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

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you be ignorant of Gods Wi●l of your duty you are inexcus●bl● becau●e the Sunne of light is risen upon you 〈◊〉 ● 1. Ephesians 4 17 18 19 20 2. G●● and keep 〈◊〉 warmth in your hearts The Sun●e hath an heating vertue C●ldness● of sp●●●t is a temper unbefitting a childe of God If a man be cold in winter when the Sunne is at a great distance 't is more excusabl● but to be cold when the Summer Sunne shines hot upon him argues great distemper To be luke-warme when Christ is risen upon you is inexcusable Christ expects heat and fervency from you in all your duties hot love hot devotion fervency of spirit in the service of God is expected from you R●m 12. 11. you will shame the beames of Christ if you have not a holy warmth in all your services My heart saith David was hot within me Psal 39. 3. Ex omni parte caluit igne Dei i. e. a-more Coelestium A cold-hearted Christian shames the Sun 3. Be very fruitfull The Sunne hath a fructifying vertue it ripens every thing Christians must be carefull that their graces be ripened raw lean weak graces shame the beames of Christ you must be sure to grow in grace to perfect holinesse 2 Cor. 7. 1. 4. Keep your soules sweet The Sunne hath a sweetning vertue A mouldy musty heart disparageth Christ you must be as the smell of a field which God hath blessed 5. Be raised up in affection to heavenly things The Sunne hath an exhaling vertue Christians must be higher then others Revel 12. 1. 6. Nourish spirituall softnesse The Sunne hath a molifying vertue A hard frozen heart is a shame to Christ Davids heart was like melting wax Psalme 22. 14. Josiahs heart was tender 2 Kings 22. 19. A frown from God an angry word from God must melt a Christians heart If your hearts be hard Christ may justly draw his beams from you if the Sunne of righteousnesse doth not melt you it is because you are clay not wax 3. For consolation Great comfort ariseth hence to godly men 1. Against spiritual darknesses Sometimes Gods people see neither Sunne nor Starres Esay 50. 10. Well be comforted Christ is the Sunne of righteousnesse he will arise and scatter all those black mists that trouble you your Sun is not set it is only eclipsed the light of it will shine again 2. Against all your own unrighteousnesse The servants of God finde much unrighteousnesse and guilt in themselves because of it they are cast down and go heavily Well remember Christ is a Sun of righteousness he is as full of righteousness as the Sun is of light and his righteousnesse is for thy benefit 'T is as much thine as if it were thine own 3. Against the want of sublunary comforts Gods people have often but little of these things Well yet the Sun is up what folly is it to complaine for want of Moon-light or Star-light when the Sunne shines If God hath cloathed you with the Sunne the want of Moon and Starres may well be endured CANT 1. 3. Thy Name is as ointment poured XXVII SERM. at Mary Wolnoth Lon. May 15. 1653. forth THe scope of the Holy Ghost in this song is to discover the exceeding great love that is between Jesus Christ and his Church We may see here Christ and his Church as it were striving who should expresse their love to each other most At the second verse in this Chapter the Church doth passionately desire to be made partaker of further Communion with Christ Let him kisse me with the kisses of his mouth Those who have once tasted of the sweetnesse of Christs love are exceedingly carried out after a further degree of his love The reason of this passionate desire is ver 2 3. namely from the sweetnesse of his love This is set out by a double comparison 1. His love is better then wine v. 2. 2. It s more desireable then precious ointments This is mentioned in the beginning of the third ver Because of the savour of thy good ointments and amplified further in the text Thy name is as ointment poured forth The words are a proposition in which we have 1. The subject Thy Name 2. The predicate Oyntment poured forth By the name of Christ some would understand the Doctrine of the Gospel So Ainsworth by his name saith he is meant the Doctrine of grace the Law of faith His Doctrine is sometimes in Scripture called his Name as the Iles shall wait for his Law Esay 42. 4. Which is expounded in his Name shall the Gentiles trust Mat. 12. 21. And it is most certain that his Law is far more sweet then the most precious oyntment But yet by his Name in this place we are better to understand his person as it is set forth in the Gospel his person is often called his Name as Mat. 10. 22. Ye shall be hated of all men for my Names sake and Act 9. 16. I will shew him how great things be must suffer for my names sake that is for my sake The Observation is this Doct. That Jesus Christ is like ointment poured forth Jesus Christ is spiritual ointment His Name both in the Hebrew and Greek signifies anointing or anointed He is called in Dan. 9. 26. Messiah which the Septuagint render 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 anointing The Prophet Esay chap. 10. 27. calls him the anointing It is reported by Historians that at the birth of Christ in Rome a sudden fountaine of Oyle sprung up and flowed for a day and a night together our Annotatours mention it in their Exposition of this text The Oyles or Ointments used in sundry cases under the ceremonial Law were some way or other typical of Christ the true ointment In the handling of this Doctrine I shall open these foure things by way of Explication 1. In what respects Christ is compared to ointment 2. Why he is compared to ointment poured forth 3. How this ointment is poured forth 4. How Christ excels all other ointments 1. For the first 1. Christ is ointment in regard of that divine unction wherewith he was anointed by God The Scripture makes mention of Christs being anointed with the graces of the Spirit as our Mediator This was typified by the anointing of the Priests under the Law especially of the high-Priest you may read at large of the holy ointment and of the anointing of Aaron and his sons with it Exod. 30. 23 24 25 30. It was also typified by the anointing of Kings and Prophets ye may read much in Scripture of the anointing of these Elisha was anointed to the office of a Prophet 1 Kings 19. 16. and Kings were also anointed We read of Davids anointing 1 Sam. 16. 1. of Solomons anointing 1 King 1. 34. 39. All these were types of Christ the great King Prophet and Priest of his Church the anointing Oyle did typifie the graces of the Spirit the anointing of Aaron with that Oyle did typifie Christs anointing with
cured Thousands and ten thousands are now in heaven that have been as si●k as thou canst be 2. Christ i● still in a way of curing His hand is in Indeed his hand is never out 3. He hath undertaken to cure all thy diseases He hath given the hand to his Father 4. He hath healed them all 〈◊〉 He hath done that which will heale you He hath shed his blood he hath poured out his Spirit c. 5. He is related to you Your brother your kinsman your husband your head a part of your self If a sick man had a brother or husband a Physician which could cure him would he despair c Why should a sick Christian despaire of cure whose husband is such a Physician 1. Object But I have many diseases upon me what hope shall I have Sol. Christ can cure all manner of diseases He cured Paul a blasphemer c. He cured Mary Magdalen He cured Manasseh c. Let thy disease be what it will so Christ be thy Physician 2. Object But my diseases have been long upon me what hope shall I have Sol. Christ can cure long diseases He cured one that was eighteen yeares diseased Luke 13. 16. Another that had been sick thirty eight yeares John 5. 5. All the diseases he cures are old diseases The original fountaine of all is from the fall of Adam 3. Object But I have relapsed c. what hope shall I have Sol. There is a peculiar promise for this disease Hos 14. 