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A25467 A Continuation of morning-exercise questions and cases of conscience practicaly resolved by sundry ministers in October, 1682. Annesley, Samuel, 1620?-1696. 1683 (1683) Wing A3228; ESTC R25885 850,952 1,060

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Fancy or Error it may be made appear that his Practice is reasonable and well grounded he hath good cause to do what he doth His Practice is reasonable 1. In respect of Gods Command for that he hath to alledge for the reason of what he doth in pursuance of the glory he expects in the other World So long as he doth nothing in Religion but what God commands him he cannot justly be taxed with folly or unreasonableness it being the greatest reason to obey God in all things If indeed a man should add to Gods Word devise Worship out of his own Head contrive new means for his Salvation which God hath not appointed and so be strict and punctual in things not enjoyned or should he be very exact in Ceremonials insist upon the Minutes of the Law and be more negligent of Morals the more weighty things of it he might be well charged with Folly for making himself wiser than God and thinking he better knew how to please him than he doth himself But let a man walk never so strictly if it be but according to the strictness of the Rule God hath given him it is no Folly in him If God commands us to walk Circumspectly a Eph. 5.15 to keep our Hearts b Prov. 4.23 to deny our selves and take up our Cross c Math. 16.24 c. it is reason we should do so though we had no other reason besides the Command If in Civil things the Command of Superiors in their Laws be counted a sufficient Warrant for the Obedience of Subjects though perhaps it may seem strange to Forreigners who have other Laws and Customs why should not the Law of the Governour of the World be Warrant good enough for the greatest Holiness and most strict walking though perhaps carnal men may think it strange † 1 Pet. 4.4 or unreasonable 2. In respect of their own Faith which requires such Holiness 1. Serious Holiness is most agreeable to the ●●●ect of their Faith that great good they expect in the future Life The holiest Practice sutes best with the highest hope it is but reasonable that they that expect to live in Heaven should live answerably while on Earth they that hope to be perfectly holy there should be as holy as they can here it ill becomes them to lead sensual Lives now that look for spiritual Enjoyments then to live like Beasts or but like Men that hope hereafter to live with God and to neglect him at present whom they hope to enjoy at last 2. It is serious Holiness which must maintain Life in a Christians Faith A man can no longer maintain his Faith than while his Practice is answerable to it Jam. 2. last Faith without Works is dead Faith hath a respect to Commands as well as Promises or to the Condition of the Promise as well as to the Mercy promised now the Promise being made to Holiness as well as Faith though perhaps in a different respect a man cannot have a true Faith without Holiness not believe that God will save him if he walk not in that way in which God hath Promised to save him though men have not their Title to Heaven by their Holiness yet they cannot be saved without it Heb. 12.14 It is the qualification required in all that are saved and no man can be assured of his Salvation if he be not in some measure qualified and fitted for it It is certain that Holiness is a Condition though not of Justification yet of Salvation and therefore Faith wherever it is in the Life and Power of it provokes and stirrs a man up to the exercise of Holiness as being the way in which he must if ever attain to happiness Where a Promise is conditional it is Presumption to apply it with a neglect of its Condition and in this case the Promise doth no further encourage a mans Faith than the Command quickens his Obedience 3. Powerful Godliness in the practice of it is reasonable in respect of a Christians Peace he can no longer maintain his Peace than while he walks in the way of Peace and that is the way of Holiness Isa 57. last There is no Peace to the Wicked may we not say as to the sence of Peace nor to Saints neither so long as they approach to them that are Wicked and live not like Saints Believers experience in themselves that when they neglect holiness they wound their Consciences weaken their Faith and Hope lose the sight of their Interest in Christ and Heaven expose themselves to Gods displeasure and the Reproaches of their own hearts and are many times filled with trouble and bitterness or as the Prophet Isa 50.10 Walk in Darkness and have no Light and is it not then most reasonable for them to take heed of any thing that may break their Peace and to labour so to walk as that they may best secure it if some single gross Sin causes broken bones and doleful complaints and lamentable cries in the choicest Saints have they not cause to walk as circumspectly as they can and keep up in themselves the Exercise of Grace that so they may keep their Peace too And so upon the whole the most stri●● and Severe Obedience of a Christian is far from unreasonable when Gods Command warrants it his own Faith calls for it and he cannot enjoy his Peace without it 3. That a Believers comforts are reall not fantastical or delusive I deny not but the delusions of Satan especially transforming himself into an Angel of light or the deceits of mens own hearts may sometimes impose upon them and pass with them for divine Consolations thus carnal men who mistake their State and apply those Promises to themselves which belong only to Gods Children may usurp the Saints Priviledges as if they had a right to them and so speak peace to themselves when God doth not speak peace and when they walk in the Imagination of their own hearts Deut. 29.19 But it follows not that no comforts are true because some are false or that the comforts of the Saints are not reall because those of Hypocrites are but imaginary We may say therefore that the Comforts of Religion are then reall 1. When they are wrought only in Souls capable of them such as have Faith and Holiness already wrought in them are reall Saints persons justified and sanctified for others carnal men unbelievers whatever they profess whatever shew they make are not yet capable of Gospel Consolations as not having a right to any Gospel Promise or Priviledge from whence such Comforts are wont to flow 2. When they are wrought in a Regular way by the Spirit as the principal Efficient and the Word as the Instrument when the Holy Spirit applyes the Promise to those to whom it belongs and thereby comforts them they that are qualified according to the Scripture experience the comfort of the Scripture the Spirit speaks in their hearts what he speaks in the
Spiritual Light and Experience men of superstitious minds found themselves intangled They knew it necessary that there should be such a Representation made of Christ as might render him a present Object of Faith and love wherewith they might be immediately affected How this was done in the Gospel they could not understand nor obtain any experience of the power and efficacy of it unto this end Yet the Principle it self must be retained as that without which there could be no Religion wherefore to explicate themselves out of this difficulty they break through all Gods Commands to the contrary and betook themselves to the making Images of Christ and their adoration And from small beginnings according as Darkness and Superstition increased in the minds of men there was a progress in this practise until these Images took the whole work of representing Christ and his Glory out of the hands as it were of the Gospel and appropriated it unto themselves For I do not speak of them now so much as they are Images of Christ or Objects of Adoration as of their being dead Images of the Gospel that is somewhat set up in the room of the Gospel and for the ends of it as means of teaching and instruction They shall do the work which the Gospel was designed of God to do For as unto this end of the representation of Christ as the present object of the Faith and Love of man with an efficacy to work upon their affections there is in the Church of Rome a thousand times more ascribed unto them than unto the Gospel it self The whole matter is stated by the Apostle Rom. 10.6 7 8. The Righteousness which is of Faith speaketh on this wise say not in thine heart who shall ascend unto heaven that is to bring Christ down from above or who shall descend into the deep that is to bring Christ up again from the dead but what saith it The word is nigh thee in thy mouth and in thy heart that is the word of faith which we preach The Enquiry is how we may be made partakers of Christ and righteousness by him or how we may have an interest in him or have him present with us This saith the Apostle is done by the word of the Gospel which is preached which is nigh unto us in our mouths and in our hearts No say these men we cannot understand how it should be so we do not find that it is so that Christ is made nigh unto us present with us by this word Wherefore we will ascend into Heaven to bring down Christ from above for we will make Images of him in his glorious state in Heaven and thereby he will be present with us or nigh unto us And we will descend into the deep to bring up Christ again from the dead and we will do it by making first Crucifixes and then Images of his glorious Resurrection bringing him again unto us from the dead This shall be in the place and room of that word of the Gospel which you pretend to be alone useful and effectual unto these ends This therefore is evident that the Introduction of this Abomination in principle and practise destructive unto the Souls of men took its Rise from the loss of an Experience of the Representation of Christ in the Gospel and the transforming power in the minds of men which it is accompanied with in them that believe Make us Gods say the Israelites to go before us for as for this man Moses who represented God unto us we know not what is become of him What would you have men do would you have them live without all Sense of the presence of Christ with them or being nigh unto them Shall they have no Representation of him no no make us Gods that may go before us let us have Images unto this end for how else it may be done we cannot understand And this is the Reason of their obstinacy in this practise against all means of conviction yea they live hereon in a perpetual contradiction unto themselves Their Temples are full of Graven Images like the house of Micah houses of God and yet in them are the Scriptures though in a Tongue unknown to the people wherein that practise is utterly condemned that a man would think them distracted to hear what their Book says and to see what they do in the same place But nothing will reach unto their conviction until the vail of Blindness and Ignorance be taken from their minds until they have a Spiritual Light enabling them to discern the Glory of Christ as represented in the Gospel and to let in an Experience of the transforming power and efficacy of that Revelation in their own Souls they will never part with that means for the same end which they are sensible of to be useful unto it and which is suited unto their inclination Whatever be the issue though it cost them their Souls they will not part with what they find as they suppose so useful unto their great end of making Christ nigh unto them for that wherein they can see nothing of it and of whose power they can have no experience But the principal Design of this Discourse is to warn others of these Abominations and to direct unto their avoidance for if they should be outwardly pressed unto the practice of this Idolatry whatever is of carnal Affection of blind Devotion or Superstition in them will quickly be won over unto a Conspiracy against their Convictions Nothing will then secure them but an experience of the efficacy of that Representation which is made of Christ in the Gospel It is therefore the Wisdom and Duty of all those who desire a stability in the profession of the Truth continually to endeavour after this Experience and an increase in it He who lives in the exercise of Faith and Love in the Lord Jesus Christ as revealed in the Gospel as evidently crucified and evidently exalted therein and finds the fruit of his so doing in his own Soul will be preserved in the time of Trial. Without this men will at last begin to think that it is better to have a false Christ than none at all they will suppose that something is to be found in an Image when they can find nothing in the Gospel SECT II. II. It is a prevalent Notion of Truth That the Worship of God ought to be beautiful and glorious The very Light of Nature seems to direct unto Conceptions hereof What is not so may be justly rejected as unbecoming the Divine Majesty And therefore the more holy and heavenly any Religion pretends to be the more glorious is the Worship prescribed in it or ought so to be Yea the true Worship of God is the height and excellency of all Glory in this world it is inferiour unto nothing but that which is in Heaven which it is the beginning of the way unto and the best preparation for Accordingly even that Worship is declared to be
