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A70945 Christ all and in all. Or, several significant similitudes by which the Lord Jesus Christ is described in the holy Scriptures Being the substance of many sermons preached by that faithful and useful servant of Christ Mr. Ralph Robinson, late pastor at Mary Wolnoth London. Which were appointed by the reverend author on his death-bed (if his brethren should think fit) to be published. Robinson, Ralph, 1614-1655. 1656 (1656) Wing R1705; ESTC R223720 320,677 592

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the children of God c. for as many of you as have been baptized c. there is neither Jew nor Greek bond nor free male nor female for ye are all one in Christ Jesus The words are a Proposition In which we have 1. The Subject Christ But Christ 2. The Predicate He is all and in all He is all things that are necessary to salvation and that in all persons who do beleeve in him who are renued and regenerated by his grace I intend to go over all the comparisons by which Jesus Christ is set out in Scripture And I have begun with this as a Preface or introduction to the rest I shall handle it generally and draw from it this observation viz. Doct. The Lord Jesus Christ is all things in and to all persons that have a true saving interest in him Christ is all and in all It doth not exclude the Father and Holy Ghost but all other things as circumcision uncircumcision c. A like phrase Act. 4. 12. Christ is all and in all to every beleever Here are two rules to be observed 1. We are not to understand this as excluding the other persons of the Trinity for the whole God-head is all in alto beleevers as well as Jesus Christ But because Jesus Christ the second person of the Trinity is the head of the mystical body by vertue of which union true beleevers are made one mystical body with Christ Eph. 1. ult therefore is this principally appropriated to him to be all in all to those that are united to him by saving faith 2. The truth of this proposition is not from the humane nature but from the divine it is from the power of the divine nature in Christ that he is all in all to his people because the fulnesse of the God-head dwells bodily in the humane nature as a part of the person Now he is all in all to them in these five respects viz. 1. By way of merit Jesus Christ is meritoriously all in all to beleevers Whatsoever they are whatsoever they have whatsoever they do or can expect is only upon the score and account of his purchase and merit They enjoy no good thing upon any other termes but only upon the consideration of Christs merits Because he hath done and suffered for them and in their stead therefore do they partake of those blessings which make them happy to all eternity The Patriarchs in the Old Testament Christians in the New have pleaded with God for all blessings only upon the account of Christ Dan. 9. 17. cause thy face to shine upon thy Sanctuary that is desolate for the Lords sake Of this the Apostle speaks when he saith that Christ is made unto us of God wisdom righteousnesse sanctification and redemption 1 Cor. 1. 30. Christ doth bestow upon us and God is pleased to accept for us the merit of Christs Passion death obedience and righteousnesse 2. Christ is all in all to them by way of conveyance As he hath merited all for them so 't is from him and through him that all good things are communicated to them John 14. 6. As we have all propter Christum so we receive all we have per Christum through Christ He is not only the fountaine but the Medium and conduit through whom all a beleever hath is conveyed to him Jesus Christ is a beleevers root Joh. 15. 5. Now as all the sap which is in the branches is communicated through the root so all the good which a beleever hath is derived through Christ God hath put all that good he intends to bestow upon his Elect into Christs hands as a Feoffee in trust and from him as the great Lord-steward is all communicated unto them Of this the Apostle speaks Col. 2. 19. From Christ the head the whole body by joynts and bands having nourishment ministred and ●nit together increaseth with the increase of God Jesus Christ is as it were the hand of God through which all good things are sent in to us He is the door John 10. 7. 3. Christ is all in all to them by way of efficiency and causality He it is that works all in all in his Saints 1 Cor. 12. 6. There are diversities of operations but it is the same God which worketh all in all This our Saviour bears witnesse unto John 15. 5. when he tells us that without him we can do nothing The soul is the principle of all action in man Jesus Christ is the principle of all motion and spiritual action in his Saints for he is the soul of their soule Not a good desire not a good thought but what is inspired by Jesus Christ The Apostle doth freely acknowledge this Gal. 2. 20. I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me c. so Phil. 2. 12 13. Work out your own salvation c. For it is God which worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure 4. Christ is all in all to them virtually he is instead of all things to them Solomon saith that money answereth all things Ecoles 10. 19. it is meat drink cloaths house lands c. all things that are vendible may be procured by money Jesus Christ is virtually all things he makes up all things that are wanting Hence it is that he is in Scripture compared to all things to food to cloathing to physick to gold to health c. because he stands for all these things unto the soules of his Saints Hence is that promise Rev. 21. 7. He that overcometh shall inherit all things Jesus Christ is for all uses and purposes This is in the text he is Circumcision to the Gentile wisdome to the Barbarian c. 5. Christ is all in all to them by way of benediction and sanctification It is from him that any good they enjoy becomes a blessing to them He makes every thing effectual for those ends for which they are appointed No good thing would be good to us without the benediction of Christ yea were it not for his blessing every good thing would prove a snare a crosse and a curse to us as they do to them who have no interest in Christ This is that which Solomon saith Prov. 10. 22. The blessing of the Lord it maketh rich Thy health would be thy greatest sicknesse thy wealth would be thy ruine thy parts and abilities would be a snare to thee did not Jesus Christ sanctifie them by his blessing All the good the Saints enjoy depends upon Christs blessings to make them good to them The Application follows Use 1. How injurious to Jesus Christ are they who mingle other things with Jesus Christ as the causes of their salvation The Papists mingle their own merits and righteousnesse indulgences the sufferings of other men with the merits of Christ as the causes of their justification and salvation What else i● this but to deny the al-sufficiency of Jesus Christ If he be all in all for justification and
7 10. From the Disciple● intreating of him to eat meat he takes occasion to preach of his zeale in promoting his Fathers work Iohn 4. 32 34. From the Peoples flocking about him for material bread he takes occasion to speak of the bread of life Iohn 6. 27. And here from the sight of a vine as he went up and down in Ierusalem he takes occasion of preaching himself to be the true Vine That this Sermon was preached as he walked in the City may saith Pisc●tor probably be gathered from ver 1. Chap. 18. Where it is said that when he had spoken these words he went forth with his Disciples over the brook Kedron This going forth saith he cannot be understood of his going forth of the house for chap. 14. ver last he went out of that before but of his going forth out of the City where he had preached this Sermon as he walked up and down It is not much material where this Sermon was preached though it is more likely that it was preached in some house then in the streets of the City especially if that be true which some conjecture that that prayer Chap. 17. which belongs to this story was prayed at the institution of the Supper it is not I say much material 'T is Christs Doctrine where-ever it was preached In the words of the Text we have two things 1. A de●enption of Christ in relation to beleevers I 〈◊〉 th● Vine 2. A dese●●ption of beleevers in relation to Christ Ye are the Branches By Vine we are to understand not the vineyard or place planted with vines though the Greek word here used as Calvin notes doth sometimes signifie a vineyard but we are to understand it of the vine or plant it self especially of the root of the vine into which the branches are ingraffed By Branches we are to understand those slips which are by him that keeps the vineyard ingraffed into the stock of the Vine The words afford a double point 1. That Christ is a Vine 2. That beleevers are Branches of this Vine Doct. 1. That Jesus Christ is a Vine We are not to understand it in a proper sense for Christ to speak properly is neither vine nor door nor rock c. but the eternal Sonne of God who is both God and man in one person but we are to understand it in a Metaphorical sense he is so called by way of resemblance there is a very great similitude between Christ and the vine Twice expressely doth our Savior in this case call himself a Vine v. 1. I am the true Vine and v. 5. I am the Vine and many times covertly in those expressions of abiding in him to which he exhorts his hearers For the opening of this Metaphor I shall shew three things 1. In respect of which 〈…〉 called a Vine 2. Wherein the resembl●nce 〈…〉 what respects Christ is so● Why he is 〈◊〉 ●led so 3. The excellency of Christ above all other vines 1. For the first Christ is compared to a Vine in respect of both natures Although some resemblances do relate more chiefly to the Divine Nature and some more chiefly to the humane yet the general is to be understood in respect of both natures Christ is a Vine in respect of the whole person as he is Mediatour God and Man It will be made evident by this Argument Christ is a Vine in that respect and latitude in which Beleevers are Branches ingraffed into him Now the union between Christ and beleevers is not between them and the humanity of Christ onely nor between them and the Divinity onely but between them and the whole person Not onely is the soule of a beleever united to the soul of Christ nor the flesh of a beleever to the flesh of Christ but the whole person of every beleever is united to the whole person of Christ This is the first particular 2. In what respects in Christ a Vine In four respects 1. In regard of the meannesse of his outward condition The Vine is not like the Cedar for height nor is it comparable to the Oak for strength 't is but meane to the outward view Jesus Christ when he came into the world did not come with any great outward pomp and glory There was indeed a star at his birth that ●●●ught the wise men from the East to worship him but for his outward condition generally it was very meane he was born in a stable laid in the manger he was born of a mean Virgin and his life was but mean here on earth His Kingdome is not administred with that outward state and splendor that earthly Kingdomes are Jesus Christ did decline all outward glory and greatnesse See what the Prophe● foret●ls concerning him Esay 53. 2. He shall grow up before him as a tender plant and as a root ●●t of a dry ground c. The reason of this is that which he himselfe gives to Pilate John 18. 36. His Kingdome was not of this world He came not to be Ministred unto but to Minister Mat. 20. 28 He came to make others great but to make himself little to fill others but to empty himself Phil. 2. 7. He came in the forme of a servant to be trampled upon to be reviled disgraced and at last crucified External pomp was not sutable to such a de●igne This is our first res●mblance 2. In regard of his fruitfulnesse The Vine is a fruit●●l plant Though●t hath little pomp yet it 〈◊〉 much plenty The fruitfulnesse of it appears three wayes 1. It brings forth pleasant fruit No plant ●ields more delightful fruit then the Vine the grape i● delightful the wine is a very pleasant thing and what is that but the blood of the grape D●ut 32. 1● 2. It yields pr●fitable fruit The blood of the grape if it be moderately and seasonably taken doth warme the heart and chear the spirits It doth as the Scripture speaks make glad the heart of man Psal 104. 15. 〈…〉 repa●rer of natures detays ●ts both food and Physick 3. It yields great plenty of frui● Other 〈◊〉 bring forth single fruit they bring forth by one and one But the Vine bring● forth cluster● There are sometimes hundreds of berries in one cluster and many of those clusters upon one Branch The Scripture useth the Vine to set out plenty of increase Thy wife shall be as the fruitful Vine upon the walls of thy house Psalme 128. 3. So Hos 14. 7. Jesus Christ may well be compared to the Vine for fruitfulnesse in all these respects 1. He brings forth pleasant fruit All the fruits that grow upon Christ are very pleasant Cant. 2. ● I sate down under his shadow saith the Church with great delight and his fruit was sweet to my taste All the trees of Paradise did not afford such pleasant fruit as grows on this Vine Consider what the fruits of this Vine are and it will be granted that they are pleasant I will name some of the fruits of this
of him 1 Pet. 3. 22. 2. He is precious in the esteeme of the Angels The Angelical host did him honour at his birth Luke 2. 13 14. They tuned their instruments and sang with a loud voice Glory be to God in the highest As God hath commanded them to worship him Heb. 1. 6. so they do continually worship him They are ready at his beck to do his will They do ascend and descend upon the Son of man John 1. 51. Not as if they ministred to Christ alone but because out of respect to Christ and to do him honour they do at his command go forth to serve his Church as he gives them charge The Angels worship the Sonne with the very same aderation wherewith they worship the Father Christ is very high in their books 3. He is precious in the esteeme of the Saints Whether ye take it of the Saints triumphant or of the Saints militant for the Saints triumphant see how they adore him Rev. 5. 8 9. And the Saints militant they have an high esteeme of him They glory and triumph in him They venture their whole salvation upon him They disesteeme all other things in respect of him I account all things saith the Apostle but losse for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord Phil. 3. 7 8. They are joyful when they can have communion with him See what follows in the verse after the Text unto you that beleeve he is precious he is but a nominal beleever that doth not account Christ precious See how the Church speaks of him Cantiles 5. 10. He is white and ruddy the chiefest of ten thousands 4. He is precious in himself This I shall shew you in these three particulars 1. In the glory of his person Never did such a person appear in the world as is Jesus Christ He is truly God and truly and properly man The Divine and humane Nature never hypostatically met in any person besides the person of Christ The Apostle saith of him that he is the brightnesse of his Fathers glory and the expresse image of his person Heb. 1. 3. He is the head of principalities and powers Col. 2. 10. The highest and most glorious of the Angels being compared to Christ is but a dark and a fullied creature He excels the Angels in the glory of his person far more then they do the meanest of men All the Divine attributes are appropriated to Christ as he is the Son of God as well as to the Father He is eternal Micah 5. 2. His goings forth are from everlasting He is immutable as the Father is Heb. 1. 12. He is omniscient Heb. 4. 13. He is omnipotent Esay 9. 6. In one word he is as God every way equal to the Father Phil. 2. 6. There are such mysteries in the person of Christ as shall be matter of admiration both to men and Angels to all eternity There is in Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 identity of person and diversity of natures and these united without composition and confusion both natures reteining their distinct properties and yet both making but one person This is the first 2. In the glory of his qualifications and endowments Jesus Christ is endued with such rare gifts and graces as never any before See how the Scripture expresseth it Psalme 45. 7. God even thy God hath anointed thee with oyle of gladnesse above thy fellows Col. 2. 3. In him are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge Col. 1. 19. It pleased the Father that in him all fulnesse should dwell The fulnesse of grace in Christ excels the fulnesse of all other persons in these three respects 1. In him are all kindes of fulnesse He hath not onely the fulnesse of parts but the fulnesse of degrees also The best of the Saints have onely the fulnesse of parts There may be additions made to their fulnesse But in Christ is fulnesse of degrees There can be no additions made to his fulnesse The Spirit which is given to others in measure is given to Christ without measure John 3. 34. And then 2. In Christ there is the fulnesse of redundancy as well as the fulnesse of sufficiency All other persons have onely a fulnesse of sufficiency The Angels albeit they want nothing which is agreeable to their estate yet they have no overplus to redound to others But now in Christ is the fulnesse of redundance he hath not onely the fulnesse of the vessel as others have but he hath the fulnesse of the fountaine whereby he is able to communicate unto others Zech. 13. 1. A fountaine shall be set open for sin and for uncleannesse He hath the fulnesse of the root the fulnesse of the heap the fulnesse of the Sunne Hence it is that men are invited to him to be made partakers of his fulnesse Esay 55. 1. All the fulnesse that is in the Saints is communicated from him to them according to that of the Evangelist John 1. 16. Of his fulnesse have we all received and grace for grace 3. All this fulnesse which is in Christ is in him after a peculiar and special manner The Apostle sets this out by that phrase of dwelling Col. 1. 19. That expression notes a threefold difference in fulnesse as it is in Christ from fulnesse as it is in the Saints 1 'T is in him originally That fulnesse which is in the Saints is in them derivatively They have it from another Christ hath his fulnesse from himselfe The Divinity doth fill and replenish the humanity with all kindes of grace 2 'T is in Christ essentially As he is God his fulnesse is his essence Therefore doth the Apostle say that the fulnesse of the God-head dwels in him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bodily Col. 2. 9. that is personally and essentially 3 T is in him unchangeably It is maintained constantly at the same height It doth not abate nor is there any potentiality of abating It 's alwayes high tyde with Jesus Christ That fulnesse which is in the Saints is the fulnesse of a dish which is abated if one drop be taken away but the fulnesse of Christ is as the fulnesse of the fire which though it kindle hundreds of sticks yet is not abated or as the fulnesse of the Sunne which though it send down its beames continually upon the world yet the light of it is not darkned Never any person endowed with so many excellencies in such a measure after such a manner as Jesus Christ No perfection can be named or imagined which is not to be found transcendently in Jesus Christ wisdome beauty meeknesse patience heavenlinesse c. All Christian vertues are called the vertues of Christ 1 Pet. 2. 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 both because they were all eminently in Christ and because as they are in the Saints they are communicated from Christ This is the second 3. In the worth of his sufferings The Scripture calls the blood of
