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

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putting on the new man Austin wrote much against this way of lying And certainly seeing that words are appointed to signifie our mind to another if we pervert them to the contrary end to deceive them we doe overthrow the foundation of spiritual and civil societies It is one thing indeed not to reveale all the truth when not required or commanded this may sometimes be done but to deny the truth or equivocate this doth no wayes become those who with sincerity and not with fleshly wisdome are to propagate the Gospel If you say for all the Church of Rome hath used such carnal policy yet she continueth in her externall prosperity she is not blasted and crossed in her designes and therefore Bellarmine would take advantages of the Protestants by this If saith he the Church of Rome be so vile and impure as you say she is if she use all those unlawfull and ungodly wayes to keep up her glory then it 's the greater argument that her constitution is of God that all her craft and wickednesse hath not yet ruined her But to this doubt it is easily answered That by the Scripture we know it is foretold that he must prevaile for a long time in the Church and therefore their successe notwithstanding all their cruelty and craft is not to be any stumbling block to such who believe the Scriptures The third instance of fleshly wisdome to propagate Religion by is To indulge men in their lusts and sinnes that so the party which followeth them may be the more numerous This is fleshly wisdome in an high degree of impiety and yet in this also the Church of Rome hath beene notorious when other Churches have by their good Discipline cast out some offenders for scandalous impieties They have appealed to the Church of Rome in that case and she craftily laying hold on the opportunity hoping thereby to establish her Supremacy would like Absolom say to every one that came that his cause was good and by this policy in indulging and encouraging such licentious offenders whom other Churches would not endure as members At last with other politick devises she arrived to that amplitude of power she now glorieth in We might instance in other subtil forgeries as the corrupting or denying some Canons made in the Council of Nice thereby to translate the chief Patriarchship to her self a famous cheat and discovered most palpably to the shame of the Romane party of which there is much in Ecclesiastical Authours as also the pretence of Constantines donation a forged he like the rest This I shall insist upon as greatly considerable The indulging of people in prophanenesse as also in horrible ignorance that so they may rule without controll And how well were it if this fleshly wisdome were inclosed in the Romane Conclave Are there not too many in the Protestant Churches that out of a desire either to please men or increase their earthly advantages promote a promiscuous admission of all to the Lords Table making no difference betweene the clean and unclean This I confesse is the way to be applauded by the most This is that which will give best content to all This is accounted wisdome and moderation but Wisdome is justified of her children and the holy institution of Christs will be owned by those who worship God in Spirit and truth But this fleshly wisoome whereby we please all and indulge men in their lusts is seldome successefull but fire will come out of the Bramble when it doth not out of the Fig-tree to consume I meane even prophane and wicked spirits are many times stirred up by God to oppose such corrupt Teachers when the godly meddle not at all For God doth many times make use of the wickednesse of one ungodly man to torment another Yea Luther's first stirrings against the abuses of Popery were not so pure and sincere as afterwards when the light and grace of God came more upon him It is therefore a great duty incumbent upon the Ministers of the Gospel to walk sincerely by Christs rule in their pastoral exercises avoiding this fleshly wisdome which though it may seeme sometimes to prevent a mischiefe yet as it did to David doth afterwards plunge in a greater calamity And indeed going to carnal policy in Church-administrations is but like going to witches and wizards forsaking Gods way which never bringeth a perfect cure Fourthly Then is carnal wisdome used to propagate Religion When by it we propound carnal and selfish ends to our selves not the glory of God and advancing the power and purity of his Ordinances This is that which Paul doth principally disclaim I seek not you but yours saith he in this Epistle 2 Cor. 12. 14. And that they might be perswaded hereof he would take no maintenance of them but made use of other Churches that he might spare them yea sometimes working with his own hands How farre this is imitable by the Ministers of the Gospel now as many do upbraid them with this example of Paul will be clearly and fully evidenced God assisting in its time for we shall meet with this part of Paul expresly mentioned and insisted on by him in this Epistle But it is worth the observation that Paul by no way he took could escape the slander of a self-seeker For if in that case he had burdened the Church of Corinth the false Apostles would have calumniated him as using a cloak of covetousness and seeking himself But now because he will not do so see how this is interpreted as a carnal designe also for so he bringeth in their objection vers 16 Be it so I did not burden you but being crafty I tooke you with guile This was suggested against Paul they made this construction of Paul's not burdening them that he did this out of craft that they should think themselves the more ingaged unto him and so by this means he get the more dominion over them Thus what shall Paul do if he doth not take maintenance it is his craft and if he doth it is his craft By this instance we see how much we are to avoid all fleshly wisdome for do what we will it shall be charged upon us Only when we have this sincerity of conscience within to comfort and support us this will be a means to make us bear the slanders of enemies with greater alacrity Now as we said then we may certainly conclude we are guided by fleshly wisdome when our aimes in our ministerial way is either glory and applause which was the poison of the Pharisees duties or earthly wealth and external pomp which motives do easily creep in unlesse grace be the porter to keep the door of the soul We see even the Disciples themselves and that twice contending about superiority and once this was done when our Saviour was fore-telling them of his sad sufferings and how they should be scattered And truly this should much prevail with us to walk by sincere rules because nothing doth
therein that do denominate him and seeing they are either the Spirit or the flesh every one either walketh in the flesh or the Spirit let a man faithfully search into his own bosome and observe what hath the predominant efficacy what he may call his principles he purposeth and liveth by and the rather because In the fourth place These principles though efficacious yet are manytimes latent and hidden It is a Rule Principia sunt maxima virtute minima quantitate Therefore being thus secret and inward it is not easily found out what principles we walk by Do those that walk after the flesh know they do so Do they believe so Do they complain of such a rotten and sandy foundation No they rather applaud themselves even the most carnal men that are do judge their principles good and right they have a good heart and good ends No doubt when Paul persecuted the Church opposed so zealously the way of Christ though in all this he was acted by fleshly principles yet he thought them Religion and service of God It is therefore our duty to examine and search into every corner of our hearts to find out the bottome of thy soul For thou art never able to judge of thy condition whether good or evil till thy principles are made manifest in thee How often mayest thou flatter thy self as doing things for God and his glory when it is thy own corrupt self thy own glory thy own advantage Fifthly These principles of the flesh are not onely in our external dealings with men or in grosse bodily sins but in religious duties and our sacred performances Oh consider this diligently A man may pray after the flesh hear after the flesh preach after the flesh and that is when a fleshly motive putteth us upon spiritual duties The Pharisees when they prayed they did walk according to the flesh and those who adored Angels and introduced voluntary worship these had a fleshly mind Col. 2. 18. Men are in the flesh and walk in the flesh not onely in respect of grosse sinnes and bodily iniquities but even when in spiritual duties they are led by sinfull motives Thus Jehu when he purposed the destruction of Ahab and his family the overthrow of Baal and his worship he did all this after the flesh When Judas resolved to follow Christ to be his Disciple all this was a resolving according to the flesh Now this we should hear with trembling and an holy fear my religion may be flesh my holy duties flesh my profession of godlinesse nothing but flesh For though the duties themselves are good and commanded by God yet the principles from which they flow may be the flesh in thee Do not take therefore all holy performances to come from a principle of sanctification in thee Did hypocrites and temporary believers diligently consider this it would be a special means to prevent their final destruction Lastly The principles of the carnal and the spiritual are directly contrary to one another even as light and darknesse and therefore one can never agree with the other Prov. 29. 27. An unjust man is an abomination to the just and he that is upright in his way is an abomination to the wicked Every godly man cannot but abominate the way of the wicked and then the wicked abominateth the way of the godly so that there can never be any agreement Now both strive for their principles dispute for their principles The godly man urgeth his and would bring men off to them The wicked man is as resolute for his principles and is active to have them take place And from hence is that enmity between the seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent Now it 's a godly mans duty to keep close to his principles not for a moment to depart from them This is to betray God and his conscience But the wicked man he is bound to leave his to come out of them with all haste for they will be his damnation at last In the next place let us consider What are the principles of a godly man by which he thinketh purposeth and liveth So that if at any time he deviateth from this his heart is smitten his soul melteth saying This is not according to my principles I have not thought said or done like my self Now there are two general principles of a godly man whereby he is kept from purposing or living according to the flesh The one I may call Principium cognoscendi The other Principium essendi or rather efficiendi For the first which is the principle of knowledge by which we are to regulate our selves in faith and manners that is the holy Scriptures which are a perfect sufficient and adequate Rule to live by how contemptuously soever the Papists on the one hand and Enthusiasts on the other do speak of it We see the Apostle Paul 2 Tim. 3. 15 16. directing Timothy though so eminent in the Church of God to the Scriptures not to the immediate inspirations but unto them which he had known from his youth giving admirable commendations of them from the efficient cause they were by the inspiration of God who would not regard what God himself saith That will prove true and every thing contrary to it a lie and then the adjunct property holy they are holy Scriptures By these alone thou wilt be enabled to have an holy nature and to live an holy life As those that keep in Apothecaries shops smell of the ointment thus those who exercise themselves in the holy Scriptures they become holy they are conformed thereunto Such a man is like a tree by the water-side bringing forth his fruit in due season Again they are commended from their end which is to make us wise to salvation This is the desirable and ultimate end of all men to be saved But we are ignorant of the way how to attain it we mistake the paths that lead thereunto and therefore the Scripture only giveth us wisdome herein Furthermore they are commended from a four-fold effect For Doctrine correction reproof and instruction in righteousnesse with the consequent thereof That the man of God even Timothy and such who are in holy Offices of the Church may be throughly furnished for every good work By this we see what is the Rule a godly man walketh by it is the Scriptures he believeth according to them he worshippeth according to them he liveth according to them Oh the holinesse and admirable lovelinesse that is in his life who thus walketh according to Scripture Oh remember that you have no other Rule to walk by in reference to heavenly things Thy Religion must be a Scripture-religion thy faith a Scripture-faith thy repentance a Scripture-repentance thy godlinesse a Scripture-godlinesse else at the day of judgement thou wilt have that sentence upon thee which was an hand-writing in the wall against that great King Thou art numbered and weighed in the balance and art found
then though they are allowed to improve their gifts in a mutual edifying way and may if they will find matter enough to exercise themselves therein yet they may not usurp this Authority and Office in the Church without a lawfull Call thereunto 2. Learning whether in the arts and tongues is an excellent qualification in men and the chiefest of Gods gifts in a common way For as Popery like a thick darkness did then cover the face of the whole earth when all learning was buried so when there came a Reformation in that kind the Arts and the Tongues being more generally known then also began the Reformed Religion to be so eminent So that if we consider man as he is rational learning is his proper and peculiar perfection and therefore far above wealth or beauty or strength or any natural perfection whatsoever In the times after the Apostles when extraordinary things ceased then they were learned men that God did for the most part raise up in his Church both to govern the members thereof and to profligate Heretiques such were Tertullian Origen Austin and Cyprian of whom Austin said That he came with the Aegyptian spoil one of Aegypt and enriched Israel by humane learning he did adorne the Church of God 3. It cannot be denied but where learning hath been in any high degree there through the corruption of man it hath been sometimes made a weapon against and an engine to promote the Devils kingdom Insomuch that the learned men of the world have done the Devil more service than any other men For the Devil at first did not use an Asse or any such dull creature to seduce Eve but the Serpent Because he was more subtill than any other beast upon the earth Gen. 3. 1. Thus still the Devil loveth to appear in Serpents in wise men in great learned men and plausible Scholars knowing that such are like Samson That can destroy many at one blow Thus all the Heathen Philosophers they were great enemies unto the wayes of God Who disputed for their Idolatry and against the Christian Religion but their Sophisters their learned men For that word was used in a good sense at first and the reason is because man being naturally corrupted and the wisdome thereof being enmity to God Rom. 1. 8. The more wisdome and the more abilities a man hath the greater adversary he is to God as the stronger or greater the toad is the more poisonous he is So that learned men if not godly they come out like so many Goliah's against the people of God Austin wrote to a learned Heathen Ornari à te diabolus quaerit Learned men they adorn the Devils way and make his Kingdom and Laws to be accepted and withall it 's hard to have this talent of gold and not to make an Idol o● it It 's hard to be learned and not to be puffed up with it So that whereas the way of the Gospel and the Scripture is in a plain but solid and majestical way they are apt to deride and contemn it witness Austin's confession of himself That he loved Tully ' s works better than the Bible And Hierom tells us That he was so addicted to humane learning that in a vision he was terribly beaten and afflicted hearing this voice Ciceronianus es non Christianus So that we grant That many learned men are kept off from the humble and low way of Christ they cannot stoop to his yoke and all because of their learning But yet 4. This is not from the nature of learning it self it 's from the abuse of it As the Apostle saith Not many noble men not many rich men hath God called 1 Cor 1. 26. But this is not because nobility or wealth are in themselves sinne but because such things do many times become a snare to us Learning therefore of it self and in its own nature hath no such poisonous quality and therefore it 's a most irrational thing to say That learning can be no more sanctified than sinne For was it not in Paul who as Tertullian expresseth it did sanctifie the Poets verses he alledged And are not learned men if Orthodox and loving of the truth more able to convince the errours of the learned gain-sayers Have not the eminent Lights in the Church of God in all ages been learned men Was not the Aegyptian learning sanctified to Moses And now learning is more necessary since the Apostles times then formerly For in those dayes they were endowed with miracles which were a strong demonstration of the infallible Doctrine that was preached and they could speak in Tongues and some had the gift of interpretation and prophesying by immediate workings of Gods Spirit but none can now pretend to any such thing What private man could have been able to have read so much as one verse in the Bible had there not been men learned in the Original Tongues who translated it into our known Language Neither can those Ministerial qualifications which the Apostle requireth in every Elder That he be able to teach to divide the Word of God aright to be able by sound Doctrine to convince the gainsayers be performed without learning Yea Doth not the Apostle Peter charge the wresting of Scripture to their own destruction upon unstable and unlearned men 2 Pet. 3. 16. 5. This must also be acknowledged That all the learning in the world cannot help us to a sanctified and holy understanding of the Scripture no not so much as the true interpretation of it without the Spirit of God and if learned men cannot do it without Gods Spirit much less unlearned Therefore we must not oppose learning to grace or to Gods Spirit For how many have written Comments upon the Bible that have been very learned men yet from that sweet flower they have turned all to poison and through the corruption that was in their hearts have made it a Book to vent all their heretical and damnable opinions So that there must necessarily be the Spirit of God besides learning First to lead us into all truth And then secondly to sanctifie it to our own hearts in an experimental and powerfull manner For men may be very Orthodox and yet know nothing of the work of grace upon their own souls These things explained concerning a two-fold consideration of Paul as a sinner and as a learned man Let us make some practical Use of it And First We see our duty when God makes use of such great sinners not to upbraid and revile them with their former impieties but rather to admire the wisdome and power of God not to reproach Peter for his Apostasie or Paul for his persecutions as the Donatists did Austin for his former miscarriages but to bless God that giveth us such real testimonies of his grace When some Papists upbraided Beza with his youthfull verses he made Isti homines saith he invident mihi gratiam Dei These men envy me the grace of