4. Peter relapsed and Christ healed him c. Whatever your diseases are if you will be willing to be cured Christ is willing to heal you Onely you must First Take Christs counsel Follow his Direction Never any miscarried that took Christs advice Secondly Keep back no disease Let him heale all or he will heale none Oh that Christ might get some custome with you this day 4. Object But I am worse since Christ took me in hand c. Sol. 1. Thou art so much the better because thou thinkest thy self worse if it be thy complaint that thou art worse 2. Let Christ alone with the cure he goes the safest way yea he goes the neerest way when he seems to go the farthest way 3 Take notice of the alsufficiency of Christ He is every thing to the soule which it wants The soul wants bread Christ is that the soule wants drink Christ is that the soule wants rayment Christ is that the soul wants a shadow Christ is that the soul wants a Physician and Christ is a Physician not a Mountebank but a learned skilful Physician The soule that hath Christ hath every thing One Jesus Christ is enough for all the Necessities of the soule 4. What comfort is this for the children of God! We get new falls every day we breed new diseases every day We contract new guilt new filth Christ is a Physician he hath healing in his wings he can cure your deadnesse your dulnesse your hardnesse your blindnesse c. He is a compassionate Physician He is touched with the sense of your infirmities Heb. 4. 15. Get nearer and nearer to Christ get farther under his healing wings c. 5. Rob not Christ of the honour of this Doctrine Christ is robbed of the honour of a Physician two wayes 1. When we go to other Physicians To creatures to duties to carnal mirth c. all which are Physicians of no value 2. When we attribute our spiritual healing to our selves or any creature and not to Christ He that robs Christ of the honour of a Physician shall when he is sick perhaps want a Physician Doct. 3. That there are many sick of this spiritual disease who think themselves to be whole As in regard of the body many that are very full of diseases judge themselves to be healthy and strong so very many there are who are mortally sick of spiritual maladies and yet conceive themselves to be in perfect health As many that are spiritualy healed think themselves sick unto death so many that are spiritually sick unto death judge themselves to be in a healthful estate Thus it was with the vain glorious Pharisee Luke 18. 11. he thought himself perfectly in health when as he was ready to drop into his grave yea to fall into hell through the abundance of his spiritual sicknesses Thus it was with those other Pharisees John 9. 39 40. Our Saviour hints their sad condition to them v. 9. They imagin'd themselves unconcern'd in what was spoken Are we also blinde q. d. our eyes are as cleare as the eyes of any in the world we are far from blindnesse They thought themselves to see as perfectly as any v. 40. Thus was it with the Church of Laodicea Rev. 3. 17. she thought her condition as good as the best in the world when she was indeed as sad a spectacle as the earth bore Experience shews it to be so still and that with the greatest part of men in the world Come to men that are grossely profane tell them of their dangerous condition ask them why they will not think of another course c. What is their answer Trouble not your self about us we are well our condition is good we hope to be saved as well as you that are so st●nct and so zealous heaven belongs to us as well as to you c. But whence comes this to passe I shall reduce all to these heads or springs First Ignorance The greatest part of men are grossely ignorant of their spiritual estate They know not they do not understand their inward estate The Scripture tells us that a carnal condition is an ignorant condition Eph. 4. 18. 1 Pet. 1 14 A carnal heart is spiritually an ignorant and blinde heart The state of nature is called a state of darknesse Acts 26. 18. And a state of folly Prov. 5. 23. And all such men are called spiritual fooles Psalme 14. 1. They may know much in outward things they may know much of the letter of the Scripture but as to saving knowledge they are very ignorant and without understanding And as they are ignorant of other matters so they are ignorant of their spiritual condition This ignorance is to be ascribed to these four heads 1. They want the Spirit of God The holy Spirit is the principle of all saving light It is called by the Apostle The Spirit of wisdome and revelation Eph. 1. 17. because all true wisdom and saving illumination is the work of the Spirit the Spirit gives us power to discern and light wherby to see spiritual things Pregnancy of natural wit without the Spirit of God can never make a person wise unto salvation Elihu tells Job Chap. 32. 8. There is a spirit in man and the inspiration of the Almighty giveth him wisdome He that wants this spirit cannot possibly know his spiritual estate But now many men all unregenerate men want this Spirit Ergo. This the Apostle largely disputes in 1 Cor. 2. 10 11 12 13
's very like the Pharisee spake no more then what was true for they were generally men very inoffensive as to all such things For the discovering of this false foundation I shall lay down foure things viz. 1. 'T is a very great mercy to be freed from these scandalous sinnes If God have preserved you from these visible diseases that you have none of these botches of Egypt upon you it is to be acknowledged as a very great blessing The Pharisee did not amisse in blessing God that he was no Extortioner if he had done it upon a right ground if he had not gone on to censure the Publican he had not been blamed but commended for it David blesses God for preserving him from the sinne of murther upon Abigails perswasion Vid. 1 Samuel 25. 32 33. And there is very great reason for it For 1 Hereby we are delivered from much anguish and torment of conscience These scandalous sinnes as they do in an extraordinary manner waste the conscience so they do lay a foundation of much horrour and trouble in the soul every sinne creates much torment but these great abominations create exceeding much What horrour did Davids Adultery and Murther cast into his spirit Though God pardoned them both to him yet he was filled with anguish a long time after vid. Ps 6. Ps 38. Ps 50. 1. Now t is a great mercy when God prevents any anguish 2. Hereby we are delivered from being hurtful examples to other men Grosse scandalous offences are very prejudicial to others The hearts of those that are good are grieved and such as are wicked are caused to stumble oftentimes to their eternal ruine Davids sin gave great occasion of sin to others Now it 's a great mercy when God keeps a person from being an instrument of hurt to others especially of hurt to their soules 2. Such as expect salvation must keep themselves from such wickednesses Vid. 1 Cor. 6. 9 10. Heaven is not a place of common receipt for good and bad 'T is not like your ordinary Innes which lodge all kinde of passengers without difference such Lepers so living and dying must expect to go to another place Rev. 22. 15. Without shall be dogs c. 3. 'T is possible for a person to be free from these abominations and yet to be mortally sick of spiritual diseases Every sick man hath not the plague A man may die of a consumption as well as of a Fever A person may be in a damnable state that never committed murther or uncleannesse 1. The Pharisee was free from all these impieties and yet deadly sick in his soule Luke 18. 11. Paul when he was a Pharisee saith that he was blamelesse concerning all such enormities Phil. 3. 6. and yet at that time sick even unto death so he in Mat. 32. 11. so the five Virgins Mat. 25. 1. Those in 2 Pet. 2. 