the preaching of the Gospel Thus Iesus Christ was manifested to all that received the Gospel and is still manifested The Apostle speaks of this manifestation Gal. 3. 1 O foolish Galatians c. before whose eyes Iesus Christ hath been evidently 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 set forth crucifyed among you And of this the Apostle makes mention 1 Iohn 1. 2. The life Venit in homines was manifested we have seen it 2 Tim. 1. 10. Neither of these appearances are to be understood in this Text for it speaks of an appearance that is yet to be made Therefore 3. A glorious manifestation of Christ yet to be made at his second coming to judgement And this is that appearance of which the Apostle here Venict contra homines August speaks for then it shall be and not till then that the Saints shall appear with Christ in glory So the Apostle tells us 2 Tim. 4. 8. Henceforth it laid up for me a Crown of righteousnesse which the Lord the righteous Iudge shall give me in that day and not to me only but to all them also that love his appearing 'T is at this day of Christs appearing that the Saints shall be perfectly glorious Having found out what is meant by Christs appearing I shall in the prosecution of the Point handle these five particulars 1. That there shall be such an appearance of Christ 2. Why Christ shall thus appear the ends of this appearance 3. After what manner Christ shall appear 4. When shall be the time of this appearance of Christ 5. Why it is deferred I. That Iesus Christ shall appear I shall evince this 1. By many expresse testimonies of Scripture There is not any Article of our Faith more clearly set down in the Book of God then this Mat. 24. 30. Then shall appear the signe of the Sonne of man in heaven and they shall see the Sonne of man coming in the clouds of heaven Act. 1. 11. This same Iesus which was taken up from you into heaven shall so come in like manner as ye have seen him go into heaven The Apostle Paul asserts this truth in expresse termes Heb. 9. 28. Vnto them that look for him he shall appeare the second time without sinne unto salvation 1 Iohn 3. 2. When he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is And as the Scripture doth expressely affirme it So 2. God hath taught his people to wait for it and to pray for it Cant. 8. 8. Come away my beloved c. Rev. 22. 20. the last prayer of the Church is for this very thing Even so come Lord Iesus And Luk. 12. 35 36. they are commanded to wait for this appearance Let your loynes be girded and your lamps burning And you your selves like unto men that wait for their Lord c. God never commanded his people to pray and wait for a fiction or dream which shal never come to passe 3. From the absurdities which would follow upon the denial of it We may say of this as the Apostle saith of the denial of the resurrection of the body 1 Cor. 15. 17 18 19. If Christ should not appear our faith would be in vaine The dead in Christ were perished and we should onely have hope in Christ in this life and of all men should be most miserable The whole comfort of a Christian turnes upon the hinge of this Doctrine of Christs appearing Ioh. 14. 18. II. The ends of Christs appearing are such as these 1. To declare that sin is abolished This is the meaning of that Heb 9. 28. 2. That he may be admired in his Saints c. This end of his coming the Apostle sets down 2 Thes 1. 10. he shall come to be glorified in his Saints and to be admired in all them that beleev One end of the second coming of Iesus Christ is to communicate his glory to his Saints that have beleeved in him He shall put his glory upon them and so shall be glorified in them Iesus Christ is glorified in his Saints now That holinesse and grace which he hath communicated to them already doth render them very glorious but at his second coming his glory will shine in them with greater splendor then now it doth He will then communicate unto them all his glory and make them glorious as he is glorious Our Saviour mentions this Iohn 14. 3. I will come again and receive you unto my self He comes to fetch all his Elect to heaven and to reveale his glory both to their soules and bodies He shall then actually put soule and body into the full possession of that glorious redemption which he hath purchased for them 'T is called the day of redemption Luke 21. 28. 3. To execute the sentence of his wrath upon all his enemies and the enemies of his people Iesus Christ hath severely threatned all wicked men that he will visibly take vengeance on them for the dishonours they have done to him and the wrongs they have done to his people And in this second manifestation of himself he will put all those threatnings into execution Of this the Apostle speaks 2 Thes 1. 7 8 9. The Lord Iesus shall be revealed from heaven in flaming fire taking vengeance on them that know not God c. And of this Enoch prophecyed long ago Iude 15. Behold the Lord cometh with ten thousands of his Saints to execute judgement on all c. Wicked men are now secure they reproach God and wrong his people but Iesus Christ will one day visibly come from heaven to punish these contempts and injuries The evil Angels and sinful men shall then be publickly adjudged to suffer that torment which they have deserved 4. To put an end to his Churches sufferings Rev. 20. 10. Then shall the devil that deceived the world be cast into the lake of fire and brimstone where the beast and the false Prophet are and shall be tormented day and night for ever and ever 5. To gather together his Elect. This the Evangelist sets down Mat. 24. 30. 31. They shall see the Sonne of man coming in the clouds And he shall send his Angels and they shall gather together his Elect from the four winds c. The Elect of God are scattered up and down in the several quarters of the world scarce two or three of them are now together in one family at the same time but then they shall be collected never to part asunder to all eternity III. What manner of appearing this shall be Consider for that these four things 1. It shall be a real and corporal appearance Christ shall not appear imaginarily as some have thought nor shall he only appear according to his Divine nature but he shall appeare bodily and truly the same humane nature which was in the grave and afterwards ascended into heaven shall descend from heaven Mat. 24. 30. Then shall appeare the signe of the Sonne of man The humanity
people When God committed our salvation to Christ he committed it to one that was mighty Christ is not a reed of salvation but a rock of salvation A strong Redeemer as the Scripture calls him Ierem 50. 34. Consider four things 1. What strong enemies Christ was to vanquish that he might save us 1 He was to save us from sinne Now sin was very strong it grew fast and deep in the heart Sinne is interwoven in the very constitution of every man Christ could not save the Elect if he did not pluck up the very roots of sinne He was to save them from the guilt from the power from the filthinesse yea from the very being of sinne Had he not been very strong he could not have subdued such a potent enemy as sinne was 2 He was to save them from the devil The devil is called in Scripture The strong man yea the strong man armed Luke 11. 21. One devil hath more strength then all the men in the world and there are many Legions of devils which are in the possession of the Elect by nature The devils are called principalities and powers for the greatnesse of their strength Eph. 6. 12. Jesus Christ if he had not been very strong could never have routed these mighty spirits Consider 2. The manner how he was to save us He was to beare and undergo the wrath of his Father for his Elect a heavy burthen which they were notable to bear The grappling with sinne and Satan was but easie in respect of this to beare the wrath of God without sinking The Prophet speaks of this Esay 53. 5 6. all the punishment of the sinnes of men was laid on Christ He treadeth the wine-presse of the fiercenesse and wrath of Almighty God Rev. 19. 15. There it 's spoken of him as the Executioner of his Fahters wrath but he did first tread it as a sufferer And he did beare all this alone And he was to undergo it without sinking and fainting Had he not been a strong salvation he had perished under this burden To beare the wrath of God is a greater work then the subduing of all the devils strength He could have done this by a word but to satisfie the justice of his Father could not be done without his personal suffering Consider 3. The multitude of the persons he was to save Thousands and millions an innumerable multitude the Scripture affirmes them to be Rev. 7. 9. All the Elect of God which did then live yea all that had been all that should be to the end of the world Had he not been a strong Saviour he could not have saved so many And which doth shew his strength more All these were at first unwilling to be saved by him The Elect when Jesus Christ 〈…〉 them and to apply the salvation 〈…〉 which he hath merited for them are 〈◊〉 unwilling to be saved they runne away from him they like their condition so well that they desire not to be removed out of it They ●●ject Christ yea they fight against Christ and the salvation that he brings until he have subdued their hearts and of unwilling made them willing by the power of his irresistible grace And then they willingly and freely adhere to him Draw us and we will runne after thee Consider 4. The perfection and fulnesse of his salvation His salvation is a compleat salvation This is that which the Apostle saith Heb. 7. 25. He is able to save 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the uttermost o● to perfection What is it to save to the uttermost or to perfection 1. 'T is to save the whole man 2. 'T is to save from all evil to all good 3. 'T is to save to eternity Jesus Christ doth perfectly save in all these respects He will never leave off his Elect till he hath brought them to glory Christ is called a Horne of salvation because he saves both Offensively and Defensively he saves his people and wounds his enemies It 's a Metaphor from horned creatures which do save themselves and offend their assailant Thus much for the second particular Why he is called an Horn of salvation 3. How Christ comes to be an Horn of salvation This is expressed in this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God hath raised him up This phrase notes these three things 1. Gods decree whereby Jesus Christ was from eternity designed to this work The Scripture ●●lls that by a solemne Decree of all the three Persons Jesus Christ the second person was designed for this work of salvation He was set apart by the determinate Counsel of God to be the Authour of salvation unto the Church The Psalmist speaks of this Psal 2. 6 7. Yet have I set my King c. I will declare the Decree the Lord hath said unto me Thou art my Sonne this day have I begotten thee 2. Gods Mission of Christ. As he was before all time appointed for this work so he was in the fulnesse of time sent to accomplish it In the fulnesse of time God sent forth his Son made of a woman made under the Law to redeeme them that were under the Law Gal. 4. 4 5. Of this Mission the Prophet speaks largely Esay 61. 1 2 3. The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me c. He hath sent me to binde up the broken hearted c. To this belongs that solemne publick promulgation of the Father whereby he proclaimed Christ as his salvation to the world Mat. 3. 17. by an immediate voice from heaven This is my well beloved Sonne 3. The Act of God in furnishing Christ with such qualifications as might render him fit for such a work As he established him by his Decree and by his publick Mission sealed him for this work so he did furnish him with all those qualifications which were necessary for the carrying of it on for the good of his Elect This furnishing of Christ relates to two things 1. The preparing of a body for him A humane nature was necessary for him that was to be the salvation 〈…〉 must be made to Justice by the 〈…〉 that committed the trespasse And 〈◊〉 besides the Divine Nature was not capable of saving that way that salvation must be wrought namely by suffering God therefore fitted Christ with a body in which body by the grace of personal union the God-head was caused to dwell Of this the Apostle speaks Heb. 10. 5. Sacrifice and meat-offering thou wouldest not have but a body hast thou fitted me 2. By conferring upon the humane nature fulnesse of all those spiritual qualifications and endowments which were necessary for him to the carrying on of his work Strength wisdome judgement mercy love patience and many other graces were needful for this work of salvation God therefore furnished Jesus Christ with all these Esay 11. 1 2 3. And as he had variety of all these graces so did God bestow upon him a fulnesse of all these not a limited stinted fulnesse as he bestowed upon
moulder 2. Acknowledge upon whom all your spiritual good doth depend All your graces all your comforts all your priviledges are bottom'd on Christ Christ lies as the foundation of all The Scripture affirms all our good to be bottom'd on Christ Our Election Eph. 1. 4. Our justification Eph. 5. 1. Our Adoption Eph. 1. 5. Our Salvation He is called not onely a Saviour but salvation in the abstract Esay 62. 11. say ye to the daughter of Zion behold thy salvation cometh What ever good we have or hope for it is for Christ and from Christ He is made to us of God wisdom righteousnesse sanctification redemption as the Apostle saith 1 Corinth 1. 30. that you sink not it is from Christ alone 3. Cast the care and burthen of all your concernments by faith on Christ There are two Texts of Scripture enjoyning this duty the one is in the Old Testament the other in the New That in the Old Testament is in Psalme 55. 22. Cast thy burden on the Lord and he will susteine thee That in the New Testament is in 1 Pet. 5. 7. Casting all your care on him Those two words Burthen Care take in all our concernments whatsoever There are many burthens as a burthen of sinne a burthen of duty a burthen of suffering a burthen of losse a burthen of successe issues and events are a heavy burthen sometimes Lay all this on Christ And then how many cares is a beleever liable unto A crowd of cares comes in daily Cast these by an act of faith on Christ He is the corner stone he hath undertaken to bear the burthen of all You honour him as well as ease your selves by casting all on him the stresse of all 4. Be stable Stedfastnesse is often commended to Christians as 1 Corinth 15. ult Be stedfast unmovable and 2 Pet. 3. 17. Let those stones totter and shake that have a shaking foundation The instability of beleevers is some disparagement to Christ the corner stone on which they are built 3. For consolation This may comfort beleevers 1. Against their own weaknesse Who that knows his own heart but findes his graces weak Every temptation shakes him as if it would shake him to pieces Remember to thy comfort Christ is the corner stone of thy grace as well as of thy salvation He hath strength though you be weak 2. In case of the totterings of the Church Such blasts arise sometime to threaten its ruine Remember the corner stone yea he is the corner as well as the corner stone 1 PET. 2. 6. Christ the chief corner stone elect and XX. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth ●ond Jan. 16. 1652. precious I Proceed to the properties of this Corner-stone First it is an Elect stone Secondly 't is a precious stone For the first Elect. This word hath a double signification It signifies choice excellent And it signifies elected or chosen Gerhard thinks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in this place is used not participially for elect or chosen but nominally for excellent and precious But I rather conceive that it is here used participially for elected or chosen This signification have our Translators given it I am induced to think it is so used here for two reasons 1 Otherwise this and the next word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 would signifie one and the same thing And it 's not probable that the holy Ghost in such short speeches should use two words to signifie the same thing 2. Because ver 4. of this Chapter where the same words are used this word signifies not choice but elected o● ch●●●n for so it 's said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Now this Text is but a recapitulation of what is there said It refers to the act of God in chusing Christ for the corner stone of the Church The point is this Doct. That Iesus Christ is chosen by God for the corner stone or foundation of the Church God the Father hath elected him for this service Here are two things to be opened 1. What this election hath reference to 2. Why Christ was thus elected 1. For the former This election referres to foure of acts God concerning Christ 1. To his eternal designation of Christ to this work The everlasting determination of God was that Christ should perform this office in and for his Church Of this our Apostle speaks in 1 Pet. 1. 20. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. To his publick mission As he was foreordeined before all time so he was publickly sent in the fulnesse of time Gal. 4. 4 5. The Scripture often mentions the mission of Christ Esay 61. 1. he hath sent me c. 3. To the divine unction God hath anointed the humane nature filled it with all grace and with abundance of grace for this work The Prophet speaks of this unction Esay 61. 1. and more fully Esay 11. 2 3 4. This is that which our Saviour calls Gods sealing of him John 6. 27. This sealing refers to two things First the solemne appointment of God God hath authorized him publickly under his broad seale for this work Secondly God hath furnished him for the work by communicating to him the fulnesse the unmeasurable fulnesse of his Spirit For the Spirit is not given to him by measure John 3. 34. 4. To the publick testimony given by God to Christ God hath given very solemn Testimony and approbation to Christ 1 By audible voices from heaven once at his baptisme Matth. 3. 17. A second time at his tranfiguration Mat. 17. 5. 2 By serious recommendation of him in the Gospel to men that they should rely upon him The Evangelist makes mention of this 1 Iohn 5. 10 11. 2. For the latter The great moving cause is his meer mercy to his Elect. No other was able Christ was sufficient to discharge this great work Out of his rich love did God chuse him upon this hinge all turns Iohn 3. 16. But if the reasons be demanded why Christ should have such solemne election c. These may be considered 1. The offices which Christ undertook did call for this divine Election he was to be Prophet Priest King fit therefore it was that he should be thus solemnly set out Prophets must be sent else they are none of Gods Ier. 23. 21. Christ was a Prophet therfore he would have a formal Authorization from him whose Prophet he was Deut. 18. 18. Christ was a King Psalme 2. 6. Therefore fit he should be sufficiently authorized hence is that Psalme 110. 1. Christ was a Priest therefore he must be lawfully consecrated Heb. 5. 4 5 6. no man taketh this honour c. 2. Else that which Christ did would not have been accepted of God nor would it have been meritorious for his Church It would have been sacriledge for Christ to have made himselfe a corner stone if God had not chosen him for the work This is my well beloved Sonne in whom I am well pleased Matth. 3. 17. God would not have been well pleased with Christ
