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

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that they have no time to practice better things the world is like a Mill it makes such a noise in carnal hearts that it drowns the sound of Gods silver Trumpet Mens affections are somtimes kindled by the preaching of the word and we begin to hope that the flame of godliness will break forth in their lives but then comes the earth and puts out this fire how many Sermons lie buried in earthly hearts More die then are put in the Bill of Mortality Oh that the want of Practice in this age were more laid to heart This is a Lamentation and shall be for a Lamentation many Professors are all ear if we should see a Creature made up of nothing but ear it were a monster in nature how many such monsters are there in Christianitie They hear and hear and are never the better like the Salamander which lies in the fire but as Naturalists say it is never the hotter Some satisfie themselves with the having of Ordinances Judg. 17.13 Then said Micah Now know I that the Lord will do me good seeing I have a Levite to my Priest But what is Physick if it be not applied what is it to have the sound of the word in our ears unless we have the savour of it in our hearts It will be little comfort to men on their death-beds to think that Christ hath been preached in their streets and they have been lifted up to heaven in Gospel administrations when their Consciences shall tell them they have been unholy and unreformed they have come into Gods House as the beasts did into the Ark they came in unclean and went out of the Ark unclean Use 2 2. It exhorts all to become Practitioners in Religion Exhort There are three steps leading to heaven Knowledg Assent Practice it is not the taking the two first steps but the third step which will make you happy Obedience is the Grand precept both of the Law and Gospel in this stands a Christians duty in this consists his felicity 1 Sam. 15.22 To obey us better than Sacrifice Per victimas aliena caro per obedientiam vero propria voluntas macta●ur T is grateful to God t is graceful to a Christian What is the excellencie of a thing but its practicalness and usefulness what are the fine feathers of a bird if it cannot sing what is a plant though decked with leaves if it brings not forth fruit What is it we commend in an Horse his eyes or his good mettle Cant. 5.5 My hands dropped with Myrrhe I may allude not only a Christians lips must drop knowledge but his hands and his fingers must drop Myrrhe that is by working the works of obedience Let me use some Divine Motives to tempt Christians to the practique part of godliness 1. Gospel-obedience is an evidence of sincerity as our Saviour Christ said in another sence Joh. 10.25 The works which I do bear witness of me Though never man spake like Christ yet when he comes to put himself upon a trial he will not be judged by his words but by his works they bear witness of me so it is not a Christians golden words but his works which testifie of him Psal 119.59 I have turned my feet unto thy statutes David did not only turn his ears to Gods Testimonies but he turned his feet to them he walked in them we judge not of the health of a mans body by his high colour but by the pulse of the arm where the blood chiefly operates so we judge not of a Christians soundness by his knowledge or high expressions what is this high colour Saul may be among the Prophets but the estimate of a Christian is to be taken by his obediential actings towards God 2. To be practitioners in Religion will not only do your selves good but others This will both honour Religion and propagate it 1. It will honour Religion the Gospel may be compar'd to a beautiful Queen the fruitful lives of Professors are so many jewels that do adorn this Queen and make her shine forth in greater glory and magnificence what a honour was it to godliness when the Apostle could say the faith of the Romans was trumpeted abroad in every place Rom. 1.8 I thank my God that your faith is spoken of throughout the whole world That is faith flourishing into obedience 1 Thes 1.2 3. We give thanks to God for you remembring your work of faith and labour of love Christians should be ambitious to keep up the credit of Religion 2. The practice of those truths we know will much propagate Religion Practice is the best Syllogisme and Argument we can use to prevail with others this will confirm them in the truth of Religion The Emperor Jovinian said to the Orthodox and Arrian Bishops I cannot judge of your Doctrine but I can judge of your lives their practice would preach loudest If others see us make a profession and yet live in a contradiction to what we profess if they hear Jacobs voice but see Esaus hands they will think Religion is but a devout complement a severe policy why doth the Father forbid his Children to swear when he himself swears would you gain many Proselytes to Religion be doers of the Word say as Abimilech to his fellows Judg. 9.48 What ye have seen we do make hast and do as I have done Would ye be as load-stones to draw your children and servants to heaven set upon the practice of holiness Basil observes that Julian in one of his Epistles writing to Arsatius saith that the Christian Religion did much flourish by the sanctity and liberality of them who professed it 3. Thus we show our love to Christ Joh. 14.21 He that hath my Commandements and keepeth them he it is that loveth me We use to say If you love me do such a thing This me thinks should be a great Argument to obedience by the love ye bear to Jesus Christ obey his Word Every man would be thought to love Christ I but try your love by this touch-stone Are ye cast into a Gospel-mould do you obey It is a vain thing for a man to say he loves Christs person when he slights his commands * Qui Dei praecepta contemnit Deum non diligi● neque enim principem veneramur si odi● ejus leges habemus Isidor 4. Without practice you will come short of them who have come short of heaven Herod did many things Mar. 6.20 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he was in many things a practiser of Johns Ministry Those who rest in the speculative part of Religion are not so good as Herod 5. What unspeakable comfort will obedience yeild both in life and death 1. In life is it not a comfort to a man when he hath been casting up his Accounts and finds that he hath gained in his Trade you come hither in the use of Ordinances Word and Prayer to trade for heaven now if ye find upon a true account that ye
not like the Medlar which is never good till it be rotten A covetous man may be compared to a Christmas-box he receives money but parts with none till death breaks this box in pieces then the silver and gold comes tumbling out Give in time of health these are the Alms which God takes notice of and as Calvin saith putteth into his book of accounts 6. Give thankfully They should be more thankful Rule 6 that give an Alms than they that receive it We should saith Nazianzene give 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a thank-offering to God that we are in the number of Givers and not Receivers Bless God for a willing mind to have not only an Estate but an Heart is matter of gratulation MATTH 5.8 Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God CHAP. XVI Describing Heart-purity THE holy God who is of purer eyes than to behold iniquity calls here for heart-purity and to such as are adorned with this jewel he promiseth a glorious and beatifical Vision of himself they shall see God Two things are to be explained 1. The nature of Purity 2. The subject of Purity The nature of Purity 1. The nature of Purity Purity is a Sacred refined thing it stands diametrically opposite to immunditia or whatsoever defileth we must distinguish of purity 1. There is a Primitive Purity which is in God Originally and Essentially as light is in the Sun Holinesse is the glory of the Godhead * Septuag Exod 15.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Glorious in holiness God is the Pattern and Prototype of all holinesse 2. There is a created Purity Thus holinesse is in the Angels and was once in Adam Adams heart had not the least spot or tincture of impurity We call that wine pure which hath no sophistication and that gold pure which hath no drosse mingled with it Such was Adams holinesse it was like the wine which comes from the grape having no mixture but this is not to be found on earth we must go to heaven for it 3. There is an evangelical purity when grace is mingled with some sin like Gold in the Oare like aire in the twilight like wine that hath a dash in it like fine cloth with a course list like Nebuchadnezzars image part of silver and part of clay Dan. 2.35 This mixture God calls purity in a Gospel-sence as a face may be said to be fair which hath some freckles in it Where there is a study of purity and a loathing our selves for our impurity this is to be pure in heart Some by pure in heart understand chastity others sincerity Psal 32.2 But I suppose purity here is to be taken in a larger sence for the several kinds and degrees of holiness they are said to be pure who are consecrated persons having the oyle of grace poured upon them This Purity is much mistaken 1. Civility is not Purity a man may be cloath'd with moral vertues justice prudence temperance yet go to hell 2. Profession is not purity a man may have a name to live and yet be dead Rev. 3.1 He may be swept by civility and garnished by profession yet the Divel may dwell in the house The blazing Comet is no Star The Hypocrites tongue may be silver yet his heart stone Purity consists in two things 1. Rectitude of minde a prizing holinesse in the judgment Psal 119.30 2 Conformity of will an embracing of holinesse in the affections Psal 119.97 A pure soil is cast into the mould of holinesse holinesse is a blood runs in his veines The subject of Purity 2 The subject of purity The Heart Pure in heart Purity of heart doth not exclude purity of life no more than the pureness of the fountain excludes the purenesse of the stream But it is call'd Purity of heart because this is the main thing in Religion and there can be no purity of life without it A Christians great care should be to keep the heart pure as one would especially preserve the spring from being poysoned In a Duel a man will chiefly guard and fence his heart so a wise Christian should above all things keep his heart pure take heed the love of sin doth not get in there lest it prove mortal Doctr. Christians should above all things breath after heart-purity 1 Tim. 3.9 Holding the mystery of faith in a pure conscience justification causeth our happinesse sanctification evidenceth it Reasons for 1. Purity 2. Heart-purity 1. Reasons for Purity The Reasons for Purity are 1. Purity is a thing called for in Scripture 1 Pet. 1.16 Be ye holy for I am holy It is not only the Minister bids you be holy but God himself calls for it what should the holy God do with unholy servants 2. Because of that filthy and cursed condition we are in before purity be wrought in us we are a lump of clay and sin mingled together sin doth not only blind us but defile us it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 filthiness James 1.21 And to shew how befilthying a thing it is 't is compar'd to a plague-soar 1 Kings 8.38 To spots Deut. 32.5 To a vomit 2 Pet. 2.22 To the infants tumbling in blood Ezek. 16.6 To a menstruous cloath Isa 30.22 which as Hierom saith was the most defiling thing under the Law All the legal washings which God appointed were but to put men in mind of their loathsomnesse before they were washed in the blood of Christ If all the evils in the world were put together and their quintescence strain'd out they could not make a thing so black and polluted as sin doth a sinner is a Divel in mans shape When Moses his Rod was turn'd into a Serpent he fled from it would God open mens eyes and shew them their deformities and damnable spots they would be afraid and flie from themselves as Serpents This shews what need we have of Purity When grace comes it washeth off this hellish filth of Ethiopians it maks us Israelites it turns Ravens into Swans it makes them who are as black as hell to become white as snow 3. Because none but the pure in heart are interested in the Covenant of Grace covenanted persons have the sprinkling with clean water Ezek. 36.25 Now till we are thus sprinkled we have nothing to do with the new Covenant and by consequence with the new Jerusalem If a Will be made only to such persons as are so qualified none can come in for a part but such as have those qualifications So God hath made a Will and Covenant that he will be our God and will settle heaven upon us by entaile but with this clause or proviso in the Will that we be purified persons having the clean water sprinkled upon us Now till then we have nothing to do with God or mercie 4. Purity is the end of our election Ephes 1.4 He hath chosen us that we should be holy not for holinesse to holinesse Rom. 8.29 Whom he did foreknow he also
of price is only precious to the poor in spirit he that wants bread and is ready to starve will have it whatever it cost he will lay his garment to pledge bread he must have or he is undone So to him that is Poor in spirit that sees his want of Christ how precious is a Saviour Christ is Christ and grace is grace to him he will do any thing for the bread of life therefore will God have the soul thus qualified to raise the price of his Market to inhance the value and estimate of the Lord Jesus Reason 3 3. Till we are Poor in spirit we cannot go to heaven Theirs is the Kingdom of heaven this doth tune and prepare us for heaven By nature a man is big with self-confidence and the gate of heaven is so strait that he cannot enter now poverty of spirit doth minorare animam it doth lessen the soul it pares off its superfluity and now he is fit to enter in at the strait gate The great Cable cannot go through the eye of the Needle but let it be untwisted and made into small threads and then it may Poverty of spirit untwists the great Cable it makes a man little in his own eyes and now an entrance shall be made unto him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Richly into the Everlasting Kingdom 2 Pet. 1.11 Through this Temple of Poverty we must go into the Temple of Glory SECT 1. Use 1 Use 1 IT shews wherein a Christians riches do consist namely in poverty of spirit Some think if they can fill their bags with gold then they are rich but they who are poor in spirit are the rich men they are rich in poverty This poverty entitles them to a Kingdom How poor are they that think themselves rich how rich are they that see themselves poor I call it the Jewel of poverty There are some Paradoxes in Religion that the world cannot understand for a man to become a fool that he may be wise 1 Cor. 3.18 to save his life by losing it Matth. 