimonies 392 393 Consolation vide Comfort Conversation Of a twofold Conversation 443 What is required to a good Conversation 445 446 Conversion A great deal of difference in the persons the Converted 42 And in the manner of their Conversion 43 The reasons of both 44 Corinth Of the City Corinth 68 D Day CHrist hath a solemn Day wherein great changes will be made 479 Wherein these great changes will be 479 480 481 482 c. Dead Of Gods raising the Dead 326 What it implies 328 329 Death The natural fear of Death not removed by grace 284 Propositions clearing it 285 286 Of what use the natural fear of Death is 286 There is a natural fear of Death in all though in some more in some lesse 288 When the fear of Death is sinfull 289 290 291 Deliverance Deliverance both temporal and spiritual from God 341 342 Despair Whence Despair arises 352 Dispensation All Gods Dispensations further the salvation of his people 242 c. Two sorts of Dispensations which conduce to that end 244 Vide Administrations E Earnest GRace the Earnest of glory 651 How grace and an Earnest differ 652 653 What is implied in the Earnest of Gods Spirit 654 655 656 They who have the Earnest of the Spirit cannot fall away 657 658 Education Education not to be rested upon 44 45 Ends. What are these inferiour Ends interposing betwixt God and us which we are apt to look upon 416 417 Enjoyments Temporal Enjoyments as well as spiritual mercies are the gift of God 369 Propositions clearing it 370 371 372 Reasons for it 373 Establish Wherein the Establishing worke of Gods grace lieth 607 608 609 610 611 612 Arguments proving all Establishing to be from God 613 The most eminent need Establishment as well as the we●kest 614 Demonstrations of it 615 616 617 'T is in Christ alone that we are Established 617 618 Reasons why we cannot Establish our selves 636 637 Experience Experience in former should encourage to trust in God for future mercies 345 Propositions clearing it 346 347 F Faith OF the different judgements which Faith and flesh put upon afflictions 274 c. The division of Faith as to the object 638 Whether in Faith and by Faith be oaths 665 Ministers have no power over a Christians Faith 684 A Christians Faith relates onely to God 694 Propositions clearing it 696 697 Father
worke consisteth in a great measure in comforting the afflicted 689 N Names THe prefixing of a Name is not a sufficient argument to prove the Authority of any Scripture 11 Note What things are necessary to make a Note 59 O Oath WHat an Oath is 659 660 661 VVhether words be necessary to an Oath 663 VVhether in faith and by faith be Oaths 665 Officers of the Church vid. Church-officers Ordinances Publick Ordinances usefull and acceptable 374 375 Reasons for it 375 376 377 Oyle The properties of material Oyle compared with spiritual 621 622 623 P Patience 'T Is Patience in sufferings that makes them conduce to our salvation 232 Patience commended by all 233 What goeth to the producing of it 234 235 Motives to Patience 236 237 238 239 Paul Why Saul called Paul 2 Paul's sins 3 His serviceablenesse 3 4 His learning 6 Of the Name Paul being prefixed before his Epistles 10 11 That argues them to be of Divine Authority 11 Why he styles himself an Apostle of Jesus Christ 31 Peace Peace from God and Christ earnestly to be prayed for 108 Wherein it consisteth how wrought and preserved 109 110 c. What are the effects of it 114 115 Directions for the attaining of it 116 People as related to Minister Vide Ministers Perseverance 'T is Perseverance that is the crown of holinesse 458 Hopefull beginnings in the wayes of Religion are not enough without Perseverance 459 Propositions clearing it 459 460 461 Prayer The most eminent in gifts and graces still need the Prayers of the meanest 359 Reasons of it 360 People ought to Pray for their Minister 361 362 363 Prayers to be made not only privately but publickly 375 Reasons of it 375 376 Praising It is our duty to Praise God for all his mercies 364 What is required to our Praising God 365 366 367 Motives to it 367 368 Vide Blessing Publick Praises vid. Publick Prayer Preaching Christ is the only object of our Preaching 557 When Christ is Preached 557 558 559 Presumption Signes of Presumption 350 351 Principles Two distinct Principles in every regenerate man 271 272 Of Principles in general 525 526 527 Of the Principles of a godly man 527 528 529 Principles of flesh vid. Flesh Professours Carnal Professours make great opposition to the Ministry 261 262 263 Who are they which Professe Religion meerly upon carnal ends 263 264 c. Promises God hath made many Promises to us in Christ 581 Propositions clearing it 581 582 583 584 Of the several sorts of Promises 585 586 Promises are the executions of Gods Decrees 587 No wicked man hath any right to the Promises ibid. The Promises suppose faith 588 God hath sealed them to us ibid. 