Christ Jesus nor any thing of Christ is no just occasion of offence to any he lived and died without giving just offence to any His counsel was good his example was holy his whole conversation was so ordered that none could justly be offended at him And yet through the wickednesse of their hearts many did then and do still to their own ruine take offence at him The Observation is this viz. Doct. The Lord Jesus Christ is to wicked men a stone of stumbling and a rock of offence Though Christ be in himself a precious corner-stone of Gods own appointment and chusing yet do wicked men make him to be unto themselves a stone of stumbling and a rock of offence It 's very common and ordinary for wicked men to be offended and to stumble at Jesus Christ Many places of Scripture do make mention of the offence which the wicked should take at Christ See Esay 8. 14 15. Though these words be not spoken directly yet they are spoken typically of Christ Adumbratus fuit Christus qui non instar arcis sed offendiculi potius Israelitis futurus erat saith Calvin upon the place Though Christ be in himself a Sanctuary and be so to the elect yet to the ungodly and carnal he is both a stone of stumbling and a rock of offence As many are gathered and saved by him so shall many be broken and snared and taken because of him To this agrees that old prophecy of Simeon concerning Christ Luke 2. 34. Behold saith he this childe is set for the fall and rising againe of many in Israel and for a signe which shall be spoken against And as it was foretold of him so we read in the Gospel that it was fulfilled concerning him many were causlesly offended at him In the handling of this point I shall open these two things 1. What it is in Christ at which men stumble and take offence 2. Whence it is that they do take offence We shall shew first the matter of the offence Secondly the occasion of this causlesse offence 1. For the first There are many occasions of offence which men take at Christ I reduce all to these three heads First some stumble and take offence at his p●rson I mean the meannesse of his person This was the great stumbling block of the Jewes They looked for a Messiah of noble birth and Parentage that should sway the Scepter of David with much outward pomp and glory They expected that all those prophesies which speak of the glory of Christs person should have been literally fulfilled therefore they took offence at him His birth was mean his parentage low and ordinary his attendance small his education and breeding contemptible this made them stumble The Prophet foretels this of the Jews Esay 53. init he shall grow up before him as a tender plant c. There is no forme nor comelinesse in him that we should desire him They looked for outward splendor and because they did not finde it they were offended The Evangelist speaks fully of this Mat. 13. 54 55 56 57. Is not this say they the Carpenters son c They did not consider that the Son of man came not to be ministred unto but to Minister that he came to be a servant that he was made under the law and therefore were scandalized at his meannesse We may adde to this his shameful and ignominious death which he suffered this was a great offence to the Jews They do to this day upbraid Christians with that curse Jer. 17. 5. Cursed is the man that trusteth in man and maketh flesh his arme Christ crucified is to this day a stumbling block to the Jewes Secondly some stumble at his Doctrine The Doctrine which Christ preached and which by his appointment is published is very glorious yet it is an occasion of offence to the world The Arians are offended at the Doctrine of his Divine nature The Manichees at the doctrine of his humanity The Socinians are offended at the doctrine of his satisfaction The Papists at his doctrine of justification by faith alone The Pelagians and Arminians are offended at his doctrine of nullifying the power of nature in things supernatural The Antinomians stumble at his doctrine of the ratification of the moral law c. The Pharisees were offended at his doctrine against tradition Mat. 15. 11 12. But to come to particulars 1. The strictnesse of his doctrine is a stumbling block to many The doctrine of Jesus Christ is very strict it condemnes not onely actual sinne but the very sinful risings of corruption in the heart He that looks upon a woman saith our Saviour to lust after her hath committed adultery with her in his heart Mat. 5. 28. so v. 29. If thy right eye offend thee pluck it out and cast it from thee c. Duri sermones durioris Magistri have some said of these words They are hard sayings of a hard master If we consider the duties of the Gospel they are not onely barely to be performed but they are to be performed cordially sincerely else they are not accepted Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soul and with all thy minde and with all thy strength Corrupt nature would have full swinge and liberty the Doctrine of Christ will not allow it therefore is offence taken at it 2. The spirituality of his Doctrine offends others The Doctrine of Jesus Christ in the Gospel is a very spiritual doctrine John 6. 63. The words which I speak to you saith Christ they are Spirit and they are life 'T is the honour of Christs Doctrine that it is not fleshly but spiritual and they that are spiritual love it because of its spirituality You may see the spiritualnesse and efficacy of the Word Heb. 4. 12. it's quick and powerful and mighty in operation sharper then a two edged sword piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit c. Now because men are carnal they are offended at a spiritual word The Apostle calls it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 James 1. 21. A carnal heart doth not love the word should be an engraffed word They are contented it should come into their eares but they do not love it should sink into their hearts therefore are they offended at it 3. The mysticalnesse of his Doctrine is a stumbling stone to others The Doctrine of Christ in his Gospel is a doctrine very mysterious 1 Tim. 3. 16. 'T is in many things above reason The Doctrine of the Trinity of persons in the unity of essence is above reason that God should be one and yet three The Doctrine of the the two natures in the person of Christ These and many others are above reason The doctrine of self-denial The doctrine of losing a mans life to save it the doctrine of regeneration of the resurrection of the body these are very mysterious And because they are so offence is taken at them read John 6. 51
a quickning vertue There is that in him which is proper for all diseases The Evangelist tells us that when sick persons resorted to Christ in the days of his flesh there went vertue out of him and healed them all Luke 6. 19. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 no vertue could have gone out of him if all vertue had not been treasured up in him Christ hath eye-salve for blinde eyes mollifying grace for hard-hearts enlivening grace for dead soules humbling grace for proud minds God hath given him fulness of all things necessary for sick soules and wisdom to apply the same for the benefit of those that repair to him Secondly how Christ heales spiritual Diseases 1. He heales by justification Sinne brings guilt Lev. 5. 2 3 4 5. Rom. 3. 19. Every sinne makes the creature liable to wrath This guilt is removed by the grace of justification Jesus Christ applies his spotlesse and perfect righteousnesse to the soule and thereby actually removes the guilt of sinne and makes the sinner as pure in the sight of God as if he had never offended Of this the Apostle speaks Romans 5. 18 19. This is called in Scripture the covering of sinne Psal 32. 1 2. Blessed is the man whose unrighteousnesse is forgiven and whose sinne is covered Christ draws the vaile or garment of his own merit and obedience over the spotted soule of a sinner and thereby covers all his guilt In this respect a sinner is perfectly healed Though sinne abide in him yet the guilt is taken away so that it shall never redound upon the person for condemnation Hence it is that God is said not to behold iniquity in his people Numb 23. 21. Of this healing the Psalmist speaks Psal 103. 3. Who forgiveth all thine iniquities who healeth all thy diseases Of this healing we are to understand that in 2 Chron. 30. 20. The Lord hearkened to Hezekiah and healed the people He did not reckon nor impute the guilt of that sinne to the people 2. He heales the soule by sanctification Every sinne hath filthinesse in it as well as guilt It is of a defiling nature and leaveth defilement upon the soule of the sinner Matth. 15. 11. Hence it is that sinners are said to be filthy creatures Rev. 22. 11. and Psal 14. 3. they are altogether become filthy This is called Macula or labes peccati the spot or staine of sinne Corruption pollution c. It doth immediately follow every offence of sinne and remaines when the act of sinne is over Look as waters when they break their banks and over-flow the earth leave a filthy slime and sediment behind them so all sinful acts leave upon the soule a filthy slime of corruption This filthinesse Jesus Christ heales by Sanctification He doth by his Spirit plant the seeds of grace in the heart he doth make the soul partaker of the divine natu●e 2 Pet. 1. 4. He doth cause all old things to passe away and all things to become new 2 Cor. 5. ●6 He doth write his Lawes in the heart of the sinner Jer. 31. 33. He doth sprinkle cleane water upon the sinner whereby he is cleansed from all his defilements Ezek. 36. 25. And by this meanes the filthinesse of sinne is healed This Sanct●fication hath two parts the one is mortification whereby the body of sinne is wasted Rom 8. 13. and Col. 3. 3 5. The other is regeneration or the spiritual resurrection whereby the inward man is strengthened and renewed from day to day the one is the putting off the old man the other is the putting on the new man Now although the sinner is not healed perfectly and at once of the filthinesse of sinne by Sanctification as he is of the guilt of sinne in regard of justification because this is a real change and therefore it 's carried on successively and gradually whereas justification is onely a relative change and therefore is perfect at once yet he is in so sure and certaine a way of healing that Jesus Christ will never let him go out of his hands till he be fully cured He is perfectly healed in respect of parts already and he shall be perfectly healed in respect of degrees he shall see the day when there shall not be the least speck of sinne or filth either upon the soul or body Thirdly the excellency of this Physician above all other Physicians This appears in many respects 1. In regard of the Subject Other Physicians have to deale onely with the body All their businesse lies in the temper constitution parts of the body in preventing removing diseases that annoy the outward man Their line reacheth no farther The soule is not the object or subject of the Physicians Art But now the chief part about which Christ is employed is the soul the conscience the affections the inward man He heales the distempers of the heart which other Physicians as Physicians can neither know nor heal Vid. Esay ●1 1. 2. Jesus Christ is a Physician for all diseases There are some diseases which are opprobria medicorum no Physician in the world is able to cure them But Jesus Christ can cure all diseases all kindes of diseases and every individual disease He knows the cause of every disease and therefore he can cure all Some Physicians though they have a general skill in all diseases yet their excellency lies sometimes in one or two which they have studied more then others and about which they have been imployed more then in others As some Divines are better versed in some one or two Controversies then others so c. But Christ is as exact in all spiritual diseases as he is in any disease He is as good for the diseases in the head as for those that are in the heart and for those that are in the affections as for those that are in the head He can cure ignorance pride unbelief discontent impatience hardnesse of heart c. and he can cure one as well as another that is he can cure all Christ never yet met with a spiritual distemper which he was not able to call by its right name and to prescribe a fit medicine for It 's said of him in the Gospel That he cured all manner of diseases John 5. 4. He can cure all manner of spiritual diseases 3. Jesus Christ can give no hurtful medicine The most learned Physician in the world being he knows but in part may prescribe something which is not proper for the disease unlesse they had spectacles to see into the body they may be mistaken but Christ cannot be mistaken He never appointed any thing but what was fit yea nothing but what was best for the patients condition And indeed Christs Physick is therefore proper because he prescribes it Other Physicians appoint such receipts because they are proper but Christs receipts are proper because he prescribes them If he will use a plaister of clay and spettle it is therefore right because he will use it John 9. 6. That which
's very like the Pharisee spake no more then what was true for they were generally men very inoffensive as to all such things For the discovering of this false foundation I shall lay down foure things viz. 1. 'T is a very great mercy to be freed from these scandalous sinnes If God have preserved you from these visible diseases that you have none of these botches of Egypt upon you it is to be acknowledged as a very great blessing The Pharisee did not amisse in blessing God that he was no Extortioner if he had done it upon a right ground if he had not gone on to censure the Publican he had not been blamed but commended for it David blesses God for preserving him from the sinne of murther upon Abigails perswasion Vid. 1 Samuel 25. 32 33. And there is very great reason for it For 1 Hereby we are delivered from much anguish and torment of conscience These scandalous sinnes as they do in an extraordinary manner waste the conscience so they do lay a foundation of much horrour and trouble in the soul every sinne creates much torment but these great abominations create exceeding much What horrour did Davids Adultery and Murther cast into his spirit Though God pardoned them both to him yet he was filled with anguish a long time after vid. Ps 6. Ps 38. Ps 50. 1. Now t is a great mercy when God prevents any anguish 2. Hereby we are delivered from being hurtful examples to other men Grosse scandalous offences are very prejudicial to others The hearts of those that are good are grieved and such as are wicked are caused to stumble oftentimes to their eternal ruine Davids sin gave great occasion of sin to others Now it 's a great mercy when God keeps a person from being an instrument of hurt to others especially of hurt to their soules 2. Such as expect salvation must keep themselves from such wickednesses Vid. 1 Cor. 6. 9 10. Heaven is not a place of common receipt for good and bad 'T is not like your ordinary Innes which lodge all kinde of passengers without difference such Lepers so living and dying must expect to go to another place Rev. 22. 15. Without shall be dogs c. 3. 'T is possible for a person to be free from these abominations and yet to be mortally sick of spiritual diseases Every sick man hath not the plague A man may die of a consumption as well as of a Fever A person may be in a damnable state that never committed murther or uncleannesse 1. The Pharisee was free from all these impieties and yet deadly sick in his soule Luke 18. 11. Paul when he was a Pharisee saith that he was blamelesse concerning all such enormities Phil. 3. 6. and yet at that time sick even unto death so he in Mat. 32. 11. so the five Virgins Mat. 25. 1. Those in 2 Pet. 2. 18 20. A natural conscience may keep men from such enormities The penalty of humane Lawes may preser●● 〈…〉 these great wickednesses Civil education may preserve a man from falling into these wickednesses A desire to keep our reputation in the world with men with whom we converse may keep us from these high impieties Meer restraint may do this 2. If freedome from these offences were enough to proclaime men to be spiritually whole then no hypocrite should be sick A man must be free from all these sinnes before he be advanced into the hypocrites forme Now we know that every hypocrite is spiritually and mortally sick Yea the Scripture tells us that hell is prepared for the hypocrites other sinners are said to have their portion with the hypocrites Mat. 2● 51. The hypocrite is of all sinners the special proprietor of Hell and yet he is free from all these offences 3. It 's possible for one that hath no saving grace in his heart to be free from these offences Though every one that hath grace will abandon these sins yet every one that is free from these sins hath not grace The instances mentioned before will prove this But every one that wants saving grace is under the rage of spiritual sicknesses Yea he that is without true grace is not onely sick in sinne but dead in sin Eph. 2. 1. and yet those that are dead in sin may be free from these wickednesses 4. Although many be free from the actual commission of these sinnes yet they have the roots of these sinnes in their hearts Every sinne is in that bundle of sinne which we call original There is pride and murther and theft c Now the pollution of nature if it be not healed by justifying grace and pardoning mercy and sanctifying grace is enough to make the soule sick and that unto death Yea indeed the great sicknesse of the soul lies there There lies the strength of sinne and the heat of sinne David when he bewailes his murther goes to that as the root of it Psalme 51. 5. All a mans actual sinnes be they never so grosse might soone be healed if that were but healed This is the fountaine of blood This is the law of sin here is the devils magazine 5. Though thou art free from th●se foule sins yet thou mayest have some secret idol or other set up in thy heart Now the least sin a vaine thought is a mortal sicknesse in it selfe and if it be not healed will prove a soul-destroying sicknesse The Papists have devised a distinction of sinnes venial and sinnes mortal That there are some sinnes that in their own nature do not make a man liable to eternal death but onely to temporal chastisement so Bellarmine teaches The Scripture knows no such distinction nor can we allow it All sinnes are venial to true repentance except that one sinne against the holy Ghost He that commits that shall never be forgiven But there is no sin venial in its own nature the least is a mortal sicknesse and deserves eternal death So saith the Scripture Gal. 3. 10. Rom. 6. ult the Apostle speaks of all sinne that is opposed to legal righteousnesse and there is no sinne so small but it is a breach of the Law of God For of every idle word that a man shall speak he shall give an account at the day of judgement Mat. 12. 36. What is lesse then an idle word and yet that doth in its own nature deserve wrath By all these things it appeares that a man may be spiritually 〈…〉 thief nor drunkard c. 4. Yet may a person gather evideners of grace from his acting against sinne in some cases David argues so Ps 18. 23. And therefore for the winding up of this point I shall lay down some Rules whereby a person may know whether his acting against sinne be from a principle of saving grace or meerly from common restraint 1. He that forbears sinne from a principle of true grace doth act from the Authority and declaration of anaked truth When the immediate declaration of Gods Will in his Word