18 20. A natural conscience may keep men from such enormities The penalty of humane Lawes may preser●● 〈…〉 these great wickednesses Civil education may preserve a man from falling into these wickednesses A desire to keep our reputation in the world with men with whom we converse may keep us from these high impieties Meer restraint may do this 2. If freedome from these offences were enough to proclaime men to be spiritually whole then no hypocrite should be sick A man must be free from all these sinnes before he be advanced into the hypocrites forme Now we know that every hypocrite is spiritually and mortally sick Yea the Scripture tells us that hell is prepared for the hypocrites other sinners are said to have their portion with the hypocrites Mat. 2● 51. The hypocrite is of all sinners the special proprietor of Hell and yet he is free from all these offences 3. It 's possible for one that hath no saving grace in his heart to be free from these offences Though every one that hath grace will abandon these sins yet every one that is free from these sins hath not grace The instances mentioned before will prove this But every one that wants saving grace is under the rage of spiritual sicknesses Yea he that is without true grace is not onely sick in sinne but dead in sin Eph. 2. 1. and yet those that are dead in sin may be free from these wickednesses 4. Although many be free from the actual commission of these sinnes yet they have the roots of these sinnes in their hearts Every sinne is in that bundle of sinne which we call original There is pride and murther and theft c Now the pollution of nature if it be not healed by justifying grace and pardoning mercy and sanctifying grace is enough to make the soule sick and that unto death Yea indeed the great sicknesse of the soul lies there There lies the strength of sinne and the heat of sinne David when he bewailes his murther goes to that as the root of it Psalme 51. 5. All a mans actual sinnes be they never so grosse might soone be healed if that were but healed This is the fountaine of blood This is the law of sin here is the devils magazine 5. Though thou art free from th●se foule sins yet thou mayest have some secret idol or other set up in thy heart Now the least sin a vaine thought is a mortal sicknesse in it selfe and if it be not healed will prove a soul-destroying sicknesse The Papists have devised a distinction of sinnes venial and sinnes mortal That there are some sinnes that in their own nature do not make a man liable to eternal death but onely to temporal chastisement so Bellarmine teaches The Scripture knows no such distinction nor can we allow it All sinnes are venial to true repentance except that one sinne against the holy Ghost He that commits that shall never be forgiven But there is no sin venial in its own nature the least is a mortal sicknesse and deserves eternal death So saith the Scripture Gal. 3. 10. Rom. 6. ult the Apostle speaks of all sinne that is opposed to legal righteousnesse and there is no sinne so small but it is a breach of the Law of God For of every idle word that a man shall speak he shall give an account at the day of judgement Mat. 12. 36. What is lesse then an idle word and yet that doth in its own nature deserve wrath By all these things it appeares that a man may be spiritually 〈…〉 thief nor drunkard c. 4. Yet may a person gather evideners of grace from his acting against sinne in some cases David argues so Ps 18. 23. And therefore for the winding up of this point I shall lay down some Rules whereby a person may know whether his acting against sinne be from a principle of saving grace or meerly from common restraint 1. He that forbears sinne from a principle of true grace doth act from the Authority and declaration of anaked truth When the immediate declaration of Gods Will in his Word
of his soul say that his end in coming to duties publick and private is because he would see him whom his soule loveth and therefore he is not satisfied with a duty if he meet not with God in it he may then comfortably conclude from the performing of duties a principle of grace in his heart 3. A desire to get corruption weakned and grace strengthened This is one end why God hath instituted his Ordinances that sinne may be outed thereby and grace confirmed 2 Cor. 10. 4. and 1 Pet. 2. 2. Now when a person can in the integrity of his soule say that he prays heares c. that he may get love increased faith confirmed grace exercised that he may get his heart warmed his conscience purified then he may comfortably conclude from such duties that his heart is upright with God 3. When the deportment is fair after duties I shall here name two things First When we blesse God for duties 'T is a great mercy to enjoy the Ordinances of God Psal 147. 19 20. Now when you return from prayer hearing c. if you can from your souls blesse the Lord that you have had such an opportunity from a sincere heart then you may conclude that your hearts have a principle in them above nature when you look upon them as priviledges Secondly When the doing of duties make you fruitful When you heare and give up your selves to be ruled by the Word you heare Rom. 6. 17. When you desire as well to be doers of the Word as hearers of it Jam. 1. 22 23 24. When you pray and desire to live the prayers you make to God When your soules are troubled that you cannot finde that fruitful efficacy of your duties upon your hearts and in your lives which you would fain find You can heartily chide your selves that you are no better for your duties When you go to prayer or to hearing or to the Table of the Lord your earne●● 〈…〉 is that he would make you 〈…〉 When you go into your ●l●eset to 〈◊〉 the Word you send up some ejaculation to heaven that the Word may be effectual upon your soul● c. then you may comfortably conclude that there is a supernatural work upon your hearts But if these things be not in you in some degree and measure the bare performance of duties though they he done never so frequently never so exactly as to the outwards of them will be no ground to you for the reasons above mentioned that you are in a good condition This is the second false Rule 3. The third false Rule Outward Prosperity Multitudes of men judge of their spiritual condition by the Rule of outward Prosperity They think their soules are in health because their bodies are in health they think they are inwardly prosperous because they are outwardly happy They have great revenues a full trading they have a multitude of children their flocks and their heards are increased they are advanced to great honours therefore they blesse themselves and say God loves them and they are highly in his favour They think they are the heires of heaven because they are the possessors of the earth Thus it was with the ten tribes when the Prophets threatned the judgements of God against them for their sinnes they ran to this Sanctuary to secure themselves they concluded Gods special favour from outward prosperity Vid. Hos 12. 8. 'T is the general and common refuge of worldly men They think their hearts are full of grace because their purses are full of gold because the world dandles them upon her lap they think God dandles them upon his knee For the removal of this I shall propound four things First 'T is a mercy in it self to enjoy a competency of these outward things To have health wealth prosperitie plentie is a mercy to be received with much thankfulnesse from God To be poore sicklie weak is in it selfe an evil and to be rich strong healthful is in its own nature a blessing which I shall prove by these two Arguments 1. The Scripture puts outward prosperity amongst blessings Deut. 28. 3 4 5 to 15. So Lev. 26. 3 4 c. Now what the Scripture calls blessing is in its own nature a blessing The judgment of God is according to truth 2. Those which are rich c. have more opportunities of doing good then such as are poore They may by their outward estates promote Religion help to advance the worship of God in the world be instruments of planting the Gospel in forreigne parts A good purse and a gracious heart meeting together may be very instrumental sundry wayes for the glory of God and the good of men They may be the meanes of bringing in many to God both by their example which is very prevalent in the world and by giving unto men rewards for godlinesse sake One rich man in a Parish may be a great help to make a Parish Religious if not in heart yet in profession which is a great mercy Rich men have a capacity of doing that good which men of meaner condition want They may relieve prisoners cloath the naked feed the hungry ransome captives which other men cannot do Now it 's a mercy to be put into a capacity of doing good 〈…〉 a good man when he is not capable 〈…〉 the good he would though it be but a temporal good 'T is a greater trouble to a good man not to be able to give then it is to the poore to be turned away without giving Though in such case the liberality of the heart is accepted instead of the liberality of the hand He that would give when he hath not to give is set down in Gods Kalendar for a bountiful man though he give nothing at all This is the first conclusion Secondly Riches and grace do sometimes go together Outward Prosperity and inward do sometimes meet in the same person 'T is not impossible that rich men should be good men We have some instances of this in Scripture Abraham was very holy Called the righteous man Esay 41. 