'T is great skill to make use of the Promises 589 The Promises are all confirmed in Christ 591 Propositions clearing it 591 592 593 What a Christian should doe that doubts whether the Promises belong to him or no. 596 597 598 The Promises of God will never be altered 598 599 The Promises give glory to God both as made by him and as believed by us 600 601 Wherein the glory of God is manifested in his Promises 601 602 How faith in the Promises gives glory to him 602 603 Our establishment in the Promises is the work of G●…lone 605 Propositions clearing it 606 607 Signs of our interest in the Promises 640 Prudence What is that holy Prudence that Ministers are to use in the exercise of their Ministerial power 678 679 Wherein it doth consist 680 681 R Raising WHat is implyed in Gods Raising from the dead 328 329 Rejoycing An holy Rejoycing and glorying in the graces of God lawfull 380 What is required to this holy Rejoycing 380 381 In what respect 't is lawfull 381 Wherein unlawfull 382 383 Religion Religion opposed by two sorts of people 262 Who are those who professe Religion onely upon carnal grounds 263 264 c. S Saints GOd of great sinners oft makes eminent Saints 2 Reasons for it 4 5 All that are of the Church are Saints by profession and ought to be so by conversation 83 Of the nature of real Saintship 86 87 89 Two motives to it 88 89 Saints ought to joyne themselves in a Church-way 91 Yet some reasons may excuse them 90 What those reasons are 91 92 What reasons are not justifiable 93 94 The soul of the poorest Saint not to be neglected 94 Salvation The Salvation of believers is promoted by their suffering for Christ 228 There is a two-fold Salvation temporal and spiritual 241 The Salvation of Gods people is furthered by all his dispensations 242 What this Salvation doth imply 242 243 Two sorts of dispensations whereby Salvation is promoted 244 Saviour Our Saviour how called Jesus Christ 1 24 26 How Christ is a Saviour 25 What kind of Saviour he is 26 Vide Jesus Saul Why Saul was called Paul 2 Scripture The Penmen of the holy Scriptures were instruments not the authors 12 We are to rest satisfied with the style and method of Scripture 12 The authority of Scripture not to be questioned 13. Four considerations whereby to arme our selves against the opposers of Scripture 13 14 Sealing The people of God are his Sealed ones 625 Propositions clearing it 625 626 What the Sealing of the godly implies 626 627 628 629 The description of the Sealing of Gods Spirit 632 633 634 c. Whether all the people of God be his Sealed ones 645 646 How this Sealing may be stopt 647 648 Self-confidence Vide Confidence Simplicity Godly Simplicity affords much comfort 404 Of the nature of Simplicity as it relateth to God 405 406 407 408 c. As it relateth to man 411 412 Sincerity How 't is called godly Sincerity 413 Godly Sincerity carries a man above all other things to God himself 414 What it is in God that a Sincere heart looks upon 415 416 Propositions discovering the nature and effects of godly Sincerity 418 419 420 Spirit How the Spirit witnesseth with our consciences 390 Spiritual Spiritual mercies to be desired before temporal 96 A natural man cannot desire Spiritual things ibid Onely the regenerate 97 What ars the qualifications which provoke the godly to esteem Spiritual favours before others ibid. The reasons of it 98 Gods Spiritual works upon his people are not only for their but also for others good 179 Two kinds of Spiritual gifts ibid. What are these Spiritual things whereby we may be seruiceable to others 180 181 Suffering What is implied in the Sufferings of Christ 196 197 What in the Sufferings of Christ abounding 197 The profession of Christ is accompanied with Sufferings sometimes excessive ibid. Propositions clearing it 198 199 200 What is required in our Suffering for Christ ex parate objecti 201 202 203 What ex parte subjecti 205 206 207 208 How Christ makes our comforts to abound in our Sufferings for him 210 The advantages of our Suffering for Christ 213 Our Sufferings for Christ are for the Churches good 218 219