as if he were in Hell already Can a man then believe this to be Gods Word and yet be so desperately mad as to live in a full contrariety to it If therefore this very Epistle be received as the Word of God that it 's no Apocryphal or humane Invention but Paul wrote it as inspired and directed by the Holy Ghost How can ye how dare ye reject the counsel and admonitions contained therein both as you are a Church and as you are particular persons But to enlarge this Doctrine consider these things First That the meer prefixing of a name though of some holy Authour is not enough barely of it self to confirm the Divine Authority of the Scripture For although indeed most of the Books both in the Old and New Testament have their names prefixed yet some of them have not as of Judges So in the New Testament the Epistle to the Hebrews hath not the name of its Authour But these are few only in respect of those whose Authours are known All the Prophets begin their Prophecies with their Names and the Authority they have by God that greater faith may be given to what they deliver If then the Authour of some Books be not known yet if these Books have all those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and marks which other Books have for their Canonical Authority then they are to be received as the Word of God Therefore I say a meer Inscription of the Name without other signs is not enough for there are false Gospels that go under the name of Thomas and Barnabas yea there is a third Epistle said to be of Paul to the Corinthians and Paul's Epistles to Seneca are mentioned by Austin and Hierom with some respect though both Papists and Protestants reject them as Apocryphal We must therefore besides the Name consider those other Arguments which prove the Divine Authority of the Scripture and see whether they be in it or not It doth appear that even in Paul's time there were some deceivers who would counterfeit Letters as if written by Paul and set his Name thereunto to get the more Authority This he informeth the Thessalonians of 2 Thess 2. 2. That they should not be shaken in mind by word or letter as from him c. You see there were some that preached the instant approach of Christs coming and they alledged Paul for it Paul said so and Paul wrote so Hence it is that to prevent such mistakes he doth so often mention his own hand in writing The salutation of me Paul with mine own hand 1 Cor. 16. 21. Gal. 6. 11. Col. 4. 18. 2 Thes 3. 17. Phil. 1. 9. he put his own hand as well as his own name to his Epistles Secondly Consider that Paul and so all other Pen-men of the holy Scripture they were not the principal Authours but instruments used by God and that not in a general or common way As when godly men make Sermons or write Books but in a peculiar and extraordinary manner So that there could not be any mistake or errour This is witnessed by Paul 2 Tim. 3. 16. All Scripture is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 given by inspiration All Scripture And although the Books of the Old Testament were it may be then only written yet it holds by proportion of all that shall afterwards be written Peter also confirmeth this 2 Pet. 1. 21. For the Prophese came not of old time by the will of man but holy men spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost The whole Word of God then came not by mens inventions neither was it any designe in them to make such a Canon or Rule for men to walk by but they were inspired by God both in the speaking and writing of it so that both for matter and words they were infallibly guided And therefore though Chrysostome and others do admit of some repugnancy in the holy Writers of the Bible in matters of lesse moment and say That this makes more to prove the Divine Authority of the Bible because hereby it doth appear that they did not all conspire and agree together yet this is dangerous to hold so For if they might erre in matters of Less moment why not in greater Besides the Text saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All Scripture that is the whole Scripture in all the parts of it So that the Bible it 's Gods Book it comes from him he hath commanded it as a Rule in which we must search and by which we are to order our lives Oh then with what reverence and respect should we receive it There we see the mind of God the will of God who would not think that there should be nothing done in the Church of God but what is according to the Bible the Doctrine of the Bible the Worship of the Bible the good Order of the Bible Yea that there should be nothing done in Nations in Cities in Towns in Villages in Families but what the Bible commands For that being the Word of God all Laws all humane Authority and Power are to submit to that And certainly this is an infinite mercy That in all things necessary to salvation we may know the will of God what he would have us to do It 's not then Paul or Peter but God himself whose Authority you despise when you will not obey the commands in their writings for they are but the Pen-men or rather those that did dictate it for Paul had some others sometimes to write his Epistles as it 's thought Tertius wrote that to the Romans Therefore because he wrote that to the Galatians with his own hand he takes notice of it Gal. 6. 11. that thereby they might be the more earnest against those false teachers that would bring in the Ceremonial Rites for Justification yet though the Holy Ghost did thus inspire and direct the holy Writers thereof both for matter and words that doth not hinder but that it was in a sutable way to their Gifts and Parts Therefore there is a great difference between the Prophet Isaiah's and Amos's Prophesies in respect of the style and so of Luke and John Hence thirdly Seeing the Scripture is thus inspired by God and the Pen-men were moved by him in the composing of it this should teach us to rest satisfied in the style and method of it For the style because it hath not the florid and Rhetorical Ornaments that humane Authours have therefore some have disdained it Yea how many had rather read some quaint English Books or Poets or Oratours rather than that Oh be ashamed of that curiosicy and vanity of thine if thou art not ashamed to believe in a crucified God in Christ though born in a manger Why of such a Scripture that doth in a plain but majesticall manner relate these things They say where mines of Gold are there groweth little Grass and few Flowers Thus where divine and holy matter is affectation of words and humane eloquence would be a
disparagement to it The Scripture is in a style full of Efficacy and Majesty sutable to God who speaks it and therefore the very Heathen could say That Moses wrote his History like one that was of God And for the Method also that some are Historical some Prophetical some Moral all this is from the Wisdome of God Therefore it 's prophane arguing on Bellarmin's part who saith That if God had intended the Bible to be Rule of Matters in Faith it would have been put into some other mould like a Catechisme or some Body of Divinity But what arrogancy is this to prescribe to the Spirit of God And this may satisfie us in that Question made by some Why Paul did write thus in an Epistolary way Why it was by way of Epistles that he wrote rather than in another manner For although some give Reasons as Because it was the way of the greatest and most learned to answer to questions propounded by others Hence we have the rescripta and responsa prudentium Or because it 's a more familiar way and apter to beget love Hence Gregory called the whole Bible An Epistle sent from the Omnipotent God to Mankind Though I say these Reasons be given yet it 's best to acquiesce in the Wisdome of God Fourthly Christians should not willingly enter into those Disputes which are apt to be raised about the Authority of the Bible and how we come to know they are the Books of God Austin spake fully to this when he acknowledged that God had taught him that such were not to be heard who would say Unde seis hos libros c. How do ye know these Books to be from the Holy Ghost and that the Authours thereof were guided by him For this is the first principle of Christianity We cease to be Christians if we deny the Authority of them So that as in all Arts there are the prima principia which are not to be questioned and are indemonstrable So is the Scipture to Christians They are like the Sunne that is visible by its own light And indeed it would be a vain attempt to undertake such a proof to a Christian seeing nothing can be apprehended of greater Authority with him than the Scripture it self Therefore the people of God should stop their ears against all such Disputes For it was the Devils way of old to make Eve question the truth of Gods Word Yet In the fifth place Because the importunity of Papists and Heretickes yea and sometimes the Devil himself who doth assault Gods own children In this very point it is good to consider these particulars First That we have as great a testimony to believe that the Books of the Scripture were written by those holy men to whom they are ascribed as we have to believe any works were made by humane Authours That Plato's works were made by Plato that Tully's works were made by Tully thus that Paul's Epistles were made by him Yea we have farre greater reason for there were miracles wrought by most of those who wrote those Books which could not but confirm their Authority in writing whereas Plato and Aristotle these never wrought any miracles Now then if there were no more this is something That there is not so much reason to doubt of these Books as made by such men then of any humane Authour that ever wrote And as thou hast no doubts there so neither may any be made here But In the second place We must go higher for this is but an Humane testimony and so only begets an Humane Faith They introduce Humanity in stead of Christianity who affirm We believe that there was such an one as Jesus of Nazareth upon no higher motives then that there was such an one as King Henry the Eighth Therefore this principle once granted as it must be then it will necessarily follow That we must receive the matter therein as the word of God and not of man For this being their Writings and they therein declaring that they are sent of God and that their Doctrine is of Heaven it must necessarily follow That the ultimate motive of our Faith is that Divine Revelation and Authority appearing therein So that if this be cleared in an humane way that such men there were once and they wrote those things as the malicious adversaries who wrote against them do confess then they therein declaring of whom they come and from whence inabled we do no longer receive their works as we do humane works but as the word of God Humane Faith may make way for a Divine Faith but this Divine Faith cannot be ultimately resolved into it And if to this In the next place you adde The wonderfull Doctrine informing us about God and the way of reconciliation of a sinner with him as also the purity and holiness of the promises the excellency of the reward promised and the terrible threatnings denounced as also the fulfilling of predictions spoken of many years before the miracles wrought to confirm it the Universal Consent of all Christians in those Books except some doubt for a while about a few which was afterwards quickly removed as also the patient Martyrdom of many millions to testifie this truth These and other things may abundantly quell all those Disputes and atheistical reasonings that may rise in thy heart But that these may perswade thee Thou art earnestly to pray for the Spirit of God which alone worketh a Divine Faith in us in and through the Word without which though all those Arguments be spread before us yet we remain Atheists or Scepticks Use Is this Epistle then of Divine Authority Is it not so much Paul as God by Paul Take heed then of rejecting any duty or truth contained therein Among other passages take notice of that 2 Cor. 4. 15. He that is in Christ is a new creature old things are passed away all things are become new If this be received as a Divine Truth then what will become of you who yet lie in your old lusts and sinnes Is this Gods Word Oh tremble then thou that hast thy old rags upon thee None is in Christ but a new creature Is not this place enough to convert the whole Congregation Do ye need any more to cast off all your former impieties But how long shall we complain Who believeth Gods word SERM. IV. What an Apostle was Christ in the building of his Church used extraordinary Officers but did not follow the Model of the Jewish Government What were the Properties and Qualifications of an Apostle 2 COR. 1. 1. Paul an Apostle of Jesus Christ c. THe next thing considerable is Paul's description from his Office and that is an Apostle He nameth his Office thereby to be received with Authority And that they might honour his Calling it being of great consequence for those who come in the Name of the Lord to be assured of their Calling The word Apostle is sometimes used more
lifted them up the more talents he hath bestowed on them the greater must their account be So that there is more cause of trembling and humiliation under all eminencies and gifts then any tumor or puffing up For they are more liable to a severe account and if they miscarry their condemnation will be greater Thus you see what cause such have to be humbled towards God and where that is there will be an humble condescension to others In the second place A godly man though exceeding eminent is humble towards others Because the meanest godly man is heir of the same glory and partaker of the same salvation with him So that if you consider them alike in Christ there is no difference God respecteth them alike In Christ saith the Apostle there is no bond or free but all are one in Christ Gal. 3. 21. And upon this account it is that Masters are exhorted To do that which was equal to servants that were believers because they had the same Lord. Only you must know that there is a true humility and a counterfeit one Grace doth not put upon the latter but the former For a counterfeit humility makes a man pusillanimous not keeping up the due authority of his place and office The Apostle though so humble that he judged himself less than the least of the Apostles yet saith He would magnifie his Office and he pleadeth for it against all opposers whatsoever Use To discover our spirits how we are when exalted to any Office or enlarged by any gifts Are not we who are apt to charge pride in others guilty of a great deal our selves We look upon those that are higher with a censorious eye not considering that there are many under us who measure out the same judgment to us Take then the Apostles advise Be cloathed with humility the Greek word is rarely 1 Pet. 3. 5. used This ought to be a garment all over us nothing but the spirit of humility should breath and live in us And indeed this is the way to be made higher still For God giveth grace to the humble and the humble he will teach his way SERM. X. There is a great deal of difference betwixt the Persons whom God calls and also in the manner of his calling them Education under godly Parents not to be rested upon but our Hearts are to be sought into whether they be really changed or no. 2 COR. 1. 1. And Timothy our brother c. VVE are upon the Person conjoyned in this Inscription and that is Timothy who is likewise inscribed in the Preface in several other Epistles Some have thought that because of this conjunction of him with Paul that therefore Timothy did assist Paul in making and composing of some Epistles But that is not probable He doth it as you heard to encourage Timothy and also hereby manifesting his modesty and humble condescension We have then the Person described by his name Timothy and by his relation Brother Not in a large sense as Paul sometimes cals all believers Brethren but in a special respect because of his Office he was in though at other times he cals him Son of which in its time Let us first consider his Name and so his Person and then his relation His name is Timothy as much as one that is for the honour of God and so indeed he proved in an admirable manner instrumental thereunto We may read of what parents he came Acts 16. 1 2. his Father was a Grecian and an Infidel but his Mother a Jewish woman and one that believed For Paul in 2 Tim. 1. 5. gives a great commendation of his Grandmother and Mother and so to himself as if their faith had been hereditary For although his Father was a Gentile yet because his Mother believed she took so much pains with him as that he knew the Scriptures from his youth up Insomuch that Nazianzen said It was a great benefit to have godly Parents especially to have a godly Mother because the mother if holy hath many opportunities to instill holy principles into the children while young And therefore Solomon speaks much of the instructions which his Mother gave him Concerning this Timothy therefore two things are observable 1. That he being educated in an hopefull godly way from his youth and for the good report that he had in the Church of God as appeareth Acts 16. 2. As also because of some Prophesies and extraordinary Revelations what an usefull instrument he would be in the Church of God Paul took a great affection to him and made him an Officer in the Church while he was a young man So that Timothy was in respect of his condition clean contrary to Paul Paul a persecuter a blasphemer an enemy and that for a long while but Timothy hopefull and a disciple from the youth up The second thing observable is That though Timothy was thus brought up with godly Parents and so knew the Scriptures from his youth And as Calvin thinketh because of that expression 2 Tim. 5. where he was perswaded of the unfeigned faith that was in Timothy as well as his Mother that it doth relate not to Timothy at that time who was no doubt an eminent believer but to his infancy or younger yeares yet that seemeth not coherent with that which Calvin saith in another place viz. 1 Tim. 1. 2. where because Paul cals Timothy his own Sonne in the faith he saith That Paul was his spiritual Father in begetting of him to Christ It is therefore disputed Whether Timothy was not converted from his youth or by Paul's ministry afterward as he did Onesimus while in bonds Some think because he cals him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his germane or sincere Sonne not spurious that he was the means of his conversion as 1 Cor. 4. he saith He had begotten the Corinthians by the Gospel Others say because he was so greatly instructed in the Christian faith and so hopefull Paul took him for a companion and much delighted in him and therefore Timothy a young man was serviceable to Paul aged in propagating the Gospel as a sonne to the father and this the Apostle insinuateth upon a large commendation of Timothy Phil. 2. 22. Others they think That though Timothy might be converted from his youth yet Paul did further instruct and convert him in the things of Christ and so it was equivalent to a conversion Now all these three respects may be allowed of and have their seasonable matter of Doctrine But let us first consider The great difference between Paul a convert and Timothy a convert one from his younger years a blasphemer an high sinner the other a disciple and unblameable in his life then observe That there is a great difference both in the persons and the manner of conversion of those whom God is pleased effectually to call and to make use of They are not of the same condition or qualifications that God calleth neither are they brought home
from the Apostles writing a second time to the Church of Corinth which he seldom did to any Church but to that of the Thessalonians and to Timothy a single person One reason whereof amongst others was because that his former Epistle had taken some good effect and whereas they had been too remiss before about their indulgence to that incestuous person it seemeth this Epistle had now so awakened them that they began to be too severe to him though repenting and humbling himself as appeareth Chap. 2. 6 7. whereupon he exhorteth them To comfort him lest he be swallowed up with too much sorrow It 's true there were other reasons why he wrote this second Epistle but this is one amongst the rest From whence we might observe That it 's very hard for the Churches of God to keep within their proper bounds about Church-administrations Nothing is more ordinary than to fall from one extream to another These Corinthians that were so negligent in good order that many pollutions were suffered amongst them insomuch that Gods judgements had surprized them for their default herein Now when awakened to do their duty they are ready to overdo and from too much remisness to fall into too much severity Thus in many other things we might instance how the Churches of God have fallen from one extremity to another but this subject especially as it relateth to Church-Discipline will be more sutably treated of in Chap. 2. I therefore briefly raise a third Observation and that is from the Apostles care and zeal to build up the Church of God For whereas he could not come to the Corinthians as yet lest any Church-corruption or disorders should arise thereby he endeavours by writing to do that in his absence which he would not do by his presence From whence we may gather That it 's the Ministers duty not only by personal preaching but by all other lawfull wayes to promote that Church he hath any relation unto When Paul cannot preach he will write This zeal in Paul drew out those many Epistles that now we have recorded in Scripture Our Apostle speaketh notably to this 1 Thess 2. 17 18. and Chap. 3. 1. where he sheweth his cordial affections towards that people with what violence he was kept from them and because Satan hindered him he saith He could no longer forbear but would be left at Athens alone without any comfort or solace rather than not to send to them that so they might not be moved from the Gospel Thus at other times we see this glorious Apostle when present yet not contented with his publick preaching did from house to house as occasion served with tears beseech and testifie every one to cleave unto the Lord. From this example of Paul who though an Apostle and so not bound to attend on particular Churches yet did by letters confirm and quicken those Churches he had planted We see how great and grievous a sinne a voluntary and unnecessary non-residence is in those Pastours who by their Office are bound to a particular Flock and to watch over them For though in some weighty cases for the good of the whole Church they may be detained from their Flock yet voluntarily and slothfully to do this will at last be found a grievous soul-murdering sin Use 2. To reprove that people who complain of too much preaching and too much ministerial imploiment thinking it needless SERM. XIX Of the Name and Nature of a Church-Saint 2 COR. 1. 1. With all the Saints which are in all Achaia WE are now arrived at the last clause in this verse which containeth a more general Description of those to whom he directs this Epistle Some Epistles are called Catholick because not inscribed to any particular Churches or persons but to the whole Church of God Others are more particular and local as this to the Corinthians yet we see it 's not so inscribed to them but that also all the adjacent Saints are comprehended in it Yea though Paul and others wrote their Epistles to certain Churches and persons yet they are in some sense Catholick for they all were written as a perpetual Rule to the whole Church of God in all ages So that this Epistle doth concern even the Churches of God in other Nations as well as that of Corinth when guilty of such disorder So that in the Inscription which is more general than the former clause we may take notice 1. Of the Persons to whom Paul writeth and they are described by their qualifications Saints 2. By a Note of Universality All the Saints There is none so mean or inconsiderable but the Apostle writeth as well to such a poor contemptible Saint as well as to the greatest and most eminent 3. There is the place where Which are in all Achaia I shall first consider the Qualification Saints He giveth this title to all that were of this Church even as in the former Epistle he saith They were sanctified in Jesus Christ Now the Question is How the Apostle could give the title of Saints to to all the Corinthians with those in Achaia for they both seem guilty of the same sins and therefore from this Epistle directed to them when yet they were so foully polluted Was the incestuous person before he repented Were those unclean persons that had not humbled themselves for their sins and Paul was afraid he should find them such when he came Were those Saints Were such who denied the Resurrection yea that had no knowledge of God as Paul said of some to whose shame he spake it were these Saints To this Austin of old answered and so some of late That the Apostle speaks this generally of the whole body because some amongst them were Saints The denomination being from the most worthy part So that they conclude of this as a Rule to interpret Scripture by To understand that of some parts which yet is attributed to to the whole And for this reason they say it is That the Apostle writing to some Churches as to this of Corinth doth sometimes speak of them as if they were all godly and at another time he reproveth them so as if they were all blame-worthy Thus because some were Saints indeed therefore he writeth to the whole Church as if Saints as we call a field of corn by that name though there may be many weeds and bryars amongst it This hath some truth but yet this is not all Secondly It may be thought that the Apostle calls them Saints in the judgment of charity because they did outwardly profess their faith and obedience in Christ even as Paul saith of Sylvanus 1 Pet. 5. 12. A faithfull brother as I suppose but a judgement of charity must be according to truth and he knew that all in Corinth were not truly Saints And as for that expression of Pauls concerning Sylvanus Calvin Estius and others do not relate the phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to a faithfull brother but to