2. the Father of the faithful The friend of God c. and yet Abraham was very rich Gen. 24. 35. Job was exceeding pious a man whom God boasts of to Satan Job 1. 8. and yet he was very rich He had plenty of children those are first put in the inventory and he was rich in all other wealth ver 3. he had seven thousand sheep three thousand camels five hundred yoke of oxen five hundred she asses and a very great houshold and Chap. ult when his estate is surveyed againe you will finde it doubled ver 12. many other instances we have in Scripture of the Association of grace and greatnesse This God doth for these six Reasons 1. To confute the judgement of the world Plain dealing is a jewel saith the world but he that useth it will die a beggar God gives these things to his people to crosse that wicked Proverb 2. To
whom the birth of Christ was first pre●ched Luke 2. 8. Jesus Christ is the desender of his sheep he preserves them carefully from them that would devoure them The Devil hath been way-laying them and attempting upon them ever since the fall of Adam and yet the eye o● 〈…〉 was so diligent and watchful 〈…〉 ●ver able to get the least lamb o● 〈…〉 shall he ever be able to gaine one o● 〈…〉 they be all folded up in heaven The sheep of Christ are all sealed in their foreheads so we reade Rev. 7. 3 4. Why are they sealed First they are sealed for distinction Secondly they are sealed for secrecy Thirdly they are sealed for security Neither men nor devils can break open this seale This similitude is used Cant. 4. 12. A garden enclosed a spring shut up a fountaine sealed under all those expressions is set out the fence which Christ makes about his sheep for their preservation Though Christ sometime suffer their bodies to be torne and devoured by men and though he suffer their soules to be assaulted yet he will not suffer their soules to be destroyed He did once lay down his life for them John 10. 11 15. and having died for them he will preserve them There is a six-fold defence which Christ sets upon every sheep for his preservation from Satan 1 His death The grave of Christ is a fold in which the sheep sleep safely his Sep●lcher is a hedge about the Church I mean the vertue and merit of his death Jesus Christ by his death hath overcome the Devil and all his Host Col. 2. 15. he hath taken him captive and delivered the sheep out of his hands Now so long as the death of Christ is in force and in force it shall be for ever and ever the sheep shall be defended The sea of Christs blood doth encompasse every sheep of the fold and Satan must either wade thorough or dry up 〈…〉 before he can annoy the sheep as 〈…〉 eternal salvation Roare and rage he may mine or teare in pieces he cannot the bottomlesse sea of Christs blood flows continually about them 2 His intercession The Scripture makes mention of the Advocateship of Christ for his people Heb. 7. 25. He lives for ever to make intercession therefore he is able to save 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This Advocateship of Christ hath three properties First it is full Secondly 't is constant Thirdly 't is effectual This intercession is the s●eeps safe-guar● Christ must ●e outed from the work of mediation before any of his sheep can be eternally hurt and outed he cannot be for his Priest-hood is an everlasting Priest-hood Ps 110. 4. Thou art a Priest for ever c. 3 The presence of Christ We learn from Scripture that Jesus Christ is ever present with his sheep he is not one moment absent from the fold ●e by his spiritual presence lodgeth with them every night and walks with them all the day Of this presence of Christ the Holy Ghost speak● Rev. 14. 1. He stands on the Mount Sion he stands not in a running posture but in a watching posture The devil must drive Christ from his standing before he can snatch away any of the sheep for he stands there as a guard to them 4 The mystical union between him and the sheep The Scripture makes mention of this union John 17. 23. I in them and Thou in me Every sheep grows in the Shepherds side as a member of his body Now this union is an indissoluble union As the natural union between the Sonne and the Father can 〈…〉 so neither can the 〈…〉 Christ and the sheep 〈…〉 and mighty hedge about the sheep 〈…〉 must drag Christ to hell before he can 〈…〉 any of the sheep thither for they are bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh 5 The promise of Christ Jesus Christ hath engaged his Word and this engagement is recorded in the Scriptures that the gates of Hell shal not prevaile against the Church Ma● 16. 18. This promise is not a rash indiscreet but a deliberate sober advised promise 'T is not the promise of a fraudul●nt person but of a faithful Saviour for he is the Amen the faithful and t●ue witnesse Rev. 3. 14. This promise is the Churches safety Satan must disannul this before he can devour the sheep and disannulled it cannot be for his Word endureth for ever in heaven 6 His recommending of them to his Father Jesus Christ a little before his death made his last Will and Testament In this Testament amongst other things he did solemnly comm●nd the tuition of his sheep to his Fathers care intreating him by all the dearnesse between them that he would preserve them from the devil and all his evil designes against them This is set down fully John 17. 11. 15. he had received them from the Father upon his recommendation v. 9. and he had kept them safe while he was with them now he intreats the Father that as he had kept them upon his recommendation so he would now likewise for his sake undertake the tuition of them v. 12. While I was in the world I kept them c. So long as Christs Testament is in force so long as God 〈…〉 of Christs bequeathment and accept of i● he will for ever the sheep shall be safe 4. A Shepherd gathers his sheep when they are s●attered When either by dogs or stormes or by their own vo●untary wandring they have been dispersed the Shepherds work is to gather them againe Ezek 34. 12. Jesus Christ is a good Shepherd in this respect the sheep are wanton they wander and stray Christ reduceth them brings them to the fold How often doth every sheep wander so often as they wander doth Christ reduce them You know the parable Luke 15. 4 5 6 c. And he will never leave till he have gathered them into heaven where they shall scatter no more He gathers them from their first dispersion in unregeneracy when they wander upon the mounts of profanenesse and unbelief c. When they are scattered by persecution temptation c. he still gathers them He gathered them when they were scattered in Babylon in the dispersion in the Apostles dayes of which you read Acts 8. He hath Gentile sheep scattered Jewish sheep dispersed both these will he gather the Gentiles John 10. 16. the Jews 2 Chr. 16. 6 7 8 9. One end of the Ministery is to gather the scattered sheep who were never converted One end of the Min●stery and discipline is to gather them that wander after conversion See the office of Christ to this purpose Eph 1. 10. He is the Centre in which all things meet All are to be gathered together by him to him and in him his meaning is all the Elect are gathered to a head as the word signifies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Christ who is the Head of the body and at the● day 〈…〉 he will gather them all 〈…〉 that they shall be