them which yet may be no true Acts of Obedience to him because not according to his Word They do but obtrude a Worship upon God and Fancy it will please him because it pleaseth them Whereas indeed nothing is acceptable to him but what is enjoyned by him Nothing is Duty but that which hath a Warrant from God for the Performance of it Men may abound in Will-worship and come short in Obedience they may do more than is enjoyned them and yet less too much which will never be reckoned to them as it was never required of them You must judge of your selves not meerly by what you do but by the ground you have for the doing of it when Gods Will is the Reason of it and not the Precepts of men nor your own Fancies so much and no more you do for God as you do in Obedience to his Command 2. Vniversal both as to the extensiveness and continuance of it 1. As to its Extensiveness See that you be not Partial in the Law a Mal. 2.9 that you walk with God in all his Ordinances Luke 1.6 have respect to all his Commandements Psal 119.6 There is the same reason for Obedience to one Command as well as another b Gods Authority who is the Law-giver and therefore when men chuse one Duty and overlook others they do not so much obey the will of God as gratifie their omn Humours and Fancies pleasing him only so far as they can please themselves too and this is not reasonable we never yield him a reasonable Service but when it is universal 2. As to its Continuance and duration If Gods Command be still the same and the Obligation of it it is but reasonable that our Obedience likewise should be still the same Constancy and Perseverance in serious Godliness will greatly confirm and Evidence the reasonableness of our Practice and reality of our Principles Fancies are usually transient and variable and so are their Effects in mens actions few Live by Fancy all their dayes but one time or other they find their Error When a Christians carriage is uniform in the course of his Life and still continues the same in a congruity and suitableness to his Principles it can hardly be imagined that it should be the effect of meer Fancy but must proceed from something in him more fixed and settled 3. Spiritual If the Obedience we yield to God be conformable to his Nature who is a Spirit so far it is reasonable and that is such as Christ requires and this the reason he gives for it John 4.24 God is a Spirit and they that worship him must worship him in Spirit and in truth See therefore that the Service you do him be not meerly external and carnal but inward and Spiritual 1. Spiritual in its Principle The goodness of your outward actions proceeds especially from within and you cannot judge rightly of them but by the Principles from which they proceed those Principles are Faith and Love Your work must be the work of Faith d 1 Thess 1.3 Rom. 1.5 your Obedience the Obedience of Faith Faith both in the Command and Promise must put you upon it and if your believing both makes you Act conformably to them the Faith of the Command presseth you to Obedience and the Faith of the Promise encourages you in it you therefore Serve the Lord because you believe him and trust in him that Service cannot be unreasonable And so likewise for Love Love to God must set you at work for God Exod. 20.6 those that love me and keep my Commandments If love within Command all without if that make you Labour in his Service fear to offend him strive to please him if you can not only see your own Obedience but feel your Love to God working your hearts to it you may be sure that Obdience is reasonable because its Principle is so reall Love felt in your Hearts and breaking out in your Lives cannot be a Fancy and what more Reasonable than for him that loves God to do all he can for God 2. Spiritual in the End for which ye Act. 1. Cor. 10.31 See that whatever you do you do it for the Glory of God as the Supreme End It is most Reasonable that as you do all from God so you should do all for him that he who is the first Cause of all you have should be the ultimate End of all you do and if you can be content to be abased that God may be Exalted to deny your selves as to your Credit and Interest and all Worldly concernments purely that God may be Honoured it is your desire that in all things Christ Jesus may be magnified in you whether by Life or by Death e Philip. 1.20 and so in doing or suffering that Obedience which is not only qualified as before mentioned but is directed to such an End is not Folly nor the effetct of Fancy 3. Spiritual in the Acts of it not that all Gospel Obedience or Worship consists only in the internal Acts and workings of the Mind for external Worship it self may be spiritual Worship and so it is when rightly performed that is when it is accompanied with and proceeds from internal but by Spiritual in its Acts I mean that which principally consists in the inward Acts of Faith and Love and Fear c. which is a Serving God in our Spirits f Rom. 1.9 yet withall is productive of and manifests it self in an outward behaviour correspondent to those internal workings See therefore that your Religion do not consist meerly in Externals that you make as much Conscience of inward and heart-Heart-worship as outward and Bodily of the Actings of Faith and Love as of Praying and Hearing look as much at least to what is within as to what comes out Do not rest in the outside of Duty nor satisfie your selves with what you do when yet it is without life and warmth have as much regard to the Manner of Performing as to Performance it self to the motions of your Hearts as to the Labour of your Lips or postures of your Bodies To conclude this direction let your work in the whole of your conversation be as much about your Hearts g Prov. 4.23 as your Lives be the same in secret that you are in publick the same when under Gods Eye only that you are in the Face of the World This I am sure cannot be said to be foolish and unreasonable when it is grounded on the greatest reason God sees in secret h Math. 6.6 looks to the heart 1 Sam. 16.17 and calls for the heart i Prov. 23.26 and therefore it is but reason we should look to them too It is the seat of Sin the Fountain whence it springs and therefore must be look't too that we may prevent the working of it and mortifie the root of it and it is the seat of Grace there is no more good in any man than what is in his
mans Conscience in the sight of God Paul's Preaching this is the principal thing to be aimed at and it is the proper source of all profitable Preaching To conclude You that are Ministers suffer a Word of Exhortation Men Brethren and Fathers you are called to an high and holy Calling your Work is full of Danger full of Duty and full of Mercy You are called to the winning of Souls an Employment near a-kin unto our Lords work the saving of Souls and the nearer your spirits be in conformity to his holy temper and frame the fitter you are for and the more fruitfull you shall be in your work None of you are ignorant of the begun departure of our Glory and the daily advance of its departure and the sad appearances of the Lords being about to leave us utterly Should not these Signs of the times rowse up Ministers unto greater seriousness What can be the reason of this sad Observation that when formerly a few Lights raised up in the Nation did shine so as to scatter and dispell the darkness of Popery in a little time yet now when there are more and more Learned men amongst us yet the Darkness comes on apace Is it not because they were men filled with the Holy Ghost and with Power and many of us are only filled with Light and Knowledge and inefficacious Notions of Gods Truth Doth not always the Spirit of the Ministers propagate it self amongst the People A lively Ministry and lively Christians Therefore be serious at heart believe and so speak feel and so speak and as you teach so doe and then People will feel what you say and obey the Word of God And lastly for People It is not unfit that you should hear of Ministers Work and Duty and Difficulties you see that all is of your Concernment All things are for your sakes as the Apostle in another case Then only I intreat you 1. Pity us We are not Angels but men of like Passions with your selves Be fuller of Charity than of Censure We have all that you have to do about the saving of our own Souls and a great Work besides about the saving of yours We have all your difficulties as Christians and some that you are not acquainted with that are only Ministers Temptations and Tryals 2. Help us in our Work If you can do any thing help us in the work of Winning Souls What can we do say you O! a great deal Be but won to Christ and we are made Make haste to Heaven that you and we may meet joyfully before the Throne of God and the Lamb. 3. Pray for us How often and how earnestly doth Paul begg the Prayers of the Churches and if he did so much more should we begg them and you grant them for our Necessities and Weaknesses are greater than his 2 Thess 3.1 2. Finally Brethren pray for us that the Word of the Lord may have free course and be glorified even as it is with you and that we may be delivered from unreasonable and wicked men for all men have not Faith THE CHAMBER of IMAGERY IN THE Church of ROME laid open OR AN Antidote against Popery Quest How is the Practical Love of Truth the best Preservative against Popery SERMON X. 1 PET. II.III. If so be ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious WHen false Worship had prevailed in the Church of old unto its Ruine God shewed and represented it unto his Prophet under the name and appearance of a Chamber of Imagery Ezek. 8.11 12. For therein were pourtraied all the Abomination wherewith the Worship of God was defiled and Religion corrupted Things relating unto Divine Truth and Worship have had again the same event in the world especially in the Church of Rome And my present Design is to take a view of the Chambers of their Imagery and to shew what was the occasion and what were the Means of their Erection and in them we shall see all the Abomination wherewith the Divine Worship of the Gospel hath been corrupted and Christian Religion ruined Unto this end it will be necessary to lay down some such Principles of Sacred Truth as will demonstrate and evince the Grounds and Causes of that Transformation of the Substance and Power of Religion into a Lifeless Image which shall be proved to have fallen out amongst them And because I intend their benefit principally who resolve all their Perswasion in Religion into the Word of God I shall deduce these Principles from that Passage of it in the first Epistle of the Apostle Peter Chap. 2. and the three first Verses The first Verse contains an Exhortation unto or an Injunction of universal Holiness by the laying aside or casting out whatever is contrary thereunto wherefore lay aside all Malice and all guile and hypocrisie and envy and all evil speaking the Rule whereof extends unto all other vicious habits of Mind whatever And in the Second there is a Profession of the Means whereby this End may be attained namely how any one may be so strengthened in Grace as to cast out all such sinful Inclinations and Practises as are contrary unto the Holiness required of us which is the Divine Word compared therefore unto Food which is the Means of preserving Natural Life and of increasing its strength As new born Babes desire the sincere Milk of the Word that ye may grow thereby Hereon the Apostle proceeds to declare the Condition whereon our profiting growing and thriving by the Word doth depend and this is an experience of its Power as it is the Instrument of God whereby he conveys his Grace unto us if so be that ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious See 1 Thes 1.5 Therein lies the first and chief Principle of our ensuing Demonstration and it is this All the Benefit and Advantage which any men do or may receive by the Word or the Truths of the Gospel depend on an experience of its Power and Efficacy in communicating the Grace of God unto their Souls This Principle is evident in it self and not to be questioned by any but such as never had the least real sence of Religion on their own Minds Besides it is evidently contained in the Testimony of the Apostle before laid down Hereunto three other Principles of equal Evidence with it self are supposed and virtually contained in it 1. There is a Power and Efficacy in the Word and the Preaching of it Rom. 1.16 I am not ashamed of the Gospel of Christ for it 〈…〉 P●●●r of God unto salvation It hath a divine Power the Power of God accompanying it and put forth in it unto its proper Ends for the Word of G●d is quick and powerful Heb. 4.12 2. The Power that is in the Word of God consists in its efficacy to communicate Grace of God unto the Souls of man in and by it they taste that 〈◊〉 Lord is gracious that is is efficacy unto its proper Ends. These are Salvation with all things requisite