there are sinfull and unjustifiable grounds of some persons who do not joyn themselves to any Church-society and that may be either from a Corrupt Opinions or a Corrupt Heart though they seldom be separated from one another First From a Corrupt Opinion As 1. Of those who call themselves Seekers confessing they cannot yet find a Church to which they may joy●… For they affirm That since the Apostles dayes there are no Churches and therefore till they can see Apostles Apostolical gifts and miracles with the like effusion of the holy Ghost upon persons they cannot own any Church But this is against those Texts of Scripture which speak of a perpetuity of the Ministry and the duty of receiving Sacraments till the coming of Christ which could not be if there were no Church 2. Another corrupt opinion is of those who call themselves high Attainers These make themselves above the Church-ordinances they need them not yea some Anabaptists in Germany made themselves above the Bible living wholly upon spiritual revelations and called those who would leave to the Scripture as a Rule Creaturistae as depending upon a creature But the Scripture and Ordinances are necessary to quicken grace in the most holy and there are none so spiritual but they need them daily to comfort or instruct them yet such have their publick Assemblies wherein they deliver their opinions to be received But if people ought to be above all Ministry and teaching then also above theirs And certainly if those places of being taught of God and having an unction which teacheth us all things be against our Ministry it is also against theirs 3. There may be a corrupt opinion which though it be not against Church-communion absolutely yet they judge it Arbitrary and not necessary Of this opinion Grotius seemed once to be for he is thought to be the Author of that Book which asserts Quod non semper communicandum per symbola and Rivet in his Dialysis against him chargeth this upon him that he was not a member of any Church acknowledging it a just hand of God upon him that at his death when a Minister was brought to him he was wholly sensless So that he who in his life time cared not for Church-communion could not have any benefit by a Minister of the Gospel at his death 4. The last corrupt opinion by which men may not joyn to a Church may be from a superstitious conceit whereby men thinking it impossible to have salvation in the world have imprisoned themselves as it were in Cells and holes of Rocks thereby to give themselves wholly to divine Contemplation Thus the Monks Eremites and Anchorites of old For though some of the most ancient are excused as being driven thereunto by persecution yet the latter seemed to be transported wholly with superstition and therefore in that they lived solely not coming to the publick Ordinances of God in a Church way it was not justifiable by Scripture Indeed if they took their times to come to publick Societies and receive Sacraments as Rivet affirmeth against Grotius Dialys pag. 106. pleading their example for being of no Church then they are to be excused à tanto though not à toto The second unlawfull ground of keeping from Communion with Church-assemblies is A prophane Atheistical disposition that look upon a Church and a Church-assembly as humane devices to keep men in awe or if they be not so eminently Atheistical yet their love to their lusts and pleasures to the world and contents thereof make them weary of the Sabbaths and publick Ordinances as those in Amos 8. 5. When will the Sabbath be over that we may set forth wheat to sell How many are there that comes as seldome as ever they can to these publick Assemblies and when they do come it 's but for custom and fashion not that they ever found any spiritual good or expect and desire any Therefore let the Use be of Instruction that as ye are not to rest in any Church forms or external Communion to think that the very bodily doing of them will save you So on the other side Take heed of voluntarily and wilfully neglecting the publick Assemblies How have the godly when banished and driven from them bewailed their misery whereas thou dost voluntarily absent thy self Think how it may lie upon thee at thy death when thou shalt remember the many Sabbaths the many Ordinances thou hast neglected and now if God would give thee but one day or one hour to make thy peace with him thou wouldst judge it a great mercy The second Observation is from the Universality All the Saints There are none so mean so inconsiderable but this Epistle is directed to them as well as the most eminent From whence observe That the soul of the poorest and meanest Saint is not to be neglected That as the rain falleth upon the least spire of grass as well as the choisest flowers so ought all ministerial planting and watering to be to the meanest plant in Christs garden as well as the chiefest Though Christian Religion doth not abolish civil Polity nor the distinctions and relations of Magistrate and Subject of Master and Servant but strictly enjoyneth their respective duties yet in respect of religious considerations all are but as one Thus the Apostle notably Gal. 3. 28. There is neither bond or free male or female but all are one mark that in Christ Christ looketh upon all as one man And certainly if Christ in shedding his bloud for his people had an equal respect to the meanest with the greatest he died for the godly servant as well as the godly master the godly poor man as well as the godly rich man Then it behoveth all Christians to imitate him in this Whosoever is a Saint though he be never so contemptible do thou own and imbrace such else we do not love the brotherhood we do not love a godly man because he is godly but because he is great or rich or may advantage thee in the world Paul will not except or leave out one of the Saints in all Acbaia SERM. XXII How Grace and Peace and such like spiritual Mercies and Priviledges are to be desired before any temporal Mercies whatsoever 2 COR. 1. 2. Grace be to you and Peace from God our Father and from the Lord Jesus Christ HItherto we have considered the Inscription we now come to the Salutation which is in these words and it containeth matter of prayer It is not any earthly or temporal mercy he prayeth for but what is heavenly and spiritual The Apostle Paul doth constantly use this Salutation only in both those Epistles to Timothy and Titus which were Church-officers he interposeth Mercy between Grace and Peace Calvin thinketh he putteth it in his Salutation to Timothy because of his dear affection and love to him but why should he do it to Titus also Certainly it ought to be considered that only to Church-officers he useth
zealous was Paul in desiring this for the Jews We read of a notable expression Epist 3. of John ver 2. There he wisheth Gaius as much health to his body as he had in soul How excellent was his soul that was in better condition than his body SERM. XXIII Of the Name Nature and Preheminence of the Grace of God above all other things 2 COR. 1. 2. Grace be to you and Peace c. THe next thing considerable in these words are the particular mercies prayed for in this Salutation The first whereof and that which is the efficient cause of all other things is Grace The Common-place in Divinity De Gratia Dei of the grace of God is of a very vast extent and most of the Popish Arminian and Socinian errours arise from the mistake of the use of this word in the Scripture but it would be impertinent to grasp that whole controversie I shall not treat any more of it then what may relate to this Text. We may therefore briefly take notice of the use of it to our purpose That the first and most principal signification of it is the favour and mercy of God towards us for it answereth the Hebrew word Chen which comes of a root that signifieth to have mercy So that when the Scripture faith We are justified by grace we are called by grace we are saved by grace The Popish party doth grosly erre taking grace there for something in us wrought by the Spirit of God whereas it is indeed without us even the Attribute of mercy and grace in God So that the meaning is We obtain such glorious priviledges not because of any thing in our selves though never so holy but because of the meer grace and favour of God without us Grace then in the most frequent and principal signification of it denoteth the favour and goodness of God But then In the second place It is used sometimes for the Effects of this Grace For as mercy is sometimes taken for the attribute in God and sometimes for the effects of it So likewise is grace Hence it is that Gods grace is sometimes put for the Gospel and the preaching of the Word This being meerly from his grace that he vouchsafeth such a mercy to his people Act. 20. 24. Tit. 2. 11. Sometimes it is taken for the good success and special assistance that God giveth unto the preachers of it Act. 14. 26. 1 Cor. 15. 10. Yet not I but the grace of God viz. assisting and giving success to my ministerial labours Again It 's applied to those common gifts of Gods Spirit which were so wonderfully vouchsafed in those dayes To speak with tongues to work miracles these are called the grace of God though some would distinguish between 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Cor. 3. 10. 1 Pet. 4. 10. Yea the very function and offices in the Church are called Gods Grace as Paul did his Apostleship Rom. 1. 5. because it's the meer grace of God that hath appointed such Offices in the Church Lastly That which the Roman Church makes the more ordinary sence that indeed is sometimes but seldom to be found in Scripture viz. to signifie those habits and principles of holiness which are with in us There are some indeed who say The Scripture never useth the word Grace in this sense but some places seem to be clear Col. 3. 16. Col. 4. 6. Heb. 13. 9. 2 Pet. 3. 18. And therefore we may truly call that work of God in us Grace so that we do not make it to justifie or save for that is the grace of God without us Observe That the grace of God is to be desired by every one in the chiefest and first place This we should earnestly pray for that whatsoever God would deny us yet that he would give us his grace and favour We are I say to desire it not only above all temporal and earthly comforts above riches honours and long life but even above the sanctification and holiness of our souls which God worketh We are to desire his grace more than grace in our own hearts for this is the effect of that and this alone being imperfect in us could not justifie or save us Let us discover this rich treasure of Gods grace though the Apostle Ephes 2. 5. calls it The exceeding riches of his grace so that we can never speak to the full of it though we had the tongue of men and Angels still there is more in the grace of God than we are able to fathom We must therefore speak and understand as children about it till in Heaven this imperfection be done away And First We must know that God hath several attributes tending to the same thing yet do not ionally differ There is his Goodness whereby he is willing to communicate of his fulness to the creature Thus he was good to Adam making him so glorious a creature There is his Mercy and that is whereby he pitieth his creature being cast into misery There is also his Patience and Long-suffering which is extended to sinners that do for a long time rebell against him when he could if he pleased destroy them every moment in hell And lastly here is this property of Grace whereby he is called a gracious God And this the Scripture doth speak of as the most glorious and comfortable attribute and that doth imply these things 1. That whatsoever good God doth bestow upon us it cometh solely and originally from his meer bounty and good pleasure So that there is nothing in us that may in the least manner either merit with God or move him to be thus gracious So that we can never hear of this word Grace but it should presently humble and debase us it should make us condemn our selves and give all to God For if it be of grace than there was no motive in us God out of his own bowels doth this for us Rom. 1. 5 6. The Apostle speaketh very fully to this If of grace than it is not of works otherwise grace is no more grace So that to acknowledge the grace of God as Pelagians were forced to do and so Papists and Arminians do yet at last to divide between grace and our selves to make us co-workers with it yea to make it effectual this is to take all away really that we had given verbally before So that if it be Gods grace we must not give so much as the least sigh and desire to our selves all cometh meerly from the good pleasure of his own will 2. Grace doth not only thus imply a pure and only original from God himself excluding us but it supposeth also a manifest unworthiness in us and a contrary desert to what God bestoweth upon us Therefore grace in the Scripture language supposeth sinfulness in us that we deserve to be abhorred and cast out of Gods presence Hence justification and pardon of sinne are attributed to the grace of God
because we by our sins might justly have expected Gods vengeance and his condemnation So that the word Grace is still to debase us more and more in our own eyes For it doth not only proclaim that all cometh meerly from God but also that we are wretched sinners who have deserved the anger and frowns of God when now we have the light of his countenance To Adam God was very bountifull and full of love yet some Divines say That we cannot call that Gods grace to him because Adam was not in a sinfull and contrary estate deserving the wrath of God 3. This grace of God is more especially demonstrated in those effects which relate to the happiness and blessedness of the soul Therefore it 's the grace of God in calling and justifying us in sending his Sonne to redeem us in vouchsafing Gospel-mercies to us In this the grace of God is made most apparent and this should teach us what we should prize most what we should be affected most with even these spiritual mercies The Scripture doth seldom or never call it the grace of God to give us wealth health and temporal mercies these are not worthy to be mentioned when we speak of Justification Remission and Salvation and yet how carnal and corrupt are we We desire the grace or favour of God for our bodies for outward happiness but who is sensible of the need of Gods grace in this spiritual manner Thou canst not therefore argue Gods grace is to thee because thou livest in prosperity and hast what thy soul can desire For these may stand with Gods anger and wrath thou mayest be a fire-brand of hell and one prepared for destruction for all this Oh then be sensible of that which the Scripture attributeth to Gods grace but none save an holy heavenly heart can do this 4. This grace is communicated to us in and through Christ So that it is called in Scripture The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ in a two-fold respect 1. Efficiently because he is able to bestow it upon us You see in the Text Paul prayeth it from him as well as God the Father And 2. Meritoriously because Christ by his bloud hath made a way open and free for grace to manifest it self Oh then let us know that without Christ God is a consuming fire a condemning Judge that there was no more possibility without him to have so much as a drop of grace as there was for Dives in hell to obtain a drop of water No no there was too great a gulph between God and us Indeed the Socinians they blaspheme and say If we hold the merits and satisfaction of Christ they say this overthroweth the grace of God making it none at all What grace is it say they for God to forgive and pardon when he receiveth full satisfaction for it But though it be of Justice to Christ yet it is meer and only Grace in respect of us and that many wayes but especially in these two particulars 1. That God was not bound to take a Surety for us he might have stood for satisfaction in our own persons that we who had sinned should also be punished And then 2. Although this price be paid yet the application of it is wholly of grace For how many are damned How many have no sinne forgiven or pardoned to them although Christ came as a Saviour into the world It is therefore meer and only grace to make thee partaker of this grace which cometh by Christ God is gracious but Christ made way for it 5. Gods grace therefore is the same with that which the Scripture calls the light of his countenance Which is an allusion to men who when they were pleased and delight in any they look in a smiling and chearfull manner upon such Thus it is with God when he is reconciled through Christ with those that are his he doth presently cast away his anger doth no longer turn his face from them abhorring and loathing their persons and duties but he accepts of them looketh upon them with delight Insomuch that the Scripture makes this to be the utmost blessedness that a godly man can desire to have The light of Gods countenance shining upon him to be under his gracious favour as you see by Davids earnest petition for it and the sad troubles and distresses which were upon his soul when he hid his face from him So that to partake of Gods grace comprehends all the comfort glory and blessedness we can desire 6. This property of God of being gracious though it hath alwayes been to the Church since Adam's fall yet it hath broken out by degrees Insomuch that the Gospel time is the time of grace in a more eminent manner Abraham and Noah and David these were all justified by grace as well as we though in Christs time this glorious light break out into its full lustre God telleth Moses Exod. 22. 27. He would hear the cry of the oppressed for he was gracious And David often Psal 86. 15. Psal 111. 4. doth acknowledge this comfortable property in God that he is gracious So that in the old administration though every thing was more covered and obscure yet then it was the grace of God alone that they made their refuge yet this was so dark comparatively that the Evangelist saith John 1. 17. The Law came by Moses but grace and truth by Jesus Christ as if those former dispensations were not dispensations of grace Hence the expression is Tit. 2. 11. The grace of God hath appeared viz. in a most visible irradiant manner that our eyes are dazelled with it as when the Sunne shineth in its full strength at noon-day So that all those Doctrines which in these Gospel times do obscure the grace of God are more intollerable than those who pleaded the Law and the works of the Law in former times 7. Let us consider What are the opposites to this grace of God or What are those sinnes that do keep off this grace of God from us For though this Sunne shine never so gloriously though this Ocean be never so full yet if we shut our eyes or wilfully stop the streams of this fountain we shall not receive any good by it And there are these remarkable sins like so many opacous bodies that do interclude this grace from us I shall not meddle with Doctrinal opinions but practical indispositions And 1. He who seeketh to be justified by the works of the Law by his external obedience thereunto he will never come under the sweet benefit of Gods grace A man that is fully confident in his own righteousness and the good of his own heart will alwayes be neglective of the grace of God You may see this largely by those arguments the Apostle hath in his Episties A pharisaical spirit is alwayes an adversary to Free-grace but oh the proneness in all to this sinne especially men civillized and meerly moralized that are kept from the gross pollutions of