work is wrought By this Word is the soule first cut off from the wilde stock of corrupt nature and planted into the true Olive-tree or Vine Jesus Christ Hence the work of planting is in Scripture attributed to the Ministers of the Gospel 1 Cor. 3. 6 7. I have planted saith the Apostle Apollo watered God indeed is the great Planter So v. 1. of this Chapter I am the true Vine and my Father i● the 〈◊〉 He is the Master-Planter the Ministers are subordinate-planters We are labourers together with God 1 Cor. 3. 9. They are so called because by the Word preached this great work is done This the Prophet clearly affirmes Esay 61. 1 2 3. The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me because the Lord hath anointed me to preach Christ that they might be called trees of righteousnesse the planting of the Lord. These mystical trees are Gods planting but the instrument wherby they are made such trees is the Word preached Hence the Word is called the incorruptible seed of regeneration 1 Pet. 1. 23. As all the Trees and Plants in the first Creation were set and sprung up by the Word of God Gen. 1. 11 12. So are all these mystical Branches ingraffed by the Ministerial Word 2. The Spirit of God The Holy Ghost is the immediate Instrument whereby the soule is ingraffed It is the Spirit which gives efficacy to the Word both to cut off the soule from the stock of nature and to implant it into the Stock of grace The Word would never be able to tear off any person from his first root if it were not edged and streng●hred by the Spirit of God The Scripture calle●h the Holy Ghost the finger of God Luke 11. 20. compared with Mat. 1● 28. He is so c●●●ed as for other reasons so for this because he is the immediate instrument whereby God works in the hearts of his creatures Particularly for this work of ingraffing the soule into Christ the Holy Ghost is affirmed to be the immediate instrument 1 Cor. 12. 13. By one Spirit are we all baptized into one body c. and have been all made to drink into one spirit And againe Eph. 2. 21 22. where the Apostle speaking of this great mystery under another resemblance saith that in Christ we are builded an habitation of God thorough the Spirit The same Spirit which builds us upon Christ into one Temple doth ingraffe us into Christ as one Vine 3. Faith This is the immediate instrumental cause on mans part Faith is an uniting grace it knits the soule to Christ and Christ to the soul Faith is an incorporating grace it doth as it were embody the soule into Christ making it one with Christ and Christ with it This is that which the Apostle saith 1 Pet. 2. 4 5. To whom coming as to a living stone c. Ye also are built up as lively stones c. Two things are observable in that Text. First that the Saints are built together upon Christ the foundation-stone an holy house to God Secondly how Christ and they are cemented together into one building this is by beleeving set out by the expression of coming which is used ordinarily for beleeving as Mat. 11. 28. The Spirit of God first works saith in the heart of a person through the Word and then the soul is by the Spirit through faith ingraffed into Christ and made a lively Branch For the second particular What advantage the soul hath by being a Branch of Christ I shall here follow the Metaphor The same advantage the Branch hath by being ingraffed into the Stock hath a Beleever in a spiritual sense by being ingraffed into Christ I name these five 1. Spiritual supportation The Branch hath this benefit from the Stock into which it is ingraffed that it is born up and supported by it The Branch doth not bear the Vine nor doth it beare it self but is born of the Vine A beleever hath supportation from Jesus Christ We stand on Christs legs not on our own I can do all things saith the Apostle through Christ that strengthneth me Phil. 4. 13. The strength of the Branch is in the Vine so is the strength of a Beleever in Christ Who is this that cometh out of the Wildernesse leaning on her beloved Cant. 8. 5. I laid me down and slept saith David I awaked for the Lord susteined me Many blasts passe over a beleever many violent concussions and shakings is he exposed unto partly by reason of sinne partly by temptations from the Devil from men in all these shakings he hath sustentation from Christ into whom he is implanted My grace saith Christ to Paul shall be sufficient for thee for my strength is made perfect in weaknesse in 2 Cor. 12. 9. A beleever may with confidence go to Christ and pray for support in all his weaknesses A beleever may go to Christ and chalenge support Christ would never have made thee a Branch if he had not intended to support and strengthen thee Esay 41. 10. there are repeated promises of sustentation I will strengthen thee I will help thee I will uphold thee In doing in suffering in dying is a beleever supported by Christ A beleever never wants support but when either through pride he will not have it or through slothfulnesse he will not 〈…〉 Jesus Christ 2. Spiritual nourishment The Bran●● doth not give nourishment to the Stock nor doth it nourish it selfe but it receives nourishment from the Stock A beleever hath nourishment from Jesus Christ The Root feeds the Branch it conveys its sap to each Branch whether it be great or little whether it be nearer the Root or at a farther distance from it Christ conveys proper nourishment to every beleever The Apostle speaks of this Col. 2. 19. The whole body from Christ by joynts and bands hath nourishment ministred the Ordinances are the joynts and bands by which nourishment is carried but Christ is the great treasury from whence it is carried He nourishes Faith he feeds Hope he nourisheth love c. Of his fulnesse have we all received and grace for grace John 1. 16. Every grace a beleever hath would die and wither if it did not receive daily nourishment from Jesus Christ 3. Spiritual increase The branch receives its Augmentation from the Vine The graffe when it's first implanted is very small a childe may break it with one of his fingers but by abiding in the Stock it grows till it come to perfection All a Beleevers increase is from Jesus Christ 'T is by and through him that we grow from infancy to a perfect man Two Texts of Scripture do fully set out this benefit of our implantation The one is Col. 2. 19. In him the whole body having nourishment ministred increaseth with the increase of God The other is Eph. 4. 16. Where the Apostle tells us that by and from Christ the whole body being fitly joyned together and compacted by that which every part supplieth maketh increase
52. how were the Jews offended because he had preached that except men did eat his flesh and blood they had no life in them They strove among themselves saying How can this man give us his flesh to eat nay not onely the Jewes but many of the Disciples also were offended at this doctrine v. 60 61. The mysticalnesse and height of the Gospel and doctrines of it do offend now to this day 4. The simplicity of his doctrine is an offence to others The Doctrine of Christ in the Gospel is laid down with great plainnesse Though the Gospel be sufficiently Rhetorical yet it is written with much plainnesse The pen-men of Scripture did purposely avoid the entising words of mens wisdome lest they should corrupt the hearts of men from the simplicity that is in Christ 'T is the excellency of the Gospel that it is set down in plainnesse and simplicity Painting is fitter for harlots then for chaste women Naked truth is best if other dresses be put upon it it is corrupted The wise Greeks stumbled at this stumbling stone They thought Tully and Demosthenes were more eloquent then the Apostles and Prophets The Apostle speaks fully to this 1 Cor. 1. 17 18 22 23. Many are to this day offended at this very thing they think there are not those strains of wit in the writings of the Apostles as are in other writings when as the truth is the highest eloquence is the eloquence of God in the Scriptures 5. The severity of his Doctrine is a stumbling stone to others The Law and Gospel do both threaten damnation for disobedience and impenitence The axe is laid to the root of the tree saith John Mat. 3. 10. Every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit is hewen down and cast into the fire He that beleeveth not is condemned already Mark 16. 