are given for as the rigid Dominicans do certainly make God the Cause of Sin whether culpable or not culpable is not the Question even so do the Scotists and Molinists for they both include in the matter of Sin somewhat more than what is meerly Natural even somewhat that is morally Vicious and yet assert that this Matter is the immediate effect of Gods Causality only the one says That God does as it were take man by the hand and lead him to Sin the other That man determines the Efficiency of God and the Scotist says That the first and second Cause do walk hand in hand to the Sin but whether I lead another to the Sin and help him to commit it or whether I am taken by the Sinner and determined to help him to produce what is sinful in the Act or whether I walk with him stil I am at least a Concauser of what is sinful in the Act so that neither the Scotist nor the Molinist give me any satisfaction in this Matter The Result therefore of my thoughts is as follows I am sure that no Natural Being ever has been is or can be without the Efficiency of God the first Cause and yet I am as confident that no Moral Evil is in any sense the Effect of the Physical Efficiency of God The Moral Undueness that is considered as that which is the Foundation of Sin cannot be from God but yet how satisfactorily to reconcile these things or how to comprehend the Modes of Divine Operation is above us we cannot reach unto it it transcends our Understandings 5. There are also several Doctrines which have a special Aspect on those Transactions that are about the carrying on Fall'n Mans Salvation to the Illustrating the Glory of the divine Perfections which are very profound The Doctrines of the Fall of Man the Transition of Original Sin from Adam to his Posterity the Methods taken for the Recovery of the Elect the Covenant of Reconciliation between the Father and the Son from all Eternity the Incarnation of the Son of God and the many surprizing Doctrines with reference thereunto even about his several Offices as Mediator and in special That of his Being a Priest after the Order of Melchisedek his Suretyship how our Sins were imputed to him and his Righteousness made ours beside those Doctrines about the Nature of the Mystical Vnion that is between Christ and Believers and how this is the ground of Imputation and many other momentous points might be spoken unto to evince That though there is nothing of Contradiction in these Doctrines yet there is very much that transcends the most enlarged Capacity They are points that the Angels themselves are prying into but cannot fully comprehend But these things I must wave and go on to acquaint you with some of the many Providences that do in like manner transcend our Understandings II. Among the many amuzing Providences that are before Us I will single out a few 1. That the greatest part of the World should lye in Wickedness unacquainted with the Methods of Salvation is an amuzing Providence Look we into the remotest parts of the World we find nothing but a strange Ignorance of the true God or of the true Worship of God Oh how great a part of the World is over-run with Paganism Mahometanism and Judaism Come we nearer home and take a view of the Christian World behold how small is it in comparison of those parts where the abovemention'd false Religions prevail and of the many thousands who are called Christians how many Invelop'd with the thick clouds of Ignorance and Error and how ●ew free from the Influence of Idolatry and Superstition A multitude of those who have been baptiz'd into the name of Christ have not the opportunity of looking into the sacred Oracles which reveal the true way to Life everlasting and of those who have the happy Advantages of consulting the sacred Scriptures how few can understand them The which is not without a Providence of God But can we compare these Providences with those discoveries that are made of the Infinite Compassions of Almighty God towards the Children of men and comprehend a consistency between them In the Scriptures 't is said That God would have all men be saved and to that end come to the Knowledg of the Truth even when but a very small spot of the Earth have any suitable means afforded 'em for the obtaining such knowledg In the Scriptures the Proclamation is general to all Ho every one and the Expostulation with Sinners is Turn ye Turn ye why will ye dye as I live saith the Lord I desire not the death of a Sinner of a Sinner indefinitely q. d. of any Sinner but rather That he would Turn and Live Besides did not Christ die for this end namely to shew the unexpressible greatness of Gods Love to the world God so loved so so loved the World as if it had been said the Love of God to the World is so transcendent that no words could sufficiently express it nothing would fully represent it but the Delivery of the Son the only begotten Son of God to the Death the cruel the shameful and the reproachful Death of the Cross for the salvation of the World on their Believing and this even when God left Millions of Angels to continue in everlasting Chains of Darkness notwithstanding all which it is manifest That they cannot believe in him of whom they have not heard and cannot hear unless a Preacher be sent unto them and that no such thing has been done no Preacher has been sent or if in one Age yet not in another How can we reconcile these Providences with the Discoveries that are given us of the infinite Compassions of God to Mankind when so few are made partakers of it What of Grace is there in leaving the greatest part of the World in a very little better condition than the fallen Angels I know that there are many things offered towards the satisfaction of a thoughtful Person as Who can tell but there are thousand of Worlds above us whose Inhabitants are in a better capacity to receive and improve the Instances of Divine Love and that this world is but a Spot in comparison of them and if this whole World should perish 't is but as the hanging up a few Malefactors to shew that God is just as well as merciful but how does this solve the Difficulty which is not meerly taken from the Notion we have of Gods me●ciful Nature in it self considered but from the Revelations made thereof unto the Children of men in the Scripture about which we cannot have any solid satisfaction but from things which are obvious before us not from what is so fully out of our view and knowledge and concerning Creatures of another kind 'T is true there are some intimations in the Sacred Scriptures which apart and by themselves considered afford Relief such as these The Gentiles which have not
have been about things less necessary yet their Hearts have been more thorowly broken and more unexpressibly longing for Spiritual supplies 'T is about Gods bestowing of his Grace that they adore his Sovereignty justifying God though he should reject them and wondering even to astonishment how he can shew kindness to them so that the more Spiritual any Christians are the more they lose their will in the will of God and the less they quarrel with God let him do what he will with them They do not think it in vain to serve God thô he should but he will not cast them off at last they thankefully acknowledge they receive so many mercies from God here as are infinitely more worth than all the Services they can do him and they see cause to love God thô there is no cause why God should love them so that they 'l pray and wait hate sin and love holiness admire God and abase themselves and let God do what he will with them This is the temper and practice of the most serious Christians This will teach us to observe Gods answering of Prayer so as to be thankful or penitent to retract or alter or urge our Petitions as our case requires And this I think I may say One of the choicest exercises of Grace is about the improving the return of Prayer e. g. I think such a thing to be good for me suppose a better frame of Health for this I fill my Mouth with Arguments and my Heart with Faith but God answers me with disappointments this puts me upon reflection I find causes more than are good why God should deny me Suppose further I beg the pardon of sin am sensible that I must perish if I be denyed and therefore reckon I can't be too earnest but am so far from speeding that to my apprehension God seems Implacable and I have less hopes every day than other Well! this puts me upon a more thorow Scrutiny and I find I have not observ'd Gods Method for Pardon I would have the comfort of a Pardon without a suitable sense of the evil of Sin which if I should obtain I should not be so shie of Sin as when I have felt the smart of it I should not look upon my self as so much beholding to Christ but that I might venture upon sin and have a Pardon at pleasure I should not so much pity others under their Soul-troubles In a word the more we consider the more cause we shall see why God answers Prayer according to his own wisdom not our Folly We do not see that Religion doth any great matter towards the Object 2 bettering of every condition those that pretend to Religion have always their own good word they love to speak and hear of the Atchievements and Priveledges of Religion thô they are invisible to all but themselves A little more Modesty and less Arrogancy would better become ' em To our grief we must acknowledge Answ that Serious Christians are shamefully defective in living up to such a height of Heavenly-mindedness as to have the Experiences they might have and shall we when we are injurious to our selves expect God to fulfill conditional Promises when we neglect the Condition of them No! Christians God will say to us what he once said to Israel e Lev. 26.3 c. If thou wilt walk in my Statutes and keep my Commandments and do them then the Lord thy God will set thee on high above all nations of the earth and all these blessings shall come on thee and overtake thee c. f Deut. 28.1 c. But if you will walk contrary unto me then will I walk contrary to you also g Num. 14.34 and you shall know my breach of Promise God doth not only in displeasure but in kindness make his People feel a difference in their Comforts from the difference in their walking ou may as well expect to buy things without Money because Money answers all things as to expect Promises fulfill'd to Godliness when you want that Godliness to which the Promise is made 'T is true God may give it of bounty but not of Promise and then it may be a Mercy but not a Blessing Make Conscience of performing the Condition and make Conscience of believing the Promise for God will certainly fulfill that Promise or a better so that the fault 's our own that we don't inherit the Promises When I have granted all that can rationally be demanded in the Objection do but impartially observe and you 'l find that notwithstanding all the defects and imperfections of Christians 't is they alone that live most above the vanity of every Condition h 2 Pet. 1.4 't is they only have received those exceeding great and precious promises whereby they are partakers of the divine nature having escaped the corruption that is in the world through lust and though they have not already attained that heavenly frame they hope for neither are already perfect i Phil. 3.12 c. yet this one thing they do forgetting those things which are behind and reaching forth unto those things which are before they press towards a full Experience of what is to be found in the wayes of Holiness If this be not a sufficient answer to this Objection what I shall add will be more than enough Whereas I have by an Induction of six comparative Cases I hope demonstrated the excellency of Serious Godliness I shall now in as many Instances beyond all Comparison and beyond Contradiction demonstrate the superlative excellency of the Power of Godliness all which may serve as arguments for Practical Godliness Serious Godliness will make your present Condition good for you be it what it will Every thing but Religion will make you think any Condition better than your present Condition There 's one Text I would commend to your consideration in this matter 1 Tim. 6.5 6. Those that are destitute of the Truth suppose that Gain is Godliness from such withdraw thy self but Godliness with contentment is great gain q. d. Those that only talk of Religion and wrangle about it they have no higher design than to make a gain of it avoid all familiarity with them but those that are sincerely Religious that know and fear and worship God aright there 's a Treasure a great Treasure k 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fundus quasi perannis sons a constant Revenue an unexhaustible Spring and then Content is not mentioned as a Condition added to Piety as if Piety were not great gain without Content added to it but Content is mentioned as the very genuine effect of Piety m Purum putum pietatis effectum The Godly man is so well contented with his Condition that he is not so solicitous as others for the bettering of it whatsoever is wanting to him is made up by Tranquility of mind and Hope in God that God will supply him with necessaries and he acquiesceth in his