16.25 and by being poor to be rich Reason laughs at it but blessed are the poor for theirs is the Kingdom Then this poverty is to be striven for more than all riches under these rags is hid cloth of gold out of this carcasse comes hony SECT 2. Use 2 IF blessed are the poor in spirit then by the rule of contraries Cursed are the proud in spirit Prov. 16.5 There is a generation of men who do commit idolatry with themselves no such idol as self They admire their own parts moralities self-righteousnesse and upon this stock graft the hope of their salvation There are many are too good to go to heaven they have commodities enough of their own growth and they scorne to live upon the borrow or be beholding to Christ These bladders the Divel hath blown up with pride and they are swell'd in their own conceit but it is like the swelling of a dropsie-man whose bignesse is his disease thus it was with that proud Justiciary Luke 18.11 The Pharisee stood and prayed God I thank thee that I am not as other men are extortioners unjust adulterers or even as this Publican I fast twice in the week I give tythes c. Here was a man setting up the top-sail of pride but the Publican who was poor in spirit he stood a far off and would not lift up so much as his eyes unto heaven but smot upon his brest saying God be merciful to me a sinner This man carried away the Garland I tell you saith Christ this man went down to his house justified rather than the other Saint Paul before his conversion thought himself in a very good condition Touching the Law blamelesse Phil. 3.6 He thought to have built a Tower of his own righteousnesse the top whereof should have reached to heaven but at last God shewed him there was a crack in the foundation and then he gets into the Rock of ages Phil. 3.9 That I may be found in him There is not a more dangerous praecipice than self-righteousnesse this was Laodicea's temper Rev. 3.17 because thou sayest I am rich and have need of nothing and knowest not that thou art wretched and miserable c. She thought she wanted nothing when indeed she had nothing How many doth this damne we see some ships that have scaped the rocks yet are cast away upon the sands so some who have scaped the rocks of grosse sins yet are cast away upon the sands of self-righteousnesse and how hard is it to convince such men of their danger they will not believe but they may be help'd out of the Dungeon with these rotten rags they cannot be perswaded their case is so bad as others would make it Christ tells them they are blind but they are like Seneca's maid who was born blind but she would not beleeve it Ait domum esse coecam The house saith she is dark but I am not blind Christ tells them they are naked and offers his white robes to cover them but they are of a different perswasion and because they are blind they cannot see themselves naked how many have perished by being their own saviours O that this might drive the proud sinner out of himself a man never comes to himself till he comes out of himself and no man can come out till first Christ come in SECT 3. Use 3 IF poverty of spirit be so necessary Trial. How shall I Use 3 know that I am poor in spirit Answ By the blessed effects of this Poverty which are 1. He that is poor in spirit is weaned from himself Psalm 131.2 My soul is even as a weaned child 't is hard for a man to be weaned from himself The Vine catcheth hold of every thing that is near to stay it self upon There is some bough or other a man would be catching hold of to rest upon how hard is it to be brought quite off himself The poor in spirit are divorced from themselves they see they must to hell without Christ My soul is even as a weaned child 2. He that is poor in spirit is a Christ-admirer he hath high thoughts of Christ he sees himself naked and flies to Christ that in his garments he may obtaine the blessing He sees himself wounded and as the wounded Deere runs to the water so he thirsts for Christs blood the water of life Lord saith he give me Christ or I die conscience is turned into a fiery Serpent and hath stung him now all the world for a brazen serpent he sees himself in a state of death and how precious is one leaf of the tree of life which is both for food and medicine The poor in spirit sees all his riches lye in Christ wisdome righteousnesse sanctification c. In every exigence he flies to this magazine and store-house he adores the all-fulnesse in Christ They say of the oyle in Rhemes though they are continually almost spending it yet it never wasts
Basil calls anger drunkennesse and Hierom saith there are more drunken with passion than with wine Seneca calls anger brevis insania a short fit of madnesse sometimes it suspends the use of reason in the best things we are coole enough in Religion we are all yce in contention all fire How unbeseeming is rash anger how doth it disguise and disfigure Homer saith of Agamemnon that when he did moderate his passion he resembled the gods he was like Jupiter in feature like Pallas in wisdom but when he was in his fury he was a very Tyger nothing of Jupiter did appear in him as Plato counselled the great Revellers and drinkers of his time that they should view themselves in a glasse when they were in their drunken humour and they would appear loathsome to themselves So let a man disguised with passion view himself in the glasse and sure he would ever after be out of love with himself Ora tument ira nigrescunt sanguine venae Ephes 4.26 27. Let not the Sun go down upon your wrath neither give place to the Divel Oh saith one he hath wrong'd me and I will never give place to him but better give place to him than to the Divel an hasty spirit is not a meek spirit Caution Caution Not but that we may in some cases be angry There is an holy anger that anger is without sin which is against sin meeknesse and zeal may stand together in matters of Religion a Christian must be cloathed with the spirit of Eliah and be full of the fury of the Lord Jer. 6.11 Christ was meek Mat. 11.29 yet zealous John 2.14 15. The zeal of Gods house did eat him up 2. Meekness is opposed to malice malice is the Divels picture John 8.44 Malice is mental murder 1 John 3.15 it unfits for duty How can such a man pray I have read of two men that lived in malice who being asked how they could say the Lords prayer one answered he thank'd God there were many good prayers besides The other answered when he said the Lords prayer he did leave out those words As we forgive them that trespass against us But Saint Austin brings in God replying Because thou dost not say my prayer therefore I will not hear thine * Quia tu non dicis meam ego non audiam tuam Were it not a sad judgement if all that a man did eat should turn to poyson to a malicious man all the holy Ordinances of God turn to poyson the table of the Lord is a snare he eats and drinks his own damnation a malicious spirit is not a meek spirit 3. Meekness is opposed to revenge malice is the scum of anger and revenge is malice boyling over malice is a vermin lives on blood revenge is Satans Nectar and Ambrosia * Nihil Diabolo gratius Luth. this is the savoury meat which the malicious man dresseth for the Divel the Scripture forbids revenge Rom. 12.19 Dearly Beloved avenge not your selves this is to take Gods office out of his hand who is called the God of recompences Jer. 51.56 and the God of vengeance Psal 94.1 This I urge against those who challenge one another to Duels indeed spiritual Duels are lawful it is good to fight with the Divel James 4.7 Resist the Divel 'T is good to Duel with a mans self the regenerate part against the carnal Blessed is he that seeks a revenge upon his lusts 2 Cor. 7.11 Yea what revenge but other Duels are unlawful Avenge not your selves The Turks though a barbarous people did in Ancient times burn such as went to Duel in their sides with hot coals of fire they who were in heat of revenge were punished sutably with fire Object But if I am thus meek and tame in bearing of injuries and incivilities I shall lose my credit it will be a stain to my reputation Answ 1. To pass by an injury without revenge is no Eclipse to a mans credit Solomon tells us it is the glory of a man to pass over a transgression Prov. 12.11 'T is more honour to bury an injury than revenge it and to slight it than to write it down † * Melius est injurias ignoscere quam vindicare The weakest creatures soonest turn head and sting upon every touch the Lyon a more Majestick creature is not easily provoked the Bramble tears the Oak and Cedar are more peaceable passion imports weakness a noble spirit over-looks an injury Answ 2. Suppose a mans credit should suffer an impair with those whose censure is not to be valued yet think which is worse shame or sin Wilt thou sin against God to save thy credit surely it is little wisdom for a man to adventure his blood that he may fetch back his Reputation and to run into hell to be counted valorous 1. Not but that a man may stand up in defence of himself Caution 1 when his life is endangered Some of the Anabaptists hold it unlawful to take up the sword upon any occasion though when they get the Power I would be loth to trust them their river-water often turning to blood but questionless a man may take up the sword for self-preservation else he comes under the breach of the sixth Commandment he is guilty of self-murder in taking up the sword he doth not so much seek anothers death as the safe-guard of his own life his intention is not to do hurt but prevent it self-defence is consistent with Christian meekness the Law of Nature and Religion justifie it that God who bids us put up our sword Matth. 26.51 yet will allow us a buckler in our own defence and he that will have us innocent as Doves not to offend others will have us wise as serpents in preserving our selves Caution 2 2. Though revenge be contrary to meekness yet not but that a Magistrate may revenge the quarrels of others indeed 't is not revenge in him but doing justice The Magistrate is Gods Lieutenant on earth God hath put the sword in his hand and he is not to bear the sword in vain he must be in terrorem for the punishment of evil doers 1 Pet. 2.14 Though a private person must not render to any man evil for evil Rom. 12.17 yet a Magistrate may the evil of punishment for the evil of offence this rendring of evil is good Private men must put their sword into the sheath but the Magistrate sins if he doth not draw it out As his sword must not surfeit through cruelty so neither must it rust through partiality Too much lenity in a Magistrate is not meekness but injustice for him to indulge offences and say with a gentle reproof as Eli 1 Sam. 2.23 24. Why do you such things nay my sons for it is no good report that I hear This is but to shave the head that deserves to be cut off such a Magistrate makes himself guilty 4. Meekness is opposed to evil-speaking Eph. 4.31 Let all evil-speaking be
it comes to a Duty by Examination and Ejaculation When the Earth is prepared then it is fit to receive the seed when the Instrument is prepared and tuned it is fit for Musick 2. Watching the heart in a Duty An holy heart labours to be affected and wrought upon his heart burns within him There was no Sacrifice without fire a pure Saint labours to have his heart broken in a duty Psal 51.17 The incense when it was broken did cast the sweetest favour Impure souls care not in what a dead perfunctory manner they serve God Ezek. 33.31 They pray more out of fashion than out of faith They are no more affected with an Ordinance than the Tombs of the Church God complains of offering up the blind Mal. 1.8 And is it not as bad to offer up the dead O Christian say to thy self How can this deadness of heart stand with pureness of heart Do not dead things putrifie 3. Outward reverence Purity of heart will express it self by the reverend gesture of the body the lifting up of the eye and hand the uncovering the head the bending the knee Constantine the Emperour did bear great reverence to the Word When God gave the Law the Mount was on fire and trembled Exod. 19.18 The reason was that the people might prostrate themselves more reverently before the Lord. The Ark wherein the Law was put was carried upon bars that the Levites might not touch it Exod. 25.11 14. To shew what reverence God would have about holy things Sitting in prayer unless in case of weakness and having the Hat half on in prayer is a very undecent irreverent practice let such as are guilty reform it We must not only offer up our souls but our bodies Rom. 12.1 The Lord takes notice what posture and gesture we use in his worship If a man were to deliver a Petition to the King would he deliver it with his Hat half on The careless irreverence of some would make us think they did not much regard whether God heard them or no. We are run from one extream to another from superstition to unmannerliness Let Christians think of the dreadful Majesty of God who is present Gen. 28.17 How dreadful is this place this is none other but the house of God and this is the gate of heaven The blessed Angels cover their faces crying Holy holy Isa 6.1 An holy heart will have an holy gesture 6. A pure heart will have a pure life 2 Cor. 7.1 Let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit perfecting holiness in the fear of the Lord. Where there is a good Conscience there will be a good Conversation Some bless God they have good hearts but their lives are evil Prov. 30.12 There is a generation that are pure in their own eyes and yet are not washed from their filthiness If the stream be corrupt we may suspect the spring-head to be impure Aaron was called the Saint of the Lord Psal 106.16 He had not only an holy heart but there was a golden plate on his fore-head on which was written holiness to the Lord. Purity must not only be woven into the heart but engraven upon the life Grace is most beautiful when it shines abroad with its golden beams The Clock hath not only its motion within but the finger moves without upon the Dyal Pureness of heart shews it self upon the Dyal of the Conversation 1. A pure soul talks of God Psal 37.30 His heart is seen in his tongue the Latines call the Roof of the mouth Coelum Heaven He that is pure in heart his mouth is full of heaven 2. He walks with God Gen. 6.9 He is still doing Angels work praising God serving God he lives as Christ did upon Earth Holy duties are the Jacobs Ladder by which he is still ascending to heaven Purity of heart and life are in Scripture made Twins Ezek. 36.27 I will put my Spirit within them there is purity of heart and they shall walk in my statutes there is purity of life Shall we account them pure whose Conversation is not in heaven * Phil. 3.20 but rather in hell Micah 6.11 Shall I count them pure with the wicked balances and with the bag of deceitful weights How justly may others reproach Religion when they see it kicked down with our unholy feet a pure heart hath a golden Frontispice grace like new wine will have vent it can be no more conceal'd than lost The Saints are called Jewels Mal. 3. because of that shining lustre they cast in the eyes of others 7. A pure heart is so in love with purity that nothing can draw him off from it 1. Let others reproach purity he loves it as David when he danced before the Ark and Michal scoffed if saith he this he to be vile I will yet be more vile 2 Sam. 6.22 So saith a pure heart If to follow after holiness be to be vile I will yet be more vile Let water be sprinkled upon the fire it burns the more The more others deride holiness the more doth a gracious soul burn in love and zeal to it If a man had an inheritance befallen him would he be laughed out of it what is a Christian the worse for anothers reproach 't is not a blind mans disparaging a Diamond that makes it sparkle the less 2. Let others persecute holiness a pure heart will pursue it Holiness is the Queen every gracious soul is espoused to and he will rather dye than be divorced Paul would be holy though bonds and persecutions did abide him Acts 20.23 The way of Religion is oft thorny and bloody but a gracious heart prefers inward purity before outward peace I have heard of one who having a Jewel he much prized the King sent for his Jewel Tell the King saith he I honour his Majesty but I will rather lose my life than part with my Jewel He who is enriched with the Jewel of holiness will rather dye than part with this Jewel When his honour and riches will do him no good his holiness will stand him instead Rom. 6.22 Ye have your fruit unto holiness and the end everlasting life SECT 5. Exhorting to heart-purity Use 3 3. LET me perswade Christians to heart-purity the Harlot wipes her mouth Exhort Prov. 30.20 But that is not enough Wash thy heart o Jerusalem Jerem. 4.14 And here I shall lay down some Arguments or Motives to perswade to heart-purity 1. The necessity of heart-purity it is necessary 1. In respect of our selves Till the heart be pure all our holy things are polluted they are splendida peccata Titus 1.15 To the unclean all things are unclean their offering is unclean Under the Law if a man who was unclean by a dead body did carry a piece of holy flesh in his skirt the holy flesh could not cleanse him but he polluted that Hag. 2.12 13. He who had the Leprosie whatever he touched was unclean if he had touched the