16. Many are greatly offended at this They would have smooth things but they love not this severity They do not consider that as the Gospel is severe against sinne so is it exceeding full of comfort to all penitent sinners And then 6. The consequences of his Dactrine is an offence to others I shall onely mention two things which do ordinarily follow the doctrine of the Gospel they are these First reproaches and persecutions Seldom do men receive the Doctrine of Christ in power but the devil and his instruments raise persecution lesse or more against them You may trace the Gospel by the blood of those that have professed it They gnashed upon Steven with their teeth saith the story Acts 7. 52 54. and at last stoned him with stones that he died Quid est predicare saith Luther nisi furorem populi in se derivare To preach the Gospel is to draw the fury of the world upon a mans self And to professe the Gospel in sincerity and zeal is to make a mans self a prey to the wicked This offends many Our Saviour foretels this See two texts Mat. 13. 21. and Matth. 24. 9. 10. The presecution which hath followed upon Christs Doctrine hath made thousands scandalized at Christ Secondly Divisions and contentions Though Christ be the Prince of peace and his Gospel the Gospel of peace yet accidentally by reason of mens corruptions it causes great divisions Luke 12. 49. I am come saith our Saviour to send fire on the earth and what will I if it be already kindled so Mat. 10. 34 35. These are not the effects but the consequence of the Gospel it meets with mens corruptions which because they will not have destroyed they are inraged This offends many Hence some have profanely wished that the Bible were burnt they have looked upon it as the great make-bate and incendiary of the world Thus is the Doctrine of Christ made a stone of stumbling and a rock of offence Thirdly Some stumble and take offence at his Kingdome I meane not onely at his internal Administration of his Kingdome by his Spirit in the heart but also at the external administration of it I shall reduce all I have to say to these two heads 1. The government of his Kingdom 2. The subjects of his Kingdom 1. For the government of his Kingdome Multitudes are offended at this The Officers by whom he hath appointed to administer this Kingdome Men do take much offence though causlesly at these decrying reviling them as if they were not of God Ye take too much upon you ye sonnes of Levi all the Lords people are holy Numb 16. 3. All men are Ministers all may preach there 's no such office as Minister in the Scripture There 's no such thing as Ruler in the Church The censures they also give offence to many Admonition Suspension Excommunication men are greatly offended at all these The government is too strict too severe 't is tyrannical these are the bitter words of men The holy Ghost foretold how men should stumble at the government of Christs Kingdom Ps 2. 2 3. Let us break their bond● asunder and cast away their cords from us Christs government is a general offence 2. For the subjects of his Kingdom Men are offended at Christ because of his subjects many ways Consider these foure things 1. Many are offended at their paucity Though Christs subjects be many simply considered yet comparatively they are but few Narrow is th● way that leadeth into everlasting life and there are very few that finde it Mat. 7. 14. Satan hath a hundred servants to Christs one Caleb and Joshuab onely entred into Canaan of all the men that came out of Egypt This causes many to stumble at Christ Shall we be wiser then others This one man came in to sojourne and he will needs be a judge say those sonnes of Belial concerning Lot Gen. 19. 9. It 's a great scandal that so few come in 2. Many are offended because of their meannesse and poverty Few of the great men of the world submit truly to Christ Not many wise not many noble not many mighty hath God chosen saith the Apostle but the foolish things of the world c. 1 Cor. 1. 26 27. Our Saviour did foresee that this would be an occasion of stumbling to men therefore he layes in a caveat against it Matth. 11. 4 5 6. Go and tell John saith he what you have seen and heard The blinde receive their sight c. and blessed is he that shall not be offended in me The rich and wealthy oppose and reject Christ Silk and Scarlet Gold and Silver do very rarely follow Christ This offends many John 7. 48. say the Pharisees have any of the Rulers beleeved in him but this people that knoweth not the Law is accursed 3. The miscarriages of which they are guilty The best of Christs subjects being but sanctified in part and having such a subtle divel to assault do too frequently miscarry and fall into sinne This causes many to be offended Wicked men though they never observe the holy actions of the godly yet they will observe their
Iohn 13. 10. he that is washed needeth not to wash save his feet He that hath the least measure of this oyntment shall as certainly finde all the effects of it as if he had the whose vessel poured upon him 5. He excels all other oyntments in the manner of composition All other oyntments are compounded and made by men they are called the oyntments of the Apothecary Eccles 10. 1. God created the materials and he it is that hath given man skil and understanding how to make use of them but the composition is made by men But this precious oyntment is not made by men but by God It is he that hath compounded this golden box of oyntment It was God that anointed Christ with the holy unction of the Spirit Psal 45. 7. and it is he that hath designed him to be oyntment unto others Yea the truth is this oyntment is God himself Though the humanity be a creature yet the Divinity is the Creator Christ is not only unguentum Dei the oyntment of God but unguentum Deus that oyntment which is God himself The Uses These I shall draw 1. From the general Doctrine 2. From the particular resemblances First In general We may take notice of 1. The excellency of Christ He is compared in Scripture to all things that are necessary and to all things that are pleasant and delightful One great piece of the study of Christians in this life is to search into the excellency of Christ To know what Christ is in himself and what he is to us comprehends a very great part of a Christians study in this life Paul desired to know nothing but Jesus Christ and him crucified 1 Cor. 2. 2. This one resemblance shews him to be a precious one he is so excellent that all the choice things in nature are made use of to shadow out his glory His Name saith the Prophet shall be called wonderful Esay 9 6. how wonderful is that Name which is com●●sed of so many excellent things 2. This should draw our hearts exceedingly towards the Lord Iesus It should beget in us desire after him and delight in him Precious oyntment draw the affections of men towards them The best oyntment is but a drug to Jesus Christ If we be not enamoured with him we do despise him He that looks on him as oyntment cannot but be greatly delighted in him It follows in the text Therefore do the virgins love thee draw me we will runne after thee That man doth not value Christ as oyntment that doth not love him and desire to be drawn after him 3. The excellency of grace 'T is the graces of the Spirit in Christ that makes him compared to ointment his sweet oyntments are his meeknesse patience holinesse and the rest of those heavenly graces True grace is a choise thing the Scrip●ure compares it to the choisest things in all the world Cant. 4 13 14. Next to God and Christ and the Spirit there 's nothing in heaven or earth comparable to Christ 4. That the grace of Christ is not a thing common to all His common graces are communicated to all his special grace is more confined His Name is oyntment The holy oyntment in the Law was poured upon none but upon consecrated things and persons Exod. 30. 