well versed in the principles of Religion they can answer almost any question in Divinity and therefore they judge their estate to be very good I have three things to say concerning this head viz. 1. 'T is a very great mercy to have the knowledge of saving and spiritual things 'T is a happinesse to have a deep knowledge in natural things Humane knowle●●● 〈…〉 could be seen i● far bright●● 〈…〉 star Knowledge never had neve● 〈◊〉 any enemy but ignorance What 〈◊〉 Solomon Eccl. 2. 13. He tells us that wisdo●● excels 〈◊〉 as far as light excels darknesse But especially the knowledge of Divine things This is a rar● jewel indeed Knowledge is one of the excellencies of God He is a God of knowledge 1 Sam. 2. 3. Knowledge was one of the perfections of man in the state of Innocency A knowing man findes more content in knowledge even in the knowledge of natural things then ever they could finde in gold or silver or any such things You have heard of some that have cast away their outward estate that they might not be taken off from searching after knowledge But of all knowledge the knowledge of heavenly things is most excellent The price of this knowledge is better then wisdome and the merchandi●e of it then fine gold Prov. 3. 14 15. No outward gain in the world is comparable to the gaine of this knowledge By knowledge we come to know what is to be done what is not to be done what is to be believed what is to be rejected Hereby we are enabled to guid others to regulate our own action By knowledge the most principal and highest faculty of the soule the understanding comes to be enriched Knowledge makes a mans face to shine Many high commendations are given in Scripture to this precious pearle of knowledge To know spiritual things is a greater mercy by far then to be made Ruler over the whole world and to want knowledge He that wants knowledge is brutish he is under the curse of Nebuchadnezzar Dan 4. 16. Let a beasts heart be given him An ignorant man is more truly a beast then a man 2. It 's the duty of all that expect to be saved to labour after this knowledge God commands it often in Scripture Prov. 4. 5 6 7. Get wisdome get understanding Search the Scriptures John 5. 39. Let the Word of Christ dwell richly in you in all wisdome Col. 3. 16. An ignorant heart is a bad heart I mean a heart totally ignorant of the things of God for without knowledge the minde is not good Knowledge is as necessary unto practise as light is to action A man must know the Will of God before he can do it Ignorance is the mother of Popish Devotion but knowledge is the mother of true Devotion A Christian can do nothing acceptably without knowledge Want of knowledge is a destructive thing especially if it be where God affords the meanes of knowledge Esay 27. 11. Hos 4. 6. want of knowledge doth stir up Controversies between God and men Hos 4. 1. A man may go to hell for want of knowledge as well as for want of faith or other graces God puts such a high esteeme upon knowledge that he saith It is life eternal to know him and Jesus Christ whom he hath sent John 17 3. It 's the character of the worst of wicked men that they desire not the knowledge of Gods wayes Job 21. 14. Knowledge in its kind and degree is necessary to salvation as well as holinesse Why is piety in Scripture so often set out by the name of wisdom knowledge understanding but to let us see how necessary it is to the attainment of true Piety 3. It 's possible to be very knowing in spiritual things and yet to be in a sick conditi●● 〈◊〉 ●●●sician may know the nature of all diseases and yet be sick of the worst of them A person may be well versed in the History of the Scriptures in the System of Divinity and yet for all that be in a bad condition as to his eternal state This I shall make good by these four Arguments 1. From the Apostles supposition 1 Cor. 13. 1 2. The Apostle supposeth a great measure of knowledge Very few men attain to that height of knowledge which is there supposed See the expressions To speak with the tongue of men and Angels To have the gift of prophecy which God bestowed upon many in the Primitive times to understaad all mysteries and all knowledge yet it s possible that all this may be without one spark of true grace Though a man could say all the Bible memoriter could resolve all the difficult cases in Divinity yet it s possible that such a man may be destitute of all saving grace 2. From experience There are at present there have been in former ages many knowing and learned men who had not the least measure of true holinesse Judas was without doubt a man of great knowledge We do not finde any thing in Scripture that he was inferior to any of the Apostles in notional knowledge He could for ought we find to the contrary preach as well as any of the Apostles and yet a very wicked man What need we instance in men when as the very devils are so great intelligent creatures their name carries knowledge in it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 gnarus peritus The devil understands Scripture as to the letter of i● farre more exactly then the best of men Now that which the worst of men and the worst of de●ils may attaine unto can be no infallible argument of a good estate We see by experience many drunkards swearers and debaucht men do in all manner of literal knowledge excel those that desire to feare God in uprightnesse The Pharisees were very knowing Rom. 2 18 19 20. 3. Natural abilities and education may help men to notional knowledge All this kind of knowledge is attained by industry and education by the concurrence of Gods ordinary blessing But now grace and holinesse is not by education or industry or from natural abilities but from the special grace of God Knowledge is but a common gift which is bestowed promiscuously upon the good and bad Now no common gift can entitle a man to Heaven 4. The Scripture doth not make knowledge simply but saving sanctified knowledge an evidence of salvation National knowledge may be without sanctifying knowledge Sanctified knowledge will evidence a mans condition to be good but notionall knowledge will not How shall a man know whether that knowledge he hath be a sanctified saving knowledge or meerly a notional knowledge I shall lay down these evidences of it and so shut up this point 1 Sanctified and saving knowledge is an humbling knowledge Meer literal knowledge swells and puffs up the heart 1 Cor. 8. 1. makes men conceited and proud and to despise others but holy knowledge makes the 〈…〉 self-denying See it in Asaph Psal 〈…〉
the light Jesus Christ hath a penetrating and searching power No heart so close but his eye is in it no conscience so dark but he sees to the bottome of it See what the Apostle saith of him Heb. 4. 13. All things are naked and open to his eyes and every creature is manifest in his sight 4. Light hath a chearing and 〈…〉 The light contributes much 〈…〉 and growth and life of 〈…〉 creatures Light and motion are the c●me of that heat which the heavenly bodies send down upon the earth Light is that instrument whereby all the influences of heaven are communicated and dispensed to the world The motions of nature are both quickned and comforted by the light and by it all the births of nature are cheared and comforted Jesus Christ hath a chearing comforting and quickning vertue 'T is by influences from Christ spiritual life and comfort are obtained and preserved The Prophet speaks of this vertue of Christ under this very Metaphor of light Mal. 4. 2. All that spiritual livelinesse and brisknesse that beleevers have at any time in their hearts is from the beaming wings of Christ the Sonne of righteousnesse He is a heart-chearing a heart-warming a heart-quickening Saviour 5. Light hath a Purifying vertue Fogs and Mists that are gathered in darknesse are dispersed and scattered when the light comes When a candle is lighted and set up in a room if there be any damps they gather about it Light is the fining pot of Nature The world would be an unwholsom Pest-house if it had not light Jesus Christ hath a purifying and cleansing vertue By vertue from him it is that those nasty filthinesses of sinne which are in the soul are purged away Heb. 8. 14. All the Levitical Ceremonial purifications used in the Law were types of him The Prophet compares him to a refiner and purifier of silver Mal. 3. 3. By his blood he purifies the soul from the guilt of sin By his grace he cleanseth the soul from the filth of sinne The Prophet compares him to a fountaine set open for purification Ezek. 13. 1. All that ever were all that ever shall be cleansed from the filthinesse of sin are cleansed by Jesus Christ 6. Light is of an undefilable nature Though it passe through sinks and the most polluted places yet it contracts no defilement It cleanseth all things but is defiled by nothing It is a quality so spiritual that nothing can fasten upon it to pollute it Jesus Christ is fitly resembled to light in this respect He is not capable of any defilement He assumed sinful nature without the least sinne He had the likenesse of sinful flesh Rom 8. 3. but not the least sinne in his flesh In the dayes of his flesh he did as a spiritual Physician repaire to all sorts of sinners but he carried away from them no pollution at all He conversed with Mary Magdalen with Zacheus the Publican and other Publicans and sinners without the least taint of corruption He was born he lived and died in a corrupt generation in a very Pest-house of sinne without the least tincture of sinne He lived and died holy harmlesse undefiled and separated from sinners as the Apostle saith Heb. 7. 26. 7. The nature of the light is hard to be known The Philosophers are much troubled about the defining and describing of it 'T is not a substantial forme because it is perceived by the sight which no substantial forme is 'T is not a body because then when the light passeth through a perspicuous body two bodies would be in one place which is against 〈…〉 and reason Nor is it an 〈◊〉 from a luminous body for then the Sonne by his continual shining would be deprived of ●ig●t but it is an accidental forme or a patib●e quality and so very hard to be described The Scripture speaks of the difficulty of searching out the nature of the light perfectly by any mortal man Job 38. 19 20 21 24. Onely he who is the Father of lights doth perfectly understand it Jesus Christ is not perfectly to be understood by any living man Who can declare his generation as he is the Sonne of God Esay 53. 8. Who can declare his conception exactly as he is the Sonne of man the Holy Ghost hath overshadowed it Luke 1. 35. He that created the flesh of Christ is onely able perfectly to understand the manner of it Who is able to declare the mystery of the hypostatical union of the two natures in one person exactly We beleeve these things comprehend them perfectly we are not able His Name is wonderful Esay 9. 6. there are such wonderful mysteries in the nature of this light as no man no creature can fully and perfectly comprehend Secondly Christ dispenses this light these two wayes 1. By the preaching of his Gospel in the publick Ministery thereof The Ministers are called Stars and the Ministery or preaching of the Gospel is that Orb in which this light shines and by which it is communicated and dispensed to the world We preach Christ crucified 1 Cor. 1. 23. Where the Gospel hath never been preached this light hath never yet shined This is the chariot in which this glorious light is carried about ordinarily in the world 2 Cor. 4. 3 4 5 6. 2. By the vertuous efficacy of his Spirit in the Ministery The most powerful preaching of Christ that can be will be to no purpose without these inward workings of the Spirit By the Spirit of Christ three things are done 1 The blindnesse of the minde is removed The holy Ghost causes the skales to fall off the eyes 2 A visive faculty is bestowed This is that which the Apostle calls the enlightening of the eyes of the understanding Ephes 1. 18. 3 Power is given actually to close with the light The soule is enabled to follow the light or to walk in the light as our Saviours phrase is John 12. 35. So that by these two meanes this light is communicated By the preaching of the Gospel the object is made present and by the Spirit of Christ the object is made visible the faculty of sight is bestowed and a power of following the light is created Thirdly Christ is differenced from all other lights viz. Prophets Apostles who are called lights Mat. 5. 14. He is differenced from all them five ways 1. They are lights onely Ministerially They are lights onely as they do by their office hold out this light They are lights as the candlestick may be called a light because it carries the candle where the light is But Christ is a light of and in himselfe He is a light not Ministerially but Originally The fountaine of light 2. They are small lights Christ i● 〈…〉 light They were but like little ●●thing 〈◊〉 Christ is as a great Torch which teacheth from heaven to earth They are light as the Stars are light a little glimmering borrowed light Christ is light as the Sunne and therefore he is called The
is called That great Shepherd First the parallel between Christ and a shepherd stands in these five particulars viz 1. A shepherd ●●ed this stock 'T is his work to provide both pasture and water for his sheep Pastour ● Pasc●nd● Ezek. 34. 2. Should not the shepherds feed the flocks A good shepherd will take care that his flock may have both grasse and water When they have eat one place bare he drives them to another when one fountaine is dry he leads them to another he had rather want bread himself then that his sheep should want provision He feeds them with his own flesh and blood John 6 5. Jesus Christ provides sufficient food and nourishment for his sheep Three things 〈…〉 1 He hath provided Ordinan●● 〈…〉 very Ordinance is a spiritual 〈…〉 fountaine for the feeding of Chris● 〈…〉 Psalmist speaks of this Psal 23. 2. He 〈…〉 to lie down in green pastures he leadeth me beside the still waters What are those pastures of tender grasse What are those waters of quietnesse but the Ordinances of the Gospel the fields where Christs sheep feed the rivers where they drink The variety of the Ordinances shewes the variety of ●eeding the richnesse and fulnesse of the Ordinances shewes the plentifulnesse of Christs feeding here are many pastures and every pas●ure so rich that it can never be eaten bare here are many streames and every streame so deep and broad that it can never be drawn dry the sheep have been eating in these pastures ever since Christ had a Church on earth and yet they are as full of grasse as ever The sheep have been drinking at these streams ever since Adam and yet they are brim full to this very day they will so continue till the sheep be above the use of them in heaven 2 He hath provided shepherd● to d●spense these Ordinances The sheep can neither feed themselves nor water themselves unlesse they have some to help them The Ministers of the Gospel do by vertue of their office open these pastures and lead the sheep into them they roll away the stone from the mouth of these Wells and draw water for them that they may drink and be satisfied The Apostle tells us that Pastou●s and Teachers are given of Christ for the edification of his Church Eph. 4. 11 12. This was the work of the Prophers in their 〈…〉 Apostles and Evangelists in their genera●on and of Pastours and Teachers the present Ministers of the Church yea we shall finde how severely Christ bath charged them under the paine of his highest displeasure to be diligent in feeding the flock See 2 Tim. 4. 1 2. and he ●ath allured them by the most glorious promises that they should be careful in this work See 1 Pet. 5. 2 4. and John 21. 15 16. And he furnisheth them with gifts and abilities for this very purpose Vid. Luke 12. 42. 3 He doth by his Spirit blesse the feeding which he hath provided He hath promised to be present with the sheep and shepherds when ever they come to feed in these pastures and drink at these waters he hath promised I say to be present to blesse their fo●d and water for the good or their soules He promised it Mat. 28. ult and he doth to this day make it good he doth walk and he will walk in the middest of the Golden Candle sticks to bless the seeding of the sheep to the end of the world He hath purchased the Holy Ghost to be bestowed both on the sheep and shepherds for this very purpose 2 A Shepherd k●owes 〈◊〉 He knows the number of his sheep and he knows them particularly 〈…〉 sheep Those phrases which are 〈…〉 concerning the sheeps p●ssing 〈…〉 rod ● ev 27. 32. and of passing under the 〈◊〉 of him that tel●eth them Jer. 33. 13. shew ●●e knowledge that good Shepherds have of their flocks they know one of their own sheep though it be in the midst of a strange flock Jesus Christ knows his sheep exactly He knows his people qu●t sint quinam sint both the 〈…〉 ticular persons John 10. 11. 〈…〉 dungeons prisons though the 〈…〉 off and the skin torne by persecution yet 〈◊〉 they are within the knowledge of Christ Consider four things First He knows them as they are given to him by the Father in his eternal Election God the Father hath given all the Elect unto Christ from eternity Iohn 17. 6. By vertue of this donation doth Christ know them He hath taken them by number from the Father and he is to surrender them by number to him againe Their names are all written from eternity in the Lambs book of life Rev. 21. 27. while this book continues they cannot wear out of the knowledge of Christ Secondly He knows them as he sees in them his own image Every sheep of Christ doth partake by grace of the image of Christ There is a conformity of likenesse between him and them His Fathers Name is written upon their foreheads Rev. 14. 1. What is this Name of God but that Divine nature which is from Christ communicated to every sheep of the fold So long as this Name abides on their foreheads and it shall abide for ever they cannot weare out of the knowledge of Christ Thirdly He knows them as he sees the sprinklings of his own blood upon them Every sheep of Christ is washed white in the Lambs blood Rev. 7. 14. They are cloathed with his righteousnesse for the justification of their persons They have his merits in which they are invested Now so long as this garment remaines 〈…〉 and it can never be worn off or ●●ollen off Jesus Christ must needs know them Fourthly He knows them as he remembers the service they have done fox him in the world Every sheep of Christ that hath attained unto years of discretion hath with care served Christ in its generation They have often prayed to him they have often worshipped him they have to their very uttermost laid out themselves for his glory in the world c. Jesus Christ hath recorded and set down all their good actions and as long as he remember● their works he cannot forget or be ig●orant of their persons This we may gather from that which stands on record Mat. 25. 34 ●5 c. They have fed him in his hungry members they have clo●thed him in his naked m●mbers c. Christ will never forget these holy actions therefore he can never forget the persons of them by whom they were performed They have both done for him and suf●ered for him therefore he knows them and will know them 3. A Shepherd preserves his st●ck 'T is the work of ● Shepherd to defend his sheep David bazarded his own li●e to de●end his sheep from the inv●ding ●●on and ●●venous bear 1. Sam. 17. 34. Shepherds watch their flocks by night as well as by day to pre●erve th●m from the dev●uring creatures So did Jacob Gen. 31. 40. So did those Shepherds to