God is good to such as are of a clean heart 7. Heart purity makes way for heaven the pure in heart shall see God Happiness is nothing but the quintessence of holiness purity of heart is heaven begun in a man holiness is called in Scripture the anointing of God 1 John 2.27 Solomon was first anointed with the holy oyle and then he was made King 1 Kings 1.39 The people of God are first anointed with the oyle of the Spirit and made pure in heart and then the Crown of glory is set upon their head * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Macar And is not purity to be highly valued it lays a Train for glory purity of heart and seeing of God are linked together 8. The examples of those who have been eminent for heart-purity the Lord Jesus was a pattern of purity John 8.46 Which of you convinceth me of sin in this we are to imitate Christ we are not to imitate him in raising the dead * Non mundos fabricare non mortuos susci●ere Aug. or in working miracles but in being holy 1 Pet. 1.16 Besides this golden pattern of Christ we are to write after the fair copy of those Saints who have been of a Dove like purity David was so pure in heart that he was a man after Gods heart Abraham so purified by faith that he was one of Gods Cabinet-counsel * Gen. 18.17 Moses so holy that God spake with him face to face what were the rest of the Patriarchs but so many plants of Renown flourishing in holiness The fathers in the primitive Church were exemplary for purity Gregory Nazianzene Basil Augustine they were so inlaid and adorn'd with purity that envy it self could not tax them * Stabilitatem habuerunt in fide sanctitatem in opere therefore as Caesar wished he had such Souldiers as were in the time of Alexander the great so we may wish we had such Saints as were in the Primitive times so just were they in their dealings so decent in their attire so true in their promises so devout in their Religion so unblameable in their lives that they were living Sermons walking Bibles real Pictures of Christ and did help to keep up the credit of godliness in the world 9. Heart-purity is the only jewel you can carry out of the world Hast thou a child thou delightest in or an Estate you can carry nothing out of the world 1 Tim. 6.7 Purity of heart is the only commodity can be with comfort transported this is that will stay longest with you usually we love those things will last longest we prize a Diamond or piece of gold above the most beautiful flower because fading heart-purity hath perpetuity it will go with us beyond the grave SECT 6. Means for heart-purity BUT how shall we attain to heart-purity 1. Often look into the Word of God John 15.3 Now ye are clean through the Word Psal 119.140 Thy Word is very pure Gods Word is pure not only for the matter of it but the effect because it makes us pure John 17.17 Sanctifie them through thy truth thy Word is truth By looking into this pure Chrystal we are changed into the image of it the Word is both a glass to shew us the spots of our souls and a lavor to wash them away the Word breaths nothing but purity it irradiates the mind it consecrates the heart 2. Go to the Bath There are two Baths Christians should wash in 1. The Bath of tears * Lavacrum lachrymarum Go into this Bath Peter had sullied and defiled himself with sin and he washed himself with penitential tears Mary Magdalen who was an impure sinner stood at Jesus feet weeping Luk. 7.38 Maries tears did wash her heart as well as Christs feet Oh sinners let your eyes be a fountain of tears weep for those sins which are so many as have passed all Arithmetick this water of contrition is healing and purifying 2. The Bath of Christs blood * Lavacrum sanguinis this is that fountain opened for sin and for uncleanness Zach. 13.1 A soul steeped in the brinish tears of Repentance and bathed in the blood of Christ is made pure this is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all the legal washings and purifications were but Types and Emblems representing Christs blood this blood layes the soul a whitening 3. Get faith 'T is a soul-cleansing grace Acts 15.9 Having purified their hearts by faith The woman in the Gospel that did but touch the hem of Christs garment was healed a touch of faith heals If I believe Christ and all his merits are mine how can I sin against him we do not willingly injure those friends which we believe love us Nothing can have a greater force and efficacy upon the heart to make it pure than faith faith will remove Mountains the Mountains of pride lust envy faith and the love of sin are inconsistent 4. Breath after the Spirit it is called the holy Spirit Eph. 1.13 It purgeth the heart as Lightning purgeth the Aire That we may see what a purifying vertue the Spirit hath it is compar'd 1. To fire Acts 2.3 Fire is of a purifying nature it doth refine and cleanse mettals it separates the dross from the gold the Spirit of God in the heart doth refine and sanctifie it it burns up the dross of sin * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost 2. The Spirit is compared to wind Acts 2.2 There came a sound from heaven as of a mighty rushing wind and they were all filled with the Holy Ghost The wind doth purifie the Aire * Ventus aerem expurgat when the Aire by reason of foggy vapours is unwholsome the wind is a Fan to winnow and purifie it Thus when the vapours of sin arise in the heart vapours of pride and covetousness earthly vapours the Spirit of God ariseth and blows upon the soul and so purgeth away these impure vapours The Spouse in the Canticles prays for a Ga●e of the Spirit that she might be made pure Cant. 4.16 3. The Spirit is compared to water John 7.38 39. He that believeth on me out of his belly shall flow Rivers of living water but this spake he of the Spirit The Spirit is like water not only to make the soul fruitful for it causeth the desert to blossome as the Rose Isa 32.15 Isa 35.1 But the Spirit is like water to purifie Whereas before the heart of a sinner was unclean and whatever he touch'd had a tincture of impurity Num. 19.22 when once the Spirit comes into the heart it doth with its continual showres and lavors wash off the filthiness of it making it pure and fit for the God of the spirits to dwell in 5. Take heed of familiar converse and intercourse with the wicked One vain mind makes another one hard heart makes another the stone in the body is not infectious but the stone in the heart is One profane spirit poysons another Beware of the
their spiritual accounts they reckon what Religion must cost them and may cost them it must cost them the blood of their sins it may cost them the blood of their lives 2. The fore-thoughts of persecution will be as sawce to season our delights that we do not surfeit upon them How soon may there be an Alarum sounded how soon may the clouds drop blood the thoughts of this would take off the heart from the immoderate love of the creature Our Saviour at a great Feast breaks out into mention of his death Mark 14.3 She hath prepared this against my Burial So the fore-thoughts of a change would be an excellent antidote against a surfeit 3. The fore-thoughts of sufferings would make them lighter when they come * Levius laedunt praevisa mala Grotius the suddenness of an evil addes to the sadness this was ill news to the fool in the Gospel who reckoned without his Host Hac nocte This night shall thy soul be required of thee This will be an aggravation of Babylons miseries Rev. 18.8 Her plagues shall come in one day not that Antichrist shall be destroyed in a day but in a day that is suddenly the blow shall come unawares when he doth not think of it the reckoning before hand of suffering doth alleviate and take off the edge of it when it comes therefore Christ to lighten the Cross still fore-warms his Disciples of sufferings that they might not come unlooked for Joh. 16.33 Acts 1.7 4. Fore-thoughts of persecution would put us in mind of getting our Armour ready 't is dangerous as well as imprudent to have all to seek when the trial comes as if a Souldier should have his weapons to get when the enemy is in the Field Caesar seeing a Souldier whetting his sword when he was just going to fight cashier'd him he that reckons upon persecution will be in a ready posture for it he will have the Shield of Faith and the Sword of the Spirit ready that he may not be surprized unawares 2. Let us prepare for persecution a wise Pilot in a calm will prepare for a storm God knows how soon persecution may come there seems to be a cloud of blood hanging over the Nation SECT 9. Shewing how we may be armed for sufferings Quest HOW shall we prepare for sufferings Answ Do three things 1. Be persons rightly qualified for suffering 2. Avoide those things which will hinder suffering 3. Promote all helps to suffering 1. Labour to be persons rightly qualified for suffering Be righteous persons that man who would suffer for righteousness sake must himself be righteous I mean Evangelically righteous in particular I call him righteous 1. Who breaths after sanctity Psal 119.5 Though sin cleaves to his heart yet his heart doth not cleave to sin though sin hath an alliance yet no allowance Rom. 7.15 What I do I allow not a good man hates that sin to which Satan doth most tempt and his heart most incline Psal 119.128 2. A righteous person is one who makes Gods glory his Center the glory of God is more worth than the salvation of all mens soul He who is divinely qualified is so zealously ambitious of Gods glory that he cares not what he loseth so God may be a gainer he prefers the glory of God before credit estate relations It was the speech of Kiliaz that blessed Martyr Had I all the gold in the world to dispose of I would give it to live with my relations though in prison yet Jesus Christ is dearer to me than all 3. A righteous person is one who values the jewel of a good conscience at an high rate good conscience is a Saints Festival his Musick his Paradise and he will rather hazard any thing than violate his conscience They say of the Irish if they have a good Skimmeter a warlike weapon they had rather take a blow on their Arme than their Skimmeter should be hurt To this I may compare a good conscience a godly man had rather sustain hurt in his body or estate than his conscience should be hurt he had rather dye than violate the Virginity of his conscience such a man as this is Evangelically righteous and if God call him to it he is fit to suffer 2. Avoid those things which will hinder suffering 1. The love of the world God allows us the use of the world 1 Tim. 6.7 But take heed of the love of it he that is in love with the world will be out of love with the Cross 2 Tim. 4.10 Demas hath forsaken me having loved this present world he not only forsook Pauls company but his doctrine The love of the world choaks our zeal a man wedded to the world will for thirty pieces of silver betray Christ and a good cause Let the world be as a loose garment that you may throw off at pleasure before a man can dye for Christ he must be dead to the world Paul was crucified to the world Gal. 6.14 It will be an easie thing to dye when we are dead before in our affections 2. Carnal fear There is a two-fold fear 1. A filial fear when a man fears to displease God * Incidam potius in Geheunam quam peccatum Anselm when he fears lest he should not hold out this is a good fear Blessed is he that fears alway if Peter had feared his own heart and said Lord Jesus I fear I shall forsake thee Lord strengthen me doubtless Christ would have kept him from falling 2. There is a cowardly fear when a man fears danger more than sin when he is afraid to be good this fear is an enemy to suffering God proclaimed that those who were fearful should not go to the Wars Deuter. 20.8 The fearful are unfit to fight in Christs Wars a man possessed with fear doth not consult what is best but what is safest If he may save his Estate he will snare his conscience Prov. 29.25 In the fear of man there is a snare Fear made Peter deny Christ Abraham equivocate David fain himself mad fear will put men upon indirect courses making them study rather compliance than conscience Fear makes sin appear little and suffering great the fearful man sees double he looks upon the cross through his perspective twice as big it is fear argues sordidness of spirit * Degeneres animos timor arguit it will put one upon things most ignoble and unworthy a fearful man will Vote against his conscience fear infeebles it is like the cutting off Sampsons locks fear melts away the courage Josh 5.1 Their hearts melt because of you and when a mans strength is gone he is very unfit to carry Christs Cross fear is the root of Apostasie Spira's fear made him abjure and recant his Religion fear doth one more hurt than the Adversary it is not so much an enemy without the Castle as a Traytor within indangers it 't is not so much sufferings without as trayterous fear within which undoes
policy 't is wisdom saith the flesh to keep out of suffering 't is wisdom not to declare against sin 't is wisdom to finde out subtile distinctions to avoide the Cross the wisdom of the flesh is to save the flesh Indeed there is a Christian prudence to be used the Serpents eye must be in the Doves head wisdom and innocency do well but it is dangerous to separate them cursed be that policy which teacheth to avoide duty this wisdom is not from above but is divellish Jam. 3.17 it is learned from the old Serpent this wisdom will turn to folly at last it is like a man who to save his gold throws himself over-board into the water so the Polititian to save his skin will damn his soul 5. A man must deny self-will Saint Gregory calls the will the Commander in chief of all the faculties of the soul indeed in innocency Adam had rectitude of minde and conformity of will the will was like an instrument in tune it was full of harmony and did tune sweetly to Gods will but now the will is corrupt and like a strong Tyde carries us violently to evil the will hath not only an indisposition to good but an opposition Acts 7.51 Ye have alwayes resisted the Holy Ghost there is not a greater enemy than the will it is up in arms against God 2 Pet. 2.10 The will loves sin and hates the Cross Now if ever we suffer for God we must cross our own will the will must be martyred a Christian must say not my will Lord but thy will be done 6. A man must deny self-reasonings the fleshy part will be reasoning and disputing against sufferings Mark 2.8 Why reason you these things in your hearts such reasonings as these will begin to arise in our hearts 1. Persecution is bitter Self-rea ∣ soning 1 Answ Oh but it is blessed Jam. 1.12 Blessed is he that endureth tentation c. The Cross is heavy but the sharper the Cross the brighter the Crown 2. But 't is sad to part with Estate and Relations Self-rea ∣ soning 2 Answ But Christ is better than all he is Manna to strengthen he is wine to comfort he is salvation to crown 3. But liberty is sweet Self-rea ∣ soning 3 Answ This restraint makes way for enlargement Psal 4.1 Thou hast enlarged me in distress when the feet are bound with irons the heart may be sweetly dilated and enlarged Thus should we put to silence those self-reasonings which are apt to arise in the heart against sufferings This self-denying frame of heart is very hard this is to pluck out the right eye one saith a man hath not so much to do in over-coming men and Divels as in overcoming himself Fortior est qui se quam qui fortissima vincit Maenia Self is the Idol and how hard is it to sacrifice this Idol and to turn self-seeking into self-denial but though it be difficult it is essentially necessary to suffering a Christian must first lay down self before he can take up the Cross Alas how far are they then from suffering that cannot deny themselves in the least things in their dyet or apparel who instead of martyring the flesh pamper the flesh instead of taking up the Cross take up their Cups is this self-denial to let loose the reins to the flesh 't is sure they who cannot deny themselves if sufferings come they will deny Christ Oh Christians as ever you would be able to carry Christs Cross begin to deny your selves consider 1. Whatever you deny for Christ you shall finde again in Christ Matth. 