2● 24 25 30. It must not be poured on mans fl●sh v. 32. Christ is compared here to this oyntment A select number the Elect of God onely those that are spiritual Priests these and these onely ●e made partakers of Christ and his graces Thu● much for the general doctrine Secondly particularly First from the fragrancy of Christ 〈◊〉 may learne four thing 1. How unsavoury they are that want Christ Wicked men have animam pro sal● their soules keep their bodies sweet but what have they then to keep their soules sweet the holy Ghost compares men that are in the state of nature to that which is most unsavory Psal 14. 3. They are unsavory both in their persons and in services that want this oyntment A heart unanointed casts the worst smell of any corrupt thing in the world 2. Acknowledge from whence it is that all your fragrancy proceeds If there be any good smell upon your souls it is because this oyntment hath been poured forth upon you Jesus Christ mentions the sweet smell of his Spouse Cant. 4 10 11. and indeed every beleever is a sweet savour unto God The precious oyntment of the graces of Christ poured upon your head at your conversion is the onely reason of this good savour 't is great pride and ingratitude not to own it 3. This teacheth us all how to make and keep the soul sweet Satan labours to make it musty by breathing the ill ayre of sinne into it and if you would have it smell sweetly you must anoint it with this oyntment every day Drop but every day a drop of this oyntment upon it by prayer meditation or some other holy duty and it will preserved sweet notwithstanding the thick fogs of sinne and temptation Carry Christ in your bosome and you will smell very sweet in every company 4. When ever you smell any sweet savour think on Christ The best use which we can make of perfumes and oyntments is to make them remembrancers to put us in mind of him who perfumes both earth and heaven And then Secondly from the cheering vertue of this oyntment learne two things 1. Whither to go for heart reviving When you finde your spirits dull and melancholy when your hearts are tired out and your souls languish smell to this precious oyntment and it will revive you It 's Christs work to revive the spirit of the humble and to revive the heart of the contrite The smell of the oyntment either of Christs satisfaction or of his promises or of his intercession is the speediest and surest way to be rid from the power of spiritual heavinesse 2. Let them that have this oyntment maintaine spiritual cheerfulnesse God calls for spiritual gladnesse as well as spiritual sorrow Phil. 3. 1. A well grounded cheerfulnesse honours religion as much as holinesse The Scripture was written for consolation as well as for conversion John 15. 11. Rom. 15. 4. The Spirit is a comforter as well as a sanctifier John 15. 26. You that have this oyntment maintaine a holy light-heartednesse There is a vaine mirth and there is a sinful and sensual mirth avoid these but the holy mirth must be kept up It s a disparagement to the holy oyntment to see anointed ones droop in the blackest seasons And then Thirdly from the mollifying vertue of this oyntment learn two things 1. The Scripture remedy against hardnesse of heart It 's a disease the best are troubled with lesse or more chafe this suppling oyntment 〈◊〉 to it and it will grow soft This oyntment was never used aright but it did in time remove the spiritu●l hardnesse of the soul 2. Ascribe all heart softnesse to Christ Had not this
Ordinance through which it is conveyed Seldome are our eyes lifted up so high as Christ We should labour to be better informed for time to come What ever conduit pipe be used Christ is the fountaine and foundation of every drop of comfort Christ is the God of all true consolation It is not in the power of all the Angels of heaven to give any soul one drop of comfort Nor can all the Ministers on earth give you one dram of comfort They can speak the words of comfort but they cannot cause the soul to receive comfort God comforts by them 2 Cor. 6. 6. Titus was but an instrument Comforting is called frequently in Scripture the speaking to the heart Hose● 2. 14. Who is able to speak to the heart but he who is the Lord and Commander of the heart God hath put all the oyle of spiritual joy into the hands of Christ Esay 61. 3. and none but he can give it out He that wants comfort must go to Christ he that hath received any true comfort must ascribe it to Christ All my springs saith the Church are in thee Ps 87. 7. 5. Let the Israel of God take heed of being a discomfort to Chr●st We cannot properly be either a comfort or di●comfort to Christ by any thing we do He receives properly no joy from us nor is he capable of enduring any sorrow from us yet our sinnes are said in a figurative sense to be a grief and discomfort to him If Christ were capable of sorrow nothing would go neerer his hear then this to see his people sinne against him What the Apostle saith of the Spirit we may in the same sense say of Christ Ephes 4. 30. It is but a disingenuous and unfriendly thing to be a grief to him that is a consolation to thee If Christ be thy comforter it 's an unworthy thing in thee to be his tormentor The Apostle speaks of some who crucifie to themselves afresh the Sonne of God Heb. 6. 6. Every sinne is in a sort the cruifying of Christ afresh if there be any dram of thankfulnesse in our hearts we shall loath the thoughts of vexing Jesus Christ 6. Maintain close communion with Christ Vse 3. Consolation to the people of God 'T is better in his hands then in ours we are cruel to our selves foolish 1. In case of the want of outward comforts It 's often the lo● of Gods people to be cut short of outward things God sees they are apt to surfeit on this sweet fruit therefore he with-holds it Well Christ is thy consolation These things could not comfort thee without Christ he can comfort thee abundantly without these 2. In case of spiritual heavinesse and trouble of heart Remember Christ is the consolation of Israel First He can comfort in all cases 2 Corinth 1. 4. Secondly He can comfort against all difficulties He can bring comforts through hell through an host of temptations to the soule Hosea 2. 14. Thirdly He can give the soul ability to receive comforts Esay 66. 13. Wait on him and on his Ordinances and you shall have comfort as much as is sufficient Fourthly he is full of comfort Fifthly ●e is willing to comfort He hath undertaken to be thy consolation as well as thy salvation He 's anointed to comfort them that mourne Esay 61. 1 2 3. Say not I have been so long without Comfort Jesus Christ can drop that into thy soul in one moment which shall make thee forget all thy discomfort Only wait on him wait patiently wait beleevingly Wait on him at the pipes of comforts the Ordinances and desire grace rather then comfort and thou shalt finde heart-revivings before thou die Vse 4. Advice to them that are without Christ Labour to close with him he is the consolation of Israel What poor comforts are those which you now feed upon You feed on ashes you eat husks you are jolly and brisk and full of a frantick joy If Christ be not yours no comfort in Scripture is yours Come and taste of these comforts They are pure They are soul-satisfying They are eternal All your comforts will be your torments if Christ be not your comfort Luk. 2. 25. XXX SERM. at Mary Wolnoth Lon● June 6. 1653. Waiting for the consolation of Israel I Proceed to the second doctrine which is this viz. Doct. 2. That true believers do wait for the accomplishment of divine promises even those that are most unlikely to be fulfilled No promise which God ever made to man had more improbabilities and seeming impossibilities to break its way thorough then the promise of Christ He is called a root out of a dry ground Esay 53. 2. He was to be borne of a Virgin Aw●-man shall compasse a man Jer. 31. 