will Now where 's that Man in all the World that can do this beside the Christian Serious Godliness will make every change of Condition good for us thô the change shock both Nature and Grace A change of condition is either the hope or fear of every one in this World and 't is not the least part of Heavens happiness that there 's no fear of change In that state of Happiness wherein Men and Angels were created Mutability was their Out-let into Sin and Misery but now through Grace there 's no change formidable Alas we change more or less every day and who is it that meets not with some almost overwhelming changes in his life and doth or should preparingly expect his greatest change at Death And let the Consciences of all that are not worse than dead say whether any thing on this side now-despised Godliness can so much as endure the thoughts of such a Change In the comparatively petty changes of our life when we but change Plenty into Want or Credit into Disgrace or Health into Sickness how do Persons fret and toss like a wild Bull in a Net or lye down sullen under God's hand as if he had done us wrong or were to give us account why he grieves us But now Grace in exercise turns our eyes inward and shews us what we have more cause to lament no evil comparable to the evil of Sin whatever God doth against us on this side Hell 't is less than sin deserves Will God any way prepare us for our unchangeable change glory be to Free Grace Serious Godliness will make Relative Afflictions which of all outward Afflictions are the most grievous good for us and nothing else can do it I confess 't is morally worse for all the Relations of a Family to go the broad way to ruine and thô their Lusts clash one against another yet to be all agreed to be the Devils willing Servants 'T was sad in Egypt n Exod. 12.30 when there was not an house whore there was not one dead but 't is far worse to have whole Families where there is not one Spiritually alive but thô 't is Sinfully worse than Divisions in Families about Religion yet 't is at present more dolefully Afflictive to have those whose Souls welfare we desire as our own to be Devils incarnate For a David a man after Gods own heart when he comes from publick worship o 2. Sam. 6.20 c. to bless his houshold to be so revil'd by Michal as to divert his Zeal to a twitting her with her Fathers rejection and his Blessing of his Houshold into Gods Curse upon her Self On the other hand for a most obliging Abigal p 1 Sam. 25.17 c. to have such a Son of Belial to her Husband that a man cannot speak to him that when by her prudent fore-sight he was preserv'd from sudden death he was so drunk as not to be capable of hearing of his danger Again for Abraham the Father of the faithful to have a seven years Promise of a Son and for God to give that Son his Name and this Son to prove a scoffing Ishmael for Isaac the quietest of all the Patriarchs to pray twenty years for a Son and to have his first-born prove a profane Esau for good Eli to have such Children as † 1 Sam. 2.17 made the Offerings of the Lord to be abhorred And on the other hand for Hezekiah of whom 't is said q 2 Kings 18.5 After him was none like him among all the Kings of Judah nor any that were before him to have such a Father as Ahaz that as it were r 2 Kings 16.3 devoted his Children to the Devil and hath this peculiar brand upon him ſ 2 Chron. 28.22 that in the time of his distrests did he trespass yet more against the Lord this is that King Ahaz How might every one of these complain as Rebekah did t Gen. 27.46 I am weary of my Life because of some wicked Relations and if I should have more such what good shall my Life do me Again for Masters to have such Servants as Mephibosheth had of Ziba * 2 Sam. 16.1 4. who irreparably blasted him in his Reputation and ruin'd him in his Estate For Servants to have such a Master as Laban was to Jacob who gives this account of his twenty years Service † Gen. 31.40 c. In the day the Drought consumed me and the Frost by Night and my sleep departed from mine Eyes and had not God relieved him by little less than Miracle Surely thou hadst sent me away empty And now having mentioned sinful relative Afflictions I 'le mention no other for there 's no Evil comparable to Sin nor any Evil so intolerable to a Gracious Soul that if Serious Godliness can keep from sinking under this burden you need fear no other to be inseparably related to one that is loaded with infamy or even famisht thrô Poverty loathsomely diseased or incurably distracted these are but flea-bitings to the stabbing wounds of wicked Relations But now serious godliness doth not only support but grow under this burden which is a priviledge they are injurious to themselves to overlook Christ takes upon him all those Relations that are impossible to meet in any other that what is grievous in any Relation may be comfortably made up in him and God usually increaseth their Graces thô not alwayes their present Comforts Serious Godliness will make horror of Conscience and divine Desertions good for us These where there is no godliness nor working towards it they are none of the least of Hell torments but where they befall any one that is godly or that God is about to make so they prove healing thô rough Physick When God thorowly awakens the Conscience thô with a fright and drops spiritual influences thô withdraws he makes Convictions more deep and Repentance more sound you may take this for a tryed case Those serious Christians whom God is pleased to exercise with tremblings of Conscience temptations of Satan and apprehensions of Desertion God thereby makes them eminently gracious and compassionately useful they walk most humbly with God justifying and praising him under his most astonishing Providences And thô above all temptations these are so far from joyous that they are most grievous yet these even these u Heb. 12.11 afterwards yield the peaceable fruit of righteousness unto them which are exercised thereby Serious Godliness will force something good out of the evil of Sin Here it concerns me to speak with more Caution than in any other Case whatsoever for we must not dare to venture upon Sin thrô hopes of extracting good out of it as Chymists extract Spirits out of Soot and Vrine c. No The Apostle tells us * Rom. 3.8 That those that do but say that offer to say we may do Evil that Good may come of it the Damnation of those slanderers is just So that
receive their Wages Zophar doth notably set forth a Wicked mans Reward Job 20.7 He shall perish for ever like his own d●●●g That is he shall perish with disgrace he shall leave a stinking Savour behind Verse 16. He shall suck the Poison of Asps that is the sin which was Sweet as Honey in his Mouth shall be bitter as the Gall of Asps verse 26. A fire not blown shall consume him that is either ignis a Coelo delapsus r Mercer a Fire falling from Heaven shall consume him as it did Korah or a fire not blown may be meant a Fire casually hapning among his Goods and Chattels shall consume him or a fire not blown that is the fire of Hell not blown with bellows shall torture his Soul he shall be ever consuming never consumed ſ Sic morientur damnati ut semper Vivant Bernard Ver. 20. This is the Portion of a Wicked man And how Tremendous is this for every Golden sand of Mercy that runs out to a Sinner God puts a drop of Wrath into his Vial. Quest What may most hopefully be attempted to allay Animosities among Protestants that our Divisions may not be our Ruine SERMON IIII. COLOSS. II. 2. That their Hearts might be comforted being knit together in Love and unto all riches of the full assurance of Vnderstanding to the acknowledgment of the Mystery of God and of the Father and of Christ THis Question is propounded to me What may most hopefully be attempted to allay Animosities among Protestants that our Divisions may not be our Ruine I must here in the first place tell you how I understand this Question 1. As to the End the preventing our ruine I take the meaning chiefly to be not the ruine of our Estates Trade Houses Families not our ruine in these respects who are Christians but our ruine as we are Christians i. e. the ruine of our Christianity it self or of the truly Christian Interest among us 2. As for the Means enquired after I understand not the Question to intend what is to be done or attempted by Laws and Publick Constitutions as if our business were to teach our absent Rulers or prescribe to them what they should do to whom we have no present Call or Opportunity to apply our selves Nor again can it be thought our business to discusse the several questions that are controverted among us and shew in each what is the Truth and right wherewith every mans Conscience ought to be satisfy'd and in which we would all meet and unite As if we had the vanity to think of performing by an Hours discourse what the voluminous Writings of some Ages have not performed Much less are we to attempt the perswading of any to go against an already formed Judgment in these Points of difference for the sake of Union and to seek the Peace of the Church by breaking their peace with God and their own Consciences But I take the Question only to intend What serious Christians may and ought to endeavour in their Private Capacities and agreeably with their own Principles towards the proposed End And so I conceive the words read to you contain the Materials of a direct and full answer to the Question Which I reckon will appear by opening the Case the Apostles words have reference to that will be found a Case like our own and by opening the Words whereby their suitableness to that Case will be seen and consequently to our Case also 1. The Case which these words have reference to as indeed the general aspect of the Epistle and in great part of the other Apostolical Letters looks much the same way was in short this That a numerous Sect was already sprung up that began so early to corrupt the simplicity and purity of the Christian Religion and very much to disturb the peace of the Christian Church A sort they were of partly Judaizing partly Paganizing Christians the Disciples as they are reputed of Simon Magus who joyned with the name Christian the Rites and Ceremonies of the Jewes with the impurities even in Worship of the Gentiles denying the more principal Doctrines and hating the holy design of Christianity it self while thy seem'd to have assumed or to retain the Name as it were on purpose the more effectually to wound and injure the Christian Cause and Interest Men of high pretence to knowledge whence they had the Title of Gnosticks filched partly from the Jewish Cabbalisme partly from the Phythagorean By which pretence they insinuated the more plausibly with such as affected the knowledge of more hidden Mysteries Whereto the Apostle seems to have reference where he addes immediatey after the Text that in Christ were hid all the Treasures of wisdom and knowledge vers 3. And sayes he did purposely adde it lest any man should beguile them with enticing words Intimating there was no need to follow those vain Pretenders out of an affectation of sublimer knowledge and forsake Christ in whom all the Treasures of Wisdom and Knowledge were hid Of the progress and Genius of this Sect not only some of the Fathers of the Church give an account † Clemens Alexandr Irenaeus Epiphanius c. But even a * Plotinus Ennead 2. l. 9. noted Philosopher among the Heathens who writes professedly against them thô not a word against Christians as such both making it his business to refute their absurd Doctrines that the World was in its nature evil and not made by God but by some evil Angel c. and representing them as men of most immoral Principles and Practices worse both in respect of their notions and morals than Epicurus himself It appears this sort of men did in the Apostles dayes not only set themselves with great art and industry to pervert as many Professors of Christianity as they could but found means as they might by their compliances with the Jews who were then much spread and numerously seated in sundry principal Cities under the Roman Power and who were every where the bitterest enemies to Christianity to raise Persecution against them they could not pervert which some passages seem to intimate in the Epistle to the Galatians who as that whole Epistle shews were much leaven'd by this Sect insomuch that the Apostle is put to travel as in birth again to have Christ formed in them and to reduce them back to sincere Christianity viz. that some leaders of this Sect so set the Peoples minds even against the Apostle himself that he began to be reputed by them as an Enemy chap 4.16 and was persecuted under that notion because he would not comply with them in the matter of Circumcision urged as an engagement to the whole Law of Moses chap. 5.11 If I yet preach Circumcision why do I yet suffer persecution Then is the offence of the Cross ceased And that they were as mischievous as they could be to fellow-Christians on the same account biting and devouring them that received not their