19.29 Every one that hath forsaken houses or brethren or sisters or father or mother or wife or children or lands for my Names sake shall receive an hundred fold and shall inherit everlasting life Here is a very saving bargain is it not gain enough to have ten in the hundred nay above an hundred for one 2. 'T is but equity that you should deny your selves for Christ did not Jesus Christ deny himself for you he denied his joy he left his fathers bosome he denied his honour he endured the shame Hebr. 12.2 He denied his life he poured out his blood as a sacrifice upon the Alta● of the Cross Col. 1.20 Did Christ deny himself for you and will not you deny your selves for him 3. Self-denial is the highest sign of a thorow-paced Christian hypocrites may have great knowledge and make large profession but it is only the true-hearted Saint that can deny himself for Christ I have read of an holy man who was once tempted by Satan to whom Satan said Why takest thou all this pains Thou watchest an ●astest and abstainest from sin O man what dost thou more than I Art thou no Drunkard no Adulterer no more am I. Dost thou watch let me tell thee I never slept Dost thou fast I never eat What dost thou more than I Why saith the good man I will tell thee Satan I pray I serve the Lord nay more then all I deny my self nay then saith Satan thou goest beyond me for I exalt my self and so vanished Self-denial is the best touch-stone of sincerity by this you go beyond hypocrites 4. To deny your selves is but what others have done before you Moses was a self-denier he denied the honours and profits of the Court Hebr. 11.25 Abraham denied his own Country at Gods call Hebr. 11.8 Marcus Arethusus who lived in the time of Julian the Emperour endured great torments for Religion if he would but have given an half-penny towards the rebuilding of the Idols Temple he might have been released but he would not do it though the giving of an half-penny might have saved his life here was a self-denying Saint 5. There is a time shortly coming that if you do not deny the world for Christ the world will deny you the world now denies satisfaction and ere long it will deny house-room it will not suffer you so much as to breath in it it will turn you out of possession and which is worse not only the world will deny you but Christ will deny you Matth. 10.33 Whosoever shall deny me before men him will I also deny before my Father which is in heaven 7. Get suffering graces these three in particular 1. Faith 2. Love 3. Patience 1. Suffering grace is faith Ephes 6.16 Above all taking the shield of faith the pretence of faith is one thing the use of faith another the hypocrite makes faith a cloak the Martyr makes it a shield a shield is useful in time of danger it defends the head it guards the vitals such a shield is faith faith is a furnace-grace 1 Pet. 1.7 Though it be tryed with fire it is found unto praise and honour Faith like Hercules club beats down all oppositions by faith we resist the Divel 1 Pet. 5.9 By faith we resist unto blood Hebr. 11.34 Faith is a victorious grace the Believer will make Christs crown flourish though it be in his own
Anselm say Let me rather fall into hell than sin wouldst thou keep thy heart environ it with love death cannot break this fence 3. Faith this is call'd a shield Ephes 6.16 The shield Fence 3 fenceth the head guards the vitals this blessed shield of faith preserves the heart from danger The shield defends all the Armour the Helmet and Breast-plate The shield of faith defends the other graces the Breast-plate of love the Helmet of hope the Girdle of truth When Satan strikes at a Christians heart faith beats back the blow and wounds the head of the old Serpent 1 Pet. 5.9 Whom resist stedfast in faith faith is the best safeguard faith brings in peace Rom. 15.13 Peace in believing And peace fortifies the heart Phil. 4.7 The peace of God shall keep your heart 4. A good conscience The heart is placed in the midst Fence 4 of the body and as it is strongly secured with ribs about it so it hath a film over it in which it is kept call'd by the Greeks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To the ribs about the heart which fence it I may compare the graces to the film in which the heart is kept I may compare a good conscience this keeps the soul that nothing can annoy it Murus Aheneus esto c. Good conscience is a brazeen wall about the Castle of the heart these are the fences that keep the heart Answ 9 9. If you would have your hearts kept beg of God that he would keep them for you set not about this work in your own strength but look higher go to God he is the great Lord-Keeper Psal 121.5 The Lord is thy Keeper * Utinam ut mihi semper à dexteris fis bone Jesu Bern. it is good to go alwayes with such a Keeper this is the reason none of the Saints are lost because the Lord is their Keeper 1 Pet. 1.5 Who are kept by the power of God Every Ward hath a Guardian to keep him choose God for thy Guardan they are safe whom God keeps lock up thy heart with God and give him the Key Motives to heart-custody The Motives that may perswade us to look after the keeping of our hearts are these 1. If we do not keep our hearts the Divel will keep them shall we let Satan have them when a rude Army gets into a Town what work do they make what Rapines Plunders Massacres when Satan possesseth hearts he carries them at last violently as he did the Swine into the Sea Satan is first crafty then cruel 1. He is crafty his work is to fish for hearts and he is very subtile he hath his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his policies and stratagems 2 Cor. 2.11 1. He observes the humours of the body and layes sutable baits the Divel cannot know the heart but he may observe the temper and constitution * Novit Diabolus cui illecebras carn● ingerat cui virus invi diae insundat omnium discurit mores Leo. he tempts a sanguine man with beauty a covetous man wich gold as the Husband-man knows what ground is fit for Barley what for Wheat Satan hath not been a Tempter so long but by this time hath gained experience having commenced Master of his black Art 2. Satan baits his hook with Religion he tempts to sin under a pretext of piety thus transforming himself into an Angel of light He tempts some to make away themselves that they may not live any longer to sin against God Who would suspect Satan when he comes as a Divine and quotes Scripture Thus cunningly doth the Divel angle for hearts 2. Having once gotten his prey he is cruel his cruelty exceeds the rage of all Tyrants we read of Hannibal Antiochus Nero who caused the Christians to be put in Coats laid over with pitch and brimstone burning all night that they might be a living Torch to them that passed by this is nothing to the unparallel'd barbarisme and cruelty of Satan his name is Apollyon Devourer he rent and tore the man in whom he was and threw him into the fire Matth. 17.15 If he was so fierce when he was chained what will he do when he hath full power when he had taken away all Jobs Estate smitten his body full of soars and thrown the house upon his children yet all this was in the Divels account but a touch of the finger Job 1.11 If the touch of his finger be so heavy what will the weight of his loyns be Oh then if Satan be so subtile in fishing for hearts and so savage when he gets mens hearts let us have a care to keep our hearts if we do not keep them Satan will keep them for us and then see what havock he will make 2. He that keeps his heart keeps his peace whence are our perturbations and disquiets but from the neglect of our spiritual watch he that keeps his heart all day may lie down in peace at night Psal 4.8 What a comfort will this be to a Christian in every condition in a low condition when he thinks thus with himself Though I have lost my friends and estate yet I have kept my heart in a sick condition we shall shortly be chained to a sick-bed but when a Christian shall keep his bed it will be no small comfort to him that he hath kept his heart in a dying condition death may take away the life but not the heart that jewel God layes claim to and it is kept for him The heavenly race 1 COR. 9.24 Know ye not that they which run in a race run all but one receiveth the prize So run that ye may obtain REligion is a business of the greatest importance the Soul which is the more Noble and Divine part is concern'd in it and as we act our part here so we shall be for ever happy or miserable the advice of Solomon in this case is most seasonable Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do do it with thy might for there is no work nor device nor wisdom in the grave whither thou goest Eccles 9.10 The business of Religion requires our utmost zeal and intension Mat. 11.12 1. Sometimes the work we are to do for heaven is set out by striving Luke 13.24 Strive to enter in at the strait gate 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 strive as in an agony strive as for a matter of life and death so Cornelius à lapide though we must be men of peace yet in matters of Religion we must be men of strife 't is an holy strife a blessed contention indeed the Apostle saith Let nothing be done 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 through strife but though strife doth not do well among Christians yet it doth well in a Christian he must strive with his own heart or he will never get to heaven 2. Sometimes our work for heaven is compared to wrestling Ephes 6.12 We wrestle not against flesh and blood but against principalities and powers c. Our life is a
and then you are at the end of your race 4. In a race there is a Crown or Garland given to him that gets the better * Bravium significat praemium quod datur ijs qui ex certamine victores sunt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 legunt palmam Ambr. Cypr. de Exhort Martyr cap. 8. so in Religion those that win the race shall wear the Crown 2 Tim. 4.8 Such as do not run through sloth or will not run through pride miss of the reward but such as run the heavenly race faithfully shall have a Crown 2 Tim. 4.8 And this reward is fitly resembled to a Crown for the splendor of it a Crown hung full of jewels is bright and splendid it gives an orient lustre neither can pen describe or pensil delineate or tongue of Angel express the glory and magnificence of this Crown nor can it be shadowed out by all the beauties of heaven though every star were a Sun 2. The second thing to be illustrated is to shew wherein the Christian race differs from other races 2. In other races one only is crowned so in the Text but one receiveth the prize but in the spiritual race many win the prize the Saints shall come to heaven from all the quarters of the world East and West c. Matth. 8.11 Many shall come from the East and West and shall sit down with Abraham and Isaac and Jacob in the Kingdom of heaven Rev. 7.4 There were sealed an hundred and forty and four thousand of all the Tribes of the children of Israel after this I beheld and l● a great multitude which no man could number of all Nations of kindreds and people and tongues stood before the Throne and before the Lamb cloathed with white Robes and Palms in their hands Ver. 9. By this multitude not numerable are to be understood those that belong to the election and are salvable these as Victors are crowned and stand with Palms in their hands should but one receive the prize there might be room left for despair 2. In other races some stand still and look on and usually there are but two run but here in the heavenly race all must run those that are unfit to run other races must run this as the lame and blinde none are excused from this race all have run from God by sin and all must run to him by repentance either run or damn either flie to heaven or fall to hell 3. In other races the feet run but in the Christian race the heart runs Psal 119.32 I will run when thou shalt enlarge my heart In Religion the heart is all that which the heart doth not is not done * Quicquid cor non facit non fit 't is not the lifting up of the eye or hand towards heaven that forwards the race it is the out-going of the heart many a mans tongue runs in Religion but not his heart Dost thou believe with thy heart Rom. 10.9 Dost thou love God with thy heart Matth. 22.37 This is to run the race of Religion this rids away ground and brings a Christian apace to the Gole when Davids heart was enlarged then he would run 4. In other races he only gets the prize that runs fastest but it is not so in this heavenly race though others may out-run us yet if we hold on to the end of the race we shall receive the reward Some Saints are like Asael light of foot as a Roe 2 Sam. 2.18 They run swifter in the race of obedience as Ahimaaz out-ran Cushi 2 Sam. 18.23 But this is the comfort of weak believers though they cannot run so fast as others yet if they hold on to the end of the race without tyring they are crowned he that came in at the eleventh houre had his pay as well as he that came in at the first houre Matth. 20.9 To shew that those who set out later and may be out-run by other Christians yet persevering they are saved 5. In other races men run for a temporal reward in the Christian race we run for an eternal others run for a corruptible Crown 1 Cor. 9.25 Sometimes the Crown bestowed upon the Victor was made of Olive sometimes of Myrtle the Aegyptians had a Crown of Cinnamon enclosed in gold but still it was corruptible but the Crown the Saints run for is incorruptible it is a never-fading Crown 1 Pet. 5.4 Other Crowns are like a Garland of flowers that soon withers Prov. 27.4 But this Crown given to the conquering Christian is immarcessible * Corona haec no●fi ●sit aut gemmis flores isti ex quibu●●tur semper vi●idescunt repullulant semper the jewels of this Crown are never lost the flowers of it never fade 6. In other races the Garland is bestowed in a way of merit but in the Christian-race it is bestowed as a Legacy of free-grace though we shall not obtain the prize unless we run yet not because we run how can we merit the recompence of reward Before we merit we must satisfie but we have nothing to satisfie Besides what proportion is there between the race and the recompence therefore the Crown bestowed is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a gratuitous gift Rom. 6.23 The gift of God is eternal life * Munera sua Coronat Deus non merita tu● Aug. epist 105. God will so bestow his rewards that he himself may be no loser though the Saints have the comfort of their Crown God will have the glory 7. In other races many times one hinders another but in the race to heaven one Christian helps another 1 Thes 5.11 Edifie one another even as also you do One Christian helps by his prayer advice example to confirm another What is the communion of Saints but one Christian putting forward another in the heavenly race 8. One may lose other races and not be miserable but he cannot lose this race in Religion but he must needs be so In other races a man does but lose his wager but if he falls short of this spiritual race he loseth his soul how seasonable therefore is that Apostolical caution Heb. 4.1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let us fear lest we should come short The third thing to be insisted on is Why we must run this race of Christianity There are three Reasons 1. Because God hath set us this race Heb. 12.1 Let us run the race that is set before us It is not Arbitrary it is not left to our choice whether we will run or no God hath set us the race Gods commands carry power and Soveraignty in them If a General bids his Army march they must march There 's no disputing duty at the Word of God the heavens drop down their dew the stars set themselves in Battalio the earth thrusts forth a crop the Sea is bridled in and dare not go a step farther If inanimate creatures obey the word of command much more those who are endued with reason when God saith