weakest believer as well as the strongest Christ to be prayed to for grace and peace Jesus Christ is a Lord. Of a threefold blessing spoken of in Scripture It is a Christians duty to be much in praising God What goeth to the making up a thankfull spirit Motives to be more affected with spiritnal mercies than temporal Motives to bless God for all his mercies God is the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Propositions explaining how Christ is the Son of God How Christs being the Son of God is the foundation of a Christians comfort God is a mercifull Father to all his children What is implied in Gods being called the Father of mercies Of the multitude of Gods mercies Of the variety of Gods mercies Of the Properties of Gods mercies Who are the fit objects of Gods mercies God is a God of all comfort to all his children What is comprehended in that expression God is the God of comfort What is implied in the word consolation How he is a God of all consolations Propositions obviating practical and doctrical objections about the mercy or comforts of God Of the Calvinists Doctrine concerning Gods absolute Decrees and how they stand with the mercy of God God not only can but doth comfort his children How God comforteth his people God is a God of comfort only to believers God will comfort his children in all their affliction whatsoever Propositions explaining the Observation Several sorts of soul or spiritual troubles in all which God comforts his children How God comforteth his people in outward tribulations No Philosopher ever had the true grounds of comfort Gods children deficient in a two-fold respect concerning Gods comforts What are these good things that God hath prepared for those that love him to comfort them What grounds of comfort the Scriptures afford unto us Psal 102. 13. How God comforreth his children in all their tribulations though they often may be disconsolate Comfort not absolutely necessary to salvation There is a two-fold joy direct and reflex Joy is either spiritual or sensitive and corporeal Gods spiritual works upon his people are not only for their own but for others spiritual advantage Of the distinction of the Schoolmen of spiritual Gifts 1. Gratiae gratis datae 2. Gratti● gratum facientes The Gifts of Gods Spirit are better distinguished into Dona Ministrantia and Sanctificantia Gifts are encreased by being improved What are those ●…ice things wherein more particularly we are to be serviceable to others 1. Humiliation 2. The Knowledge of God and true saith 3. Temptations 4. Consolations Those only can make fit applications to others who have the work of Gods Spirit upon their own souls A two-fold knowledge of spiritual things 1. Speculative and Theoretical 2. Practical and experimental This speculative and practical knowledge of spiritual things differ in the whole kind All knowledge that is accompanied with some kind of affections is not an experimental knowledge All experimental workings upon the soul are to be tryed by the Scriptures How our experiences are to be judged by the Word 1. Are they from Scripture rightly understood 2. Are they from the Spirit of God 3. Do they make thee more holy and humble Reasons confirming the Doctrine 1. They that have not this experimental knowledge they have no skill to cure others 2. They can have any sutablenesse of of pity and compassion 3. Because such only are found reall and in earnest 4. Because such alone are faithfull It is a special duty in a right manner to comfort the afflicted Propositions clearing the truth 1. There are two sorts of troubles 1. Spiritual and inward 2. Outward 2. The afflicted need the help of others to comfort them though themselves be never so skilfull in the comsorting others Reasons 1. Because remptations darken the judgement 2. Because the sense of their grief doth wholly possesse them 3. Because the most eminent when in troubles are subject to much unbelief and frowardness 4. Because the Devil is then most busie Lastly God hath appointed Ministers and Christians as a means to comfort others 3. The dispensation of comfort to the afflicted is either Charitativè or Potestativè 4. What is required to the comforting others in a right manner 1. Knowledge of the temptation and disposition of the person 2. The discovery of sin and then the application of comfort The same grounds of comfort that revive the heart of one godly man may do so to another too 1. There are both general and particular grounds of comfort What are the general grounds of comfort 