work is wrought By this Word is the soule first cut off from the wilde stock of corrupt nature and planted into the true Olive-tree or Vine Jesus Christ Hence the work of planting is in Scripture attributed to the Ministers of the Gospel 1 Cor. 3. 6 7. I have planted saith the Apostle Apollo watered God indeed is the great Planter So v. 1. of this Chapter I am the true Vine and my Father i● the 〈◊〉 He is the Master-Planter the Ministers are subordinate-planters We are labourers together with God 1 Cor. 3. 9. They are so called because by the Word preached this great work is done This the Prophet clearly affirmes Esay 61. 1 2 3. The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me because the Lord hath anointed me to preach Christ that they might be called trees of righteousnesse the planting of the Lord. These mystical trees are Gods planting but the instrument wherby they are made such trees is the Word preached Hence the Word is called the incorruptible seed of regeneration 1 Pet. 1. 23. As all the Trees and Plants in the first Creation were set and sprung up by the Word of God Gen. 1. 11 12. So are all these mystical Branches ingraffed by the Ministerial Word 2. The Spirit of God The Holy Ghost is the immediate Instrument whereby the soule is ingraffed It is the Spirit which gives efficacy to the Word both to cut off the soule from the stock of nature and to implant it into the Stock of grace The Word would never be able to tear off any person from his first root if it were not edged and streng●hred by the Spirit of God The Scripture calle●h the Holy Ghost the finger of God Luke 11. 20. compared with Mat. 1● 28. He is so c●●●ed as for other reasons so for this because he is the immediate instrument whereby God works in the hearts of his creatures Particularly for this work of ingraffing the soule into Christ the Holy Ghost is affirmed to be the immediate instrument 1 Cor. 12. 13. By one Spirit are we all baptized into one body c. and have been all made to drink into one spirit And againe Eph. 2. 21 22. where the Apostle speaking of this great mystery under another resemblance saith that in Christ we are builded an habitation of God thorough the Spirit The same Spirit which builds us upon Christ into one Temple doth ingraffe us into Christ as one Vine 3. Faith This is the immediate instrumental cause on mans part Faith is an uniting grace it knits the soule to Christ and Christ to the soul Faith is an incorporating grace it doth as it were embody the soule into Christ making it one with Christ and Christ with it This is that which the Apostle saith 1 Pet. 2. 4 5. To whom coming as to a living stone c. Ye also are built up as lively stones c. Two things are observable in that Text. First that the Saints are built together upon Christ the foundation-stone an holy house to God Secondly how Christ and they are cemented together into one building this is by beleeving set out by the expression of coming which is used ordinarily for beleeving as Mat. 11. 28. The Spirit of God first works saith in the heart of a person through the Word and then the soul is by the Spirit through faith ingraffed into Christ and made a lively Branch For the second particular What advantage the soul hath by being a Branch of Christ I shall here follow the Metaphor The same advantage the Branch hath by being ingraffed into the Stock hath a Beleever in a spiritual sense by being ingraffed into Christ I name these five 1. Spiritual supportation The Branch hath this benefit from the Stock into which it is ingraffed that it is born up and supported by it The Branch doth not bear the Vine nor doth it beare it self but is born of the Vine A beleever hath supportation from Jesus Christ We stand on Christs legs not on our own I can do all things saith the Apostle through Christ that strengthneth me Phil. 4. 13. The strength of the Branch is in the Vine so is the strength of a Beleever in Christ Who is this that cometh out of the Wildernesse leaning on her beloved Cant. 8. 5. I laid me down and slept saith David I awaked for the Lord susteined me Many blasts passe over a beleever many violent concussions and shakings is he exposed unto partly by reason of sinne partly by temptations from the Devil from men in all these shakings he hath sustentation from Christ into whom he is implanted My grace saith Christ to Paul shall be sufficient for thee for my strength is made perfect in weaknesse in 2 Cor. 12. 9. A beleever may with confidence go to Christ and pray for support in all his weaknesses A beleever may go to Christ and chalenge support Christ would never have made thee a Branch if he had not intended to support and strengthen thee Esay 41. 10. there are repeated promises of sustentation I will strengthen thee I will help thee I will uphold thee In doing in suffering in dying is a beleever supported by Christ A beleever never wants support but when either through pride he will not have it or through slothfulnesse he will not 〈…〉 Jesus Christ 2. Spiritual nourishment The Bran●● doth not give nourishment to the Stock nor doth it nourish it selfe but it receives nourishment from the Stock A beleever hath nourishment from Jesus Christ The Root feeds the Branch it conveys its sap to each Branch whether it be great or little whether it be nearer the Root or at a farther distance from it Christ conveys proper nourishment to every beleever The Apostle speaks of this Col. 2. 19. The whole body from Christ by joynts and bands hath nourishment ministred the Ordinances are the joynts and bands by which nourishment is carried but Christ is the great treasury from whence it is carried He nourishes Faith he feeds Hope he nourisheth love c. Of his fulnesse have we all received and grace for grace John 1. 16. Every grace a beleever hath would die and wither if it did not receive daily nourishment from Jesus Christ 3. Spiritual increase The branch receives its Augmentation from the Vine The graffe when it's first implanted is very small a childe may break it with one of his fingers but by abiding in the Stock it grows till it come to perfection All a Beleevers increase is from Jesus Christ 'T is by and through him that we grow from infancy to a perfect man Two Texts of Scripture do fully set out this benefit of our implantation The one is Col. 2. 19. In him the whole body having nourishment ministred increaseth with the increase of God The other is Eph. 4. 16. Where the Apostle tells us that by and from Christ the whole body being fitly joyned together and compacted by that which every part supplieth maketh increase
and the beleever are made one not by mixture as water and wine are made one but by marriage as the husband and wife are made one Next to the union of the three persons in one nature and the union of the two natures of Christ in one person this spiritual union between Christ and the beleever is the most glorious This is the first inference 2. We may from hence learn the high descent of true Beleevers They are of a very eminent extraction However they be mean in regard of their natural birth yet in respect of their spiritual birth they are nobly descended They are the off-spring of the great family of heaven See what the Apostle saith of them 1 Pet. 2. 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What Heraldry is comparable to this They are buds of the coelestial Vine They are Branches of Christ and by vertue of their union with Christ they come to be made one both with the Father and the Holy Ghost John 17. 21. That they may be all one with us They are of the blood royal of heaven They are of ●in to all the persons of the 〈…〉 'T is an honour which the 〈…〉 Heaven are not advanced unto To which 〈◊〉 the Angels said Christ at any time 〈…〉 Vine ye are the Branches Though they he above us in regard of their nature yet are we above them in regard of our union T●●e Saints are not contemptible persons whatever they be as men yet as Saints as new men they are better descended then the best bor●e of the Sonnes of men This is the second Inference 3. That it is an union wrought by God not by us What doth the Branch contribute to its union with the Root What do we contribute to our union with Christ we neither cut off our selves nor graffe in our selves Man is passive in his first conversion Ephes 2. 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. For Exhortation I shall direct it first to them that are Branches Secondly to all others that grow upon their first Stock 1. To the branches of Christ I have from this Doctrine these foure things to commend to them which I would intreat them to lay to heart 1 That they would be very thankful for this great priviledge Blesse the Lord that hath made you branches Ye are not branches by your natural birth but ye are made Branches by your spiritual birth There is this difference between the natural branches and the mystical The natural branch is ordinarily better then the stock into which it is ingraffed Your Gardiners if they can but get a good graffe they care not much how mean the root be A crab-tree is good enough to grasse upon but here it is quite contrary the Stock is better then the Branches The best of us by nature are wilde vines as the Apostle saith of the Gentiles Rom. 11. 24. We were cut out of the Olive-tree which is wilde by nature the more cause have we to admire the goodnesse of God the great Husbandman that such crabbed sowre knotty crooked branches as we were by nature should be implanted into such a sweet glorious honourable root as Christ is Behold here as the Apostle saith concerning the implanting of the Gentiles the goodnesse of God Rom. 11. 22. Our visible external implantation is a very great mercy our spiritual implantation far greater We were made Branches of Christ When we were by nature very unfit When we were very unwilling And When others as good as the best of us were passed by and suffered still to grow on the sowre stock of nature Blesse God for your rooting in Christ your rooting in him is the ground of all other blessings This is the first And then 2 That they would be fruitful The Scripture calls frequently for plentifulnesse of fruit from the Saints of God Phil. 1. 11. he would have us to be filled with the fruits of righteousnesse Great reason there is why it should be so We are ingraffed into a fruitful Vine God may well expect we should be fruitful Branches Reade what the Prophet speaks by way of prediction concerning this very thing Ezek. 47. 12. By the river shall grow all trees for meat c. We should be careful to fulfil this Prophecy God may 〈…〉 made us branches of such a Stock 〈…〉 very fruitful branches We may well 〈…〉 our implantation if we be not 〈…〉 in is the excellency of the mystical 〈…〉 that they are not any of them barren 〈◊〉 ●●leevers fruitfulnesse doth greatly honour 〈◊〉 the Husbandman and Christ the Vine 〈◊〉 his unfruitfulnesse dishonours both John 1● 8. Herein is my heavenly Father glorified that ye bring forth much fruit c. Fruitfulnesse doth distinguish between the nominal disciple and the real Disciple He that is a Disciple indeed is a fruitful Disciple We are therefore made Branches that we may be fruitful Of all branches the Vine branch is good for nothing if it be not fruitful I beseech you be fruitful Let the fulnesse of the root appear in the fruitfulnesse of the Branches And be sure of this that ye bring forth the fruits of the Stock Here is another difference between the natural branch and the mystical The natural branch brings forth its own fruits not the fruits of the stock into which it is ingraffed but the fruits of its own kinde but the mystical Branch must bring forth the fruits of the root the fruits of Christ His meeknesse his patience his heavenlinesse c. The end of this and all other priviledges is our fruitfulnesse So the Apostle tells us 1 Pet. 2. 9. Ye are a chosen generation c. To what end That ye should shew forth the vertues of him that called you out of darknesse into his marvellous light This is the second And then 3. That they ●●●ld be very holy Take heed of wickednesse you that are the Branches of Christ Mean and sordid employment is not fit for persons that are of noble or royal descent Sinne is an unmeet employment for a Branch of Christ Holinesse becometh thy house O Lord for ever Psal 93. 5. The Apostle presseth it from this very Doctrine 1 Cor. 6. 15. Shall I take the members of Christ and make them the members of an harlot God forbid For a Branch of Christ to lie or cheate or defraud how unseemly For shame let it not be so He that is borne of God sinneth not 1 John 3. 9. He that abideth in him sinneth not ver 6. He sinneth not that unpardonable sinne He committeth no sinne as others do with delight with allowance with deliberation c. Either disown sinne or disown to be Branches of Christ When Satan tempts you when the flesh stirs you up to sinne say to them and say with resolution of spirit such dishonourable employment is very unfit for him who is a Branch of Christ Let them that are branches of the devil do the devils work but let them that are branches of Christ do the work of
communication of the Divine nature to them cause them to become the servants of righteousnesse Of this the Apostle speaks Rom. 6. 18. Being made free from sinne ye became the servants of righteousnesse This is the work of Sanctification Of this the Apostle speaks Tit. 2. 14. Who gave himselfe for us that he might purifie us unto himselfe c. Christ takes off the yoke of sinne and puts on the neck the yoke of grace This the Apostle fully expresses Rom. 8. 2. The Law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the Law of sin and death 3 The condemnation of sinne The wages of sinne is damnation Rom. 6. ult Jesus Christ is a horne of salvation to his 〈…〉 for he hath 〈◊〉 the wine 〈…〉 anger and suffered the 〈…〉 their sinnes for them Of 〈…〉 speaks in 1 Pet. ● 2● Who his 〈…〉 sinnes in his body c. And the 〈…〉 affirms Rom. 8. 1. That there i● 〈…〉 to them that are in Christ Jesus Thus in respect of sinne Christ is a horne of salvation 2. In respect of Satan Satan is a sworne adversary to the Elect. He goeth about continually like a roaring lion seeking how he may devoure them 1 Pet. 5. 8. There are three things in respect whereof Christ is salvation to them from Satan 1. The Dominion of Satan The Elect are by nature as well as others the bondslaves of Satan Eph. 2. 2. they are his servants by nature and by their own voluntary sinfulnesse they have enslaved themselves to his bondage more Of this the Apostle speaks 2 Tim. 2. 26. Now Jesus Christ is salvation to the Elect from this estate He doth at the conversion of the Elect cut the cords and unloose the chaines by which the devil holds them fast in bondage Of this our Saviour speaks Luke 11. 21. By his death he did triumph over him Col. 2. 15. and at the moment of our conversion he doth actually put us into the possession of this victory Acts 26. 18. He doth then turn us from the power of Satan unto God 2. The temptations of Satan Satan as he tempted Christ the Head of which we reade Mat. 4. 1 2 3. so doth he not cease to assault and tempt all his members The more visible Christs image is in any person the more violently doth the devil assault him The Apostle speaks of this as in many other places so fully in Eph. 6. 12. Now in this respect Christ is salvation to them He stands by them that these temptations may not prevaile over them He interposeth himself between them and the teeth of this roaring lion that he may not have his will on them Of this our Saviour speaks Luk. 22. 31 32. 3. The accusations of Satan The devil is called in Scripture The accuser of the brethren Rev. 12. 10. and he is a diligent creature at this work for he accuseth them day and night before the Lord. There are many imperfections and weaknesses in the children of God they do too often step aside out of Gods way we have too many sad instances of the truth of this in Scripture which I need not name The Devil takes occasion from these to accuse us not onely to men but to God He that turnes every stone to hurry us into sinne doth when he hath overcome us represent all to God against us in the ugliest shape he can that he may hinder mercy from us Yes he is so malicious that when he can have nothing visibly to lay to our charge he will pretend something as we see in the case of Job Chap. 1. 9 c. Ch. 2. 4 c. Christ now is a horne of salvation to us in this respect He stands continually pleading for us at Gods right hand as soone as Satan puts in a Bill Christ puts in an answer and so doth cast out and nullifie all his Accusations Thus is he salvation to them in respect of Satan 3. In respect of ●●n 〈…〉 by men both in the●● 〈…〉 spiritual estate 1. In their outward 〈◊〉 Men 〈…〉 against them they 〈…〉 because they 〈…〉 image they have so much of the 〈…〉 Because I have chosen you out of the 〈◊〉 therefore doth the world hate you John 15. 19. The great ones of the world they rise up often against them and vex them c. Now Christ is salvation to them in this regard Sometimes breaking the hornes that devoure them Sometimes melting the hearts of their devourers making their enemies their friends Sometimes removing them from them that would break them alwayes delivering them from the evil and hurt of the attempts made against them turning them for their greater and best good He makes their vinegar better then their wine Of this the Apostle was confident in his own case Phil. 1. 19. This shall turne to my salvation through your prayer and the supply of the Spirit of Jesus Christ. Christ is a horne even of temporal salvation to the Elect in this regard He makes your troubles as good friends to you as your comforts He makes your worst conditions work together for your best good 2. In your spiritual estate Christ is salvation to you from men in two respects First In regard of the corruptions of the world Wicked men give wicked examples and by the example of one wicked man others are corrupted Now albeit the Godly are sometimes infected in regard of some particular acts yet are they saved from the general corruptions of wicked men amongst whom they live Jesus Christ keeps them from soyling themselves as others do This is that which is recorded of the Angel of the Church of Pergamus Rev. 2. 1● and of those few in Sardis chap. 3. 4. Th●s was Noah saved in that corrupt age in which he lived Gen. 7. 1. Secondly ●n regard of the evil counsels of men Wicked men are of the same minde with the devil their father They are daily tempting inticing alluring and perswading the godly to walk with them in their wayes Joseph was tempted by his Mistresse Gen. 39. 7. This is put in amongst the Catalogue of the sufferings of the old Martyrs that they were tempted Heb. 11. 37. Christ the great Counsellor of his Church saved all these from yielding to such temptations Though they are sometimes ensnared yet they are againe brought off by Christ from those ensnarements and Christ gives them power afterward the more to resist them and to abhor them II. Positively Christ is salvation 1. In respect of grace 2. In respect of glory Jesus Christ is eternal salvation unto the Elect. All that salvation which hath been mentioned before is in reference to this which is the upshot of all He therefore saves them from sinne from the devil from men that he may bring them to this eternal happinesse He is called in Scripture eternal life 1 John 5. 20. The Authour of eternal salvation Heb. 5. 9. The salvation of Israel Psal 53. 6. The Captaine of our salvation Heb.