glorious and that in an eminent manner above all the outward Worship of the Old Testament in the Tabernacle and Temple whose Glory was great and as unto external Pomp inimitable To this purpose the Apostle disputes at large 2 Cor. 3.6 7 8 9 10. This therefore is agreed that there ought to be Beauty and Glory in divine Worship and that they are most eminently in that which is directed and required in the Gospel But withal the Apostle declares in the same place that this Glory is Spiritual and not Carnal so did our Lord Jesus Christ foretel that it should be and that unto that end all distinction of places with all outward advantages and Ornaments belonging unto them should be taken away John 4 20 21 22 23 24. It belongs therefore unto our present Design to give a brief Account of its Glory and wherein it excels all other ways of divine Worship that ever were in the world even that under the Old Testament which was of divine Institution wherein all things were ordered for Beauty and Glory And it may be given in the Instances that ensue 1. The express Object of it is God not as absolutely considered but as existing in three Persons of Father Son and Holy Spirit This is the principal Glory of Christian Religion and its Worship Under the Old Testament the Conceptions of the Church about the Existence of the Divine Nature in distinct Persons were very dark and obscure for the full Revelation of it was not to be made but in the distinct actings of each Person in the works of Redemption and Salvation of the Church that is in the Incarnation of the Son and Mission of the Spirit after he was glorified John 7.39 And in all the ways of Natural Worship there was never the least shadow of any respect hereunto But this is the foundation of all the Glory of Evangelical Worship The Object of it in the Faith of the Worshipper is the Holy Trinity and it consists in an Ascription of Divine Glory unto each Person in the same individual Nature by the same Act of the Mind where this is not there is no Glory in Religious Worship 2. It s Glory consists in that constant respect which it hath unto each Divine Person as unto their peculiar work and actings for the salvation of the Church so it is described Eph. 2.18 Through him that is the Son as Mediator we have our access by one Spirit unto the Father This is the immediate Glory of Evangelical Worship comprehensive of all the Graces and Priviledges of the Gospel And to suppose that the Glory of it doth consist in any thing but the Light Graces and Privileges which it doth it self exhibit is a vain Imagination It will not borrow Glory from the Invention of men we shall therefore a little consider it as it is here represented by the Apostle 1. The Vltimate Object of it under this consideration is God as the Father we have an access therein unto the Father And this Consideration in our worship of God as a Father relating unto the whole dispensation of his Love and Grace by Christ Jesus as he is God and our God his Father and our Father is peculiar unto Gospel-worship and contains a signal part of its glory We do not only worship God as a Father so the very Heathens had a Notion that he was a Father of all things but we worship him who is the Father and as he is so both in relation to the eternal Generation of the Son and the communication of Grace by him unto us as our Father so no man hath seen God at any time the only begotten Son who is in the bosom of the Father he hath declared him John 1.18 This Access in our worship unto the Person of the Father as in Heaven the holy Place above as on a Throne of Grace is the glory of the Gospel See Mat. 6.9 Heb. 4.16 ch●p 10.19 20 21. 2. The Son is here considered as Mediator through him we have this access unto the Father This is the Glory that was hidden from former Ages but brought to light and display'd by the Gospel So speaks our blessed Saviour himself unto his Disciples Whatsoever you shall ask the Father in my Name he will give it you Hitherto ye have asked nothing in my Name ask and ye shall receive Iohn 16.23 24. To ask God expresly in the Name of the Son as Mediator belongs unto the Glory of the Gospel-worship The chief of them may be reduced to these three Heads 1. It is he who makes both the persons of the Worshippers and their Duties accepted of God See Heb. 2.17 18. chap. 4.16 chap. 10.19 2. He is the Administrator of all the worship of the Church in the holy place above as its great High Priest over the House of God Heb. 8.2 Rev. 8.3 3. His Presence with and among Gospel-worshippers in their worship gives it Glory This he declares and promises Mat. 18.19 20. If two of you shall agree on earth as touching any thing that they shall ask it shall be done for them of my Father which is in heaven for where two or three are gathered together in my Name there am I in the midst of them All Success of the Prayers of the Church dependeth on and ariseth from the presence of Christ amongst them He is so present for their assistance and for their conso●ation This presence of a Living Christ and not a dead Crucifix gives Glory to Divine worship He who sees not the Glory of this Worship from its relation unto Christ is a stranger unto the Gospel with all the Light Graces and Privileges of it 3. It is in one Spirit that we have Access unto God in his Worship and in his Administration doth the Apostle place the glory of it in opposition unto all the glory of the Old Testament as doth our Lord Jesus Christ also in the place before referred unto for 1. The whole Ability for the observance and performance of it according to the Mind of God is from him alone His communication of Grace and Gifts unto the Church is that alone which makes it to give glory to God in his Divine Service If this should cease all acceptable Worship would cease in the world To think to observe the Worship of the Gospel without the Aid and Assistance of the Spirit of the Gospel is a lewd imagination But where he is there is Liberty and Glory 2 Cor. 3.17 18. 2. By him the sanctified Minds of Believers are made Temples of God and so the principal Seal of Evangelical worship 1 Cor. 3.16 chap. 6.8 This Temple being of God's own framing and of his own adorning by his Spirit is a much more glorious Fabrick than any that the hands of men can erect 3. By him is the Church led into internal Communion and Converse with God in Christ in Light Love and Delight with holy boldness the glory whereof is expressed by the Apostle
Heb. 10.19 21 22. In these things I say doth the true Glory of Evangelical Worship consist and if it doth not it hath no Glory in comparison of that which did excel in the Old Legal Worship For the wit of man was never yet able to set it off with half the outward Beauty and Glory that was in the Worship of the Temple But herein it is that it not only leaves no Glory thereunto in comparison but doth unspeakably excel whatever the wit and wealth of men can extend unto But there is a Spiritual Light required that we may discern the Glory of this Worship and have thereby an Experience of its Power and Efficacy in reference unto the Ends of its appointment This the Church of Believers hath They see it as it is a blessed Means of giving Glory unto God and of receiving gracious Communications from him which are the Ends of all the Divine Institutions of worship and they have therein such an Experience of its efficacy as gives Rest and Peace and Satisfaction unto their Souls For they find that as their worship directs them unto a blessed view by Faith of God in his ineffable Existence with the glorious actings of each Person in the dispensation of Grace which fills their hearts with Joy unspeakable so also that all Graces are exercised increased and strengthned in the observance of it with Love and Delight But all Light into all Perceptions of this Glory all Experience of its Power was amongst the most lost in the world I intend in all these Instances the time of the Papal Apostacy Those who had the conduct of Religion could discern no Glory in t●●●e things nor obtain any experience of their Power Be the Worship what it will they can see no Glory in it nor did it give any satisfaction to their minds for having no light to discern its glory they could have no Experience of its power and efficacy What then shall they do The Notion must be retained that Divine Worship is to be beautiful and glorious But in the Spiritual Worship of the Gospel they could see nothing thereof wherefore they thought necessary to make a Glory for it or to dismiss it out of the world and set up such an Image of it as might appear beautiful unto their fleshly minds and give them satisfaction To thi● end they set their Inventions on work to find out Ceremonies Vestments Gestures Ornaments Musick Altars Images Paintings with prescriptions of great bodily Veneration This Pageantry they call the Beauty the Order the Glory of Divine Worship This is that which they see and feel and which as they judge doth dispose their Minds unto Devotion without it they know not how to pay any reverence unto God himself and when it is wanting whatever be the Life the Power the Spirituality of the Worship in the Worshippers whatever be its efficacy unto all the proper ends of it however it be ordered according unto the prescription of the Word it is unto them empty indecent they can see neither Beauty nor Glory in it This Light and Experience being lost the introduction of Beggarly Elements and Carnal Ceremonies in the Worship of the Church with attempts to render it d●corous and beautiful by Superstitious Rites and Observances wherewith it hath been defiled and corrupted as it was and is in the Church of Rome was nothing but the setting up of a deformed Image in the room of it and this they are pleased withal The Beauty and Glory with Carving and Painting and imbroidered Vestures and Musical Incantations and Postures of Veneration do give unto Divine Service they can see and feel and in their own imagination are sensibly excited unto Devotion by them But hereby instead of representing the true Glory of the Worship of he Gospel wherein it excels that under the Old Testament they have rendred it altogeth●● ●inglorious in comparison of it for all the Ceremonies and Ornaments which they have invented for that end come unspeakably short for Beauty Order and Glory of what was appointed by God himself in the Temple scarce equalling what was among the Pagans It will be said that the things whereunto we assign the Glory of this Worship are spiritual and invisible Now this is not that which is enquired after but that whose Beauty we may behold and be affected with And this may consist in the things which we decry at least in some of them though I must say if there be Glory in any of them the more they are multiplied the better it must needs be but this is that which we plead Men being not able by the Light of Faith to discern the Glory of things spiritual and invisible do make Image of them unto themselves as Gods that may go before them and these they are affected withal but the Worship of the Church is spiritual and the Glory of it is invisible unto eyes of Flesh So both our Saviour and the Apostles do testifie in the Celebration of it We come unto Mount Sion and unto the City of the Living God the Heavenly Jerusalem and to an innumerable Company of Angels to the general Assembly and Church of the first born which are written in Heaven and to God the Judge of all and to the Spirits of Just men made perfect and to Jesus the Mediator of the New Covenant and to the Blood of sprinkling that speaketh better things than that of Abel Heb. 12.22 23 24. The Glory of this Assembly though certainly above that of Organs and Pipes and Crucifixes and Vestments yet doth not appear unto the Sense or Imaginations of men That which I design here is to obviate the Meritricious Allurements of the Roman Worship and the Pretences of its efficacy to excite Devotion and Veneration by its Beauty and Decency The whole of it is but a Deformed Image of that Glory which they cannot behold To obtain and preserve in our hearts an experience of the power and efficacy of that Worship of God which is in Spirit and Truth as unto all the real Ends of Divine Worship is that alone which will secure us Whilst we do retain right Notions of the proper Object of Gospel-worship and of our immediate approach by it thereunto of the way and manner of that approach through the Mediation of Christ and assistance of the Spirit whilst we keep up Faith and Love unto their due exercise in it wherein on our part the Life of it doth consist preserving an experience of the spiritual benefit and advantage which we receive thereby we shall not easily be inveagled to relinquish them all and to give up our selves unto the Embraces of this lifeless Image SECT III. It is an universal unimpeachable Perswasion amongst all Christians that there is a near intimate Communion with Christ and Participation of him in the Supper of the Lord. He is no Christian who is otherwise minded Hence from the beginning this was always esteemed the principal Mystery in the