1. All afflictions come from a Father 2. The end is good 3. The advantages that come from Christ Of the special and particular grounds of comfort The grounds of the point 1. Because all godly men are of the same nature 2. Because all have the same spirit 3. Because promises are made alike to all The sufferings of Christ abound in us What is meant by the sufferings of Christ What is meant by the sufferings of Christ abounding What be these sufferings abounding in us The true and faithfull owing of Christ is sometimes accompanied with great sufferings Propositions declaring the truth of the Doctrine 1. A Saints sufferings may be as extensive as his comforts 2. At some time their sufferings abound more then others 3. To suffer for Christ is very grievous to flesh and blood 'T is a glorious and blessed thing to own Christ in the midst of sufferings What it is to suffer for Christ 1. Ex parte Objecti 1. It must not be for any sin 2. It must be for the name of Christ 3. For righteousnesse sake 4. For a good conscience What are the qualifications of those who suffer truly for Christ 1. Faith 3. Spiritual ●ortitude and heavenly courage 4. Holy wisdom and prudence 5. Patience 6. An heart mortified to all earthly comforts 7. Pure and holy motives As our sufferings are for Christ so are our comforts by him How our comforts abound by Christ 1. Efficiently 2. Meritoriously 3. Objectively How many wayes Christ makes his comforts to abound to those that suffer for him 1. By perswading them of the goodness of the cause why they suffer 2. By sorewarning of their sufferings 3. By informing us of his Sovereignty and conquest over the world 4. By vertue of his prayer put up in that very behalf 5. By instructing them of the spiritual advantages which come from such sufferings God doth proportion our comforts to our sufferings Christ alwaies accommodates himself to the capacities of his people The mercies of God do often overflow Reasons 1. Because God in all his administrations doth still regard his own glory not our desert 2. Because of Gods faithfulnesse to his Promises 3. Otherwise God in his expressions of mercy would be exceeded by man 4. Because otherwise Gods glorious and in his afflicting could not be obtained Object Answ Why God often denies comfort in trouble 1. To teach us that comforts are his gifts 2.
damned Jesus is the Christ the anointed of God Where Ministerial labours are great there needeth the more help from others Where there is any fault in one Minister the people are apt to charge it upon all The grounds of it 1. The policy and enmity of false Teachers 2. The indiscretion of the people 3. The natural enmity in man against the Ministry 'T is an happy thing when all the Ministers of God agree to advance Christ The effects of this Agreement 1. The greater confirmation of the truth 2. The greater defence of the truth 3. The greater conviction of the impenitent and unbelieving Gods truth and so the true Preachers of it are alwayes the same 1. We must distinguish between the external formes of Gods worship and doctrinals 2. Between the growth and the change of truth 3. Between a seeming and a real yea and nay 4. Antiquity and consent are properties of a true Church God hath made many promises in Christ to us 1. God might have dealt with man by absolute soveraignty 2. The promises of God are properly promises 3. Gods promises do not adde to his simple affirmation but only are to confirm our faith 4. The rise of all Gods promises is his free mercy 5. Therefore the fullfilling of his promises is only of grace 6. The promises of God are absolute or conditional 7. There may be reasons given why God made such promises As 1. To exercise our faith 2. To teach us humility 1. Of the several sorts of promises 1. The promises of God are either Legal or Evang elical 2. Promises are either spiritual or temporal 2. Gods promises are the executions of his Decrees 3. No wicked men have any promises belong to them 4. Gods promises to us suppose faith in us 5. God hath sealed his promises to us 6. 