Run the race we must run 2. There 's no other way to get to heaven but by running the race by nature we are far distant from the gole and if we would have heaven we must run for it a man can no more get to heaven that doth not run this race than one can get to his journeys end that never sets a step in the way 2 Pet. 1.10 Give diligence to make your calling and election sure for so an entrance shall be ministred to you abundantly into the everlasting kingdom 3. Our time alotted to us is short Job compares our life to a swift Post Job 9.25 My dayes are swifter than a Post The Poets painted Time with wings if Time flies we had need run the night of death hastens and there is no running a race in the night Use 1 1. It shows us that the businesse of Religion is no idle thing Informat we must put forth all our strength and Branch 1 vigour Herculem duri celebrant labores Ille Centauros domuit superbos Cerberum traxit triplici catena Ultimus coelum labor in reflexo Sustulit collo c. Claud. Religion is a race we must run and so run 't is an hard thing to be a Christian alas then what shall we say to them that stand all the day idle Come to many and one would think they had no race to run they put their hand in their bosome Pro. 19.24 Is that a fit posture for him that is to run a race They stretch themselves upon their couches Amos 6.4 they had rather lie soft than run hard many would have heaven come to them but they are loth to run to it if salvation would drop as a ripe fig into the mouth of the eater Nahum 3.12 men could like it well but they are loath to set upon running a race but never think to be sav'd upon such easie terms * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 M●nand the life of a Christian is not like a Noblemans life the Nobleman hath his rents brought in by his Steward whether he wake or sleep think not that salvation will be brought to you when you are stretching your selves on your beds of ivory if you would have the prize run the race The passenger in the ship whether he sit in the Cabinet or lie on the Couch is brought safe to shore but there is no getting to the heavenly port without rowing hard Zacheus ran before to see Jesus Luke 19.4 If we would have a sight of God in glory we must run this race we cannot have the world without labour and would we have heaven 2. If the life of Christianity be a race this is that Branch 2 may justifie the godly in the haste which they make to heaven Psal 119.60 I made haste and delayed not to keeep thy Commandements Carnal spirits say What need you make such haste why are you so strict and precise why do you runne so fast fair and softly a more easie pace will serve oh but may a Christian reply Religion is a race I cannot run too fast nor hardly fast enough If any had ask'd St. Paul why he ran so fast and pressed forward to the mark he would have answered he was in a race Here is that may justifie the Saints of God in their zeal and activity for heaven they are Racers and a race cannot be run too fast The blind world is ready to judge all zeal madness but have we not cause the to put on with all speed when it is a matter of life and death if we do not run and so run we shall never obtain the prize if a man were to run for a wager of three or four millions would he not run with all celerity and swiftness 1 Sam. 21.8 The Kings business requires haste If any should say to us Whether so fast why so much praying and weeping we may say as David The Kings business requires haste God hath set me a race to run and I must not linger or loyter The haste Abigail made to the King 1 Sam. 25.34 prevented her death and the massacre of Nabals family our haste in the heavenly race will prevent damnation This may plead for a Christian in his eager pursuit after holinesse against all the calumnies and censures of the wicked Use 2 1. It reproves them that run a contrary race not the race God hath set them Reproof but the race the Divel hath Branch 1 set them the race of iniquity qui virilius peccant * Sen. who sacrifice their lives to Bacchus they make haste but not to heaven they make haste to fulfill their lust● Prov. 6.18 they make haste to swear to be drunk they are swift to shed blood Isa 59.7 their feet run to evil The sinner in regard of the haste he makes in sin is compared to a swift Dromedary Jer. 2.23 a wicked mans swiftness in sin is like Absaloms riding on his Mule 2 Sam. 18.9 The Mule went under the thick boughs of an Oake and his head caught hold of the Oake and he was taken up between the heaven and the earth Sinners make haste to sin as a bird hastens to the snare they run as the swine possessed with the Divels ran into the Sea and were drowned Mark 5.13 Oh what haste do men make to hell as if they feared the gates would be shut e●e they could get thither what needs this speed why do they run so fast to prison the sins men commit in haste they will repent at leasure Achan make haste to the wedge of gold but now he hath time enough to repent of it Sin is an unhappy race a damnable race will it not be bitterness in the end 2 Sam. 2.26 when men come to the end of that race instead of a Crown behold chains of darkness Jude 6. 2. It reproves them who instead of running the race Branch 2 of Gods Commandements spend all their time in joviality and mirth as if their life were rather a daunce than a race Job 21.12 13. They take the Timbrel and Harp and rejoyce at the sound of the Organ they spend their dayes in mirth they are at their musick when they should be at their race Amos 6.4 That chaunt to the sound of the Viol that drink wine in bowls and anoint themselves with the chief oyntments 'T is hard to have two heavens some are all for pleasure 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they are like those hunting-dogs Diodorus Siculus speaks of while they run among the sweet flowers they smell to the flowers and lose sent of the Hare and leave off their game So while many are among the sweet flowers the delights and pleasures of the world they fall a smelling to these flowers and leave off their race 〈◊〉 sub dulci melle latent venena These go merrily to hell I may say as Solomon Prov. 14.13 The end of that mirth is heaviness Branch 3 3. If Religion be a race it reproves them that
are slow-paced in Religion who creep but do not run their motion is like the motion of the eighth Sphere slow and dull they should be like the Sun in the firmament which is swift when they are like Sun on the Dial which moves very slow many Christians move so heavily in the wayes of God that it is hard for standers by to judge whether they make any progress or no they are hasty in their passion but slow of heart to believe Luke 24.25 what haste did Israel make in their march when Pharaoh was pursuing them what need have Christians to expedite their race when the Divel is behind pursuing and ready to overtake them and make them lose the prize we read in the Law that God would not have the Asse offered in sacrifice he hates a dull temper of soul the Snaile was accounted unclean Levit. 11.30 the slow-paced Christian will be taken tardy at last and misse of the prize Branch 4 4. It reproves those who begin the race of Christianity but do not persevere to the end of the race they faint by the way Ye did run well who did hinder you that ye should not obey the truth Gal. 5.7 the Crown is set upon the head of perseverance he that runs half the way and then faints loseth the Garland 'T is sad for a man to come near to heaven and then tyre in the race as it is to see a ship cast away in sight of the shore Nay what shall we say to them who do worse than tire in the race they run backward into the way of profanesse as Julian Gardner and others there is no going to heaven backward such do cast reproaches upon the wayes of God better never begin the race than run back 2 Pet. 2.21 For it had been better for them not to have known the way of righteousness then after they have known it to turn from the holy Commandement A Souldier that runs from his Colours and lists himself in the enemies Regiment if he be taken must expect Martial Law Heb. 10.38 If any man draw back my soul shall have no pleasure in him God will bear with infirmity but he will punish treachery wrath shall smoak against the Apostate fury will display itself in its bloody colours indeed in War there is a retreating sometimes which if it be done politickly and to the enemies disadvantange it is called an honourable retreat but in a race to heaven there must be no retreats these are not honourable retreats but damnable retreats whosoever draws back it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to perdition Heb. 10. ult 3. Let all Christians be exhorted to run this heavenly Use 3 and blessed race of Religion Exhortat what Arguments shall I use to perswade look upon other creatures wing'd with activity and then Christian shame thy self Look into the firmament and see the Sun as a Gyant running his race Psal 19.5 and dost thou stand still look into the Aire see the birds soaring aloft and mounting towards heaven look into the earth see the Bees working in the Hive look upon the Angels they are swift in obedience look upon other Christians near thee thou shalt find them their race reading at praying weeping and hast thou nothing to do look upon thy precious time time runs and dost thou stand still look upon the wicked how quick are they in sin and shall they run faster to hell than thou dost to heaven nay look upon thy self how industrious art thou for the world rising early compassing Sea and Land and yet how stupid and heartless in the matters of salvation wilt thou run for a feather a bubble and not run for a Kingdom To quicken your pace in godliness consider what the prize is we run for it is a Crown of glory * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This incircles all blessedness within it there will soon be an end of our race but there will be no end of our Crown this blessed reward should quicken u● in the race but how shall we run the race so as to obtain 't is sad to run in vain Phil. 2.16 this brings to the next Use 4 Direction 4. I shall prescribe some Directions about this heavenly race 1. Take heed of those things which will hinder you in your race As 1. Shake off sloth idleness is pulvinar Diaboli the sluggish Christian will never win the race he is asleeping when he should be running sloth is the rust of the soul 't is the disease of the soul a sick man cannot run a race Prov. 12.27 The slothful man roasteth not that which he took in hunting he will rather fast than hunt for Venison oh shake off sloth abandon this idle Div●l if ye intend a race 2. Throw off all weights There are two sorts of weights we must throw off 1. The weight of sin Heb. 12.1 Let us lay aside every weight and the sin that doth so easily beset us and let us run the race The Prophet David felt this weight Psal 38.4 Mine iniquities are gone over mine head as an heavy burden they are too heavy for me If we do not throw off this weight by repentance it will sink us into hell A man cannot run a race with a burden upon his back an unclean person cannot run the race of holiness a proud man cannot run the race of humility a self-willed man cannot run the race of obedience O Christian unburden thy soul of sin through off this weight if thou intendest to lay hold on the Crown 2. The second weight the Spiritual Racer must throw off is the world This is a golden weight which hath hindred many and made them lose their race So far as the world is a weight throw it off I say not lay aside the use of the world but the love of it * 1 Joh. 2.15 When the golden dust of the world is blown in mens eyes it blinds them that they cannot see their race 3. Discard false Opinions about this race as 1. That the race is easie many a man thinks he can run the race from earth to heaven on his death-bed O sinner thou that say'st the race is easie art a stranger to the Christian race Thou art dead in sin till a supernatural Principle of grace be infused Ephes 2.1 is it easie for a dead man to run a race to run the way of Gods Commandements is against nature and is it easie for a man to act contrary to himself is it easie for the water to run backward in its own channel is it easie for a man to deny himself to crucifie the flesh to behead his beloved sin oh take heed of this mistake that the Christian race is easie Do you know what Religion must cost you and what Religion may cost you 2. The second false Opinion we must beware off is that the race to heaven is impossible there is so much work to do that sure we shall never win the race Cyprian
Bernard saith Fragrare unguentis optimis Christ will give them a new name he will call them his friends his Spouse the apple of his eye their names shall flourish with honour and give forth their perfume as the wine of Lebanon 3. Christ as a Judge will appear to crown his people when body and soul shall be reunited and perfected in glory Christ will take his people into his sweet and everlasting embraces he will lay them in his bosome he will set them upon his Throne he will fill them with the Inebriating wine of his love to all eternity And thus you see what is the Saints hope namely the glorious appearing of Christ when he shall appear as a Judge to acquit vindicate crown them Use 1 1. See here the misery of a wicked man who hath all his hope in this life Informat he makes the wedge of gold his hope he casts his Anchor downwards he can have no hope of Christs appearing he fears Christs appearing he doth not hope for it he is like a Prisoner that fears the Judges coming to the Bench. Christs appearing will be a dismal appearing to him when Christ shall appear where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear 1 Pet. 4.18 a wicked man is like a Mariner at Sea that hath no Anchor like a man in a storm that hath no shelter where is his hope when he shall come to die It is with a sinner as it was with the old world when the flood came the waters did arise higher and higher by degrees First the waters came to the Valleys but they encouraged themseves in the Hills then the waters came to the Mountains I but there might be some Trees upon the Hills and they would climb up to them then the waters prevailed and rose to the top of the Trees now they had nothing to trust to all hopes of being saved were gone So it is with a sinner if one comfort be taken away he hath another left if a Relation be gone he hath an estate left if one Crutch be broken yet he hath another to lean upon I but sickness comes and he sees he must die and appear before his Judge now he hath no hope he dies despairing he must lie for ever in the boyling furnace of Gods wrath * In inferno nulla est redemptio qui illic damnatuus demersus fuerit ulterius non exibit Aug. in Serm. ad Erem In cava Lethaeas dolia portat aquas 2. Put your selves upon the tryal Have you this blessed hope of Christs appearing and of your appearing with him in glory come almost to any man and you Use 2 shall hear him say he hopes to be saved well then Trial. let every soul put it self upon the tryal I shall show you four differences between a sound Hope and a sandy Hope 1. True hope is quickning it sets a man a working for heaven * Addit conatum quendam elevationem animi Aquinas it is called a lively hope 1 Pet. 1.3 it puts life into a man hope is a Spur to duty a Whetstone to industry Hope of victory makes the Souldier fight hope of gain makes the Merchant runthrough the several Zones Divine hope is as Wind to the Sails as Wheeles to the Chariot it makes a Christian active in Religion he runs the wayes of Gods Commandements * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Macar Hope is circa arduum it cuts away through the Rock it wrastles with difficulties it despiseth dangers it marcheth in the face of death True hope never gives over till it hath the thing hoped for He who hath Divine hope will have Christ though it be in a Furnance he will profess the truth though the next word Christiani ad Leones The Romans as Tertullian observes would endure all kind of hardship they would fight with cold and hunger and run any hazard for hope at last to be Consul which was saith Tertullian unius anni gaudium volaticum honour but for a year Oh then what pains will he take who hath hopes of heaven where he shall be Crowned with a Garland