his principal end is himself degenerated into a Beast The inferior and subordinate end is the good of the Communities the happiness and welfare of the whole Country the peace comfort and prosperitie of all the People over whom Governours are set The supreme Magistrate is to his Dominions what the Head is to the body natural and so influence belongs to him as well as preeminence he is engaged to think contrive study care order and provide for the comfort of the body and all the members of it Paul saith Rom. 13 4. He is the Minister of God to thee for good for a fourfold good as learned Partus saith 1. In bonum naturale for natural good that he may secure thy person and life from danger and thy outward Liberty comforts and enjoyments from the Sons of violence 2. In bonum morale for moral good that he may curb thy unruly passions and base lusts and restraine or hinder them from breaking out into vitious and enormous practices 3. In bonum civile for civil good that he may preserve publick Society and keep up common honesty and Justice 4. In bonum spirituale for spiritual good that he may defend the true Religion that which is pure and undefiled before God and the Father and keep up and encourage the Worship of God which is warranted by the Scripture And all this is according to the word which doth direct and command that we should pray for Kings and all that are in Authority that under them we might lead peaceable and quiet lives in all godliness and honesty So that the end of Government is the securing peace and quietness and the encouraging of honesty and godliness 2. In all Government there is supposed a power sufficient for the ordering of things unto these ends not only natural power but also moral Authority lawfully come by for without that there can be no just right and good Government Magistrates therefore are called Powers Rom. 13 1. Let every Soul be subject to the higher Powers for there is no power but of God the powers that be are ordained by God Lawful Governours are invested with Authority and Power there are put into their hands the Scepter to rule and the Sword to protect and punish as there is cause They have a legislative Power to make Laws and issue out commands which shall oblige their Subjects they have a right to do this so they use their power rightly and obedience is due from their People obedience to all their just and lawful commands they ought to rule in the fear of God and their Subjects ought to obey in the fear of God Rom. 13 5. Ye must needs be subject and that not only for Wrath but also for Conscience sake as knowing that this is the will of God concerning you and when any wilfully fail herein they contract guilt and break their own peace And as there is an Authority to enact Laws so a Power to suppress the Rebellions and animadvert on those that are refractorie and stubborn and also to defend reward and encourage all persons studious and careful of performing their duty Where all this Power is not there is a miserable defect in the Government which will in time dwindle and come to nothing and confusion and every evil work step up in its place 3. In Government this Power is reduced into act there is a prudent seasonable exerting and putting forth of the Power in order to the attaining of these ends This is the complement of all for it is folly for any to make that his end which is quite out of his reach and that Power is in vain which always lyes dorment Power is not put into the Rulers hand meerly for ornament but for use It is no other than a trust committed to him therefore though he be a Magistrate over men yet he is a Minister of God and is obliged to serve his great Lord according to the best of his skill and to act toward the end formerly mentioned As he is advanced to high and honourable places so he is engaged to great and excellent work Rom. 13 4. He is not to bear the Sword in vain and it may be said He weareth not the Crown in vain he holdeth not the Scepter in vain not for nothing not for a meer shew an empty Pageantry but for a good end for excellent and noble purposes The Crown and Scepter are not so glorious as that for which he is advanced the Sword committed to him must be drawn against the enemies of God and truth and holiness he must be an Avenger to execute wrath not upon the pious and peaceable that would be an abuse of his Power but upon them that do evil Thus have I shewed you what Government is Viz Using of lawful Power for excellent ends The second thing propounded was to prove and evidence to you that God doth Govern the world As he made it at first so he doth still uphold and order it In a Nation you know there are many inferiour Magistrates and under-Officers yet it followeth not but the King is supreme who authorizeth influences directs and limits them by his Laws There are upon Earth many Governours various forms of Government yea the Angels in Heaven are ministring Spirits employed in special and weighty matters But all of them are set up and set forth by God and fulfil his pleasure God himself sits at the helm and steers the course he overrules and orders all from the highest to the lowest For the evidenceing hereof take these following particulars 1. First the light of nature hath discovered this and by the glimmering thereof though it burn dimly as a Candle in the Socket many among the Heathens have been led to the knowledg of it and constrained to acknowledg it It must be granted that they groped and were exceedingly in the dark differing much one from another in their Sentiments about the Deitie and his Providence Some plainly denyed a God some owned and asserted the being of a God but denyed the creating of the World but that it was from everlasting or rose up through a fortuitous concurse of atomes Some granted that the World was of God as of the first cause yet he did not see nor observe what is done in it among men Some held he doth indeed see all things that are and be done in the world but he is only an insignificant idle Spectator who minds and regards nothing Some were of opinion that God doth not attend to the meaner and inferiour Creatures nor take any cognizance of small inconsiderable matters but only superintended the affairs and concernments of mankind Doth God take care of Oxen Some did again assert that God did look after and care for all things yet he acted only in a way of common general influences and by second causes doing nothing immediately and by himself Others again on the contrary side did affirm that God doth immediately and by himself so work all
such a year and such a year it may be for many years spent in open profaness and all manner of debauchery As you fill up your time with sin God fills it up with secret wrath which will be revealed one day Time carries along with it all the things good or evil that are done in that time the neglect of a present duty Leave that time void of the duty that belongs to it and there is no going back to fill it up As for instance If your Present duty be Prayer if you don't pray now you can never pray now You may pray afterwards but that does not answer to the present now You may do the same duty for substance at another time but it does not bear the same date That hour in which thou dost omit any duty proper to it will witness against thee when that part of thy life comes under examination have a care that time does not carry an evil report of you to God There is a voice in time Day unto day uttereth speech and night unto night sheweth knowledg Psal 19.2 Time past is present with God he sees how it slips thorow thy fingers how it is stained by thy sins Time is ill bestowed upon thee it may provoke God to shorten thy days and to cut thee off in the midst of thy years Psal 55.23 4. You can have no tryal of your spirit nor of the truth of your state 'T is impossible you should ever prove your sincerity but by a conscientious discharge of your present duty The power of godliness lies much in this in having a respect to God in all our common actions There can be no Religion without this and in this there is peace true hearts ease Psal 119.45 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in ipsâ latitudine When a man so walks that his conscience meets with nothing that offends it that strikes against it the way is broad enough a plain path of duty which is very satisfactory to conscience But when the business is dark and doubtful looks as much like sin as duty a man cannot be at ease in this case the way is very narrow there is a grating upon the conscience and after all the tricks salves and distinctions that may be used to justifie what we do we cannot have inward peace whilst something always rubs against the conscience as we go 5. You cannot walk evenly with God if you do not your present duty One would wonder to see what broken forms of godliness some men rest in They pick and chuse here a duty and there another this they will do and this they will not do Their Religion is but a voluntary Religion what they please pure will-will-worship Col. 2.23 They will stint themselves and stint God so much he shall have and no more They draw up to themselves a scheme of Religion such as they think will serve the turn and on they go in this round of duties Here they are now and here you shall find them Seven years hence I am not against a method of Practical godliness provided it be comprehensive enough but 't is very dangerous tying up our selves to these narrow set forms of practical holiness which some men place all their Religion in a step farther they will not go Alas the Providence of God may lead you to such duties which you thought not of in doing or suffering for him John 21.18 Therefore you should be in a readiness to comply with every call of God standing compleat in his whole will Present obedience gives understanding for the future A good understanding have all they that do his commandments Psal 111.10 Let it be the purpose of your heart to walk before God unto all well-pleasing Col. 1.10 and then your hearts will not reproach you while you live Job 27.6 Some men walk very unevenly there are so many gaps in their obedience they move from duty to duty per saltum quite leaping over some and lightly touching upon others as if they had no great mind to any They act Grace so abruptly that it gives no continued sense we know not where to find them There are so many vacant spaces so many blanks of omission so many blots and blurs of commission they drop a duty here and another half a Mile off that you cannot say A man of God went this way This is not even walking their way is crooked in and out sometimes they wander on the right hand and sometimes on the left they never touch upon the right path unless it be in crossing the way from one sin to another which is rather to break thorow a duty than to perform it Here is no beaten path of holiness no continued tract of godliness They don't always exercise themselves to keep a good conscience They who are not frequent in duty are never exact in duty their hearts cool so much between duty and duty that there is no servour of spirit left they are key-cold now and then they take up a Bible read a little dipping at a venture but are no way concern'd in what they read they heed it not now and then they hear a Sermon now and then pray but without any life and spirit They who pray but seldom never pray well Actus perficit habitum Frequent acts beget a habit and frequent acts maintain it We can never perfect holiness but by a constaut tenor in holiness going on from day to day in the practise of it Some trees tho they bring not forth much fruit yet that as is is the bigger and fairer but 't is not so in a Christian The less you are in duty the more lank and lean are your duties As all Graces grow up together in the heart in an apt disposition to actual exercise when occasion is given to draw them forth And as no grace in the heart grows up alone so no duty thrives in the life alone one duty borrows strength from another is bounded within another as stones in a wall do bare up one another so a Christian is built up of many living stones many graces many duties There is the same reason to do thy duty in one thing as in another the same authority commands both Unless you have respect unto all the Commandments you truly respect none 6. You must begin somewhere at some present duty Why not at this It will be as difficult nay more difficult to come to Christ to morrow than 't is to day Therefore to day hearken to his voice and harden not your heart Break the Ice now and by Faith venture upon thy present duty wherever it lies Do what you are now called to You 'l never know how easie the Yoke of Christ is till 't is bound about your necks nor how light his Burthen is till you have taken it up While you judg of holiness at a distance as a thing without you and contrary to you you 'l never like it Come a little nearer to it do but take it