fancies and opinions making such a grace as we would have and then go to the Scripture to confirm it but the word of God must be the alone Rule in this case So that by the Scripture alone we shall not give too little nor on the other side attribute too much to it making Gods grace to be such a thing not indeed as it is but such as we would have It is good therefore to attend to the Scripture and to lay all our own thoughts and all humane Authorities aside that so the Scripture grace of God may be found out Now these Characters we may have of that grace the Scripture commends in God 1. That the Scripture-grace doth begin all the good in us We do not prevent God but he prevents us Thus our Saviour You have not chosen me but I have chosen you We love him because he loved us first So that the word of God doth still resolve the original of all we have into this grace of God as Rom. 9. and Rom. 11. Ephes 1. Whosoever therefore makes something in us to begin and then Gods grace to be subsequent he setteth not up grace in a Scripture-way Therefore there are no antecedent merits or dispositions in us for which God doth afterwards bestow his grace upon us The very first desire inspiration and least unseigned groans after Christ is from this grace of God Therefore the beginnings of what is good is attributed to God as well as the progressives yea the initials most of all because then we were dead in sin and in a state of enmity against God 2. The grace of God which the Scripture commends as to our Sanctification and conversion is not meerly suasory and by moral arguments or in an universal indeterminate and ineffectual manner till we by our freewill content to it but it 's a grace that takes away the heart of stone and giveth an heart of flesh it 's a grace that gives a new birth and maketh us new creatures Which expressions do suppose that we had not so much power as to consent unto grace till grace doth enable us It is a grace that giveth us both to will and to do It 's a grace that makes us to be what we are and so to differ from another whereas if we did co-operate with grace or make Gods grace effectual then it would be we our selves and not Gods grace that should make this difference 3. The grace of God which the Scripture commends as to our Justification is imputed grace not inherent evangelical grace which justifieth us is external though by faith received into us and made ours And this is greatly to be observed for what godly man when he goeth for Justification and consolation doth not more attend to inherent grace than imputed This truth is the very heart and marrow of the Gospel It is about this that there is so much doctrinal and practical contending Whether grace inherent in us or imputed to us be that which we must rest upon and lean upon when God enters into judgement with us We say only imputed grace others say inherent and that because the Apostle excludeth works not only meritorious work but godly works works of grace done by us And here now the Adversaries seem to insult saying The Apostle excludeth works only of the Law such as are done by our natural strength or perfect works or works that merit but this is to distinguish where the Scripture doth not and whereas it is said that the works of grace cannot be opposed to grace because they flow from it they are effects of it It 's answered that works of grace cannot indeed be opposed to that principle of grace within us from whence they are said to flow but they are opposed to that grace which is said to be the effect of them viz. Justification and remission of sins So that though works of grace do not oppose internal renovation yet they do justification which they say is produced by them Again whereas they say That none extoll grace more than they do because they make grace inherent to make us accepted of with God Whereas the Protestants debate it denying it this noble work For say they will not grace be most advanced in Heaven when we shall be justified by that perfection of holiness which is within us But to this also it 's answered That it's imputed grace which is Evangelical grace and that we are to exalt in this life In Heaven indeed this Evangelical and imputed grace will cease though all glory will be given to that because by it we are brought to perfect inherent grace Lastly The Scripture-grace though it be not for good duties yet doth alwayes require the study of them and diligent attending thereunto So that as we must not with the Papist make our duties thrust out grace so neither must we with the Antinomians make grace to thrust out duties for both these do consist together Therefore as the Scripture speaks of Gods grace so it doth also of those holy duties which if we do not diligently perform we cannot have any portion in everlasting happiness Use of Admonition To pray for that spiritual wisdome that we may joyn Gods grace and our holiness to be conscionable in performing of the later but to relie only upon the former Especially take heed of such wayes and courses that shall put thee out of this warm Sunne that shall make thee to walk in darkness not feeling the comfortable beams thereof Oh remember it is this alone that makes life and death comfortable It is true thou mayest be under this grace of God yet by some cloudy temptations upon thy soul thou not be able to perceive Oh but let thy earnest prayer be That Gods grace may not only be to thee but this may be evidenced to thee Thou canst never have true solid peace and quiet contentation of soul till this be all the food as it were thou livest upon till this be all the cloaths thou coverest thy nakedness with SERM. XXV Of the Nature of true Gospel peace and wherein it chiefly consisteth 2 COR. 1. 2. Grace be to you and Peace from God our Father and from the Lord Jesus Christ VVE are now come to the second thing which the Apostle doth so cordially wish these Corinthians and that is Peace Grace is the Cause Peace is the Effect Grace is the fountain Peace is the stream This word Peace among the Hebrews comes from a root signifying to be whole and sound because by Peace they did mean all good and prosperity as by Warre the Hebrew word coming from a root signifying to eat and devour they meant all misery and destruction And among the Hebrews this was their ordinary salutation and greeting Peace be to you intending thereby all prosperity and happiness And so some expound it here by Peace understanding a prosperous and successefull proceeding of all their affairs But though this is not to be excluded yet
comparatively to the cause and glory of Christ And this makes it so difficult to suffer This hath made the Apostates that have many times been in the Church This hath filled the hearts of many with woe and wounds implacably For their childrens sake for their lives sake they deny Christ and a good conscience and how can it be otherwise while Earth is dearer than Heaven when we esteem the favour of men more than the favour of God This hath proved bitter wormwood to many at last Lastly To suffer for Christ there is required pure and holy motives To lose all for Christs sake out of meer conscience that this is the only cause why we are in any trouble We may read both in sacred and prophane Histories how men have suffered even death it self only for vain-glory All Aristotles vertuous men they were ambitious and vain-glorious men The very Heathen could make it Laudum immensa cupido as well as Amorpatriae We would think it a madnesse to lose comforts and life for an airy bubble of windy glory yet many have been thus transported not only Philosophus but Haereticus est animal gloriae vanissimum If then it 's not Scripture-grounds but ambitious vain-glorious principles that make thee to suffer Christ doth not will not provide sugar for thy bitter pils Thus have we seen what is required to suffer for Christ Oh the difficulty of this duty No wonder so much seed hath withered away when the scorching Sunne of persecution did arise No wonder Christ hath many Swallow-friends that endure with him the Summer time onely No wonder few are lovers of Christ for Christs sake As Alexander had more 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 These are the Bees that follow for the honey-pot only Now to all these we must adde this Caution A Christian that suffereth for Christ though he have not those qualifications in a perfect degree but find corruption opposing every one of them He must not therefore cast away his confidence for we can no more suffer perfectly for Christ then do perfectly for him and if our gracious works cannot justifie us no more can our gracious sufferings Martyrdom is not meritorious Though we shed our bloud for Christ yet the blood of Christ must cleanse that duty also The Martyrs died only in resting upon Christ for salvation and no wonder the godly heart finds more imperfections in his sufferings more carnal fear and impatience then in other duties because this is the hardest service Christ doth ever put his upon What else is to be said in this point will come in in the next particulars SERM. XLVIII How many wayes and by what means Christ comforteth those who suffer for him 2 COR. 1. 5. So our consolation aboundeth by Christ THe second absolute Proposition in the Text is That our comfort aboundeth by Christ. The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is rendred by some Exhortation but more generally and fitly Consolation Though this be spoken in the singular number and afflictions in the plural yet this is to be understood collectively as a treasure that hath all kind of comforts in it not one or two but all Therefore the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is here repeated again aboundeth which is to be understood partly repletively it filleth the hearts of those that do suffer for Christ and partly diffusively it extends also to the comfort of others And then you have the cause of all this By Christ Christ who is the cause of their sufferings is also the cause of their comfort As from the same root proceedeth both the Rose and its pricks Thus from Christ the same Fountain cometh both bitter and sweet Were not this added who would suffer for Christ who would lose all for him but Christ hath so ordained it that these sufferings are advantagious to us and though we lose in the retail yet we gain in the bulk and whole Observe That as our sufferings are for Christ so by the same Christ are our comforts Though he strike with one hand yet he supporteth with the other If David said to the Priest who fled to him many of them being slain at No● by the bloudy cruelty of Saul Stay with me I am the occasion of your deaths thou shalt fare as I fare How much more will Christ own such who suffer for him saying Depend upon me for I am the cause of all the reproaches and cruel usages you meet with in the world But to explain this Let us consider In what respects comforts may be said to abound by Christ And First Efficiently He being the same with God is therefore a God of all consolation Yea Christ as a Mediator he is sensible of our temptations knoweth our need and wants and therefore the more ready to comfort Christ that wanted comfort himself and therefore had an Angel sent to comfort him is thereby the more compassionate and willing to comfort us Thus you may read Christ and God put together in this very act 2 Thess 2. 16 17. Our Lord Jesus Christ himself and God even our Father who hath given us everlasting consolation comfort your hearts Paul here prayeth that both Jesus Christ and God the Father would comfort them Christ therefore not only absolutely as God but relatively as Mediator is qualified with all fitnesse and fulnesse to communicate consolation he is the fountain and head as of grace so of comfort Secondly We are comforted by Christ Meritoriously he hath merited at the hands of God our comfort for without Christs death and atonement we were no more subjects prepared for comfort then the damned Angels Had all mankind with Dives begged but for a drop of comfort such was the gulph between God and us that it could not be obtained So that by Christ a way is made for our consolation Christ did not only obtain the communication of the holy Ghost in the gifts and graces thereof So that as by Christ the Spirit of God is given to the Church as a guide to teach and lead into all truth as the sanctifying Spirit and use of all holinesse So he is also as the Comforter who giveth every drop of consolation that any believer doth enjoy Though therefore joy and comfort be in Scripture attributed to the holy Ghost as the appropriated and applying cause thereof yet this is wholly because of the merits of Christ And therefore we may pray for comfort upon the same grounds as we doe for holinesse They are both the fruits of Christs death Lastly We are comforted by Christ Objectively that is in him and from him we take our comfort As Christ is called Our righteousnesse because in and through his righteousnesse we are accepted of in him we are compleat So Christ is our comfort because in him we find matter of all joy though there be troubles and vexations from the creatures though the Sunne and Moon be turned into bloud all powers
off for ever Will he be gracious no more Thy tribulations are not eternal After thy wildernesse condition thou wilt be brought into a Canaan 2. We have the effect or end of such consolations which are vouchsafed to others especially the Officers of the Church who are like the mountains whose springs empty themselves into the valleys and that is two-sold Consolation and Salvation Of the former enough hath been said already We come therefore to the latter which is their Salvation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We have three words in the New Testament tending to the same 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Saviour thus Christ is often called and his Name Jesus is because he doth save his people Christ is the cause of our salvation Then there is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Actual salvation Act. 4. 12. Yea this is applied sometimes to Christ himself metonymically Even as in the Old Testament David doth often call God his salvation Act. 13. 47. Christ is there said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For salvation to the ends of the earth Luk. 1. 69. he is called the horn of saluation that is a powerfull and strong Saviour Lastly There is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which doth not so much signifie salvation it self as the means and instrument by which it is procured and thus Christ as Mediator is our 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luke 2. 30. Luk. 3. 6. Hence Ephes 6. 17. The helmet of salvation because it 's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it may relate even to Christ himself as David calleth God his helmet and his shield c. As for the thing it self viz. Salvation that may answer the Hebrew word Peace which containeth a confluence of all good things The Heathens did so admire it that they built a Temple Deae Saluti to the Goddesse Safety though they understood only a temporal safety and therefore when they were saved or delivered from dangers they did offer their Sacrifices called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thus they thought all their safety came from Heaven though corrupted with blind minds In the Scripture we read of a two-fold salvation A Temporal one and the Old Testament speaketh much of this salvation because temporal mercies were in a more plentifull manner vouchsafed to them not but that the godly looked for a spiritual salvation as Jacob witnesseth in his benedictory prayer before his death saying Gen. 49. 18. I have waited for thy salvation O Lord only spiritual things were not so clearly and plainly manifested as in the Gospel times Hence the Temple 1 King 6. 4. had windows indeed but they were of narrow lights This Salvation temporal is often in the Old Testament expressed in the plural number The salvations of the Lord because of the multitude and Frequency of them 2. There is a spiritual Salvation and this is sometimes applied to the Gospel and means of grace because they are instituted means to bring to salvation Act. 13. 26. It 's called the Word of salvation 2 Cor. 6. 2. Behold now is the day of salvation Heb. 2. 3. How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation So that the very title which is given to the preaching of the Gospel should partly much affect and winne upon us who would not be saved Why should not all Congregations endeavour after a godly Ministry This is to bring in Salvation amongst them And partly it should terrifie all prophane atheistical men who delight in their lusts and slight the Gospel preached what is this but to refuse salvation What is this but to say Let me be damned I had rather with my lusts go to hell then without them to Heaven Every Sermon thou despisest salvation it self is rejected by thee But then 2. This spiritual Salvation is either inchoate or consummate Inchoate or Salvation begun is attributed to the works of grace in this life Sanctification especially Justification So Ephes 2. 5. and 2. 8. By grace ye are saved he speaks of Justification in this life and as that which is already ob●ained 2 Tim. 1. 9. Justification is salvation begun though good works are otherwayes required to one and the other The Consummate or compleat Salvation is that in Heaven which is the Salvation so often promised in the Scripture and that is the Summum bonum and the ultius finis the mark all are to aim at The Scripture doth clearly describe that which the Philosophers did grope in the dark about having many several opinions about it That as our Saviour asked his Disciples Whom do men say I am And they answered Some John Baptist some Elias Now though these were holy men yet it was a dishonour to Christ to be accounted no more than a man Woe be to us if Christ had been no more than a meer Prophet Seeing therefore these did so mistake our Saviour asketh further But whom say ye that I am Then Peter answered The Sonne of the living God It was the Father not flesh and blood that had revealed this Thus if you ask What do the men of the world say Happinesse and Salvation is One will reply Riches another Honours but what do ye say who are more than flesh and blood who have the Spirit of God revealing things to you Even the enjoyment of God and Christ to all eternity this is Salvation this is Blessednesse This Salvation is that which we are to endeavour after in our whole life Better never have been borne and not saved What will it profit thee to have had a little pleasure a little greatnesse and honour in this life and hereafter to lose this salvation There are some places of Scripture wherein it 's disputed what Salvation is spoken of whether temporal or spiritual or both 1 Pet. 3. 20. Eight persons were said to be saved in the Ark. So 1 Pet. 4. 18. The righteous shall scarcely be saved The Arminian would bring that place 1 Tim. 4. 10. Who is the Saviour of all men to a spiritual salvation But that is absurd for he speaks of being an actual Saviour and that cannot be to wicked men for they are not saved therefore it is of a temporal preservation for even to wicked men he vouchsafeth daily salvations and deliverances Now it is plain my Text speaketh of a spiritual Salvation and that which is to come called eternal Salvation Observe That God doth by all his dispensations carry on and further the salvation of his people If others be afflicted if others be comforted all helpeth forward to the salvation of those that believe In this sense it is said 1 Cor. 3. ult All things are yours The Officers and Ministers of the Church life and death things present and things to come How are all these things a godly mans Even because they further his salvation by all these he promoteth the happinesse of his people Thus Paul knew Phil. 1. 19. that all his enemies practices yea their preaching Christ out of envy thinking thereby to afflict