not O ye servants of God despondingly fear the attempts of your enemies Gods Church though it be the worlds great friend yet meeteth with many enemies many bloody hornes are goaring at it to destroy it Look into all the ages that are past and you will finde it Pharaoh was a horn and a bloody one Nebuchadnezzar was a horn You read of four horns Zech. 1. 18 19. In the New Testament you read of hornes Herod the Heathen Emperours these were bloody horns You read of a little horn Dan. 7. 8. This is Antichrist Oppose this horn of salvation to all these horns of destruction 1. This horn is longer then they they reach to one Kingdome he the world over 2. This horne is stronger then they 3. This horn is longer-lived then they Vid Micah 4. 12 13. No horn hath yet been able to stand None shall Psal 75. 8. 10. That horn of Christ that with one push overthrew many Legions of Devils is it not strong enough to bring down men PSAI. 72. 6. He shall come down like raine upon XVII SERM. at Mary Wolneth Lon. Novem. 14. 1652. the mowen grasse THis Psalme was penned by David as appeares from v. 20. It was composed by him a little before his death when he had made his sonne Solomon King Upon the occasion of Ad●nijahs rebellion we read in 1 King 1. 33 34 c. that Solomon was by the appointment of David annointed King of Israel and Judah David having set him in his Throne doth in the close of his life make this Psalme wherein he doth prophetically foretel and accordingly prayes for the prosperity of him and his Kingdome under which he doth also Prophecy of the felicity of Christs Kingdome of which Solomon was a type Here are some passages which cannot be properly understood of Solomon or his Kingdome but are chiefly to be understood of Christ and his Kingdome as that in ver 7 8 17 c. He shall have dominic●● His Name shall endure for ever Therefore it is to be expounded of Solomon and his Kingdome as they were typical of Christ the true Solomon and his Kingdome Here are three parts of the Psalme 1. Matter of petition v. 1 2 3. 2. Matter of Prophecy v. 4. to 18. 3. Matter of praise v. 18 19. The Text falls under the second head which I called matter of Prophecy David doth describe by the Spirit of Prophecy the Kingdom of Solomon but especially the Kingdom of Christ which was prefigured by Solomon's Kingdome This Kingdome is described two wayes 1. By the righteousnesse of it v. 4. There are both the parts of righteousnesse The defending of the good He shall judge the poore of thy people and save the children of the needy The punishment of the wicked He shall break in pieces the oppressor 2. By the blessed fruits of it These are several as namely 1. The holy feare and reverence of God ver 5. They shall fear thee as long as the Sun and Moon endure thoroughout all generations 2. The propagation of his Kingdom by the calling in of the Gentiles ver 8 9 10 11. He shall have dominion also from sea to sea from the river to the worlds end 3. The great blessing which should accrue to his Subjects and the great glory of the King This is v. 12 13 14 15 16 17. He shall redeeme their soule from deceit c. 4. The great encrease and edification of his Church I name this last because it is in the text and the verse following the text He shall come down like raine c. In which we have First a Prophecy of Christs communications to his Church He shall come down Secondly the nature of this communication As the raine as the showers He shall come down 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There is a foure-fold descending of Christ which the Scripture mentions 1. His incarnation the manifestation of himselfe in the flesh 2. The abasing of himselfe in condition He did not onely assume humane flesh but all the natural infirmities of our flesh he took upon him the form of a servant lived in the meanest and lowest condition of the sonnes of men Of this descension the Apostle speaks Phil. 2. 6 7. 3. The subjecting of himself to death His abiding under the power of the grave for three dayes and three nights This is the lowest piece of his descension Of this the Apostle speaks Eph 4. 9. In that he ascended what is it but that he also desconded first into the lowest parts of the earth These descensions or comings down of Christ are included one in another When he took our nature upon him he did truly descend Not as if the Divine nature came where it was not before but because God did in the incarnation of Christ manifest himself after such a manner as he never had done before For God cannot properly be said to ascend or descend he being a most simple and spiritual Essence is not moved from place to place as creatures are but he is said to ascend or descend in regard of the manifestation of his presence either by the effects of his presence or by visible species or shapes which appearing or disappearing he is said to ascend or descend Although men might look upon his descension as having re●erence to his incarnation Yet 4 There is another descension which we shall rather expound this of the distillations of his grace and spiritual blessings upon his Church These indeed are glorious descensions When Christ lets fall the influences of his grace then doth he come down in a glorious manner Every drop of grace is a Metaphorical descension Christ doth spiritually come down when he lets any spiritual vertue drop down in his Ordinances upon the souls of his people Of this kinde of descension the Church speaks Esay 64. 1. Like the raine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Some think our English word water comes from this Hebrew word matar because they are so neer in sound one to another Rain is the distillation of a moist cloud which being dissolved by the heat of the Sunne and by the collision of other clouds sends down its water to the middle Region of the aire The reason why it falls down by drops and doth not come like a torrent is because the cloud is not dissolved all at once but by little and little Vpon the mowen grasse Detondere 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Hebrew word used here hath a double signification It signifies a shorn fleece of wool and it signifies a meadow newly mowen This hath occasioned divers readings some reade it He shall come down like the rain into a fleece of wo●ll So the Septuagint they that follow this reading make it an allusion unto the dew that fell upon Gideons fleece Judg 6. 37 38 39. when all the land beside was dry and againe upon the rest of the land when the fleece was dry 〈…〉 read it according to our translation
of the Israelites out of Egypt into Canaan which place was assigned unto them by lot as we reade in the book of Joshuah Then were the Jews in a more conspicuous manner formed into one Polity or Common-wealth and from that time the separation began That which made this separation was the Ceremonial worship which God established in that Church or Nation according to which they and their posterity were to worship God This separation continued from that time untill the death and resurrection of Christ During all this long tract of time there was a manifest separation between the Jew and the Gentile But now Christ hath as a corner stone made a firme union between these two so that the Jew and Gentile are brought together under the same worship This is done by the abolition of the Ceremonial Law Christ hath taken down this wall of separation and so made both one Church The Apostle treats largely of this in Eph. 2. 13 14 15 16. He is our peace who hath made both one and broken down the middle wall of partition between us c. The Jew and the Gentile are now made one house by the death of Christ 2 In reference to the spiritual union of beleeleevers one with another We reade often in Scripture of spiritual fellowship and communion between beleevers The Apostle Phil. 2. 1. speaks of the fellowship of the Spirit and Phil. 1. 5. He makes mention of their fellowship in the Gospel So 1 John 1. 7. saith the Apostle If we walk in the light as he is in the light we have fellowship one with another This spiritual communion or fellowship doth consist First In mutual affection one to another One Saint loves another though they have never seen the faces one of another Secondly In participation of the same graces and priviledges They are all like one another They partake of the same gifts of the same Graces the same Reconciliation the same Adoption the same Sanctification the same Salvation that belongs to one belongs to them al. This is that which the Apostle mentions Eph. 4. 4 5 6. From hence it is that the Scripture calls the salvation of the Elect Common-salvation Jude 3. because it's common to all the Elect. The same graces which are wrought in one Saint are wrought in another though perhaps different in degree Thirdly In the performing of mutual offices one to another They pray one for another they give thanks for the good of one another they grieve for one anothers evils they beare one anothers burthens they rejoyce in one anothers comforts they supply one anothers wants both outward and inward as far as they are able The Apostle speaks of these mutual offices which beleevers by vertue of that fellowship which is between them owe one to another in that 1 Cor. 12. 26 Now it is in and through Christ that union and communion of Saints one with another is made Our communion with Christ is the foundation of our mutual communion which we have one with another John 17. 23. I in them and thou in me that they may be made perfect in one 'T is this uniting corner stone that brings every particular stone of the building into one For our mutual union one with another is in him who is the head of the union The Apostle speaks fully to th●s in Eph. 1. 10. That he might gather together in him all things both which are in heaven and which are in earth The Greek word is very significant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to gather to a head All the Saints of God that are were or shall be both those that are gloriously triumphing in heaven and those that are yet militant on earth are gathered together to a head in Jesus Christ Membership with him is the foundation of mutual membership which we have one with another This is the second 3. In regard of Direction The corner stone is that which gives the builders direction how to lay and place all the other stones If the several stones of the wall be not laid level to the corner stone the whole building is spoiled He that would build right must have his eye to the corner stone Jesus Christ is a beleevers Direction and Rule in all spiritual things that which is not done by Christs Command or example or by some direction from him is not wel done Learne of me saith our Saviour for I am lowly and meek-hearted and ye shall finde rest to your souls Mat. 11. 29. Jesus Christ is the beleevers pattern His Word and his example we must have an eye continually upon if we would not miscarry He that saith he abideth in Christ he ought so to walk as he walked 1 John 2. 6. Lay all things level to Christ and then act vigorously I have given you an example that ye should do as I have done to you John 13. 15. Nothing will either be lasting or comfortable which doth not runne parallel with the line of Christ 4. In regard of Beauty Skilful builders place the strongest stones in the corner because of bearing and the fairest stones because of beauty If the corner stones be graceful the whole building is the more comely Psal 144. 12. More Art is bestowed on the corner stone then on any other part of the building Iesus Christ is the beauty of the spiritual building If this one stone were taken away the whole building would be an uncomely heap One Christ hath more b●auty in him then ten thousand Sain●s Psalm 45. 2. Thou art fairer then the children of men The fairest Saint is but an Ethiopian if compared with Christ He is in respect of his beauty compared to the Lily and Rose which are the most beautiful of all flowers Cant. 2. 1. The blinde world looked upon him as deformed Esay 53. 2. There is no forme nor comelinesse in him but those that know him admire his beauty Look upon him in his Divine Nature and so he is more beautiful then the Sunne Look upon him as man and so he is exceeding beautiful No doubt but his body for the outward feature of it was very comely 'T is a Rule which Divines have That which God doth immediately he doth most exactly And for his soule that had more grace in it then is in all the sons of men laid together His soul was unsoyl'd by sinne and it was richly furnished with all grace God shewed more of his Art and skill in Iesus Christ then upon all the stones of the building besides The beautiful Angels are black if compared with Christ This is the first particular 2. For the second Christ differs from all other corner stones in five respects 1. He is a living stone The corner stones of all material buildings are inanimate But Christ hath life in him 1 Pet. 1. 4. He hath life in himself and he communicates life unto the whole building From him all the stones of the spiritual house are called lively stones ver 5. Ye also
if he had not elected him for the work he undertook And then 3. For the comforting of Christ in undergoing that which he was to suffer for the carrying on of this work He must endure the wrath of God the contradiction of sinners before he could be the corner stone Divine appointment comforts a man in the hardest sorrows Gen. 31. 9. Thou saidst return to thy country The consideration of this strengthned and comforted Christ in all he suffered John 18. 11. The Uses of this 1. The Father and holy Ghost have a hand in the work of mans salvation as well as Christ we scarce take notice of the Father in the work of redemption as if he only did look on and approve what Christ did he acts in it as well as Christ he chose Christ he sent out Christ he fitted Christ for this great work Though the second person was he that was incarnate yet both the first and third person concurre and contribute to the work The divine election is the first wheele that moves in this work 2. That the work of our salvation by Christ is not a rash work 'T is not a work of inconsideration or precipitancy but a serious work There was much deliberation and consultation about it Here is mention of electing Christ It 's a work of infinite and unsearchable wisdom The mystery of godlinesse the Apostle calls it 1 Tim. 3. 16. The manifold wisdom of God Ephes 3. 10. here is depth of wisdome in this work 3. That the Elects salvation by Christ is a work well pleasing to God It 's called the pleasure of the Lord Esay 53. 10. It is a great contentment to God to see it carried on it cannot be otherwise when he himself hath elected Christ to it That which a man chuseth and contrives he is pleased when it is carried on God that hath chosen Christ for the foundation will carry on the work in his hand 4. Why Christ is called Gods Elect and Gods Servant Esay 42. 1 2. not as if he were inferior to God in regard of his divine nature Zech. 13. 13. Phil. 2. 6. but because he is chosen of God to be the foundation He is chosen to be the head of the Election all the Elect are chosen 5. Let us with confidence cast our selves on Christ Can we chuse better then God hath chosen 'T is an undervaluing not onely of Gods love but of his wisdom to chuse another foundation God will take it ill if we reject his choice Adventure on him you may Believe and trust in him without doubting He that hath elected Christ will not reject those that accept and relie on Christ The Election of God will mightily aggravate the refusal of Christ Encourage faith by this He that beleeveth in him shall not be ashamed 6. Very great comfort to them that have built on Christ God doth not chuse mouldring stones but firme stones If God have any wisdome to chuse Christ is sufficient to beare all their weight He hath laid help on one that is mighty Psalme 89. 19. Let what blasts will come this Elect stone will hold 1 PET. 2. 6. XXI SERM. at Mary Wolnoth Lon. Febr. 13. 1652. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Precious I Go on to the second property of this corner stone as it is laid down in this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 precious The word here used 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies that which is of great worth or value in it selfe and that which is much prized and esteemed by another A thing and a person may be valuable in it self and not valued by others And then a thing may be highly in it self esteemed which is of no great worth but this word signifies both That it denotes the worth of things or persons you may see Luke 14. 8. When thou art bidden to a wedding sit not down in the highest room lest a more honourable man then then be bidden of him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That it signifies the valuation or high esteeme of things or persons appears from Phil. 2. 29. The Apostle writes to the Church about Epaphroditus that they would receive him and saith he hold such in reputation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 make much of such let them be deer to you 'T is opposed to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies one of no esteeme or account amongst men The Observation is this Doct. That Jesus Christ the chief corner stone of the Church is exceeding precious As he is a stone of Gods chusing so he is a choice stone He is therefore precious because he is of Gods choice Christ is a corner stone precious in himself and it is our great sinne if he be not precious unto us Christ is not onely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 precious but he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of very great price Matth. 13. 46. What is that pearle of great price but Jesus Christ himself for the obteining of whom a wise Merchant will readily part with all that he hath Nothing is worth a mans All but Jesus Christ But in comparison of him all things even the best are nothing worth Jesus Christ is a precious stone as well as an elect stone In the handling of this Doctrine I shall open two things for Explication 1. In what respects Christ is precious 2. Why he is so meanly esteemed by the greatest part of men 1. For the first Christ is precious in foure respects 1. He is precious in the account of God Jesus Christ is the delight both of the Father and of the holy Ghost God values him as a pearl of great price 1 He is in Scripture called the Son of his bosome The onely begotten Sonne who is in the bosome of his Father John 1. 18. As men and women shew their esteeme of jewels and pearls by wearing them at their bosome so doth God testifie his high esteem of Christ by laying him in his bosome The Sonne of God never was never will be out of the bosome of the Father 2 The publick testimony which God gave from heaven to Jesus Christ at his baptisme is an evidence of the high esteeme he hath of him Mat. 3. 17. This is my well beloved Son in whom I am well pleased 3 He is so precious in Gods account that the Father will accept of none but through him nor will he reject any whom he recommends to him 4 The great designe of God in the Gospel is to put honour upon Christ He commands all men to honour the Sonne as they honour the Father All the good he bestows upon men is in Christ and through Christ alone 5 The Father would never have put such a trust into his hands as the redeeming and saving of the Elect if he had not been of precious account in his sight 6 His present session at Gods right hand in heaven is a full and manifest proof how dear he is to him God hath set him there as a testimony of the highest account