every corner of the Earth to fetch home fuel to feed the insatiable fire of lust which the more it eats the more it hungers Alexander Severus and Aurelianus those great Emperors are reported never to have worn a garment of entire Silk all their lives which is now become the ordinary wear of every Nurse of a Village Emperors then were not cloath'd as Servants are now It was above 150. years after Christ that some idle Monks brought into Europe these Silk Spinsters And truly it 's no great credit to the wear that they who first brought in strange Religions and new fashions of Worship should be the men who first introduced strange Attire and new fashions of Apparel But so it is Jonah 2.8 whilst we pursue Exotick lying vanities we forsake our own Domestick mercies § 5. The Laws of the land ought to carry a great stroke in the decision of what is decent It were to be wisht that evil Manners might at length beget good Laws But we are not sick enough with this Surfeit to make us feel the need and submit to the prescription of State-Physicians Such was once the extravagancy of this Nation in the prodigious breadth of their Shooes that they were restrain'd to Six Inches at the Toes O monstrous Excess where the Excess it self was accounted Moderation But because I find no sumptuary Laws in force at present let us look a little back into former Ages and step a while into foreign Countries The Lacedaemonian Ephori were exceeding punctual Aelian var. hist l. 14. c. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That a daily inspection should be exactly made into the matters of Apparel that nothing herein might vary from what was decent and of necessary comliness Julius Caesar Lecticarum usum item conchyliatae vestis margaritarum nisi certis personis aetatibus ademit Julius Caesar prohibited the use of Sedans Sueton in vitâ J. Caes and Licters as also of Purple or Scarlet and Pearls except to some certain persons of such and such years And Tacitus the grave Historian highly commends the prudence and policy of that Law Praeclarè prudenterque Caesar ordines civium veste discriminavit ut scilicet qui locis ordinibus dignationibus antestant cultu quoque ab aliis discriminarentur Caesar says that Author with admirable prudence distinguishd the several ranks of the Citizens by their Apparel so that they who were advanced above others in Offices Degrees and Honours should also be differenced by their proper habits § 6. That which compleats the Rule of Dcency is common Honesty By which I understand the general received practice of such who in all other things are of a laudable conversation The Apostle seems to proceed by this Rule Phil. 4.8 Whatsoever things are comely or honest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whatsoever things are of good report 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 think of these things where he refers the decision of what is decent to their outward Senses 1. To their eyes Whatever things are comely First see how well the fashion becomes the back of a sober grave Christian before you put it on your own First consider how a dress sits on the head of a modest chaste Virgin before you try the Experiment your selves 2. He refers the matter to their ears Whatever things are of good report We should be like that famous Artist who lay close behind his Picture to hearken what every man's judgment was of it So should we listen what the generality of sober Christians speak and judg of the new Modes and Fashions Their censure is enough to create a suspicion of the appearance of evil 1 Thes 5.22 Rom. 12.17 1 Cor. 8.21 from which the Apostle commands us to abstain Again Provide things honest in the sight of all men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 such as carry a conviction of their comeliness with them Again Providing for honest things not only in the sight of God but in the sight of men Let the inward garb of your souls the frame of your hearts be such as may approve it self to God the outward garb and deportment of your bodies such as may have a good report of good men Only here I must recommend to you these Cautions Caution 1. All customs that will authorise and warrant your imitation must be rationabiles consuetudines reasonable Customs such as clash not with offend not against any Maxime of right Reason It 's a Maxime of Reason That the particular modes of Apparel should answer the general ends of all Apparel No Custom will justifie that Mode which exposes shame and nakedness to publick view Another Maxime of Reason That what was appointed to preserve life should not be perverted to destroy it A Maxime of Reason That none should glory in that which sin and shame brought into the World And therefore no Apparel should make us proud since all Apparel was thus introduced If an inveterate Custom shall plead time out of mind and bolster up it self with Antiquity let it know That nulla consuetudo occurrit Rationi no Custom how ancient soever can prescribe against the Law of right Reason Caution 2. All fashions of Apparel that will justifie themselves by Custom must be able to plead universality among them that in other things make a Conscience of their ways and actions The Custom of a few good men or of many wicked men will be an unsafe Rule by which to judg of Decency One speckled Bird will not warrant us all to be Jayes and Magpyes A single Cato would abhor those Garments which Varro calls Vestes Vitreas Glass-Cloaths and which Suidas terms Tunicas interlucentes laticed Garments wherein under the pretence of covering the Debauchees of Rome discovered their Nakedness Nor should a thousand precedents encourage one sober Christian to herd with those in this who in many other things give a demonstration That they are under no ties of Conscience Caution 3. Not only Customs which cross the ends of Nature and the Rules of Scripture but such as are vain and trifling contribute nothing to the Rule of Decency Mat. 12.36 Our blessed Saviour has left us a smart word That every idle word that a man shall speak he shall give an account thereof in the day of judgment 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And if of every idle word no doubt of every idle action and practice If we could then certainly tell what an idle word is we might with the same labour learn what an idle action is If indeed an idle word in that Text denote a false or blasphemous speech I see not how we can make any use of it here But with the leave of that learned Paraphrast who thus glosses it I conceive an idle word is somewhat below that and does signifie whatever speech is not designed for some good end and use either Natural or Moral Discourse that has no tendency to any thing that is good or useful And if so what may we judg
walk in Strife Envy Debates Emulation Contention they will not hereby be only hindred in their Communion with one another but with God also 7. And Lastly Let the People of God walk in Fellowship with one another Let them be all united to some particular visible Church where they may enjoy all those Ordinances of Divine Worship which God hath instituted for Communion with himself Besides the Catholick Church whereof Christ is the Supream Head and Pastor there are particular Churches under the praesidency and care of particular Pastours to some of which all professed Christians ought to belong in order to their Communion with God and one another But upon this third General I shall speak somewhat further in the Application IV. I shall now come to the Fourth and last General I proposed to General IV speak to and that is the Consequences or Consectaries that arise from this whole Discourse 1. It follows hence that Communion with God is a very comprehensive Consect 1 duty It comprehends much in it It consists not in one single Grace or one single Act of the Soul or one single Duty of Religion but it comprehends the Exercise of many Graces reacheth to manifold Duties of Religion and consisteth of manifold Acts and Operations of the Soul 2. It is also a constant Duty which we are to maintain in a constant Consect 2 course and not only now and then at some solemn times or at some solemn Ordinance Not as if we ought to do nothing else but worship God which is the Communion reserved for Heaven but it is to be our dayly practise and to set some time apart for it every day and as much as we can to carry this Communion with God through the several Affairs Conditions and Actions of our Life Acquaint thy self with God said Elihu to Job chap. 22. v. 21. The Heb. is Accustome thy self with God which importeth some frequent course of approaching to God and converse with him And when it is said of Noah and Enoch that they walked with God It implies a constant course of Religion and Communion with God And when the Apostle saith Phil. 3.20 our Conversation is in Heaven it implies more than the performance now and then some Religious Worship but some constant converse with God and the things of Heaven as Citizens of the same civil Body or Society have among themselves in their civil Commerce and Conversation with one another as the Greek word there used doth import 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. No Creatures are capable of Communion with God but Angels Consect 3 and Men. The Beasts were not made for it nor are capable of it not being rational and intelligent Beings This Communion with God requires the exercise of Reason and Understanding and that in the highest improvements of them If we consider it either in the Active or Passive part of it the Beasts are not capable of it Though God hath Communicated something of himself to all his Creatures and as the Poet expresseth it Jovis omnia plena all things are full of God and his Infinite Being is in all Finite Beings yet no Creatures have Communion with him but Angels and Men Other Creatures have a Natural instinct or sagacity to preserve and propagate their respective Natures or Beings but have no sense of their Creator no impression of a Deity upon their Nature nor no rational faculties whereby they might be capable of Communion with God The Angels have Communion with God in Heaven they alwaies behold the face of God as our Saviour speaks So the Spirits of just men departed are with Christ and in nearer Communion with God than when they dwelt in their Tabernacles of Flesh And the Saints upon Earth also are not without it though in a lower degree whereby the Church Militant hath Communion with the Church Triumphant in this Communion that both have with God Heb. 12. whieh shews the excellency of rational Creatures above all others that they alone are capable of this high Employment and Priviledge Consect 4 4. The Supreme felicity of Angels and Men lies in Communion with God As they alone are capable of it so their felicity consisteth in it God hath provided a good suitable to the Natures of all his Creatures in the enjoying of which is their chief happiness but the happiness of rational and intelligent Creatures lies in himself And therefore in their first Creation they were made happy in their Communion with him And herein consisteth the chief misery of fall'n Angels and fall'n Man that they both fell from their Communion with God The Angels so fell as never to be restored to it again And man so fell also as not to be able of himself to return to it But God hath provided a way for man by Christ to be brought back again to him which if he neglects or refuseth he will then be cast into the same hopeless Condition with the Devil and his Angels Consect 5 5. The highest improvement of the faculties of the Soul are to Employ them in Communion with God They are then in their highest Operation upon the highest Object Though they are Employed about things of this lower World and ought so to be in their proper bounds yet these are not their highest Operations which they are capable of As the highest use that could be made of Beasts under the Law was to make them Sacrifices to God and when the Israelites brought Gold Silver Purple Scarlet and precious Stones for the use and service of the Sanctuary they devoted them to the highest service they were capable of So when the faculties of the Soul are made a Sanctuary to God and employed in Communion with him they receive their highest improvement Lastly Communion with God is the Life of Religion It is but a dead thing without it All Religion hath respect to a Deity either to confer Honour upon it or to have Communion with it especially the true Religion without the former it finds no acceptance with God without the latter it is unprofitable to our selves yea we may grow worse under all our profession What the Body is without the Soul and what the matter without the form that is Religion where men find no Influence from Heaven upon their Hearts and have no Communion with God I next proceed to the Application I. Take notice with an holy admiration of the condescending goodness Vse I of God to admit any of the Sons of Men into fellowship with himself That there should be fellowship where there is such infinite inequality such infinite distance yea with such as had provok't him and disobliged him by their wilful departure from him To assume our Nature into Union and Communion with God was great condescent and so it is to receive any of our persons Will God indeed dwell on Earth said Solomon when he had built God an House for him to dwell in amongst his people For God to approach in wayes of such