is an improper foundation for thy faith As thy faith is hereby a blind faith so thy comfort is but a blind comfort How greatly do the Popish Casuists perplex their people with such cases of conscience and about such superstitious things that they have only tradition for and that it may be not many yeares neither without any stamp or superscription of the Scripture Have not they comfort in their Penances in their Indulgences Will not their Friers and Monks not those slow beasts and idle bellies who from deluded principles of conscience do severely and austeerly mortifie themselves say They have the testimony of their consciences and make a bulwark from thence But where is the rule they go by Is it not tradition On the contrary side in another extream there is the Enthusiast who rejecteth the Scripture as a dead letter and doth adhere only to revelations to pretended workings of Gods Spirit to the manifest light within them Doe not these even boast in their joyes and ravishments Doe they not when unable to answer arguments flie to a light within them But what ground is there for this Is not the Apostles command That we should not believe every spirit but try them 1 John 4. 1. And how must that be but by the Scripture You see then that it is not conscience simply and alone but a Scripture-conscience that is the ground of comfort To leave that and to trust in our conscience is to make our consciences a Bible to attribute infallibility to our selves Now this Scrigture is not only a Rule for our conscience in matters of faith but also of manners of righteousnesse towards man Conscience must witness to thee not only that thou art in the true Religion but also doest walk in holy conversation It must testifie of thy righteousness towards man as well as of Religion towards God This was Paul's continual exercise Act. 24. 26. To have a conscience void of offence towards God and towards man There are many voluminous Tractates of Cases of Conscience De jure justitiâ Of Righteousnesse towards man And although the Scripture doth not particularly decide Law-cases yet it layeth down such general rules that by them particulars may easily be decided if our hearts were not corrupt As for example that famous rule What you would have men do to you do ye to them Mat. 7. 12. Our Saviour after he had given religious precepts about prayer c. he addeth this to shew that Religion and righteousness must alwayes go together And Adrian the Emperour was so affected with this Rule saying He had it from the Jews or Christians that he commanded it to be written on the doors and gates of his Palace and before he would punish any offender would inform him of this Rule And our Saviour saith This is the Law and the Prophets A great expression Look then to thy conscience that it take the Scripture for a Rule in its adequate nature For faith and conversation this is no rule for conscience to go by Others do say every one is to look to himself but the word of God that must bear evidence to thee by thy conscience Secondly To the right guidance of our conscience in witnessing to us there is not only required the Word as a Rule But the Spirit of God to enlighten thy mind to receive the true meaning thereof Such are the powerfull delusions of Satan that when he can no longer dethrone the Scripture from its authority but men will appeal to that then he looketh about to advance his Kingdom by the Scriptures ill handled and wrested to corrupt opinions and by this means men are brought into a worse condition and more incurable then those who walk by no Scripture at all For if a man be delivered up to this perswasion that his opinions and wayes are allowed by Scripture warranted by Scripture what way shall we take to reduce him The Apostle Peter telleth us of some unstable and unlearned men 2 Pet. 3. 16. which did wrest the Scriptures to their own perdition And nothing is more ordinary which made Luther say That the Bible was the Hereticks book not in the sense the Papists do accusing it thereby of insufficiency and imperfection But for the dignity of it having such authority that every Heretick would gladly runne to this Sanctuary The Scripture then though a perfect Rule yet is not enough to guide our conscience unless the Spirit of God as is promised lead us into truth As the Sunne though never so full of light yet cannot guide a blind man We grant indeed that the Scripture is but a dead letter and of it self without Gods Spirit doth not enlighten the mind and convert the heart Only we say The Spirit doth this in and by the Scripture and that all mens consciences impulses light revelations and joyes must be examined and stand or fall according to this Rule Let this be granted and then we plead as fervently as any can for the work of Gods Spirit This must enlighten the conscience to be able to understand and believe the things revealed there Hence the Disciples could not attempt their office of publishing the Gospel without this assistance from the holy Ghost John 16. 13. he is said To guid them into all truth To guide them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this signifieth that they did not know the way or if they were in they would quickly divert into by-paths if this Spirit did not guide them When David said The Word was a lamp and light to his feet If we understand it effectually so that it did not only propound the light objectively but that also he was subjectively thereby illuminated this doth necessarily presuppose the work of Gods Spirit No wonder then if so many may be exceedingly acquainted with Scripture be ready with some Texts upon every occasion yet for all that be deluded with errours because they want Gods Spirit to enlighten them and instruct them thereby Let us look upon the Jews the sad dest object in the world at this day they have been so skilfull in the Old Testament that some could remember how many words and syllables were therein and that is read to them daily yet who more maliciously opposite unto the Lord Christ promised in the Old Testament than they are But the Scripture giveth a full reason thereof The veil is upon their eyes And long before there was such a prediction of this spiritual judgement upon them That seeing they should not see hearing not hear lest they understand and be converted Therefore to have a pure and true conscience we must be sure to pray and exercise our selves herein that the Spirit of God would direct us into the true sense and meaning of the Word which is to be expected in the holy use of those means which are necessary to find out the sense thereof For you must not expect that Gods Spirit will immediately reveal the sense of the Scripture without
of this Therefore First We may take notice That there is a two-fold testimony of our conscience which doth afford matter of rejoycing either particular as to some matter of fact or one particular business especially when calummated by adversaries Or secondly General which is to the whole frame of our heart and our whole conversation These two are greatly to be distinguished For we see David in many places praying to God That he would reward him according to his innocency and deal with him according to the righteousnesse of his hands and he doth many times appeal to God concerning his integrity Now this was from a testimony of his conscience to a particular fact Saul and others did maliciously accuse him laying to his charge things that he never did Of this Paul speaketh also 1 Cor. 4. 2. I know nothing by my self He did not matter those crimes that the false Apostles burdened him with because his conscience did clear him as to any grosse neglect in his ministerial course Now you must know that many a natural or moral man may have in some cases this particular testimony of his conscience and receive comfort from it and yet be farre enough from the state of grace How many persons in the world are slandered by some malicious adversaries as guilty of such crimes which are altogether false Now happily thou art pure and free from them thy conscience justifieth thee and thou hast comfort from this but this is not all which God requireth Therefore there is a second testimony of the conscience which is General and that speaketh to the whole man witnessing that thy whole conversation is unblameable and that thy heart in the universal inclination thereof is wholly for God and against sinne It is this general testimony that is the foundation of true comfort A man may be free and innocent as to some particular sinnes and yet the state of his soule be in gall and bitternesse Secondly This testimony of the conscience even in general witnessing unto thee thy state of grace may be considered two wayes For either it may be supposed or expected that it should testifie unto thee an heart and life free from all sinne failing in nothing at all Or else To witnesse sincerity and uprightnesse for the main though failing in many things If then a Christian should resolve to take no joy unlesse his conscience can witness perfection and an immunity from any failings such an one must resolve to have no comfort all his life time but if it witness the main bent and frame of thy heart to be for God though carried aside often through the violence and deceitfulnesse of temptations from this thou mayest rejoyce This is much to be observed for why are the discouragements and disconsolateness of Gods own children so great but because their conscience telleth them of several failings and they desire some testimony of a perfection Satisfie your selves therefore and regulate your thoughts in this particular And thus we must expound that place 1 John 3. 20 21. which at first appearance seemeth to speak very terribly If our hearts condemn us God is greater than our heart and knoweth all things This Text if not rightly understood is enough like Belshazzars writing in the wall to strike us with trembling For is there any man living whose heart doth not condemn him for sinne Doth not this very Apostle say 1 John 1. 8. If we say we have no sinne we deceive our selves and no truth is in us If then we have sinne how can our hearts but condemn us And then God knowing our hearts and seeing more evil and errour in us then we can understand must condemn us much more What is this then but to fill every godly man with despair But that the Apostle himself may not speak a contradiction we must have recourse to the mentioned distinction viz. That our hearts condemn us justly for the main that our foundation is rotten that we love sinne more than God then we have cause to be wholly cast down but if our hearts do not condemn us for the main only for those imperfections and frailties which we cannot perfectly be purged from in this life then we may have confidence towards God Thirdly Our conscience may be considered as Habitually able to testifie or as Actually and immediately prepared This is necessary to be observed For every regenerate man having his conscience sanctified is thereby habitually able to give a good testimony but many things may intervene that hinder it in its actings Even as the Sunne is able to give a clear light to the whole world but clouds and mists may hinder the actual communication of it And thus it is often with the children of God their conscience is sanctified but many doubts arise many scruples and fears do interpose so that they have not that actual witness in their conscience which they might have So that as in sanctification there are the principles of grace though the exercise of them may be stopt So it is in matter of consolation there is the foundation and fountain of it though the stream may be troubled And this should make us wary so to walk as not to put stops and checks in the way of conscience especially to labour for a sound judgement and a full perswasion in things to be done For the more doubtfull and scrupulous we are the less firm and clear is the testimony of our conscience as appeareth Rom. 14. 22 23. Fourthly We are to distinguish of the testimony of conscience as alone and separate or relating wholly to the blood of Christ in whom alone all our acceptance and cause of comfort is contained Whereas if a man should attend to the testimony of conscience alone though to his best actions he would have more cause to fear and tremble from that then rejoyce Therefore the Scripture attributeth the purging of our conscience to the blood of Christ there is no mans conscience can be good and truly peaceable that doth not look to Christ that saith not with John Behold the lamb of God that taketh away thy sinne as well as behold the holy duties thou hast lived in Heb. 9. 14. How much rather shall the blood of Christ purge your conscience from dead workes Let conscience then alwayes eye Christ look to him as well as to our graces For the goodness of an evangelical conscience lieth not in this to testifie thou hast not been such a sinner or thou hast not such failings but though thou hast been such yet repenting and believing through the blood of Christ thy conscience is not to condemn thee for them because pardoned Now the conscience of a civil and pharisaical man which comforts from works done doth not at all relate to Christ and by this thou mayest find the deceitfulness of it seeing that by Christs blood alone it cometh to be truly purified Use 1. Of Instruction How few they are that have this
as the Spirit of God doth sanctifie them But naturally the hearts of all men are deceitfull full of lies and falshoods towards God as if they loved him as if they repented when yet self is the motive that setteth all on work and no lesse false is it to man also It is true indeed commonly it is interpreted by good Expositors as if this speech did come from David in unbelief that it was the weaknesse of his faith thinking as if Samuel and other Prophets had deceived him about the Kingdome But in this sense there would have been a falshood in the speech neither would the Apostle then have made that use of it as he doth Besides at the verse before he saith I believed therefore have I spoken which the Apostle also maketh use of 2 Cor. 4. 13. for freedome and boldnesse in the profession of our faith therefore it may very well be that David from the strength of his faith now in his persecutions for that haste he speaketh of is to be understood of his flight and running from place to place doth encourage himselfe from the truth of God and is not dismayed to see Absolom and all his people prove false and perfidious for the corrupt nature of man inclineth him to no better If then the heart of a man be so naturally prone to be false towards God and man to be mercenary to seek our selves to be hypocrites This is the excellency of sincerity that it eateth away the rotten flesh at the bottome Hence In the third place It is because of this sincerity that the way to Heaven is such a streight and narrow way That Godlinesse is so rare a Jewel That many are called but few are chosen because though there be many duties many religious professions yet little sincerity of spirit Oh if there were no more required to goe to Heaven than to hear pray keep up an external forme of Religion different from the course of the world How easie and broad would the way to Heaven be Many thousands more would goe to Heaven than doe But this is that which makes it so difficult a thing to be saved because no duty no religious performances are entertained but rejected by God which come not from a sincere and true principle of grace within It is not then praying but sincere praying It is not hearing but sincere hearing Yea Martyrdome without sincerity is but the Devils Sacrifice So that experience will teach thee to set upon religious duties from principles of sincerity is a farre more difficult task then thou ever thoughtst of while going on in a formal customary way Heaven could never be so difficultly obtained neither could those Texts of Scripture which speak of the holy violence and agonies that must be in the way to Heaven were the externals of Religion enough but it is sincerity in these actings that maketh the streights When we set upon that then we see how far nature education custom and formality may carry us and yet want the soul and life of all Therefore Fourthly Sincerity is the proper characteristical difference between a temporary in Christianity and a true convert It is one of the greatest practical Questions in Divinity that is What is that which differences between the common graces of Gods Spirit and the special Or What are the bounds and limits whereby we may know to distinguish between an enlightned hypocrite fervent in all external religious duties and he who is cordially and truly so The Question is Whether it be a specifical or gradual difference And what is that which the truly godly doth And the foolish Virgin or foolish builder cannot do And if we descend not to particulars but speak in the general then we must say Sincerity is the essentiall difference So that as rationality maketh the essential difference between a man and a beast so doth sincerity between the truly godly and the seeming so onely This made the difference between Saul and David between Peter and Judas between many Kings recorded in the Old Testament who did very much in the wayes of the Lord and those who did seek God with all their heart So that by this you see how much it lieth us upon to look after sincerity in duties more than duties after sincerity in gifts and religious abilities more than gifts for this maketh the Christian The other are but as the body and garments this is the soul All thy glorious building must be pulled down if this be not the foundation It is no matter what standing thy Discipleship to Christ is of nor how famous thy gifts and parts are nor what an interest thou hast in the thoughts of Professours nor what a stricter way of Church-order thou mayest seeme to set upon if sincerity be not the salt to season all Oh then that Christians would study more in this point meditate about it read about it knowing that this is all in all If this be not the first stone laid in thy spiritual building when stormes arise thy building will fall and thy fall will be the greater by how much the appearances of holinesse have been the greater Therefore it is that sincerity is usually called by Divines the Gospel-perfection when many are said To seeke God with a perfect heart the meaning is not as if there were no sinnes or imperfections cleaving to them but because they were upright and sincere Though weak faith yet if sincere faith Though imperfect love yet if sincere love this hath a kinde of Gospel-perfection Hence of all the deceits in the world none is more dangerous and pernicious then when we take our selves for upright and sincere but are not Fifthly Sincerity doth carry a man on in religious wayes from principles of voluntarinesse and delight within Outward motives may make false hearts towards God set upon many notable services as we see in Iehu and Iudas c. But here was no voluntary and delightsome principle within For a man will never sincerely leave the sweetnesse of his lusts and profits he had in a carnal way till he finde infinitely more sweetnesse and delight in heavenly things So that this doth necessarily accompany sincerity that it maketh a man voluntary and willing with joy and delight in the whole work of God Psalm 110. 3. Thy people shall be willing willingnesses in the day of thy power It is true even the most upright doe sometimes finde much deadnesse and unwillingnesse to ho y things there is a wearisomnesse and aversnesse they sometimes feele but this is an heavy burden to them They cry out to God to quicken them to draw them to enliven them whereas the insincere man is carried out by external motives Even as when the water maketh the Mill runne round that of it self would never move because it wanteth life within Therefore that expression of Iob is observeable Iob 27. 10. Will he delight himselfe in the Almighty Will he alwayes call upon God The