hath taken up a prejudice though they be never so deserving Ahabs prejudice against the Prophets of the Lord would not suffer him to heare them 1 Kings 22. 8. 1 PET. 2. 6. XXII SERM. at Mary Wolnoth Lon. Febr. 20. 1652. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Precious I Proceed to the Uses which are 1. Information 2. Examination 3. Exhortation 1. For Information This teacheth a twofold lesson 1. The exceeding great glory of the Church of Christ. The Scripture tells us that the Church of God is a glorious body Though the Church taken in its more large acception as it contains all visible professors be in many respects lesse glorious because o● the mixture that is in it it being a field wherein is both wheat and tares Mat. 13. 24 25. Mat. 3. 13. Mat. 13. 48. a barn floore wherein is both good corn and chaff a net in which are fishes good and bad yet the Church of God more strictly taken for the number of them that are effectually called the invisible Church is a very glorious society The Apostle calls it a glorious Church Eph. 5. 27. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It 's glorious as in regard of the holinesse of the members so chiefly in regard of Christ the glorious foundation A house whose corners are laid with precious stones and whose superstructory stones are all lively stones must needs be glorious Never such a building in the world as the Church of God is See how the Evangelical Prophet describes it Esay 54. 11. O you afflicted tossed with tempests and not comforted behold I will lay thy stones with faire colours and lay thy foundation with Saphires c. 'T is much like that description which is made of it Rev. 21. 10 11 12 c. Every thing which is in the Church makes for the glory of it Glorious in its members who are cloathed with the glory of God glorious in regard of the worship which is there used and of the Ordinances there dispensed in regard of the Doctrine there there maintained Calvin I remember understands by those precious stones mentioned Esay 54. 11 12. The variety of the gifts and graces of God to his people Paul understands by the same precious stones the doctrine taught in the Church 1 Cor. 3. 11. The Church is glorious both in respect of the doctrine and of the various gifts and graces of God dispensed amongst the members of it But the great glory of all lies in the foundation-stone Jesus Christ That must needs be a precious building which hath its foundation on such a precious stone as Jesus Christ is who it as far above all precious stones and a great deale more then they are above common stones For the setting out of this consider how Christ excels all other precious stones 1. He excels them in largenesse Other precious stones are but of a small dimension and of a very little weight You may put many of the largest that ever were seen into a small Cabinet but Jesus Christ is very great As God he is infinite without dimension filling heaven and earth with his presence See how the Prophet speaks of the infiniteness and incomprehensiblenesse of Christ in regard of his divine nature Esay 40. 12 13. Who hath measured the waters in the hollow of his hand and meted out the heaven with a span and comprehended the dust of the earth in a measure and weighed the mountaines in scales and the hills in a ballance That all this is spoken of Christ appeares from verse 11. where he is prophecied of as the Shepherd of his flock 2. He excels them in duration Other pearles and precious stones are of a perishing nature they may be defaced broken dissolved they may lose their beauty There 's a day coming when they shall be melted away into nothing Cleopatra dissolved a pearle of very great worth by the Art of Chymistry and drank it at one draught to her Antonius But Jesus Christ is a durable precious stone Neither time nor eternity will be able to dissolve this stone His beauty cannot be lost or dimished He never will have any flaw or crack or spot in him in the eyes of those that are able to judge aright of him His brightnesse is an unfading brightnesse The heavens and the earth fade and wax old like a garment but Jesus Christ is still the same and his years have no end Heb. 1. 11 12. And 3. He excels them in the multiplicity and perfection of his properties There is not any precious stone that hath all excellencies and vertues in it Some excel in one property some are excellent for another vertue Whether their medicinal vertues be considered or their other excellencies as their colour their forme their roundnesse c. One excels most in this kinde another in that But the vertues and excellencies of all pearls and precious stones meet in Christ Whatsoever perfection is to be found in any created stone the same is to be found in Christ The properties of the Saphire the Diamond the Chrysolite the Sardonix the Amethist and of all other stones meet in Christ alone And then they are all in him in a farre more transcendent manner then they are in any of these His brightnesse is above the brightnesse of the Diamond his whitenesse far exceeds the whitenesse of the Pearl The medicinal and physical properties that are in Christ are far more excellent then those that are in other precious stones Some Pearls they say do strengthen the heart others clear the sight others remove the vertigo or dizzinesse of the head and many other useful properties are recorded by learned men but none of them are so excellent in any of these kindes as Christ is for he removes and heales the distempers of the soule and minde as well as of the body he cures the spiritual eye-sight Rev. 3. 18. He cures the troubles of the conscience which no other precious stone can do being never so artificially used He being rightly applyed and taken cures the soul of sinne removes guilt which none other precious stone can do The neck-lace of pearle cannot cure the wounds of conscience the girdle of diamonds cannot remove tremblings from the spirit the costly jewel in the bosome cannot quiet the heart throbbing for sin or Gods departure all this Christ can do And 4. He excels them in this that he hath no hurtful qualities Other precious stones have a killing quality powder of diamonds they say is poysonful put in the bowels or throat takes away life presently But Jesus Christ hath no destructive quality He is occasion of hurt to none but to him that refuseth him Put all these together and it will appeare that the Church of God which is erected upon and united unto such a precious foundation must needs be a glorious Church 2. The great riches of true beleevers A member of Christ how poore soever he is in regard of outward riches yet he is the richest man in
3. and yet it was but 〈◊〉 〈…〉 at three hundred Romane pence v. 5. but 〈◊〉 is oyntment of invaluable worth All the ●●ld and silver on earth all the pearles and diamonds in the world are not worth the least drop of this oyntment He that hath it would not part with one drop of it for ten thousand rivers of oyle he that wants it cannot purchase it for all the riches of the world one drop of this oyntment is worth a sea of other oyntments 2. He excels all other oyntments in duration The vertue of other oyntments may be lost Take the most fragrant oyntment in the world keep it with never so much care yet it will corrupt in time Other casual accidents may fall out which may corrupt it You know what Solomen saith Eccles 10. 1. Dead flies cause the oyntment of the Apothecary to send 〈…〉 savour The best oyntment 〈…〉 compounded by the art of man may lose its 〈◊〉 and be offensive but Jesus Christ is incorruptible oyntment he can never lose his savour no time can putrifie him no accident can corrupt him This oyntment hath continued ever since the promise made to Adam Gen. 3. 15. yet the vertue of it in every respect is as precious as it was the very first day his Name is as glorious as fragrant as beautiful as shining now as it was when the Ala●aster box was at first poured forth The Psalmist sp●●ks of this very expressely Psal 72. 17. His Name shall endure for ever his Name shall be con●●nued as long as the Sunne and daily shall he be p●aised all Nations shall call him blessed 3. He excels all other oyntments in his fulness Other oyntment is of a waiting nature take but one dram of oyntment out of the largest vessel and there is an abatement take but one drop out of a river of oyntment and there is a drop less but this oyntment doth not grow lesse by spending Christ hath anointed thousands of his Elect in all the ages that are past and yet the vessel is as full as if one drop had not been taken out of it This Olive tree hath been emptying it self for many ages into the golden bowle and yet it continues running with as full a stream as it did the very first day 4. He excels all other oyntments in vertue and operation this may be branched out into six particulars 1 He anoints the soul as well as the body Other oyntments are poured only upon the outward man the soul the conscience is not the better for the multitude of oyntments that are poured upon the body the face of a person may shine with oyntment and yet his soul be black and filthy but this oyntment reacheth to the conscience and inward man Yea this oyntment is principally for the inward man the heart is the chief place on which this oyntment is poured 1 John 2. 27. the anointing which ye have received of him abideth in you Other oyntments are outward oyntments that abide upon us but this is an inward oyntment which abideth in us 'T is unctio spiritualis 2. This oyntment hath the good properties of all oyntments Some oyntments are fragrant to the smell but they are not healing others are healing but they are not sweet No one kinde of oyntment hath all excellercies in it but now in Jesus Christ all excellencies meet together the good properties of every oyntment do all center in Christ he is equally excellent every way You cannot say in what respect Christ is best he is so excellent every way 3. This oyntment doth charge the very na●ure of the person upon whom it s poured Other oyntments cannot change a person from what he is They cannot make a sinner a Saint they cannot alter the nature of a person But Jesus Christ changeth the nature of persons If this oyntment be poured upon the head of a sinner he is presently turned into a Saint if it fall upon a dead man he becomes a living man if a drop of this oyntment fall upon a weed it is presently turned into a flower When this oyntment was poured forth on Soul he became a Paul from a Persecutor of the Gospel he was changed into a preacher of the Gospel This oyntment turnes a filthy Sepulchre into a curious garden 〈…〉 an into a Nazarite as white a● show 4. This oyntment upon whomsoever it is poured doth abide upon him for ever A person may be anointed with material oyntment and in a short time lose all the sent and savour of it as if he had never been anointed but whosoever hath been once anointed with this oyntment will smell of it as long as he lives If Jesus Christ do but drop one drop of this oyntment upon the soul of an infant he carries the savour of it with him to his grave 1 John 2. 27. The unction which ye have received of him abideth in you The scent of this oyntment may be very weak in the children of God but it can never quite be lost David once by his sinne had brought such an ill savour upon his soule that the smell of the holy oyntment was almost quite lost My wounds stink and are corrupt through my foolishnesse Psal 38. 5. yet after a while his old savour did return againe the fragrancy of his oyment did ovecome the ill savour of his sinne The soul and body may be separated but Christ and the soul cannot be separated 5. This oyntment hath a present efficacy upon the soul The effects which are wrought by other oyntments are not so suddenly done Oyntment heales but not in a moment oyntment makes the face smooth and cleare but it must have some convenient time the Virgins which were to stand before the Persian King must be anointed six moneths before their beauty was perfect Est. 2. 12. hard swellings are mollified by oyntment but not at one dressing What ever operation the best oyntment hath it requires a convenient time to accompl●sh it But whatever i● done upon the soul by this oyntment is done in a moment ●● sooner is this oyntment dropt upon the soul but the spots are done away it cures the most festred sore with once dressing Assoon as ever the Application is made the effect follows One moment is as good as an age for this oyntment 6. The smallest quantity of this oyntment is as effectual as the greatest quantity A little of other oyntment doth little or no good A drop will not cure a wound a small quantity will not perfume a great roome a drop or two will not supple a hard tumour But now one drop of this spiritual oyntment is as effectual for the maine work as a whole ocean One drop of Christ softens the heart one graine of this oyntment perfumes the soul There is infinite vertue in every drop of Christ He that is made partaker of any part of Christ hath the merit and vertue of whole Christ As our Saviour tels Peter in another case
Iohn 13. 10. he that is washed needeth not to wash save his feet He that hath the least measure of this oyntment shall as certainly finde all the effects of it as if he had the whose vessel poured upon him 5. He excels all other oyntments in the manner of composition All other oyntments are compounded and made by men they are called the oyntments of the Apothecary Eccles 10. 1. God created the materials and he it is that hath given man skil and understanding how to make use of them but the composition is made by men But this precious oyntment is not made by men but by God It is he that hath compounded this golden box of oyntment It was God that anointed Christ with the holy unction of the Spirit Psal 45. 7. and it is he that hath designed him to be oyntment unto others Yea the truth is this oyntment is God himself Though the humanity be a creature yet the Divinity is the Creator Christ is not only unguentum Dei the oyntment of God but unguentum Deus that oyntment which is God himself The Uses These I shall draw 1. From the general Doctrine 2. From the particular resemblances First In general We may take notice of 1. The excellency of Christ He is compared in Scripture to all things that are necessary and to all things that are pleasant and delightful One great piece of the study of Christians in this life is to search into the excellency of Christ To know what Christ is in himself and what he is to us comprehends a very great part of a Christians study in this life Paul desired to know nothing but Jesus Christ and him crucified 1 Cor. 2. 2. This one resemblance shews him to be a precious one he is so excellent that all the choice things in nature are made use of to shadow out his glory His Name saith the Prophet shall be called wonderful Esay 9 6. how wonderful is that Name which is com●●sed of so many excellent things 2. This should draw our hearts exceedingly towards the Lord Iesus It should beget in us desire after him and delight in him Precious oyntment draw the affections of men towards them The best oyntment is but a drug to Jesus Christ If we be not enamoured with him we do despise him He that looks on him as oyntment cannot but be greatly delighted in him It follows in the text Therefore do the virgins love thee draw me we will runne after thee That man doth not value Christ as oyntment that doth not love him and desire to be drawn after him 3. The excellency of grace 'T is the graces of the Spirit in Christ that makes him compared to ointment his sweet oyntments are his meeknesse patience holinesse and the rest of those heavenly graces True grace is a choise thing the Scrip●ure compares it to the choisest things in all the world Cant. 4 13 14. Next to God and Christ and the Spirit there 's nothing in heaven or earth comparable to Christ 4. That the grace of Christ is not a thing common to all His common graces are communicated to all his special grace is more confined His Name is oyntment The holy oyntment in the Law was poured upon none but upon consecrated things and persons Exod. 30. 2● 24 25 30. It must not be poured on mans fl●sh v. 32. Christ is compared here to this oyntment A select number the Elect of God onely those that are spiritual Priests these and these onely ●e made partakers of Christ and his graces Thu● much for the general doctrine Secondly particularly First from the fragrancy of Christ 〈◊〉 may learne four thing 1. How unsavoury they are that want Christ Wicked men have animam pro sal● their soules keep their bodies sweet but what have they then to keep their soules sweet the holy Ghost compares men that are in the state of nature to that which is most unsavory Psal 14. 3. They are unsavory both in their persons and in services that want this oyntment A heart unanointed casts the worst smell of any corrupt thing in the world 2. Acknowledge from whence it is that all your fragrancy proceeds If there be any good smell upon your souls it is because this oyntment hath been poured forth upon you Jesus Christ mentions the sweet smell of his Spouse Cant. 4 10 11. and indeed every beleever is a sweet savour unto God The precious oyntment of the graces of Christ poured upon your head at your conversion is the onely reason of this good savour 't is great pride and ingratitude not to own it 3. This teacheth us all how to make and keep the soul sweet Satan labours to make it musty by breathing the ill ayre of sinne into it and if you would have it smell sweetly you must anoint it with this oyntment every day Drop but every day a drop of this oyntment upon it by prayer meditation or some other holy duty and it will preserved sweet notwithstanding the thick fogs of sinne and temptation Carry Christ in your bosome and you will smell very sweet in every company 4. When ever you smell any sweet savour think on Christ The best use which we can make of perfumes and oyntments is to make them remembrancers to put us in mind of him who perfumes both earth and heaven And then Secondly from the cheering vertue of this oyntment learne two things 1. Whither to go for heart reviving When you finde your spirits dull and melancholy when your hearts are tired out and your souls languish smell to this precious oyntment and it will revive you It 's Christs work to revive the spirit of the humble and to revive the heart of the contrite The smell of the oyntment either of Christs satisfaction or of his promises or of his intercession is the speediest and surest way to be rid from the power of spiritual heavinesse 2. Let them that have this oyntment maintaine spiritual cheerfulnesse God calls for spiritual gladnesse as well as spiritual sorrow Phil. 3. 1. A well grounded cheerfulnesse honours religion as much as holinesse The Scripture was written for consolation as well as for conversion John 15. 11. Rom. 15. 4. The Spirit is a comforter as well as a sanctifier John 15. 26. You that have this oyntment maintaine a holy light-heartednesse There is a vaine mirth and there is a sinful and sensual mirth avoid these but the holy mirth must be kept up It s a disparagement to the holy oyntment to see anointed ones droop in the blackest seasons And then Thirdly from the mollifying vertue of this oyntment learn two things 1. The Scripture remedy against hardnesse of heart It 's a disease the best are troubled with lesse or more chafe this suppling oyntment 〈◊〉 to it and it will grow soft This oyntment was never used aright but it did in time remove the spiritu●l hardnesse of the soul 2. Ascribe all heart softnesse to Christ Had not this