of glory for ever doth that man say his hope is in God who stands all the day idle Prov. 19.24 there is a faint velleity in Hypocrites they would be saved but sit still and do nothing their hope is not a a lively hope but a dead hope 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 True hope is in the soul like fire which is an active Element it is ever sparkling or flaming 2. True hope is purifying 1 Joh. 3.3 He that hath this hope in him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 purifying himself Hope is in the soul as lightning is in the Aire it clears the Air he who hath hope in Christ sets himself against all sin both in purpose and practice he is a consecrated person there is engraven upon his heart Holiness to the Lord hope is a Virgin-grace it lives in the soul tanquam scintillatio in fomite tanquam ramus in radice * O quam multi cum vanaspe descendunt ad inferos Aug. St. Bernard compares holiness to the Root and hope to the Branch true hope flourisheth upon the root of holiness now then try your hope by this Scripture Touchstone The hypocrite saith he hath hope but is he a purified person what an unclean person and hope to go to heaven nothings enters there which defileth Rev. 21.27 what a drunkard and hope to be saved dost thou think to go reeling to heaven what an Apostate and yet hope to be saved as if there were any going to heaven backward * O quam multi cum vanaspe descendunt ad inferos Aug. The wicked man is not sure of happiness but secure 3. A true hope is a good hope 2 Thes 2.16 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Who hath given us good hope through grace A wicked mans hope is as far from being good as his heart the Hebrew word for hope 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies both confidence and folly it is fitly applyed to a wicked mans hope his confidence is folly the hope of a godly man is compared to an Anchor Hebr. 6.19 the hope of a wicked man to a Spiders Web Job 8.14 And the sinners hope is fitly resembled to a Spiders Web three wayes 1. The Spiders Web hath no foundation such is the hope of the wicked it is a pleasing thing but it hath nothing to rest upon A godly mans hope is built upon a double Basis 1. The Word of God Psal 130.5 In his word do I hope The Word saith Let the sinner forsake his way and the Lord will abundantly pardon The Word saith Hereby we know that Christ abideth in us by the Spirit which he hath given us 1 Joh. 3.8 Now a child of God finding these qualifications wrought in him he builds his hope for heaven upon them In his Word do I hope 2. The hope of a godly man is built upon experiences Rom. 5.4
their Relations consider 1. He who is not good in his Relations goes under the just suspition of an Hypocrite let a man seem to be a penitent or Zelot yet if he bear not fruit proper to his station he is no tree of righteousness but some wild degenerate plant There are some will pray hear Sermons discourse well this is good but what means the bleating of the sheep they are not good in their Relations this discovers they are foundered and unsound A good Christian labours to fill his Relations and to go through all the parts of Religion as the Sun through all the Signs of the Zodiack I like not those Christians who though they seem to be travelling to heaven yet leave the duties of their Relations a as Terra incognita which they never come near 2. The excellency of a Christian is to bring forth proper fruit * Perfectum est quod propriam att●ngit virtutem wherein lies the goodness of a member in the body but to discharge its proper office The eye is to see the ear to hear c. So the excellency of a Christian is to bring forth that fruit which God hath assigned him what is a thing good for which doth not do its proper work what is a Clock good for that will not strike what is a ship good for that will not saile what is a Rose good for that doth not smell what is that Professor good for that doth not send forth a sweet perfume in his Relation the commendation of a thing is when it puts forth its proper vertue 3. Not to bring forth suitable fruit spoils all the other fruit which we bring forth If a man were to make a Medicine and should leave out the chief ingredient the Medicine would lose its vertue If one were to draw a Picture and should leave out an eye it would spoile the Picture there are many to whom Christ will say at the day of judgement as to the young man Luke 18.22 Yet lackest thou one thing Thou hast pray'd and fasted and heard sermons yet lackest thou one thing thou hast not been good in thy Relations 4. Relative graces do much beautifie and set off a Christian It is the beauty of a Star to shine in its proper Orbe Relative grace doth bespangle a Christian 5. A good Christian brings forth seasonable fruit Psal 1.3 he that bringeth forth fruit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in his season * Eccles 3.1 every thing is beautiful in his time Eccles 3.11 That may be good at one time which at another may be out of season There is a great deale of skill in the right timing of a thing duties of Religion must be perform'd in the fit juncture of time 1. Christian duties that relate to our Neighbour must be observed in their season 1. Our reproving others must be seasonable Reproof is a duty when we see others walk irregularly like souldiers that march out of Rank and File we ought mildly yet gravely to tell them of their sin Levit. 19.17 but let this fruit be brought forth in its season 1. Do it privately Matth. 18.15 Go and tell him his fault between thee and him alone 2. Do it when thou seest him in the best temper not when his passions are up that were pouring oyle on the flame but when his spirit is meekned and calm'd you put the seal on the wax when it is soft and plyable there is a time when mens spirits are more flexible and yielding now is the fittest season to stamp a Reproof upon them and it is likelyest to take impression When Abigail reproved Nabal it was in the right season not when he was in wine but when he was in his wits and was fit to hear a Reproof 1 Sam. 25.37 3. Another season for Reproof is in the time of affliction Affliction tames mens spirits and now a word of Reproof spoken prudentially may work with the affliction a bitter potion is not refused if in case of extremity of pain Affliction opens the ear to Discipline * Job 36.10 2. Our comforting others must be seasonable Prov. 15.23 A word spoken in due season how good is it when we see one fallen into sin and with Peter weeping bitterly oh now a word of comfort will do well The cest●ous Corinth being deeply humbled the Apostle calls for oyle and wine to be poured into his wounds 2 Cor. 2.7 Ye ought rather to comfort him and the reason is given lest perhaps such an one should be swallowed up of sorrow When the soul is wounded for sin now bring the mollifying oyntment of a promise Jer. 3.1 hang out free graces Colours display the glory of Gods Attributes his Mercy and Truth to the sinner when the spirit is broken a word of comfort spoken in season is the putting it in joynt again Gal. 1.6 this is to bring forth seasonable fruit when we give wine to them that are of a heavy heart Prov. 16.4 Pleasant words are as an honey-comb sweet to the soul Jobs friends pretended to comfort him but instead of pouring oyl into the wound they poured in vinegar 2. Duties of Religion that relate to God must be performed in their season 1. Mourning for sin is a duty God loves a contrite heart Psal 51.17 how powerful with God is the weeping Rhetorique that a poor sinner useth but yet there is a time when mourning may not be so seasonable when God hath given us some eminent signal deliverance and this mercy calls aloud to us to rejoyce but we hang our Harps upon the willows and sit weeping this sadness is fructus intempestivus fruit out of season there was a special time at the feast of Tabernacles when God called his people to rejoycing Deutr. 16.15 Seven dayes shalt thou keep a solemn feast unto the Lord thy God and thou shalt surely rejoyce Now if the Israelites had sat heavy and disconsolate at that time when God called them to rejoycing it had been very unseasonable like mourning at a wedding when we are called to thanksgiving and we mingle our drink with tears is not this to be highly unthankful for mercy God would have his people humble but not ungrateful 'T is the Divels policy either to keep us from duty or else to put us upon it when it is least in season 2. Rejoycing is a duty Psal 33.1 But when God by some special providence calls us to weeping now joy is unseasonable this is that which God complains of Isa 22.12 In that day did the Lord of Hosts call to weeping and behold joy and gladness c. Oecolampadius and others think it was in the time of King Ahaz when the signs of Gods anger like a blazing star did appear * Cum jam prae foribus esset in●●tus now to be given to mirth was very unseasonable ver 14. Surely this iniquity shall not be purged from you till you die saith the Lord of Hosts In the Hebrew it is 〈◊〉
Fruit is that which God expects from us we are his plantation and Who planteth a Vineyard and eateth not of the fruit thereof 1 Cor. 9.7 Let us not be as Pharaohs kine which devoured the fat and yet still were lean let us not be still devouring Sermons yet never the fatter 2. Fruitfulness is one of the best distinctive Characters of a Christian Prov. 12.12 The root of the righteous yieldeth fruit Fruitfulness differeth a Saint from an Hypocrite the Hypocrite is all for show and pretence he hath fair leaves but the root of the righteous yieldeth fruit fruit can no more be separated from faith than moisture from the Air it is the very definition of a branch in Christ it bears fruit Joh. 15.2 As a man differs from a beast by Reason a beast differs from a plant by sense a plant differs from a stone by vegetation so a good Christian differs from an Hypocrite by fruit Fruitfulnesse puts a difference between the sound tree and the hollow tree Quest But may not Hypocrites bring forth fruit Answ 1. They do not bring forth fruit in the Vine they bring forth in the strength of parts not in the strength of Christ 2. Hypocrites bring forth something like fruit but it is not the right fruit 1. The fruit they bear is not so sweet The Crab may bear fruit aswell as the Pearmain but this excells in sweetness The Hypocrite may pray and give alms as well as a child of God but there is difference in the fruit the fruit of the Regenerate is mellow it is sweetned with Faith it is ripened with love The Hypocrites fruit is sower and harsh he doth not bring forth Pomgranates but Crabs not Figs but wild Grapes 2. The seeming fruit of Hypocrites dyes and comes to nothing Joh. 15.6 He is cast forth as a branch and is withered The Hypocrites fruit is like the grass upon the house tops which withereth before it groweth up Psal 129.6 Matth. 13.6 3. Fruitfulness adorns a Christian the Fruit adorns the Tree a Fruit-bearing Christian is an Ornament to Religion the more fruitful the branch is the more fair to look on Jer. 11.16 The Lord called thy name a green Olive-tree fair and of goodly fruit A dead tree as it is unserviceable so it is uncomely A Christian decked with the Fruits of Righteousness is beautiful and glorious The fertil Christian is compared to the Lilly for pulchritude and fairness Hos 14.5 There are many strive to make themselves look fair by their dressing and attyre their chain of Pearl and Bracelets O would you be fair in Gods eye Then spread your Branches send forth your Spices as Aromatick Trees in Lebanon 4. Fruitfulness is a good evidence to show for heaven the fruits of love humility good works are as St. Bernard saith Seeds of hope signs of Predestination the happy presages of future glory The righteousness of faith * Rom 4.11 is alwayes accompanied with the fruits of Righteousness He that can show good fruit goes like a ship laden with Jewels and Spices full saile to Heaven 5. God delights in his fruitful trees when his Garden flourisheth he will walk there he who curseth the barren tree will taste of the fruitful tree Cant. 5.1 I am come into my Garden my sister my Spouse I have gathered my Myrrhe with my Spice 2. It Exhorts them that do bear fruit that they would Branch 2 bring forth more fruit do not think you have fruit enough but bring forth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 further degrees of sanctity Joh. 15.2 Every branch that beareth fruit he purgeth it that it may bring forth more fruit Grace is like the morning light which encreaseth more and more to the full meridian of glory Christians should be like that ground in the Parable which brought forth some sixty some an hundred fold Matth. 13.8 He who hath a little gold labours to encrease it and is not grace more precious than gold some Christians have a little fruit and they think that is well like Trees that have an Apple or two growing on them to show that they are of the right kind Isa 17.6 Two or three berries in the top of the uppermost bough They are like the Church of Philadelphia which had 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a little strength Rev. 3.8 so they have a little faith a spark of love Christ chides a little faith Matth. 14.31 Christians should encrease with the encrease of God Col. 2.19 Christ compares the breasts of his Spouse to Clusters of Grapes for fruitfulness Cant. 7.7 Oh labour to be Christians of degrees the Apostle prayes for the Philippians that their love might abound 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yet more and more Phil. 1.9 Now that I may press Christians who have Fruit to bring forth more fruits of patience humility love c. Consider 1. This is the end why we have new cost laid out upon us that we should bring forth more fruit The Lord is still Manuring us not a week not a day but he is at new cost with us he rains down golden showers and why is God at all this charges with us but that we may bring forth more Fruit 2. The more fruit we bring forth the more glory we bring to God Joh. 15.8 Herein is my Father glorified that ye bear much fruit Though it is a blessed sight to see any Fruit I would not discourage such as bear but two or three Olive berries it is a signe they are not dead trees it is observable the ground in the Parable which brought forth more sparingly Christ calls it good ground Matth. 13.8 If the Husbandman sees a thin ear which hath but a little Corn in it yet he is glad to see some and he carries it into the Barn So though thou art a thin ear thou hast not so much grace as others God will not reject thee if there be any Fruit God will accept it he that gained but two Talents had his Euge bone serve Matth. 25.22 Well done thou good and faithful servant This I speak that I may not discourage the weak Christian though thou hast lesse Fruit growing on thee thou art too good a tree to be made fewel on thou shalt be transplanted into Paradise But I say you should not rest in small beginnings but labour to put more Oyle in the Lamp and be encreasing your stock of grace for the more Fruit you bring forth the more glory God hath herein is my Father glorified though the lowest degree of grace may bring salvation to you yet it doth not bring so much glory to God It is observable in the Text when the Apostle had said Filled with the fruits of righteousness he adds which are unto the glory and praise of God It is a praise to the Husbandman and commends his skill and industry when the plants in his Orchard thrive so when the plants of Righteousness flourish this is to the praise of Gods glory it is the highest