the true Religion Though I am far from so loose and extravagant a Charity as to judge that Men may be saved in any Religion whatever if they do but live suitably to the Principles and Rules of that Religion when there are so many false so many Idolatrous ones so many which deny fundamental truths or maintain damnable errors Yet on the other side I am not so uncharitable as to confine true religiousness and consequently final Salvation to any particular sect or sort or party of Men professing Christianity to the exclusion of all that dissent from them True Religion is more affection and Practice than Doctrine or Nation and is seated more in the heart than in the head Men may be really gracious and so in truth religious in Gods account who yet differ in some things from others who are no less truly religious too There is indeed but one true Religion in the World but in that we must distinguish between principles and conclusions and those either nearer or more remote between fundamentals and superstructures and those either which touch the foundation or are farther from it between substance and circumstances things necessary or not necessary to the being or to the well being of Religion In some things they that are wise and godly may differ without prejudice to the Salvation of either Every truth is not necessary to Salvation nor is every error de facto Damning All Mens Light is not alike cleer nor are all Mens Minds equally enlightened some see more than others and some more clearly nor is every degree of Light which shall be for the perfection of Saints hereafter necessary while they are here in order to their Salvation There may be the unity of Faith in the main and of Love too where yet there is some disagrement about some things believed It is confessed that there is but one way of Salvation that of Faith and Holiness from which whatever by-paths of error leads Men aside they do at the same time carry them off from the end of Faith the Salvation of their Souls whatever is inconsistent with either Faith or Holiness is inconsistent likewise with Salvation But every difference or mistake about such truths as are not necessarily saving must not presently be looked upon as a false way or an error certainly Damning The way to Life is called the narrow way but is it therefore indivisible Is there no Latitude in it may not Two or Three or Four or Five go abrest in it Must all go in the self-same Track or Path May not several Paths be in the same great Road or run along by the side of it and lead to the same place which if sometimes they decline a little from the Road yet before the end fall in again with it and for the main are parallel to it It is as certain that truth is simplex error is multiformis truth is but one and error is various and whatever in the least deflects from truth must be a degree of error as it is that there can be but one perfectly strait Line between any two Points But may not a Line that divaricates a little from the strait one and is so far crooked run in again to it Doth any Saint on Earth attain to the whole of truth without any mistake so much as in lesser things Doth any keep exactly to the strait Line so as never to take a crooked step never in any thing to go off from it Some indeed may miss it in fewer things some in more and yet both keeping to what is necessary hit it in the main Some may go to Heaven more directly and with fewer wandrings when others may go farther aside and fetch a greater compass and yet at last arrive at it 2. Positively by Religious I understand those 1. Who as to the Doctrine of Christianity hold the head Col. 2.19 keep to that only foundation which God hath laid the Lord Jesus Christ though perhaps they may build some things on it which are not suitable to it Wood Hay Stubble 1 Cor. 3.12 such whose works shall be burnt yet themselves saved though with difficulty and as by Fire verse 15. such I mean therefore as own so much truth as is necessary to the Life of Faith and Power of Godliness and maintain no error which is inconsistent with either 2. Those who as to the Practice of Christianity fear God and work righteousness Acts 10.35 they that not only believe in Christ but live in obedience to him not only have received Christ Jesus the Lord but walk in him Col. 2.6 All true Religion consists in Faith and Holiness it is nothing else but a glorifying God by believing and obeying a seeking Salvation in that way and method in which alone God hath determined to bring Men to it i. e. through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the truth 2 Thes 2.13 whoever therefore they are that do unfeignedly believe in the Lord Jesus Christ and live up to that Faith are truly Religious though in some lesser things they may dissent from others who have the same Faith and practice the same Holiness So that from being thus religious I exclude not only Atheists that have no Religion Idolaters damnable Hereticks and all those whose principles are inconsistent with or repugnant to the truth of the Gospel so are of a false Religion but even among those that profess the truth I exclude 1. Those that are grosly ignorant know not the first principles of Christianity understand not what they own and pretend to believe 2. Those that are profane scandalous vitious livers despisers of them that are good persecutors of powerful godliness These are not real Saints but a prophane generation the Seed of the Serpent not of God 3. Hypocrites masked professors that make a shew of Religion to serve a carnal interest that have a form of godliness but deny the power of it 2 Tim. 3.5 have unsound hearts though under never so smooth faces In a word all those that are destitute of true Faith and real Holiness that allow themselves in any way of known sins whether more often as the second sort or more secret and close as these last 2. How or in what respects the religious of a Nation are the strength of it In order to the stating of this I shall premise one distinction The Holy Seed or religious in a Nation may be considered either 1. As being actually in the World and actually in a state of Grace brought into Christs Fold engaged in Gods ways effectually called and sanctified 2. Or as being in the World but not yet converted though in Gods time to be converted elect unbelievers He that is a sinner at present may be a Saint in time a Publican may come to be an Apostle nay a persecutor of the Saints may be called to preach that Faith which once he destroyed Gal. 1.23 They that are Christs Sheep by election may in time nay certainly
this in our selves and then How we may evidence it in others 1. How may a Believer experience in himself that that Serious Godliness he lives in the Practice of is more than a Fancy 1. See that your Religiousness came into you the right way was wrought in you by the Word of God the power of which ye have found changing your Hearts and reforming your Lives When men leap into Religion they know not how can give no account to themselves of their Conversion or Reformation that the Word which is the Ordinary means God useth in converting Sinners hath had any influence upon them in working such a change it is suspicious that what they take to be Godliness in themselves is not reall that which is unaccountable is most like to be a Fancy True a man may not know the just time when God did work Grace in his heart nor the particular Word which was the Seed of it or which did first draw the heart to a closing with the Promise and subjecting it self to the terms of the Gospel he may not know when the new man was first quickned in him not be able to discern distinctly the first vital motions of Grace in his Soul some may have been wrought on in their Education by which they have been restrained from more gross Sins and influenced to some diligence in Religious duties and in them the passing from one extream to the other from a state of Nature to a state of Grace may not be so remarkable and therefore not so easily discerned However a change they find and that the Word hath wrought it whch they have experienced Effectual in many things it hath been the means at one time or other of enlightning their minds melting their hearts exciting their affections directing their ways and refreshing their Spirits though they cannot say what truth wrought the first degree of Grace yet they can say such and such truths have had an influence upon them and promoted the work whenever it was wrought such a Command quickned them to their Duty another brought them off from some evil way another helped them when they were tempted such a Promise supported them when burdened eased them when troubled or comforted them when cast down and so what good they have done the Word hath put them upon it what evil they have escaped that hath kept them from it what refreshment they have had that hath brought it in They know they are in their journey to Heaven and that they do not Dream that they are so because if they cannot tell which was absolutely the first step they took in the way yet they are sensible of many Stages they have travelled many removes they have made what accidents have befallen them what difficulties they have met with what Guide they had what directions were given them their journeying agrees with the map of their way the Word hath been a light to their Feet and a Lamp to their Paths * Psal 119.105 that hath still gone before them and conducted them in their march and their steps have been ordered according to it † Psa 119.133 they have not taken up a Religion at a days warning not passed from being prophane and worldly to be even superstitiously strict all upon a suddain without being able to give a reason of so great a change Look therefore to the way of Gods working upon you and the means he made use of in it and though you cannot trace the workings of his grace in all the particular steps he hath taken yet ye may conclude it to be his Work and not your own fancy because it was wrought in his way and by his Word which is his usual Instrument in it 2. See to your Faith as to the Foundation of it and the Effects of it that it be rightly grounded and rightly qualified built upon the Word and fruitfull in good works 1. See to the Foundation of it that it be the Word it self and not your own mistakes about it When men misunderstand the Scripture and so believe it they Build on their own Errors not Gods Truth and then what they call Faith is but a Fancy as not being grounded on the Word of God but their own Conceits See therefore that ye rightly understand what ye profess to believe and know the mind of God in the Word and so indeed believe what he speaks not what you imagine See that your Faith respect Commands as well as Promises Duties as well as Priviledges what you are to do as well as what you are to expect God joyns both together and if you seperate them you set up a Conceit of your own instead of his Truth Take heed of believing Promises as absolute when they are conditional or when made with some limitations or restrictions or when they suppose the use of some means prescribed by the Command in such cases men may think they believe when they do not there being no right Object for their Faith they believe what God never spoke This fallacy appears when men apply Promises to themselves but overlook the Condition or the Command annexed as suppose believe they shall be Pardoned though they never desire to be purged shall find mercy though they do not forsake Sin contrary to the tenour of the Word Prov. 28.14 or that they shall see God though they do not follow after holiness contrary to Heb. 12.14 And so when they believe one promise and not another the Promise of Justification but not of Sanctification when yet there is a connexion between them and to whom one belongs the other belongs too In a word let your Faith take in its Object in the whole Latitude there being the same reason Gods Authority for your believing one truth as well as another 2. See to the Effects and Fruits of it the reality of it must be proved by the fruits of it a Barren Faith is a dead Faith and indeed if any Faith be a Fancy it is the Faith of those that live destitute of Holiness and under the Dominion of Sin and yet expect Eternal Salvation bring forth no Fruit to Holiness and yet hope the End will be Everlasting life Faith will work as long as it lives and where there is no Fruit you may be sure there is no Root if it Act not it lives not 3. Therefore look to your Obedience too not only that it be as in the former but that it be Right and such as it should be that is Regular Vniversal Spiritual for otherwise it is not reasonable 1. Regular such as the Word of God calls for and hath its warrant from thence whatsoever we do in the things of God and what we would have look'd on as Acts of Obedience should be done with a respect to Gods Commands and not of our own heads Obedience it is not if it be not Commanded Men may do many seemingly good things and place Religion in them and think they please God by