suppling oyntment d●opt upon it it had been stony to this present day Fourthly from the beautifying vertue of this oyntment learn two things 1. What true beauty is To be anointed with Christ to be filled with his graces to be made partaker of the divine nature this is beauty this is true beauty this is lasting beauty this is beauty that will commend us to God 'T is not he that hath the beautiful face but he that hath the beautiful soule that is accepted of God And then 2. He that would be beautiful let him anoint himself with Christ How vaine are persons in painting their faces Jezabels daughters abound 2 Kings 9. 30. as if they would mend Gods workmanship it was formerly whores customes Ezek. 23. 40. Anoint your selves once with this oyntment and all others will be unpleasant And then Fifthly from the healing quality of this oyntment learn two things 1. To acknowledge how their sores were healed Thou wast one full of wounds now they are bound up and healed Thou mayest blesse God for this balsome of heaven ●esus Christ otherwise thou hadst died of thy wounds 2. Get this oyntment into 〈…〉 Wise men will not be without healing oyntment in their house● especially were they are farre from Chirurgion All our houses by reason of sin are no better then spiritual hospitals There 's no balme in Gilead that can heal one sore but this divine balm Jesus Christ get your vessels fill'd with this oyntment and all will be well pray that God would poure this oyntment into your wounded children and servants else they are but dead men LUK. 2. 25. Waiting for the consolation of Israel XXIX SERM. at Mary Wolnoth Lon May 29. 1653. THere are in this Chapter foure things observable concerning Jesus Christ 1 His nativity ver 1. to ver 21. 2 His circumcision verse 21. 3 The presenting of him in the Temple ver 22. to v. 41. 4 A proof of his prophetical office v. 41. ad finem In that part which speaks of his presentation in the Temple we have many things observable 1. The time of it ver 22. which was the fourtieth day after his nativity 2. The efficient cause of it his parents Joseph and Mary 3. The final cause of it this is declared ver 23 24. 4. The adjuncts accompanying this work These are principally two First the prophecy of Simeon verse 25. to verse 36. Secondly the prophecy of Anna concerning him v. 36 to 39. In this prophecy of Simeon we have 1. A description of some things concerning his person v. 25 26. And then 2. A declaration of his prophecy v. 27 c. His person is described two wayes First by his piety v. 25. init Secondly by his gift of prophecy this is expressed generally by the efficient cause of it v. 25. The holy Ghost was upon him particularly by the revelation which he received v. 26. His piety is set down by three graces 1. His justice or righteousnesse He was just 2. His devotion he was a devout man 3. His faith and hope in expecting the fulfilling of Gods promise concerning Christ This is in the text He waited for the consolation of Israel ●n which words we have two things 1. A description of what Christ is to his people 2. A 〈◊〉 of what Simeon did in reference to ●●rist 〈…〉 him God had revea●ed 〈…〉 by 〈◊〉 ●oly Ghost that Jesus Christ 〈…〉 before his soule went out o● the flesh 〈◊〉 ●he holy man beleeved this and 〈…〉 w●it for it From 〈…〉 two particulars we have this double Observation 1. That Jesus Christ is the consolation of Israel 2. That godly men do expect and wait for the accomplishment of divine promises even of such as are most unlikely to be fulfilled I begin with the first viz. Doct. 1. That Jesus Christ is that consolation of the Israel of God Simeons expectation was for the coming of Christ in the flesh as is clear from v. 25. He that is there called the Lords Christ is here called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the consalation of Israel Christ is the only true consolation of all Gods Israel the consolation of Israel is a periphrasis of Christ the Messiah saith Piscator 1 See the type Noah was herein a type of Christ Gen. 5. 29. 2 See it in the prophecies They that foretold Christ prophecied of him as a comforter Esay 9. 3 6. Esay 40. 1. Esay 51. 3. Esay 52. 9 10. 3 See it in the Angels that proclaimed his birth Luke 2. 10 11. In opening of this doctrine I shall handle these three particulars 1. Who are meant by Israel 2. In what respects Christ is said to be the consolation of Israel 3. That he is the consolation of Israel only 1. For the first By Israel we are to understand true beleevers the members of the truly invisible Church so we find them called Gal. 6. 16. They are called Israel or the Israel of God in two respects First in reference to the people of Israel beleevers are like the people of Israel in three respects 1. In regard of their inward circumcision It was the badge of an Israelite and that whereby he was distinguished from all other Nations that he was circumcised Other Nations are called uncircumcision the Israelites are called ordinarily ●he circumcision Beleevers they and they onely are spiritually circumcised the foreskin of their flesh is mortified and cut off they are circumcised with the circumcision not made with hands Col. 2. 11. The body of sinne is truly mortified in them Hence they are called in Scripture the circumcision as the Israelites were Phil. 3. 3. We are the circumcision saith the Apostle speaking of beleevers which worship God in the Spirit a true Beleever is a true circumcised person 2. In regard of the Law written in their hearts It was the great priviledge of the people of Israel that they had the Law of God amongst them The Apostle mentions this Rom. 2. 2. And the Prophet David long before him Psalme 147. 19. Beleevers have this priviledge above all people under heaven that the Law of God is with them nay the Law of God is in them not the Law of nature but the Law of grace it is not onely written amongst them but it is written in them The Apostle speaks of this Heb. 8. 10. 3. In regard of their neernesse to God It was the great dignity of the people of Israel that they were of all people neerest to God Deut. 4. 7. They were Gods heritage his peculiar people separated from all people under heaven It is the great priviledge of beleevers that they are neerer to God then all other people They are neer to God in affection they are neer to God in relation Of this the Apostle speaks Eph. 2. 13. Thus they are called the Israel of God in regard of the people of Israel Secondly in reference to the 〈…〉 rael Israel is Jacob he had that name 〈◊〉 him of God Gen. 32. 28. Now
Ordinance through which it is conveyed Seldome are our eyes lifted up so high as Christ We should labour to be better informed for time to come What ever conduit pipe be used Christ is the fountaine and foundation of every drop of comfort Christ is the God of all true consolation It is not in the power of all the Angels of heaven to give any soul one drop of comfort Nor can all the Ministers on earth give you one dram of comfort They can speak the words of comfort but they cannot cause the soul to receive comfort God comforts by them 2 Cor. 6. 6. Titus was but an instrument Comforting is called frequently in Scripture the speaking to the heart Hose● 2. 14. Who is able to speak to the heart but he who is the Lord and Commander of the heart God hath put all the oyle of spiritual joy into the hands of Christ Esay 61. 3. and none but he can give it out He that wants comfort must go to Christ he that hath received any true comfort must ascribe it to Christ All my springs saith the Church are in thee Ps 87. 7. 5. Let the Israel of God take heed of being a discomfort to Chr●st We cannot properly be either a comfort or di●comfort to Christ by any thing we do He receives properly no joy from us nor is he capable of enduring any sorrow from us yet our sinnes are said in a figurative sense to be a grief and discomfort to him If Christ were capable of sorrow nothing would go neerer his hear then this to see his people sinne against him What the Apostle saith of the Spirit we may in the same sense say of Christ Ephes 4. 30. It is but a disingenuous and unfriendly thing to be a grief to him that is a consolation to thee If Christ be thy comforter it 's an unworthy thing in thee to be his tormentor The Apostle speaks of some who crucifie to themselves afresh the Sonne of God Heb. 6. 6. Every sinne is in a sort the cruifying of Christ afresh if there be any dram of thankfulnesse in our hearts we shall loath the thoughts of vexing Jesus Christ 6. Maintain close communion with Christ Vse 3. Consolation to the people of God 'T is better in his hands then in ours we are cruel to our selves foolish 1. In case of the want of outward comforts It 's often the lo● of Gods people to be cut short of outward things God sees they are apt to surfeit on this sweet fruit therefore he with-holds it Well Christ is thy consolation These things could not comfort thee without Christ he can comfort thee abundantly without these 2. In case of spiritual heavinesse and trouble of heart Remember Christ is the consolation of Israel First He can comfort in all cases 2 Corinth 1. 4. Secondly He can comfort against all difficulties He can bring comforts through hell through an host of temptations to the soule Hosea 2. 14. Thirdly He can give the soul ability to receive comforts Esay 66. 13. Wait on him and on his Ordinances and you shall have comfort as much as is sufficient Fourthly he is full of comfort Fifthly ●e is willing to comfort He hath undertaken to be thy consolation as well as thy salvation He 's anointed to comfort them that mourne Esay 61. 1 2 3. Say not I have been so long without Comfort Jesus Christ can drop that into thy soul in one moment which shall make thee forget all thy discomfort Only wait on him wait patiently wait beleevingly Wait on him at the pipes of comforts the Ordinances and desire grace rather then comfort and thou shalt finde heart-revivings before thou die Vse 4. Advice to them that are without Christ Labour to close with him he is the consolation of Israel What poor comforts are those which you now feed upon You feed on ashes you eat husks you are jolly and brisk and full of a frantick joy If Christ be not yours no comfort in Scripture is yours Come and taste of these comforts They are pure They are soul-satisfying They are eternal All your comforts will be your torments if Christ be not your comfort Luk. 2. 25. XXX SERM. at Mary Wolnoth Lon● June 6. 1653. Waiting for the consolation of Israel I Proceed to the second doctrine which is this viz. Doct. 2. That true believers do wait for the accomplishment of divine promises even those that are most unlikely to be fulfilled No promise which God ever made to man had more improbabilities and seeming impossibilities to break its way thorough then the promise of Christ He is called a root out of a dry ground Esay 53. 2. He was to be borne of a Virgin Aw●-man shall compasse a man Jer. 31. 22. and yet this good man having a Revelation from God that he should not depart this life till his eyes had seen him did wait for the fulfilling of this promise If any should wonder why Simeons waiting for Christ should be noted as an act of such singular faith when as now the generality of the Jewes were big with the same expectation C●●mnitius gives two good Reasons of it 1. The common bulk of the Jews did expect Christ onely for external advantages They expected him onely as one that should restore their outward liberties which were now invaded and taken away but Simeon waited for him as a spiritual Redeemer that should save their souls from sin and hell 2. Simeon expected his coming to be neer at hand according to the predictions of the Prophets whereas the generality of the Jews had but onely a loose uncertain expectation of him Simeon waited for a speedy coming of Christ therefore doth the holy Ghost take such strict notice of it Other examples we have in Scripture of the holy waitings of godly men for the fulfilling of Divine promises Abraham waited for the promise of a Sonne when his body was even dead and his wife unlikely according to the course of nature to conceive the Apostle mentions ●● ●om 4. chap. 20 21. 18. 19. David waited many years for the promise which God made to him of succeeding Saul in the throne Though upon difficulties and crosse providences which did arise he was sometimes put to a stand yet he did expect the accomplishment of the thing promised He doth often in the book of P●almes make mention of his waiting as Psal 62. 1 2 5. Daniel waited for the accomplishment of Gods promise for the restoring of the Church from their captivity though there were many difficulties in the way the Church being then as d●y bones Ezek. 37. 3 4 5 6. yet Daniel beleeved and waited for it as appears by chap. 9. init He did count the number of the years and when they drew neer a period then he stirs up himself to pray with more then ordinary faith The whole Church waited for the fulfilling of this promise Micah 7. 7. I wi●● wait for the God of my salvation my
shall appear so the Angels tell the Disciples at his Ascension Act. 1. 11. This same Jesus which is taken into heaven shall so come in like manner as ye have seen him go into heaven As he did really and bodily ascend so shall he really and corporally descend God will honour the humane nature of Christ in the world They shall look upon him whom they have pierced The same flesh of Christ which was pierced shall be manifested in his second coming 2. It shall be a sudden appearing His coming is compared to a sudden flash of lightning Mat. 24. 27. The appearance of Christ is compared to the lightning in two respects 1. For the evidence of it It shall be as clear to the eyes of men as the lightning is 2. For the suddennesse of it A flash of lightning doth suddenly break forth and in an instant shines from one end of the heaven to another so shall the appearance of Christ be And for this very cause is it compared to the coming of a thiefe in the night Luk. 12. 39 40. As it was in the dayes of Noah so shall it be when the Son of man cometh They ate they drank c. Mat. 24. 37. when men say peace c. 3. It shall be a very glorious appearance He shall come with power and great glory Mat. 24. 30. He was not so mean and despicable in his first coming as he shall be majestical and renowned in this his second coming His first appearance was in the form of a servant He came not to be ministred unto but to minister A low kinde of appearance was most fit for such work but when he appeares again he shall come as a Judge as King of kings and Lord of lords therefore Majesty is fit for him The Scripture doth set out the glory of his coming sundry wayes 1. He shall come in the clouds of heaven The bright cloud shall be his chariot Mat. 24. 30. 2. He shall come attended with an innumerable company of glorious Angels Those glorious spirits shall come in full regiments attending upon his person to do him service and to execute his will Mat. 25. 31. He had the beasts to attend on him at his first coming but he shall have Angels to wait upon him at this coming 3. He shall come with the voice of the Archangel with a mighty shout and with the trumpet of God 1 Thes 4. 16. All these expressions are used to set out the glory of it All outward glory which ever man beheld is but darknesse in this respect 4. It shall be a very dreadful and terrible appearance Full of Majesty and therefore full of terror His first coming was dreadful Mat. 4. 5. The Scripture sets out the dreadfulnesse of it by the Antecedents Concomitants Consequents of it The Antecedents are in Matthew 24. 29. such an alteration shall be made upon the creatures being that Sunne Moon and Starres being obscured by the glory of Christ shall cease from their service and not be able to shew their glory as before The Concomitants the firing of the world The Apostle speaks of this 2 Pet. 3. 10. what a dreadful sight will this be to the wicked The consequents of it are the raising of the dead the setting up of the Thrones the summoning of all the world to judgement Well doth the Scripture call it the terrible day of the Lord. IV. When shall this appearing be you cannot imagine that I should be so bold as to say any thing of the particular day moneth or yeare of Christs coming Our Saviour hath for ever silenced all curious enquirers about it Mar. 13. 32. The Scripture tells us thus much about the time of it that it shall be when the time of the Churches tribulation is ended Matth. 24. 29. When the number of Gods elect is converted In the end oft dayes Dan. 12. 13. It is one of those Novissima or last things which is to be expected in the world V. Why is it deferred 1. Because the Elect of God are not yet called All the Vessels of glory are not borne into the world Christ stayes till these flowers be sprung up The fetching of these to heaven is one end of his coming And he will not come till these are brought forth As the world was made at first so doth it stand and continue for their sakes 2. That space and time for repentance may be afforded unto sinful men This reason the Apostle renders of it 2 Pet. 3. 9. The Lord is not slack c. but is long suffering to us-ward not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance He defers his coming that sinners may have more tenders of salvation made to them that so they may be inexcusable if they do not returne 3. That the faith hope patience of his own children may be exercised The delaying of Christs coming is a very great help both to exercise faith watchfulnesse and patience We may say of this as the Prophet doth of the delaying of another day of the Lord Hab. 2. 4. Though it tarry wait for it because it will surely come it will not tarry And the just shall live by his faith 4. That all other of Gods decrees for and about the things which must come to passe before this day may be accomplished Many things God hath decreed shall be done before his appearance which are not yet done in the world The preaching of the Gospel to all Nations Mat. 24. 14. The overthrowing of Antichrist 2 Thes 2. 3 8. The making of the Jewes and Gentiles into one Church c. Christ stayes because these decrees must be accomplished The Uses of this Point Use 1. Away with those Atheists and Epicures who deny this Doctrine In the very dayes of the Apostles there were some scoffers that did mock at this doctrine of Christs appearing 2 Pet. 3. 3 4. where is the promise of his coming we have many such scoffers in our dayes that deride the Doctrine of the resurrection of eternal life of Christs second coming The Apostle tells us the reason of this scoffing in the same place 1. The impurity of their hearts They walk after their own lusts That 's one great ground of Atheistical and wicked opinions Such Doctrines curb and check their lusts and because they cannot have their lusts by retaining such doctrines they therefore reject and scoffe at such doctrines 2. They walk more by sense then by the testimony of the Word of God Since the fathers fell asleep all things continue as they were from the beginning of the Creation because they cannot apprehend with their sense any such doctrine or any ground of it therefore they reject it Such as these who will not be convinced by Scripture we shall leave to feel the severity of that coming which they will not beleeve They that now scoffe will have time enough sadly to bewaile their scoffing they shall then feele what they will not now