I know saith St. Paul whom I have believed 2 Tim. 1.12 there was the applying blood to the Root of the tree and how fruitful was he in zeal love to Christ Heroical courage 2 Cor. 12.15 He that believes Christ dyed for him never thinks he can do or suffer enough for Christ When we read and pray now we do but water the Branches when we believe now we water the Root of the Tree and make it fruitfull 2. Apply the Promises Husbandmen have an art to comfort the spirits of the Root to make the tree bear better Apply the Promises these are for comforting the spirits of a Christian and then he puts forth fruit more vigorously It is an experiment in nature the Root of the Pine tree watered with wine doth cause it to flourish the Promises are as wine to water the Trees of Righteousness whereby they spread and augment more in grace Ever preserve the spirits of the tree if you would have it bear a pensive dejected soul is less fruitful but when through the Promises a Christians heart is cheared and comforted now he is enriched with pleasant fruits Camphire and Spiknard and Frankincense he is like a Tree laden with fruit 5. Another means to fruitfulness is humility The low grounds are most fruitful The Valleys are covered with Corn Psal 65.13 The humble heart is the fruitful heart It is observed in some Countreys as in France that the best and largest Grapes which they make their wine of grow upon the lower sort of Vines The largest and fairest Fruits of the Spirit grow in a lowly Christian 1 Pet. 5.5 God gives grace to the humble St. Paul calls himself the least of Saints yet he was the chief of the Apostles The Virgin Mary was low in her own eyes Luke 1.48 but this lowly Plant did bear that blessed Vine which brought the Fruit of salvation to the world 6. If you would be fruitful in grace be much in good conference Mal. 3.16 Then they that feared the Lord spake often one to another There is an observation some have concerning the Sympathy of Plants some plants will bear better near other trees than when they grow alone as is seen in the Myrtle and Olive This holds true in Divinity the trees of righteousness when they associate and grow near together thrive best in godlinesse The communion of Saints is an excellent means for fruitfulness Christians encrease one anothers knowledge strengthen one anothers Faith clear one anothers evidences When the Trees planted in Gods Orchard stand at a distance and grow strange one to another they are less fruitful 7. If you would be fruit-bearing trees be near the waters of the Sanctuary Jer. 17.8 He shall be like a tree planted by the waters and that spreadeth out the roots by the River her leaf shall be green nor shall it cease from yeilding fruit The Word preached will not only make us knowing Christians but growing Christians Ministers are compared to Clouds Isa 5.6 their Doctrine drops as the rain and makes the trees of God fruitful Those that sit under these silver drops the wind of the Spirit blowing are like that flock of sheep Cant. 2.4 whereof every one bears twins and none is barren among them I wonder not that they are barren trees and nigh unto cursing * Heb. 6.8 that are not under the droppings of the Sanctuary a Christian can no more be fruitful without Ordinances than a tree without showres 8. And lastly if you would fructifie apace go to God and desire him to make you fruitful God is call'd the Husband man John 15.1 and he hath an art above all other Husbandmen they can plant and prune trees but if they be dead they cannot make them bear God can make the barren tree bear he can put life into a dead tree Ephes 2.5 It is not Pauls planting but the Spirits watering must give the encrease Pray to God to make you fruitful though it be by affliction oftentimes God makes us grow in grace this way Hebr. 12.11 No chastening for the present seemeth to be joyous but grievous nevertheless afterward it yieldeth the peaceable fruit of righteousness The bleeding Vine bears best It is an observation that the pulling off some of the blossoms of a tree makes the fruit fairer the reason is because the sap hath the less to nourish some Writers say they have known a tree by having too many blossoms hath blossomed it self dead The notion holds true in a Scriptural sence God by pulling off some of the blossoms of our outward comforts makes us bring forth fairer fruit some have so blossom'd in prosperity that they have blossom'd themselves into hell It is an ancient experiment that the planting of some tender trees near the West sun doth them hurt and parcheth the Fruit the Sun being so extream hot Too much prosperity like the West sun doth Christians much hurt and parcheth all good affection Jer. 22.21 Oh pray to God that he would make you fruitful though it be by bleeding Say as Luther Lord wound where thou wilt prune and cut me till I bleed so that I may have my Fruit unto holiness and my end everlasting life Rom. 6.22 The perfume of Love 1 Pet. 1.22 See that ye love one another with a pure heart fervently THE holy Scripture makes the love of the brethren the surest note of a man that shall go to heaven 1 Joh. 3.14 and I find Christ and his Apostles beating much upon this string of love as if this made the sweetest musick and harmony in Religion The consideration whereof hath put me upon this subject All the graces have their beauty but there are some that do more adorn and set off a Christian in the eye of the world like some of the Stars that shine brighter as humility and Charity These two graces like pretious Diamonds cast a sparkling lustre upon Religion I have designed to speak of the last of these at this time See that ye love one another with a pure heart fervently Love is a Grace alwayes needful therefore never out of season though too much out of use My Text like the River of Eden * Gen. 2.10 parts it self into four Heads 1. Here is a Commission or charge 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 See that ye love 2. The Extent of this Love 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 One another 3. The Manner of this Love 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with a pure heart 4. The Degree of this love 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fervently 1. Love purely that is opposed to Hypocrisie Love must be with the heart it must not be a complement which is like a painted fire dissembled love is worse than hatred 2. Love fervently that is opposed to Neutrality love must flame forth it must not be as the smoaking flax but as a burning Lamp so much the Hebrew word for love 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 imports an ardent and zelous affection * Ardens vehemens
the nature of the Sun is light so Gods nature is love The three persons in the Trinity are all love 1. God the Father is love Joh. 3.16 God so loved the world that God should part with Christ out of his bosome the Son of his love and lay this jewel as it were to pawn for our salvation oh unparalleld love never was such love showed to the Angels 2. God the Son is love how did Christ love his Spouse when he died for her his sides drop'd blood his heart drop'd love such a vein of love was opened in him that our sins could not stench love was the wing on which Christ did fly into the Virgins womb Christ incarnate hre was love covered over with flesh and Christ on the Cross here was a book of love laid open before us to read in Per vulnera viscera 3. God the Holy Ghost is love his appearing in the likeness of a Dove show'd his nature the Dove saith Pliny is an amicable creature it is without gall what are all the motions of the Spirit but tenders of love what is the Zeal of the Spirit but the print of love why doth this blessed Spirit as a suitor come a woing to sinners but that they may know he is in love thus all the persons in the Trinity are love and the more we shine in the grace of Love the more we resemble the God of Love 6. Argument enforcing love is from the sweet Relations we stand in one to another we are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fellow-Citizens Ephes 2.19 we all expect one heaven we shall shortly live together and shall we not love together we are souldiers of the same band 2 Tim. 2.3 ours must be the fight of faith not the fight of contention our strife must be who shall love most we are branches of the same Vine and shall we not be united we are stones of the same building and shall we not be cemented with love nay we are brethren Acts 7.26 Sirs ye are brethren why do ye wrong one to another Use 1. I might here take up a lamentation and steep my Use 1 words in tears to consider the decay I had almost said the funerals of this grace among Christians Terras Astraea reliquit the fire of brotherly love is almost ready to go out instead of the fire of love the wildfire of passion I have read of one Vitalis who hazarded his life to succour his distressed friend but sure such Vitales are dead in this age fratrum quoque gratia rara est The Text saith See that ye love one another but our times have made a bad Comment upon this Text how do Christians reproach censure maligne one another the Text saith love fervently but they hate fervently instead of the bond of love behold the apple of strife we live in the frigid zone the love of many waxeth cold Many live as if they had been born upon the Mountains of Bether the Mountains of division and as if they had been baptiz'd in the waters of Meribah the waters of strife Do the wicked unite nay do the Divels unite there was in one man a Legion which is according to Varro seven thousand six hundred twenty two shall there be more harmony among Divels than among Christians For these divisions of the godly there are great thoughts of heart Oh Christians turn your hot words into salt tears how do the enemies of Religion insult to see not only Christs Coat but his Body rent for these things let our eyes run down Consider the ill consequence where love is wanting the absence of this grace brings forth divisions and they are dangerous For 1. Divisions bring an opprobrium and scandal upon Religion they make the wayes of God evil spoken of as if Religion were the fomenter of envy and sedition Julian in his Invectives against the Christians said that they lived together as Tigers rending and tearing one another and shall we by our animosities and contentions make good Julians words this will make others affraid to embrace the Christian Faith There is a story in Epiphanius of Miletius and Peter Bishop of Alexandria both Confessors of the Orthodox Religion both condemned to suffer who being together in prison upon a small difference sell into so great a Schisme that they drew a partition between each other in the prison and would not hold communion in the same worship of Christ for which notwithstanding they both suffered which division grew scandalous and did more hurt than their persecution did good 2. Divisions advance Satans Kingdom The Divel hath no hope but in our discords * Nibil spei nisi per discordias Cornel. Tac. St. Chrysostom observes of the City of Corinth when many zealous converts were brought in Satan knew no better way to damme up the current of Religion than by throwing in a bone of contention and dividing them into parties one was for Paul and another for Apollo but few for Christ Use 2. Be Exhorted to cordial and fervent love See that Use 2 ye love one another Exhort Oh that this sweet spice might send forth its fragrant smell among Christians Oh that the Branch 1 Lord would rain down some of these silver showers of love upon the hearts of Christians which are for the most part like the Mountains of Gilboa which have none of this heavenly dew upon them They say of the stones of the Temple they were so closely cemented as if there had been but one stone in the Temple it were to be wished that the hearts of Christians were so sweetly cemented in love as if there were but one heart Let me commend this grace of amity and love to Christians under a double notion 1. As you are members of a body politick The whole nation is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Political body now it should be with the body Politique as it is with the natural body all the members of the body have a sweet sympathy they all work for the good of the whole that there be no Schisme in the body 1 Cor. 12.25 So it should be in the body politique 2. You are membra Ecclesiae members of the Church of God you bear Christs Name you wear his Livery therefore you must be sodred together in affection It is a sad Omen and presage when the joynts of the same body shall be loosed and the knees shall smite one against another If yet men will live at variance nourishing a Viper in their bosoms I shall offer two things to their serious consideration 1. An uncharitable person is an unregenerate person Titus 3.3 We were sometimes disobedient serving divers lusts living 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in malice and envy as if he had said Before grace came we were fill'd and ready to burst with this poyson of malice the Apostle describing a natural condition calls it the gall of bitterness Acts 8. He that lives in bitter strife is in the gall bitterness A
sacred embleam how he did begirt himself with with our flesh the blessed angels stood wondring at this how the divine nature could be girdled with the humane 3. He taught them exemplo by example ver 5. he poureth water into a Bason and began to wash his disciples feet he teacheth them humility by his own example he stoops to the meanest office he washeth his disciples feet and this he did for their imitation ver 14. ye ought also to wash one anothers feet Now our Lord Christ having thus taught his disciples by Doctrine Embleam and Example he makes as it were the Use of all in the words of the Text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If you know these things happy are ye if ye do them A text that deserves to be engraven in letters of gold upon our hearts a text that if well observed will help us to reap benefit by all other texts A Sermon is never heard a right till it be practised I shall therefore make this Sermon to be by the blessing of God as a selvidg to keep the rest from ravelling out That were an happy Sermon which would help you to put all the other Sermons you have heard in practice If you know these things c. by the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 these things our Saviour by a Synecdoche comprehends all the matters of religion though more particularly those two things he had been immediately before speaking of love and humility In the Text there is 1. a Supposition if ye know and do 2. A benediction happy are ye Doctr. From whence this Doctrine ariseth That it is not the Knowledg of the points of religion but the Practice of them that makes a man happy Had Christ said if ye know these things happy are ye and there had made a stop and gone no further we should have thought knowledg had been enough to have made one happy but Christ staies not here but goes further happy are ye if ye do them Christ doth not put happiness upon knowing but doing So that the Doctrine clearly results That it is not knowledg but practice renders a man blessed This Proposition consists of two Branches and I shall handle them distinctly 1. That Knowledg alone in the mysteries of religion will not make a man happy 2. That it is the Practique part of religion makes a man happy 1. Branch of the Doct. 1. That Knowledg alone in the mysteries of religion will not make a man happy Mat. 7.21 Luk. 6.46 Why call ye me Lord Lord and do not the things which I say It is not the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the speculation of the most glorious truths can bring a man to heaven If a man could discourse de omni scibili if his head were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Treasury of wisdom an Ocean of learning as it is said Hyperbolically of Albinus Beringarius Hermolaus Barbarus and others yet this could not entitle him to happiness his knowledg might make him admired but not blessed If a man knew all the policies of State the mysteries of Trade the subtilty of Arts the system of Divinity all this could not crown him with happiness Indeed knowledg in the Theory of Religion hath a beauty in it next to the Pearl of grace this gold is most pretious Knowledg is the enriching of the minde it is a faire garland to look upon but as Rachel though beautiful yet being barren said give me children or I dye so if knowledg doth not bring forth the child of obedience it will dye and come to nothing I would by no means disparage knowledg knowledg is the Pilot to guide us in our obedience if zeal be not according to knowledg