if thou finde that one Sermon passeth away after another yet there is no spiritual benefit accrewing to thy soul thereby But why do we speak of spiritual Edification in how many is not the ground-work of Conversion laid how can they have the second benefit who have not obtained rhe first How can they be nourished and grow who have not yet the Principles of Life infused into them Two great things are then to be done by our Ministry through the grace of God The First To Regenerate The Second is To grow and increase in the work of Grace If the foundation stone of this building be not laid thou art yet in thy ruines and rubbish thou art yet in thy sinnes Thou art to pray and to desire all others to pray that God would have mercy upon thy soul that he would take away thy stony heart that he would heal thy blinde eyes and open thy deaf eares But if God hath brought thee into this spiritual estate know there is a necessity to grow in grace as well as to be in grace and that for progress herein God hath appointed his Ministry and the Ordinances Cry out then and say Lord not the First time but the Second and Third yet all my life long make me to partake of this Heavenly Benefit SERM. CVIII All Christians especially Ministers ought to lay out themselves wholly for Gods Glory and others good 2 COR. 1. 16. And to passe by you into Macedonia and to come again out of Macedonia unto you and of you to be brought on my way toward Judea THis Text containeth the manner how Paul was to fulfill his purpose of coming to them which was first to go to Macedonia and upon a short abiding there then again to come back to them and to make a longer continuance with them For the state of the Church of Macedonia was not so corrupt as this of Corinth and therefore needed not so long a residence of Paul there as in this place For our holy Apostle had his whole heart carried out in the service of God and therefore did order his journeys and continuance in any place according as Gods glory and the advantage of the Church might require it So that when Paul speaketh here of his travails and setteth down as it were his several journeys in all these he did not consult with flesh and blood or look upon carnal advantages but his aim in all is to promote the Kingdom of Christ There is one great difficulty which Commentators are exercised with concerning this Text and that is How to reconcile this passage with that which is 1 Cor. 16. 5 6 7. where he saith He would come to them after he had passed through Macedonia and that he would not now see them by the way whereas here he saith he will though afterwards he would come and abide with them So that here seemeth to be a contrariety in his purposes Some as Aquinas and others think therefore that this purpose in the Text was either made in a former Epistle which is now lost or sent by a messenger to them And that afterwards Paul for urging reasons did alter his resolution And that this is spoken of in the former Epistle which they say is the second though with us it be the first Hence it 's affirmed by some that the Apostle wrote three Epistles to these Corinthians though we have but two But it is the judgement of the most able Divines That no part of the Canonical Scripture is lost They grant many books are now wanting which some holy men did write but of that which was by God appointed to be the Canon and Rule of our faith and manners none is perished And indeed to hold that opinion would open a door for many atheistical arguments at least it would gratifie the Popish party who thinketh if there were no Scripture yet the Church and her traditions would be a starre bright enough to guide us unto Heaven Others there are that grant in the former Epistle Paul had a contrary resolution to this in the Text and that it is no dishonour to him to change his mind for they distinguish between matters of Doctrine and matters of Fact In matters of Doctrine they were alwayes guided by the Spirit of God But in matters of Fact sometimes they did purpose according to humane considerations but prudential and rational yet in the event were over-ruled to other things then they purposed by some new dispensations of Gods providence Neither is this to be blamed no not in wise men For the Rule is Sapientis est mut●re consilium new emergencies which the wisdome of man could not fore-see may cause new resolutions Now it 's plain that either Paul did wholly change his purpose or else he did not fulfill it as soon as was expected by the Corinthians which made them so calumniate him for inconstancy and levity And this answer may very well be justified yet Musculus doth at large shew how both these purposes may be reconciled and that there is no contrariety in them which is too long here to insert Let us come to observe some practical and profitable instructions from this Text and from the general scope that Paul had in all this labour and travail which was to advance the glory of God to promote the good of the Church rejoycing like a Gyant to runne his race We may observe That it is the duty of all Christians and especially of Ministers to lay out themselves for the glory of God and good of others Was not Paul admirable in this See how he taketh one journey upon another travaileth from one Church to another and all this is that Christ might be exalted Both godly Christians and especially Ministers of the Gospel are to follow Christ in this who went up and down preaching the Kingdome of God and doing good whithersoever he came All his life was spent in doing the will of the Lord. First Let us consider it as the duty of all Christians in their several places and relations and herein these things are considerable First There is none though in never so mean a condition but hath several talents committed to him which are to be imployed for the honour of God and the good of others The known Parable of the Talents doth sufficiently confirm this For though there be a great difference some have five and some have ten and others but one or two yet none are to sit idle And therefore in that Parable Matth. 25. 24. the instance of an unprofitable servant is made in him who had but one Talent we would have thought it would have gone worse with those who had more Talents they were under many obligations it would be very difficult to improve all Doth not evperience teach us that where a man hath many relations and several trusts committed to him how hard it is to be faithfull in all Yet here in this Parable he only is
men Ama tanquam aliquando osurus yet it may have its use considering how wicked and uncertain men are But true Religion inclineth a man to a setled and fixed way of love to those that are fit subjects thereof The Scripture speaketh of a love to all men and of a brotherly love which is upon more peculiar and holy respects Now truly if we speak in a moral sense onely we may take up Solomon's complaint Prov. 20. 6. Most men will proclaim their own goodnesse but a faithfull man who can find Men will talk and boast and professe much love and kindnesse but as it was in David's time so it will be in all ages Psal 5. 9. For there is no faithfulnesse in their mouth their inward part is very wickednesse they flatter with their tongue Hence is that Rule 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But why is there such hypocrisie dissimulation and falshood in mens hearts and tongues It is because there is so little true godliness for that maketh a man sincere and of a single heart both towards God and towards man If then Paul was so afraid of being thought a light and inconstant man any was this sheweth what gravity constancy and faithfulness of spirit we ought to walk even to men in the world godliness and Religion teacheth us these things whereas to be double-hearted double-tongued cannot consist with a man that is made a new creature Labour then to inform thy self of the extent of Religion how farre godliness will put forth its self not onely in religious duties towards God but righteous just and faithfull actions towards man Now that we may have such plain and faithfull spirits consider the aggravation of this sinne in our civil actions to be yea and nay to be inconstant and changeable And First This is directly contrary to the glorious nature of God whose image ought to be stampt upon us we are to be like God in our holinesse Now how often doth the Scripture proclaim this glorious property of God that he is unchangeable that he is faithfull in his Word and promises And truly this is the comfortable support of our selves for it 's not any worth in us but Gods faithfulness in his promises that preserveth us to eternal glory Thus he is called a faithfull Creator 1 Pet. 4. 19. so faithfull is he that hath called us 1 Thess 5. 24. If God were not faithfull in his promises even when we have unfaithfull hearts how miserable would our end be It 's Gods faithfulness not our own we are to depend upon Now the children of God they are to have this Image of God established upon them to be faithfull as he is faithfull There is no yea or nay with God See this notably affirmed Numb 23. 19. God is not a man that he should lie neither the sonne of man that he should repent hath he said and shall not he do it So 1 Sam. 15. 29. The strength of Israel will not lie or repent for he is not a man that he should repent The Scripture maketh it a necessary property to a man to lie and to repent unlesse he be assisted by grace For such is the weaknesse and ignorance of his understanding that he cannot fore-see things and therefore must necessarily alter his resolutions and then so corrupt is his heart that as there are several objects to entice him so accordingly he transformeth himself but God is infinitely wise and infinitely holy and therefore there is no shadow of change in him Oh then be in love with this glorious Attribute of God and according to a creatures capacity do thou imitate it Shew forth the Image of God in this thing that thou art even a man and wilt not lie wilt not sinfully change thy words and promises I say sinfully because we are so apt to be ignorant to mis-judge of things to be deceived in what we resolve of that many times it is our wisdom and duty to be of another mind and to take up contrary resolutions to what once we pitched upon of which more in its time Secondly Endeavour after such constancy in words and life because as it is a great sinne against God so it 's an heavy reproach and scandal to Religion It thou shouldest study to do the Devil service and to promote his Kingdom so as to have Religion stink in the nostrils of all men thou canst not take a more compendious way then to lie to deceive to be unjust to make no conscience of words and promises This is to betray godliness to the scorn of all wicked men You see that even the most holy men that are that walk in a most tender conscientious regard to all their words and works yet cannot scape the censure of men in the world that they are hypocrites that they are lyars that they have no truth in them Oh then what a woe will be pronounced to thee who should give just occasion for such men to blaspheme the holy calling wherewith we are called When one by his apostasie and inconstancy had betrayed the true Religion of Christ he was afterwards troubled in heart for it he could have no rest in his spirit thought himself unworthy of any Church-communion and therefore cried out Calcate me insipidum salem Trample upon me as unsavoury salt If then thou wouldst have Religion honoured the Gospel well spoken of look to thy self in these things let no lie no falshood no deceit be found in thy words and dealings For if there be presently Religion is wounded then the carnal ones rejoyce this is their godliness this is their Religion Certainly a godly heart cannot but bleed exceedingly if at any time he hath in this way been so overtaken as to make men think the worse of godliness wherers on the other side to be true righteous and faithfull in all thy wayes as it is an ornament to Religion so it maketh thee have an awe and a reverence in the consciences of the most profligate persons Thus because John was a just man therefore even Herod the King did reverence him Mark 6. 20. John was both just and holy and this wrought reverence Thirdly It is a great sinne to be thus rash and inconstant because hereby a man maketh himself unfit for Gods service either in Church or Commonwealth such an unfaithfull man can never do any good but be scorned and reproached as one Bishop was called Euripus in antiquity for his inconstancy and mutability and this was the great reason why Paul doth with so much earnestnesse and affection take this calumny off from himself for this would be a special means to bring his person and Doctrine into contempt if there had been just cause to judge him such a mutable man Paul's preaching would never have done good more as we hear him saying at another time Gal. 2. 18. If I build again the things which I destroyed I make my self a transgressour Thus it always falleth out that a man of
our knowledg true when it is conformable to the thing it self but then is the thing true when it is conformeable to the knowledg of God So that herein is the Infiniteness and excellency of Truth as it is in God manifested above that which is in man So that man may well respectively to God be called a lyar There is no truth in him Now because truth as it is in God is invisible and the same with his Essence and we are never able to cown to know Truth but by God Hence we have the Scriptures given to the Church as the rule of truth All truth is from God whether it be natural or supernatural When any of the Heathens have found out Truth it was from God even as all fashood is from the Devil so that when the Godly do lye 't is from the Devils temptation the Father of lyes Thus when wicked and ungodly men have uttered truth it hath been of God Now because Supernatural truth could not be discerned but by Divine Revelation and pacefaction Hence it pleased God to make known in his Word What is that truth which will lead us to Salvation So that seing we are not able to behold truth as it is in God we must look upon it as it is in his Word for God is the hidden Truth as it were the Word is the revealed truth Therefore whatsoever is Scripture we may conclude of it as sure and firm Truth coming from the supream truth If then ye ask as Pilate did another way What is truth I answer thee The Scripture is truth No men are true any further than guided by Scripture and led by the Spirit of God accordingly Oh that therefore you did more aw your hearts with the truth of Gods Word If that say sin will be bitter in the latter end though it may bring profit and pleasure for a while believe it against all the wicked men in the world and say I do more believe this Text this Place of Scripture than all which the wickedness of men may oppose against it 3. In that God is true Herein he differeth from man and is thereby opposite to the Prince of darkness He differeth from man Therefore it is said Numb 23. 19. God is not as man that he should lye or Repent To trust in man is to lean upon reads Yea hence it is that because God only is Truth no pastors or Officers in the Church are to be believed any further than they bring the Word of God It was Christ alone God and man that could say I am truth Neither Austin nor Luther nor Calvin can say I am truth Not that therefore the Ministers of God are therefore to be laid aside because they are not infallible For God hath commanded us to hear them and to submit to them only we are not ultimately to depend on them The Church is called the Pillar of truth because she doth declare and hold out the Truth but she is not the Author of it We are then to conclude of all men that of themselves they have no Truth they need the Spirit of God to guide them therein And then hereby is an Opposition in God to the Devil As God is true so the Devil is the Father of Liés John 8. 44. when he speaketh of his own he speaketh a lye Now then consider how inexcusable every wicked man will be For on the one side Christ who is Truth it self he speaketh to the sinner to repent to reforme promising Everlasting Happiness to him Christ saith Thy sinnes have no pleasure no profit in them thou wilt finde them prove a lye to thee On the other side The Devil he tempteth thee contrary to Christ he telleth thee sin is sweet it is good and profitable to sin he biddeth thee follow the lusts of thy soul thou shalt not be damned for all that and now thou believest this Devil this Father of lies rather than Christ Oh how unsufferable is this how great is the Patience of God towards thee What hearken to the Devil before God But even thus Eve did at first she believed the Serpent more than God and thereby brought ruine upon her self and Posterity Oh that we could convince you enough herein that you may see with what madness and folly your sinnes carry you away while you listen to the Father of Lies who is the Adversary of your soules rather than Christ who mourneth over you saying Oh that such a sinner did know the things that maketh for his peace 4. From this truth of God Hence it is that we are so much commanded in Scripture to believe on him to trust in him and to depend upon him which indeed is a quiet and blessed life For what is that maketh thy heart like a Sea What is it that causeth one wave to rise up after another in thy soul Is it not because thou dost not depend upon this truth of God Were thy soul more assured here in the frame of thy spirit would be more joyfull Two Temptations amongst others there are wherein the soul cryeth out as in a Whales belly not knowing what to do● whereas the confidence of Gods truth would presently satisfie the soul The first is In matters to be believed about the Doctrine that is delivered there For because that is wholly supernatural above our humane reason though not contrary to it hence it is that we have many fluctuations of spirit and our understandings are with difficulty captivated unto the Word of God Though these temptations about the Truths of Christian Religion are not incident to all the Godly and it is a special mercy to be preserved from them yet upon some they have come like a violent storm and therefore there is no way to stand disputing and arguing but to say God is true the Word is true I believe when I cannot dispute as one Martyr said But then a Second temptation which is like a continual thorn in the sides of the Godly is their Diffidence and distrust about the Promises of God They do not live and walk as if they were true So that never did any Heretick more subtilly cavill against the Doctrine of the Scripture than they do argue against the Promises of the Scripture Whether they be such as belong to the Church or to themselves To the Church when they read the Scriptures they finde such glorious and excellent Promises that they exspect she should alwayes have Halcyon dayes that her enemies should alwayes be vanquished but alas they finde experimentally the contrary They cannot see how Gods Words and his Works how his Promises and Providences do concurre together But the reason of this is from themselves They do not take a right way to understand the truth of God in this particular for these three Causes which commonly make the sense to erre about the Object although to speak properly the sense doth not erre but the judgment of a man discerning according to sence for
it is that in Heaven when our understandings shall be fully perfected then we shall not grow in knowledge we shall not imbrace errours and upon further illumination leave them So that whensoever God shall make such a change upon us that we are not to believe as we have done worship as we have done lived as we have done As we are to be thankfull unto God so we are to be humble in our selves because that ever any darknesse did take hold of us The Thomists among the Schoolmen give this for a reason why the good Angels proved constantly good and the evil Angels unchangeably evil Because say they Such is the perfection of the Angelical Nature that what it willeth it willeth immoveably it cannot alter again and therefore an evil Angel cannot repent I shall not justifie this reason but certainly we see it a glorious perfection in God that his understanding is infinite his will immutable so that he cannot know any new thing or will any new thing which he did not from eternity Yea the estate of the glorified Saints in Heaven is admirable in this particular that they are so confirmed by grace they are so perfectly enlightned and sanctified that they receive all truth at first and can never come to know more or better then they did at first admission into that glorious place Fourthly There is no man living though never so learned and so knowing but may still understand more In him there may be there will be Yeas and Nayes He will have cause to confesse he was in this errour once he misunderstood such and such Texts of Scripture formerly Doth not experience confirm this Hence are their retractations their recognitions and reviews of their works which they have put out with much judgement and deliberation So that we are not to wonder if the most excellent and learned men do sometimes say This I thought once and this was my judgement once but now I am better informed It is true the case of the Apostles and such as were divinely inspired of old is different from the most eminent holy and learned men that are in the Church for though after their first call by Christ they did retain some ignorance upon them yea did erre in some doctrinal points of great consequence yet after they received the holy Ghost in a full confirmation of them in their Office then they were made infallible so that in their preaching and writing they could not erre And therefore if there had been any Yea and Nay any contrariety in their Doctrine If any of them should have said Thus I thought once but it was my errour I am now of another mind this would have made us questioned their immediate call from God but all Pastors and Teachers that are to guide the Church they are not to expect such infallibility neither should people look for such assistance upon us but we are limitted to the Scripture as the Rule by which all spirits are to be tried If therefore any eminent Officer of the Church do build hay and stubble upon the foundation of precious stone and pearle wonder not at it Or if you see such afterwards more enlightned and to bewaile the hay and stubble they have built Let not this make you stagger so as to think with your selves what can we believe For they may erre in one thing as well as another and as they confesse they have taught false in one particular so it may be in all the rest and therefore we are not bound to believe them at all For In the fifth place You must distinguish between that which is fundamental in a word and that which is circa or supra fundamental The word of God containeth in it all things that are necessary to salvation but withall it hath many excellent conclusions that are deduceable from them It hath not onely the foundation stones but an excellent and glorious superstructure It hath not onely milk for the babe but strong meat for the adult person And although there be no truth revealed in the Scripture which when sufficiently proposed to us we ought to despise it being the truth of the holy Ghost and wilfully to oppose any known truth of Gods word though it be farre from the fundamentals is a very damnable sinne and rebellion against the Spirit of God yet for all that we must alwayes distinguish between the fundamentals and principles of Religion such as are named Heb. 6. and the conclusions by many mediums deduced from them between the seed and the crop between the essentials and the accessories For there is no godly man much lesse no godly Officer that is so farre left by God as to erre in fundamentals of salvation at least perpetually and therefore they have no Yea and Nay in them For they have the promise of God which is That the Spirit shall lead them into all truth John 16. 13. And they have also the anointing which will teach them all things 1 John 2. 27. where by all things is not meant Omne scibile Every thing that may be known for then they should know all the arts and all the tongues every one would be wiser than Solomon No nor all things in Religion not all things in faith and manners for that would contradict other places which say We know but in part 1 Cor. 3. and also That we are to grow in knowledge 2 Pet. 3. 18. but all things necessary to salvation They shall not want the knowledge of that thing the absence whereof will damn them It may be for a season they may be involved in some fundamental errour even as they may in regard of their lives fall into some grossimpieties that do for the present take away the present claim that they have to the Kingdom of Heaven but at last they shall be delivered because it 's not possible the elect should be deceived viz. totally and finally by the most deceiveable wayes of falshood that are Matth. 24. 24. Now the knowledge of this is necessary to obviate that Objection which you heard mentioned If the Ministers of the Gospel may be Yea and Nay in some things why not in all things If they erre in one thing why not in every thing This is not to be yeelded unto For they cannot erre in necessaries though they may in accessories They cannot lay any other foundation than what is laid yet they may build hay and stubble Therefore it 's sensless and irrational to argue from any errour or mistake the Ministers may have in some points of Religion that are problematical to those that are essential For in these later we are sure we are never deceived we may with Paul confidently say If an Angel from Heaven preach contrary to that Doctrine let him be accursed SERM. CXVIII A further Discovery of the sinfulnesse and reproach of Inconstancy especially in a Minister 2 COR. 1. 18. Our word toward you was not yea and nay WE are pursuing