'T is great skill to make use of promises In Christ alone are all the promises of God confirmed and made good 1. By the promises of God here are meant only tis promises of grace 2. Promises are fulfilled either in Christ or by him 3. There could have been no promises without Christ 4. And therefore is the covenant of grace called a testament Ans 1. It is hard to sail between the Arminian and Antinomian rock * Saltmarsh 2. A Christian in making use of a promise must not oppose it to Christ nor Christ to it What a Christian ought to do in his doubtings of his interest in the promises 1. He is not to ascend into the high points of predestination and universal redemption 2. He should make Gods command and invitation his ground of drawing nigh to a promise The promises being ●ounded upon will never be altered or changed The promises of God are made and are to be beleeved to his glory Wherein the glory of God is manifested in his promises 1. Hereby his goodnesse is known 2. His love 3. The freenesse of his grace How faith in Gods promises gives glory to him 1. Hereby we acknowledge our dependance upon him 2 Hereby we manifest him to be the truth it self 3. Hereby we exalt Gods way of justification Our establishing in the faith of the promise is the gracious work of God alone 1. God may be said to establish us either in the grace it self or in our apprehension of it 2. We are not able of our selves to do any thing towards the work of grace 3. Wherein lieth the establishing work of Gods grace 1. In preparing the understanding to it How God prepares the understanding 1. By discovering our own infirmity 2. The acceptablenesse of the work of saith 3. The evangelicall way of Gods vouchsafing mercy to the soul 2. In setling the and removing the impediments 1. Presumption 2. Despair Wherein Gods confirmation of us upon the promises consisteth 1. In working principles of grace 1. Faith 2. Love 3. Heavenly courage and spiritual fortitude 4. Divine ●op● 5. Spiritual joy 2. By actual motions of his Spirit upon us Arguments that all our establishment is from God It appears 1. From that unevenness that is in the godly themselves 2. In that weak Christians have gone through great temptations when strong ones have failed 3. It appears from the prayers of Gods people The strongest Christians need Gods establishing grace as well as the weakest 1. It appears from the falls the strongest have had 2 From Gods dispensations towards them 3. From the Devils malice against them more than others 4. From Gods leaving them oft to themselves that they may see their strength to be only in him 5. From the nature of the grace within us In Christ alone we are established 1. By grace are Christians united to Christ 2. From this union followeth our establishment 3 Our establishment comes from Christ 1. By meritorious impetration 2. By effectual application All true believers have a spiritual anointing from God 1. Who is the fountain of this ointment even God and Christ 2. The comparison betwixt material and this spiritual oyl They are like 1. As oyl was used in the consecration of things to God 2. As it comforts the heart and beautifies the countenance 3. As it refreshed the weary 4. As it healeth wounds 5. In that it is delightsom to the nostrils 6. As it mollifies 7. As it strengthens and comforts the limbs The people of God are his sealed ones 1. There is an active and a passive sealing 2. Gods sealing of his people is either vifible or invifible What the sealing of tee godly implys 1. The great esteem with God 2. Their safety 3. Security 4. Their difference from others 6. Secrecy and privacy 7. Confirmation Scriptures equivalent to the text Rom. 8. 18. Gal. 4. 6. 1 Cor. 2. 12. 1 Joh 3. 24. 1 Ioh. 5. 8 9 10. The description of the sealing of Gods spirit The description of the sealing of Gods spirit 1. It is a supernatural and gracious work 2. Of Gods spirit Reasons why it is the spirit alone that thus sealeth 〈◊〉 This sealing of Gods spirit is in the hearts of the sanctified 4. It confirms and establisheth the heart Reasons why we cannot confirm our selves 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. The Spirit seals the promises of grace to a believer The division of faith as to the object it is 1. General 2. Special 3. Particular How the Spirit seals even by the means that God hath appointed Which means are either external as 1. The Sacraments 2. By the marks of such to whom the promises belong Or else internal The signes whereby we may know the spirit witnesses our interest in the promises 1. The sanctified improvement of afflictions 2. The experience of Gods gracious presence with us 3. The antecedent works of sanctification Of the end of the spirits sealing even that we might live godly and thankfully Whether all Gods people be his sealed ones 1. It belongs to all the godly 2. Primitive Christians did more partake of it then Christians do uow 3. It is not so necessary to