it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 will-worship it is the setting up an altar to an unknown God Knowledg must usher in obedience it is as abominable to God to offer up the blinde as the lame Final ignorance damnes Hose 4.6 My people are destroyed for lack of knowledg The Hebrew word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they are cut down or fell'd like Trees so that there is a necessity of knowledg knowledg is the elder sister but obedience is better than knowledg here the elder must serve the younger knowledg may put us into the way of happiness but it is only practice brings us thither That knowledg alone cannot make a man happy I shall prove by three demonstrations 1. Knowledg alone doth not make a man better therefore it cannot make him happy bare knowledg hath no influence it doth not leave a spiritual tincture of holiness behind it doth inform not transform knowledg of it self hath no power upon the heart to make it more divine it is like weak physick that doth not work it doth not warm the affections or purge the conscience it doth not fetch vertue from Christ to dry up the bloody issue of sin a man may receive the truth in the light of it not in the love of it 2 Thes 2.10 the Apostle calls it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a form of knowledg Rom. 2.20 Knowledg alone is but a dead form having nothing to animate it he that hath knowledg only is a spiritual stil-born he looks like a Christian but hath neither appetite nor motion Knowledg alone makes men monsters in religion they are all head but no feet they do not walk in Christ Col. 2.6 A man may have knowledg and be neglective of his duty as Plutarch said of the Grecians they knew what was just but did it not A man may have knowledg and be prophane he may have a clear head and a foul heart The sun may shine when the way is dirty the understanding may be irradiated when the foot of a sinner treads in unholy paths now then if knowledg abstracted from practice doth not make a man better then it cannot make him happy 2. Knowledg alone will not save therefore it will not make a man happy if knowledg alone will save then all that have knowledg shall be saved but that is not true for then Judas should be saved he had knowledge enough then the Divel should be saved he can transform himself into an Angel of light he is call'd 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from the great knowledge he hath a man may have knowledge and be no better than a Divel hell is full of learned heads now if knowledge alone will not save then it will not put a man into a state of blessedness 3. Knowledge alone makes a mans case worse therefore it cannot make him happy 1. Knowledge takes away all excuse and apology Joh. 15.22 Now ye have no cloak for your sin 2. Knowledge adds to a mans torment Woe unto thee Corazin it shall be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon at the day of judgement than for thee It will be better with Indians than Christians living in a contradiction to their knowledge Luke 12.47 That servant which knew his Lords will and did not according to his will shall
obedience The Saints renowned of old have ever received their commendations and titles of honour from their obedience Moses a man mighty in words and deeds Acts. 7.22 Cornelius a man fearing God giving much alms When Christ pronounceth the sentence of absolution see how it runs Come ye blessed of my Father inherit the Kingdom for I was an hungred and ye gave me meat thirsty and ye gave me drink Matth. 25.34 35. Christ is not said at the last day to reward men according to their knowledge but their deeds Behold I come quickly and my reward is with me to give every man according as his works shall be Rev. 22.12 So then if the Scripture that Mercurial rod points out no other way to happiness but practice then it is in vain to expect it any way else 2. It appears by Reason happiness is not attainable but in the use of means now the use of means implies practice Salvation must not only be sought out by knowledge but wrought out by practice Phil. 2.12 There can be no Crown without running no recompence without diligence If happiness comes only in the use of means then it is neither imaginable or feasible without practice Use 1 1. If it be only the doing part of Religion makes men happy Reproof Then it sharply reproves them who know much yet do nothing they talk of God but do not walk with God men are all for knowledge because it is counted an O●nament they would be stuck with this gay flower but one leaf of the tree of life is worthy all the tree of knowledg T is better to practice one truth then to know all herein most Christians are defective they have with Rachel good eyes but they are barren Mephibosheth caught a fall and became lame 2 Sam. 4.4 Since Adams fall men are lame on their feet they walk not in the wayes of obedience Men know coveteousness is a sin The Greek word for coveteousness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies an immoderate desire of getting * Ex vi nominis significat studium semper plus habendi Ger. like Midas who desired every thing he touched might be turned to gold the several species of sin grow upon this root of coveteousness 2 Tim. 3.2 Yet men live in this sin and nothing can cure them of this dry dropsie Amos 2.7 that pant after the dust of the earth Men know swearing is a sin for this the land mourns Jer. 23.10 Sinners let their oaths flie and God sends a flying roul against them Zach. 5.2 3. Yet they will not leave this sin They know drunkenness to be a sin there is death in the Cup yet the drunkard will drink it off Men know uncleanness to be a sin Exod. 20.14 it wasts their strength blots their name wounds their conscience wronges their posteritie damnes their souls Rev. 22.15 yet they will follow this sin and burn in lust though they burn in hell Transiens est quod delectat aeternum quod cruciat Men know they should be winged with activity in the duties of religion but they can be content to let these duties alone They know they should mortify the flesh pray in their families be just in their dealing give alms to the poor but if there were no other Bible to teach us these things than the lives of most we should not know there were any such duties Commanded For the most part men are no changlings what they were twenty thirty years ago they are the same still as proud and unreformed as ever The best Tooles have been either broke or worn out upon their rockie hearts yet they are as unhewn and unpolished as ever The Bellows are burnt the lungs of Gods Ministers are wasted yet how much reprobate silver remaines still in many of our Congregations If none are happy but doers of the word how few will be saved But why do so few come up to the Practical part of religion Surely it is 1. for want of deep humiliation he that hath the spirit of bondage let loose upon him apprehends himself as it were in the Forlorne-hope he sees the sea of his sins before him ready to swallow him up and the justice of God behind pursuing and ready to overtake him he cries out as St. Paul Act. 9.6 Lord what wilt thou have me do Wilt thou have me repent believe I stand ready prest to what ever service thou Commandest the humbled sinner doth not dispute but obey The seed that had not depth of earth withered and came to nothing Math. 13.5 6. The reason men do not bring forth the fruits of obedience is because they have not depth of earth they were never yet deeply humbled for sin A proud man will never obey instead of trampling his sins under his feet he tramples Gods Laws under his feet Jer. 43.3 4. He who stoops in humility is the likeliest to put his neck under Christs yoak he that sees himself within an inch of hell asks the Jailors question What must I do to be saved Act. 16.30 What will not a condemned man do for a pardon 2. Want of Practice is for want of faith Isa 53.1 Who hath believed our report This makes Sermons to be like showres of raine falling upon a rock they neither mollifie nor fructifie because men are in part infidels they had rather dispute then believe such as live Scepticks die Atheists Did men believe sin were so bitter that wrath and hell followed it would they take this serpent into their bosom Did they believe there were a beautie in holiness did they believe godliness were gain that there were joy in the way and heaven at the end would they not turn their feet into the way Men have some slight transient thoughts of these things but their judgments are not fully convinced nor their conscience fully captivated into the belief of them This this is Satans master-piece his draw-net by which he drags millions to hell by keeping them in infidelitie he knows if he can but keep them from the belief of the truth he is sure to keep them from the practice of it 3. Mens backwardness to Practice is from the difficultie of the practical part of religion it is easie to hear a truth to give some assent to commend it to make a profession of it but to digest a truth into practice this is hard and men are overgrown with sloth they are loth to put themselves to too much trouble Prov. 19.15 Can men dig for gold and not for the Pearl of price Can they take pains in the pursuing of their sins and will they be at no paines for the saving of their souls I dare be bold to say It costs many a sinner more sweat and labour in toyling about his lusts then it costs a Saint in serving his God * Impij quare strenuè serviunt diabole Cypr. 4. The World comes between and hinders The thorns choak the seed of the Word Men practice so much in the world
from the Proposition 1. IT shews us what the nature of Christianity is viz. Use 1 Sanctity joyned with suffering Inform. a true Saint carries Christ in his heart and the Cross on his shoulders 2 Tim. Branch 1 3.12 All that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution Christ and his Cross are never parted 't is too much for a Christian to have two heavens one here and another hereafter * Delicatus nimis es si hic vis gaudere cum saeculo postea regnare cum Christo Hier. Christs Kingdom on earth is Regnum Crucis What is the meaning of the shield of faith the helmet of hope the breast-plate of patience but to imply that we must encounter with sufferings It is one of the titles given to the Church Afflicted Isa 54.11 Persecution is the Legacy bequeathed by Christ to his people John 16. ult In the world 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ye shall have tribulation Christs Spouse is a lilly among thorns Christs sheep must expect to lose their golden Fleece this the flesh doth not like to hear of therefore Christ calls persecution the Cross Matth. 16.24 Because it is cross to flesh and blood we are all for reigning Acts 1.7 When wilt thou restore the Kingdom again to Israel But the Apostle tells us of suffering before reigning 2 Tim. 2.12 If we suffer we shall reign with him How loth is corrupt flesh to put its neck under Christs yoke or stretch it self upon the Cross but Religion gives no Charter of exemption from suffering to have two heavens is more than Christ had Was the head crowned with Thorns and do we think to be crowned with Roses 1 Pet. 4.12 Think it not strange concerning the fiery trial If we are Gods gold it is not strange to be cast into the fire Some there are that picture Erasmus half in heaven and half out Methinks it represents a Christian in this life in regard of his inward consolation he is half in heaven in regard of his outward persecution he is half in hell Branch 2 2. See hence that persecutions are not signs of Gods anger or fruits of the curse for blessed are they that are persecuted If they are blessed who dye in the Lord Are not they blessed who dye for the Lord We are very apt to judge them hated and forsaken of God who are in a suffering condition Matth. 26.40 If thou be the Son of God come down from the Cross The Jewes made a question of it they could hardly believe Christ was the Son of God when he hung upon the Cross Would God let him be reproached and forsaken if he were the Son of God When the Barbarians saw the Viper on Pauls hand they thought he was a great sinner Acts 28.4 No doubt this man is a Murtherer So when we see the people of God afflicted and the Viper of persecution fastens on them we are apt to say These are greater sinners than others and God doth not love them this is for want of judgement Blessed are they that are persecuted Persecutions are pledges of Gods love badges of honour Hebr. 12.7 In the sharpest trial there is the sweetest comfort Gods fanning his wheat is but to make it purer SECT 7. Containing a sharp reproof Use 2 1. IT reproves such as would be thought good Christians Reproof Branch 1 but will not suffer persecution for Christs sake their care is not to take up the Cross but to avoid the Cross Matth. 13.21 When persecution ariseth because of the Word by and by he is offended There are many professors who speak Christ fair but will suffer nothing for him these may be compared to the chrystal which looks like pearle till it comes to the hammering then it breaks many when they see the Palme-branches and garments spread cry Hosanna to Christ but if the Swords and Staves appear then they flink away as King Henry the fourth then of Navar told Beza who urging him to engage himself in the Protestant Religion said he would not launch out too far into the deep but that if a storm should arise he might retreat back to shore 'T is to be feared there are some among us who if persecutions should come would rather make Demas his choice than Moses his choice and would study rather to keep their skin whole than their conscience pure Erasmus highly extolled Luthers Doctrine but when the Emperour threatned all that should favour Luthers cause he unworthily deserted it Hypocrites will sooner renounce their Baptisme than take up the Cross if ever we would shew our selves Christians to purpose we must with Peter throw our selves upon the water to come to Christ He that refuseth to suffer let him read over that sad Scripture Matth. 10.33 Whosoever shall deny me before men him will I also deny before my Father which is in heaven 2. It reproves them who are the opposers and persecutors Branch 2 of the Saints how great is their sin they resist the Holy Ghost Acts 7.51 52. Ye do alwayes resist the Holy Ghost which of the Prophets have not your Fathers persecuted Persecutors offer affront to Christ in heaven they tread his jewels in the dust touch the apple of his eye pierce his sides Acts 9.4 5. Saul Saul why persecutest thou me When the foot was trodden on the head cried out as the sin is great so the punishment shall be proportionable Rev. 16.6 They have shed the blood of Saints and Prophets and thou hast given them blood to drink for they are worthy Will not Christ avenge those who dye in his quarrel what is the end of persecutors Dioclesian proclaimed that the Christian Churches and Temples should be razed down their Bibles burned he would not permit any man that was a Christian to hold an office some of the Christians he cast alive into boyling lead others had their hands and lips cut off only they had their eyes left that they might behold the tragedy of their own miseries what was the end of this man he ran mad and poysoned himself Felix Captain to Emperour Charles the fifth being at Supper at Auspurg vowed he would ride up to the spurs in the blood of the Lutherans a flux of blood came up that night into his throat wherewith he was choaked it were easie to tell how Gods hand hath so visibly gone out against Persecutors that they might read their sin in their punishment SECT 8. That Christians should possess themselves before hand with thoughts of suffering Use 3 1. LET it exhort Christians to think before hand and make account of sufferings Exhort this reckoning before hand can do us no hurt it may do us much good 1. The fore-thoughts of suffering will make a Christian very serious the heart is apt to be feathery and frothy the thoughts of suffering persecution would consolidate it Why am I thus light Is this a posture fit for persecution Christians grow serious in the casting up