Christ herein the world knoweth Insomuch that St Francis or St Dominick or the Virgin Mary or some other Saint these were preached more than Christ Insomuch that we may say Till God raised up our Reformers there was no preaching of Christ Images Saints Pilgrimages and workes of Supererogations these were made the whole of Christianity It is true they would sometimes mention Christ but then they make him but a semi-Saviour they make others to joyne in this worke And although they runne to many plausible distinctions yea would perswade us that they more honour Christ then we doe yet all the water of their Tyber cannot cleanse them herein It was then blessed mercy when the Sunne-shine of the Gospel began to arise so that Christ was exalted in his Glory and his Offices that now there was no more robbery making others equal to him Yea the bold blaspheming picture was not ashamed of this Inscription That the way to Heaven by St Francis was easier than by Christ The Papists then do not preach Christ And as for the Socinian he surpasseth the Papist and deferveth not to be reckoned amongst Christians For although they hold him to be a constituted God and some of them say That religious adoration is due to him yet they say This is meerly from Gods appointment Hence as they dis-robe him of his Deity so they deny him to be a Saviour and Redeemer by way of satisfaction and atonement to the justice of God and therefore make him but as an eminent Prophet and Martyr but having no essential God-head nor procuring by his death any atonement for our sinnes to the vindicative justice of God What cause then have we to rejoyce under the full and exact preaching of Christ where Christ in his Natures in his Offices is so magnified that he alone is to be our Mediatour In his obedience alone in his death alone we put all our confidence For if Christ be not known as the way truth and life If the Natures and Offices of Christ be not understood all the way of consolation of justification of remission of sinne is wholly mistaken Because Christ is not known in his Mediatory Office therefore men either runne into despair and tormenting fears on one side or else into instituted wayes of superstition and supererrogation to the workes of the Law and to merits which hath been the poisonous Doctrine in Gods Church for many yeares together this was the wormwood that was in all their water The Popish Casuists did give consciences troubled for sinne nothing but gall to drink and in stead of healing did provoke and irritate the wound farre more Fifthly Christ is preached when he is set up as the King and Lord of his Church to whose Lawes and commands we are wholly to submit else we shall hereafter finde him to be the great Judge of the world who will judge it in righteousnesse People are deceived when they think Christ must be preached onely as a meer absolute Saviour that though they live in prophanenesse and dissolutenesse yet they are to trust in him as a Saviour Whosoever preacheth Christ thus he preacheth another Christ than what is revealed in the Word Therefore the Doctrines of Antinomians and Libertines who turne the grace of God into wantonnesse are to be abhorred with all abomination though there may be a sinfull setting up of righteousness and our good workes against Christ and his grace so there may be also a licentious conjoyning Christ and wickednesse We must therefore distinguish of what persons we have to do with For as Luther observed well to this effect Comment in Gen. The Antinomians who cry down holinesse and mortification they maintain themselves by my words and doctrin which I have preached but they must remember that when we came out of Popery we found the whole world in pharisaical admiration of superstitious workes as if by them they should be justified and saved which made us so advance Christ But under this pretence to cry down the preaching of the Law to give way to all licentiousnesse as if a Publican living in his sinnes might be saved by Christ though not a Pharisee This is to separate one Scripture from another But you will say If we are onely to preach Christ then we must not preach the Law we must not preach about regeneration and the differencing characters between a temporary believer and a true one we must not then preach repentance holy duties nor the day of Judgement To this it is answered That the right preaching of all these is to preach Christ Therefore the Law is preached hell and damnation are preached that so Christ may be the more welcome that so the grace of the Gospel may be the more conspicuous Even as it is with the Physician it 's health that he aimeth at even while he maketh sick while he putteth to paine and seemeth to take the ready way to destroy and kill The Husbandman while he ploweth and harroweth the ground it is the crop he looketh at in all this So it is with the Ministers of God while they convince threaten terrifie while they informe direct all is to bring you nearer to Christ These are the Ladders to stand upon while Christ is built in you SERM. CXX Our Lord Christ is the Son of GOD. 2 COR. 1. 19. For the Sonne of God Jesus Christ c. VVE heard what was the Subject matter of Pauls Preaching even the Lord Christ who is described from his Natures and Office The first is His Divine Nature in the former words The Son of God What is necessary for the Explication of this shall be brought in the Amplification of the Doctrine which is That The Lord Christ is the Son of God This is the greatest and most glorious Attribute that can be given to him It is for this that all adoration and divine worship is due to him It is for this that we are commanded to put our trust and confidence in him Had he not been truly God he could not have been our Mediator nor purchased our Salvation for us No meer pure creature Man or Angel could accomplish this work but he that is our Saviour must be Immanuel God with us I shall not inlarge my self concerning the dignity of this Subject but briefly dispatch all I shall say at this time And First When we say He is the Son of God the meaning is so that he is truely and properly of the same Nature with God It is not to be understood diminitively as if he were not the most High God and Jehovah but distinctively in respect of the Father he is the Son of the Father so that he hath the true nature with God though not the same personal propriety with the Father As then he is called the Son of man because he hath the same nature of a man so also the Son of God because he hath the true nature of God and therefore Rom. 9. called God
therefore should a Christian doubting whether the promises do belong to him do in that darknesse and perplexity which is upon him And first we grant That a Christian so exercised is not to ascend up to those high points of predestination or the universal redemption by Christs death We do not require of thee to ascend up into heaven as it were to search into the Book of life whether thy Name be written there and then to say the promise belongs to thee This absurd and preposterous course some would fasten upon those who hold the doctrine of Gods absolute election as if from that it did necessarily follow that no Christian humbled for sin might apply the promises till they first know whether they be elected or no. And again those that pleade for Universall redemption by Christ they think that unlesse that be received we cannot rationally perswade any humbled sinner to apply a particular promise to himself that Christ loved him and gave himself for him but no afflicted sinner is to run to any of these doctrines but is out of the sence of his unworthinesse to go as boldly to Christ in the promise as if none of those doctrines had ever been disputed by learned men For in the second place We are to make Gods commands and invitations the ground of our drawing nigh to the promise If then the Scripture be full of such gracious invitations to all that are hungry and thirsty to all that are humbled and debased under their unworthinesse to come and finde rest for their souls yea if the Scripture commands such as are poor in spirit with all holy boldnesse to draw nigh to the throne of grace then here is their warrant from this they are to encourage themselves so that the truly humbled sinner is only to hearken what the word of God commands Art thou one who findest thy self undone Dost thou f●el thy self to be a lost man then know it is Gods will and command to come unto him for pardon Thou art bound in conscience if thou wilt not dishonour God nor damn thy own soul to eat of this tree of life Never then perplex thy self about these thoughts whether the promises of God belong to thee or no for it 's plain They belong to such who are sick under the sence of sinne who are burthened under the weight of it and if the promises belong not to such as thou art they belong to none in the world and withall set this home upon thy soul that the longer thou keepest off from the promise the worse it is with thee the work of faith will be the more difficult the longer thou sufferest this wound to fester the more difficultly will it be cured The longer thou wandrest in this wildernesse the more hard it will be at last to enter into Canaan the longer the water is muddied the harder will it be to see the face For when all is done and thou hast disputed thy self out of breath thou must come to this at last even to lay hold upon the promise by particular application Shall Esther resolve to go into the Kings presence though no Scepter of Invitation were held out saying If I perish I perish how inexcusable then wilt thou be if thou drawest back when the Scepter is held out No wonder if Adam did run from God endeavouring to hide himself from his presence upon his transgression for as yet he had received no promise from God But how wilt thou pleade for thy self when the promise is indefinitely propounded to every one that findeth the need thereof This is certain it is inevitable ruine to run from the promise where wilt thou help thy self if thou flyest from it There is no other way but this Ark to escape drowning Therefore remember it is not disputing but resting of thy soul on Christ that will at last quiet thy spirit In the next place in that all the promises of God are thus Amen in Christ it followeth That they will never be altered and changed that they are more immovable than the Laws of Medes and Persians so that although David and others of Gods Children have sometimes sadly complained Hath the Lord forgot for ever yet this was from their imbecillity attending more to the dead womb of second causes than to Gods truth For God can no more break his promise than he can ceafe to be God and truly herein the heart of a godly man should greatly rejoyce The promises depend not upon thy strength upon thy perseverance upon thy good use of the opportunities enjoyed by thee but upon Christ alone How often hast thou as much as lieth in thee made the promises of none effect to thee but the promises keep thee and not thou the promises God cannot break his promise Oh pray to God for an heart that is yea and Amen as well as the promises say O Lord I would gladly have faith as firm as the promises I desire my soul may be Yea and Amen as well as they are Oh how full is the Scripture of sweet and comfortable promises But we are dejected and desolate not at all attending to them so that it is with us as Pythagoras fancied about the heavens viz. that they made most admirable musick in their motion but our ears through continuall use are stupified and hear them not To be sure the Scripture vouchsafeth excellent musick and ravishing joy to a gracious heart but that many times attendeth not to it But you may say If this be so that God breaketh not his promise how shall we understand that place Num. 14. 34 where God threatning the people of Israel for their murmuring against them and that their carcases should fall in the wildernesse then saith God ye shall know my breach of promise or as in the margin my altering of my purpose Here it should seem God may break his promise to this it may be answered if we follow this Translation that God speaketh of that particular promise about their entring into the land of Canaan which was conditionall if they did not rebell against him and so they not fullfilling the condition God is there said to break his promise But others render the Hebrew word otherwise as some translate it ultionem meam my revenge The Hebrew word Tenuathi cometh of Noah to break and as it is applyed to words and promises so also to other things and therefore the most genuine translation is abruptionem meam you shall know my breaking that is as some that disobedience whereby you have broken your selves from me or else which is most probable that breaking which I have made upon you because of your sins you shall know I have divided my self from you for your iniquites and this I conceive most genuine The Use is of Instruction would we ever have the promises of God fullfilled to us then the way is to get an interest in Christ the promises are fullfilled in him and therefore without Christ
of themselves Having thus illustrated the Doctrine let us touch some arguments à posteriori whereby it is plain That all our establishment is from God And 1. It is plain In that a godly man findeth such an inequality in the temper of his soul Sometimes he is able to withstand strong gusts of temptations and at another time he is so weak that every blow will beat him down David discovereth these hils and valleys in his soul in many Psalms Now if it were a mans own strength then he would be more constant and uniform Only by these ebbings and flowings we are taught that God doth alone support us if he withdraw his hand then are we troubled 2. It is plain Because sometimes weak Christians have gone through great temptations when strong ones have exceedingly failed Did not Peter an eminent Apostle of Christ fall very dangerously And yet how many weak women have been inabled to become Martyrs for Christ Did not Abraham called the father of the faithfull shew much sinfull fear when he was in Abimelechs country Alas if Samsons hair be cut he is no stronger than other men Oh the wise dispensation of God! Sometimes the strong Christian stumbleth and falleth when the weak standeth And why is all this but as the Apostle teacheth us to shew That the root beareth us and not we the root Rom. 11. 18. Christ keepeth us to him we do not keep Christ to our selves Lastly That it is God alone who establisheth as appeareth By the prayers of Gods people And it 's a Rule of Austins of old against the Pelagians It is an absurd thing to pray unto God for that which is in our own power If we can establish our selves why do we pray that God would not lead us into temptation Do we not therein proclaim that our own power our own strength cannot preserve us in any temptation Thus David prayeth Uphold me according to thy Word Psa 119. 116. and Psal 51. 12. Uphold me with thy free spirit The guilt upon his soul for those grosse sins would have swept him away like a flood had not God mercifully upheld him and as the godly have declared this by prayer so also by their praises and thanksgiving acknowledging that they could never have gone through such exercises conflicted with such temptations had not the Lord supported them They wonder to see how their hearts were kept up under such dejections Thus David Psal 63. 8. My soul followeth hard after thee thy right hand upholdeth me And Psal 145. 14. The Lord upholdeth those that fall though they fall yet he doth not quite take off his hand from them but raiseth them up again Thus you see how true the Text is That it is God who establisheth us SERM. CXXXI The most eminent for Godlinesse need to be established by God as well as the meanest which Establishment is in Christ Jesus 2 COR. 1. 21. Now he which establisheth us together with you in Christ c. THe next thing considerable is the Subject of this Establishment with the Object wherein The Subject is Us with you In this doth appear the Apostles modesty and humility Though he had such a plerophory and did exceed many others as much as the Cypresse doth the shrubs yet he attributeth it not to his own strength or power but to the grace of God If God leave him then this Samson is no more than other men And when he saith With you this is to be understood indefinitely not universally For who can think that every Corinthian was thus established anointed and sealed But it is ordinary with the Apostle when writing to Churches to speak of them as those that are truly godly either because many were so or else because in charity it was meet for him to think so Or lastly because according to their outward calling and profession they declared themselves obliged and bound thereunto Thus writing to the Church of the Ephesians he speaketh generally Grieue not the Spirit of God whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption Ephes 4. 30. In the next place you have the Object and that is in Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Christum Some render it as being more emphatical The sense is that we are incorporated as it were into Christ and thereby established for out of Christ we are as reeds shaken with every wind From these two particulars we may observe two Doctrines to be briefly dispatched at this time The first is That even the most eminent in godlinesse do need Gods power to stablish them as the weakest and most infirm Even the Pauls that are like gyants when others are but as dwarfs are not preserved by their own power It 's Gods right hand that upholdeth them and if that be removed they are no more than other men This is a very necessary truth to be improved for the comfort of those that are weak in their own sense and feeling Whatsoever encouragements you declare to them they are ready to put off all with this It is true such as Paul such as Abraham and David that were starres of the first magnitude these could do so God was in a special manner present with them But we must not argue from these Cedars to such Briars as we are whereas this Text sheweth that all are alike as to this dependance alone upon God Us with you saith the Apostle and therefore we have him Rom. 8. and in other places putting himself in the number of other Christians and a guing for their justification perseverance and eternal glory by such arguments as are common to all believers not from any thing peculiar and extraordinary in himself So that all believers have the same God the same Christ to rest their souls upon though they differ much in their inherent graces Thus we may see David a president herein Psal 32. 6. when he had declared Gods great goodnesse to him upon his purpose to confess his sins I said I will confesse my transgressions unto the Lord thou forgavest the iniquity of my sinne that is spoken by way of aggravation whatsoever was guilty and damnable in it though never in so heinous a manner thou didst pardon it then mark the inference For this shall every one that is godly pray unto thee for this because God did so with David whereas it might be objected Though God did so with David yet will he with such an unworthy wretch as I am But David answereth you For this euery godly man shall be encouraged to pray To demonstrate the Doctrine viz. That the strongest Christians are alone stablished by the power of God consider these particulars First The examples of the fals of the most godly men that are recorded in Scripture By which it is plain that not they themselves but the power of God did preserve them and when that had forsaken them being left to themselves they fall into the mire Thus David and Peter are sad