22. and yet this good man having a Revelation from God that he should not depart this life till his eyes had seen him did wait for the fulfilling of this promise If any should wonder why Simeons waiting for Christ should be noted as an act of such singular faith when as now the generality of the Jewes were big with the same expectation C●●mnitius gives two good Reasons of it 1. The common bulk of the Jews did expect Christ onely for external advantages They expected him onely as one that should restore their outward liberties which were now invaded and taken away but Simeon waited for him as a spiritual Redeemer that should save their souls from sin and hell 2. Simeon expected his coming to be neer at hand according to the predictions of the Prophets whereas the generality of the Jews had but onely a loose uncertain expectation of him Simeon waited for a speedy coming of Christ therefore doth the holy Ghost take such strict notice of it Other examples we have in Scripture of the holy waitings of godly men for the fulfilling of Divine promises Abraham waited for the promise of a Sonne when his body was even dead and his wife unlikely according to the course of nature to conceive the Apostle mentions ●● ●om 4. chap. 20 21. 18. 19. David waited many years for the promise which God made to him of succeeding Saul in the throne Though upon difficulties and crosse providences which did arise he was sometimes put to a stand yet he did expect the accomplishment of the thing promised He doth often in the book of P●almes make mention of his waiting as Psal 62. 1 2 5. Daniel waited for the accomplishment of Gods promise for the restoring of the Church from their captivity though there were many difficulties in the way the Church being then as d●y bones Ezek. 37. 3 4 5 6. yet Daniel beleeved and waited for it as appears by chap. 9. init He did count the number of the years and when they drew neer a period then he stirs up himself to pray with more then ordinary faith The whole Church waited for the fulfilling of this promise Micah 7. 7. I wi●● wait for the God of my salvation my
of our work and duty to God Hos 12. 6. A waiting frame of heart ● honours God greatly A waiting heart 2. hath as much benefit by good in reversion as by good in possession Heb. 11. 1. A waiting heart 3. can live comfortably under the cr●ssest prov●●●nces he that can wait on God for the g●od ●e ●ath promised will not faint because 〈◊〉 ●●●●cted Mi●●h 7. 7. He that can wait on 〈◊〉 his promises may 4. conclude hi● 〈◊〉 to be 〈◊〉 from the old Patriarchs 〈…〉 after off and embraced them Heb. 11. 13. A ●aiting Christian hath a clear eye and a ●ong ●rme He can see things ●t a g●eat distance he can reach things that are afa● off 5. A waiting Christian is not much inferior to a comprehending Christian None but the Saints in heaven live so glorious a life as the Saints that can wait on earth The sight of faith is the next to the sight of Vision Thus much for Motives 2. For Rules to direct the soul in waiting for promises 1. Waiting for promises is to be accompanied with obedience to precepts Many talk much of their expectation about divine promises who make no conscience of the obedience of divine Precepts Such a waiting is a groundlesse presumption Precepts and promises must ●e eyed both of them in their kinde I have waited for thy salvation saith David and kept thy Law P● 119. 174. and 166. I have hoped for thy salvation and have done thy Commandments It 's a blessed conjunction when waiting on promises and doing of Commandments go together 2. Waiting for promises must be accompanyed with prayer for the fulfilling of promises He that is a true waiter must be a daily petitioner The Church puts praying and expecting together ●salme 123. 2 3. The freenesse of promises exclud●s the merit of prayer they do not exclude the meanes of prayer I will be sought unto by the house of Israel to do these things for them Ezek. 36. 37. Prayer doth not purchase the promise but it doth help both to sanctifie and ripen the promise He will best hold out waiting that holds on praying 3. Waiting for the promise must be accompanyed with joy in the promise A waiting heart must be accompanied with a thanksgiving heart We rejoyce in the hope of the glory of God Rom. 5. 2. While the soul waits for salvation it must rejoyce in salvation We must not wait with a sowre face nor a discontented heart but 〈◊〉 cheerfulnesse of spirit To ●e admitted to wait is a priviledge as well as to receive what we wait for Thus much for Rules 3. For Objections Mans foolish heart is ready to pretend many vain excuses against this duty As Obj. 1. We have waited long and yet God puts us off the promise ●s as farre off as ever it was in our thoughts Sol. 1. The day of the promise dr●ws neerer and neerer still do not faint at last Heb. 10. 36 37. 2. The longer thou 〈◊〉 ●he fuller will the crop be Gods promises will bear their own charges The longer the ship stayes out the richer will the adventure be The promise will recompence thee fully for all thy stay 3. The comfort of thy waiting is more then full wages for thy waiting God doth bestow some drops on the waiting soul 4. God doth but stay to ripen the promise for thee and thee for the promise It is not forgetfulnesse but love that makes God delay Obj. 2. I see no likelihood of the fulfilling of it No meanes appears Sol. 1. He that made the promise can create means That that now seemes to obstruct the promise may be the midwife of the promise 2. Weak means will serve omn●potency to work by A broken plant is as good as a whole one Acts 28. 27. Zech. 13● 1. In that day there shall be a fountaine XXXI SERM. at Mary Welnoth Lon. July 10. 1653. opened c. IN the former Chapter the Lord promiseth repentance to the Elect Jews v. 10 11. This promise was fulfilled partly upon the conversion of those which are mentioned Acts 2. 37. 41. and Acts 4. 4. and it shall be fully accomplished when the body of the Jews shall be brought home to God Of which we read Rom. 11. 25 26 27 28 29. Note There are none so farre off from but God is able to bring them neerer to himself by tr●e conversion The Jews that lie ●●sti●g and soaking in their sinne for many ages together shall a● last be converted and brought in to Christ In this text we have a promise of pardoning and cleansing mercy to these penitent Jews In that day a fountaine shall be opened for sinne and for ●ncleannesse In the words we have f●●re particulars 1. A spiritual bath A fountaine shall be set open 2. The persons for whom this bath is prepared The house of David and the inhabitants of Jerusalem that is for all true penitent beleevers The house of David and the inhabitants of Jerusalem are mentioned because they were the first fruits of the Gospel-Church acco●ding to that prophecy Esay 2. 3. Out of Zion shall go forth the Law and the Word of the Lord from Jerusalem 3. The diseases or distempers for which this bath shall be effectual For sinne and f●r uncleannesse or for seperation from uncleannesse under these words all spiritual distempers are comprehended 'T is by way of ●llusion to the legal impurities 4. The time of the opening of this fountaine In that day It refers generally to Gospel times particularly and specially and ultimately to the time of the conversion of the Jews I might lay down many Observations but I shall sum up all into this one general doctrine viz. Doct. That Jesus Christ is a fountain set open in the Gospel to all true penitents for the purging away of sinne and spiritual uncleannesse In the handling of this Doctrine I shall open these following particulars 1. That Christ is the only bath for the purging of spiritual uncleannesse 2. Why Christ is compared to a fountaine 3. That onely penitent sinners shall be purged in this fountaine 4. How Christ purgeth away sinne and uncleannesse from the soul 5. How Christ is said to be a fountaine opened 1. For the first That the purging away of spiritual uncleannesse is the work of Christ He can do it and none but he is able to do it This may be evinced by three arguments 1. From expresse texts of Scripture All purging work is attributed to Christ and to Christ alone His blood is the only Scripture-bath the Word of God mentions this and no other See the following places 1 John 1. 7. Rev. 1. 5. and Heb. 1. 3. The holy Ghost tells us that Christ did by himselfe purge our sinnes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All the ingredients of this spiritual purgation came out of the hear● of Christ alone No creature contributed so much as one herb towards this cleansing medicine That in Prov. 16. 16. where it is said that by mercy