himself all things from his bounty By these passages you would think that unlesse a man hath this assurance that he is not truly godly yea that the very difference between an hypocrite and a true beleever lyeth in this particular about a solid perswasion of Gods love in Christ Then on the other side if you do consult with the experiences of these whom we have cause to judge truly godly we shall meet with few that say they have this sealing They have good hopes they will tell you in the favour of God and sometimes they finde such supports of soul that they walk with much peace and comfort but to say that they have ordinarily this sealing of Gods Spirit that they dare not what then shall be answered to the Objection I shall not in this place enlarge on it only I shall speak some things to satisfie the doubting soul in this Point And first You are to know That this priviledge of sealing is spoken of in the Scripture as belonging to all the godly There is none excluded It is the duty of every one to endeavour after it to make all diligence in prayer and in other means to obtain it We are not to conceive as Papists do that some may have it by a speciall revelation as Paul and other eminent Saints although we grant that whosoever hath this sealing hath it by a speciall revelation but not in the Popish sense that is the Spirit of God doth in a special manner evidence unto a beleever by the fruits of faith that he doth belong unto Christ This sealing then the Scripture speaketh of as a mercy vouchsafed to every sanctified person at least that he may be made partaker of it for not only the Texts fore-mentioned but that also Gal. 4. 6. doth demonstrate this truth Because yeare Sons he hath sent the Spirit of Adoption into your hearts Because you are Sonnes now a quatenus ad omne valet consequentia is a known Rule and Rom. 8. The Apostle speaketh generally The Spirit witnesseth with our spirits that we are the Sonnes of God You are not then to think that this admirable favour is destined only for some choice servants of God No this scep●er is held out to every beleever such honourall his Saints may have But yet in the second place It is no wonder if the primitive Christians who lived in the Apostelical daies did partake of it more powerfully and plentifully then beleevers generally do in this latter age The Apostle in his Epistles might speak of this sealing as partaked of by all because then beleevers had a greater measure not only of extraordinary gifts many of them I mean but also of the sanctifying graces of Gods spirit They lived up to higher degrees of fervency of zeal of heavenly-mindednesse then ordinari y we do Again their conversion was more eminent and remarkable and that by the Apostolical Ministry which was accompanied by signes and wonderful miracles so that as their dogmaticall faith had greater means to heighten it then ours so likewise their salvifical and speciall faith They were wonderfully coverted from Gentilism both from idolatry and prophanenesse whereby their change was the greater and so were more sensible of Gods Spirit working upon them Lastly They were exposed to great persecutions they lived under constant tribulations there were no outward encouragements for them Now it's Gods way to vouchsafe this inward comfort and peace most to those that are bereaved of all outward Thus the Martyrs even in these latter daies did in a great measure enjoy this Sealing of Gods Spirit else they could not have been carried through those bitter trials with such unspeakable joy and consolatton as they were These things considered no wonder if the primitive Christians might have an higher measure of this sealing then we have although it must be confessed that even in those daies there were many hypocrites and several temporary beleevers who had only vanishing apprehensions in these great things not solid perswasions Thirdly Although this sealing be propounded in the Scripture as common to all yet it is not of the same absolute connexion with eternal happinesse as sanctification is without holinesse no man shall see God without this sealing a man may Insomuch that the promises of pardon and glory are not made to this assurarce and consolation but to grace and holinesse It is not said Thou shalt not be saved unlesse thou have this for if it were so then many of Gods Children had cause to be greatly amazed but it is not in the same way of necessity as sanctification is Seeing therefore it is more than a temporall mercy and yet not so high as an absolute spirituall mercy to salvation it is to be reckoned in the number of such mercies that are spirituall but yet not of peremptory necessity such are degrees of grace These are promised to the godly but not as absolutely necessary for then all beleevers should be equally godly but they are distributed according to the wisedom of God Thus it is also in this matter of sealing Hence in the fourth place Sealing doth not follow sanctification as a naturall necessary property but by divine appointment and order It is not as when there is fire there must necessarily be heat or as when there is the Sun there might be light only God hath appointed such an order There is a great aptnesse and fitnesse for sealing to follow sanctifying Hence it is commonly Gods way to make one follow the other but yet this chain may sometime be broken if God sometimes hinder naturall agents from their effects as when the fire did not burn the bodies of the three Worthies No wonder if in meer positive and instituted waies of God sometimes there may be an interruption made so that experience doth unquestionably demonstrate this that many truly sanctified ones may yet for a season at least want this sealing yea go bowed down and afflicted with thoughts clean contrary as if they had received the spirit of bondage only Their love is so farre from casting out tormenting fea● th●● their slavish fears do cast out Evangelical love But how may this honey-comb cease to drop how may this Conduit of wine come to be stopped I answer First On Gods part for some speciall and peculiar reasons not known to us alwaies The Lord hath wis● and just reasons to leave his people in darknesse To bring them into the Whales belly as it were out of which they cannot finde any escape It was thus with Christ his only begotten Sonne that he might accompish the bitter work of redemption for us he was left to those strong agonies and fears the Scrip●ure speaketh of he had not consolation nor joy when he cried out My God My God why hast thou for saken me his enemies gave him gall to drink and his soul tasted of gall within his enemies set a crown of thorns upon his head and he had sharp thorns
true but because it is the spirit that doth apply the promises to the soul and make us assured of them as he is called the holy spirit because he is the authour of holinesse But then Eph. 4. 30. there we are said to be sealed by the spirit denoting the spirit of God to be the efficient cause of it So that it is a blasphemous wresting of the Scripture by a Socinian when by the holy Ghost thus sealing unto us is saith he Smal. disp de promisso spiritus sancti meant no more than a sure hope of eternal life He denieth the holy Ghost to be God and a Person it is only saith he a sure hope within us but this is to confound this effect with the cause faith and love and hope are the effects of Gods Spirit they are not the spirit it self So that from hence viz. because the spirit of God doth seal us we may gather a sure argument that he is truly God for the spirit is said to confirm us and God is said to confirm us whereby it is implyed that to confirm our hearts is a divine operation as well as to sanctifie it It is true how the spirit of God is God and how it proceedeth from the Father and Sonne cannot be comprehended by reason It is enough that by faith we are to beleeve so for no wonder the doctrine of the Trinity is inexplicable seeing the nature of God is ineffable To this purpose Austin having discoursed about the Trinity concludeth that he perceived only he had spoken something of God Si autem dixi non est hoc quod dicere volui hoc unde scio nisi quia Deus ineffabilis est Quod autem a me dictum est si ineffabile esset non esset dictum ac per hoc ne ineffabilis quidem dicendus est Deus quia hoc cum dicitur aliquid dicitur fit nescio quae pugna verborum quoniam si illud est ineffabile quod dici non potest non est ineffabile quod velut ineffabile dici potest De Doctrinâ Christianâ lib. 1. But that by the way Lastly Here is the subject wherein and that is said to be in our hearts So that as God doth write his Law in our hearts Thus he doth also infuse his comfort and assurance which doth demonstrate the soveraign power of God over our hearts he can make them holy when he pleaseth he can comfort them when he pleaseth No Potentate in the world can do thus That heart of thine which is not in thy own power which no man can tame the grace of God can tame it that heart which thou desirest may be filled with holinesse and consolation God alone can do it The Observation is That grace wrought in the heart is a sure earnest of glory hereafter He that is holy here must needs be happy hereafter If thou canst finde grace in thy soul thou hast found the Pearl thou maist rejoyce not doubting but heaven will be thine hereafter The people of God are not only to look upon grace as grace but as it is an earnest of a greater happinesse yet how often do the children of God consider it without thiis respect what courage joy and holy boldnesse would it work in thee to think thou hast within thee that which assureth of eternal glory as if thou wert already in heaven This is a reviving truth that grace is an earnest of glory thou mindest grace as it subdueth thy corruptions as it maketh thy heart to be carried out more holily and delightsomely to God but then thou dost not attend to it as an earnest There is a great deal of difference between a shilling as a single peece of money and as an earnest it may be of twenty pound more to come Thus it is very much rejoycing to finde grace at all in thy soul as it is grace but it doth much more rejoyce as it is an earnest of more fulnesse Adam had grace the angels had grace but grace was not given them as part of an inheritance for they fell from it Let us consider two Texts of Scriptures where we have this earnest spoken of The first is by our Apostle in this Epistle cap. 5. 5. Now he that hath wrought us for the self same thing is God who also hath given unto us the earnest of his spirit What is that self same thing he speaketh of it is a groaning and an earnest desire after immortality we would gladly be out of this burden here and in heaven yea as we groan and desire so we are assured and know that when we shall dye we shall go to heaven But now because these are things far above the power of nature we naturally are afraid of death we are unwilling to be taken from our relations we have not such assurance of heaven Therefore saith the Apostle He that doth work us frame and polish us for this great thing it is God We could never do it without his supernatural assistance But then how doth God work this admirable frame of heart it is by the earnest of his spirit we have the beginnings of heaven already So that as the Israelites by the bunches of raisons had some foretast of Canaan so have beleevers some taste of heaven by what they feel already and as Moses from Mount Pisgah could behold Canaan though he did not enter into it thus thou hast a sight of heaven and an entrance into it by the grace begun in thee The other Text is Eph. 1. 14. where the Apostle having said That we were sealed by the spirit of promise he addeth which is the earnest of our inheritance until the redemption of the purchased possession We are not yet brought into heaven into Canaan We are yet in the wildernesse we meet with many dangers and temptations threatning us that we shall never come there but only this earnest doth assure us and satisfie us So that as among the Israelites an inheritance was not to be alienated from the Tribe in the year of Jubilee it would return again to the true owner Thus this inheritance of heaven will never be taken from thee Thou maist be in some dangers and fears of losing of it by thy unwise carriage but shalt not be deprived of it Before we enlarge on this subject it is good to take notice of the dissimilitude as well as the similitude for though grace wrought in us be compared to an earnest in this respect as it doth assure us of future glory yet in other respects it greatly differeth from earnest among men As in the first place An earnest in bargains is to assure the buyer that giveth it as well as the seller they mutually hereby are confirmed so that the buyer cannot honestly fly off any more than the seller But now when the spirit of God worketh this earnest in us it is only for our good it is that we may be assured and
necessity of this doctrine for while a godly man looketh upon what is to come he seeth such a terrible wildernesse he is to go through such a Red Sea to passe over such Anakims in the way to be destroyed that had he not this certain perswasion that he shall overcome all these difficulties and that God would daily hold him in his arms of grace that he shall not fall his doubts and fears would wholly dishearten him And thus much is comprehended in the metaphor of an earnest It is not my purpose at this time to lanch into that ocean of the doctrine of perseverance as also the certainty of it I shall therefore amplifie this doctrine with some few propositions and so conclude it for the excellency and comfortablenesse of it will not let us wholly passe it by This precious flower can be found only in the paradise of the Scripture Therefore Austin was weary of Platonical Books because they had not these excellent things in them the Scripture hath whereof this arra spiritus the earnest of the spirit is one he instanceth in lib. confes cap. 7. As first We must know that comfort of perseverance is only improved by those that are certain of the present work of grace in their souls He that findeth grace for the present in his soul may undoubtedly conclude of his salvation hereafter but if a Christian do lie in doubts whether he hath grace or no this doctrine will not be as the honey-comb to him for he hath not laid the foundation that this must be built upon but if his thoughts about the present work of grace be hopefull only in him then also are his thoughts about perseverance hopefull only He may have some comfort but not such a certainty as the Scripture propoundeth Neither can he use those triumphing expressions of holy confidence which Paul Rom. 8. speaketh not of himself by any peculiar revelation but of all the children of God that nothing shall separate him from the love of God in Christ Secondly There are some Doctors and Teachers who make the certainty of our present grace and of perseverance therein two distinct yea and separable things They will grant that a man may be certain of the present grace he hath but then they deny he is to be certain that he shall continue and persevere in this for they affirm that a man may have true grace and yet totally and finally fall from it others say that a man may have grace and not be elected and such may lose it but he that hath true grace and elected that man shall never lose his interest in heaven Nay some of these Teachers do not only deny any such certainty of perseverance in our present grace either ordinarily possible or necessary But say such a certainty would be very dangerous and destructive to all vigilancy and carefulnesse in an holy life for what a man is assured of he cannot fear he shall lose let him live how he will but this upon another account is in time to be more largely debated Therefore for the present I only adde this third Proposition viz. That the certainty which the godly have is not such an absolute abstracted one as that it doth not include the means leading to salvation but rather doth necessarily connote them Insomuch that if any godly man should be left to such a desperate frame of heart as to say I am sure of heaven let me fall into the most abominable impieties that are these shall not hinder salvation such an one would certainly be damned but that is not to be supposed that such who have the true seed of grace will ever be given up to such a prophane spirit The certainty then that a beleever hath is in the use of means to attain their desired end So that it 's like the assurance that Paul had concerning the preservation God would vouch safe to all his fellow-passengers in the ship with him which yet did relate to the necessary use of means as Paul exhorteth them or like that of Hezckiah to whom God promised the addition of fifteen years longer to his life Now he was assured of this God could not lye yet he did not neglect to eat and drink he knew Gods promise implyed the use of the means so that the adversaries to this Truth do fully mistake when they say we preach such a certainty of perseverance that though a man fall into any enormous crimes yet he shall enjoy this still This is oppositum in apposito to suppose that if fire be water it will refrigerate Fourthly We are further to distinguish of a two-fold certainty in this matter of salvation and perseverance in the way therein The first I call a dogmaticall certainty and that is when a man is fully convinced out of the Scripture of this truth in the generall that whosoever hath once had true grace shall never fall from it but certainly shall be saved and he that hath this differeth from those corrupt and erroneous Teachers that affirm the contrary as the Arminians and their complyers in this respect for there is no more reason to doubt of this doctrinal point than others that are maintained by the Orthodox against that party so that there is no more reason to make this a problematical point wherein learned men may dissent from one another then any other in the Arminian controversies But 2. there is a personal or reflexive certainty and that is when a man doth not only beleeve this position as a truth that he who hath true grace cannot fall from it but also is perswaded that he hath true grace in his own heart and therefore that he is built upon such a rock that no storms or tempests shall be able to overthrow him and this is that every godly man is to presse after This text is a speciall furtherance in this work for the spirits fealing perswadeth of the grace already wrought in us and the earnest doth assure us of that which is to come If you ask what grounds there are why he who findes grace in himself may thus conclude infallibly for heaven hereafter I shall amongst many give three only which is such a threefold cord that can never be broken As first That all true grace is the proper effect of predestination so that whosoever is effectually called in time is thereby declared to be predestinated before the world began Thus the Apostle Rom. 8 30. whom he did predestinate he called and those he justifieth and those he glorifieth You see it 's a chain of Gods making and so cannot be dissolved therefore Tit. 1. 1. it 's called the faith of Gods elect so Eph. 1. 4. he hath chosen us before the foundation of the world that we should be holy We see then that holinesse and true faith is proper to the elect only and therefore to distinguish of a two-fold Sonship of God some by present grace only and
appeareth in that they took an oath of every member admitted into their society to walk according to their rules The Pelagians besides their doctrinall heresies had two practicall Positions which seemed to savour of much piety and religion The one was that a rich man abiding rich couldnot be saved whatsoever was above necessity he was bound to abdicate The other was that it is wholly unlawfull to swear upon any occasion and as for Pauls examples they denied them to be oaths and as for the instance taken from God himself that he did swear their answer was that though God the Master might swear yet it did not follow that servants might especially when their Master forbiddeth them The Papists some of them though they hold it lawfull to swear yet they judge abstinence from it a counsell belonging to perfect men and not a precept They usually likewise charge it upon the Waldenses as if they judged an Oath absolutely unlawfull The Socinians they indeed grant an Oath lawfull in necessary cases only their errour is That whereas rash and vain swearing was not forbidden in the Old Testament The Jews in their ordinary discourse might swear so only false swearing was prohibited Now Christ as a more perfect Law-giver doth not only forbid forswearing but that common rash swearing But this is built upon their false foundation That Christ persected the morall Law not by explication and declaration only against Pharisaicall glosses but by addition of new precepts Some Anabaptists in this latter age have positively condemned all Oaths and therefore refused to swear before Magistrates thinking that our Saviour Matthew● 5. did forbid it because he saith Swear not at all but let your yea be yea and nay nay c. Yea some of the Fathers as Tertullian Basil Chrysostome and others do seem as peremptorily to condemn all kinde of swearing as can be expressed some of them thinking it was allowed the Jews no otherwise than he Bill of Divorce was even for the hardnesse of their hearts There are indeed learned men as Sixtus Senensis and others who labour to excuse them but by their words nothing seemeth to be more plain yet Tertullian who said Qucmodo pejerare quibus ne jurare est licitum how shall Christians for swear to whom it is not lawful to swear acknowledgeth that though the Christians as Polycarpus wou'd dye rather than swear per genium imperatoris which they judged a devil yet they did per salutem imperatoris by the life or safety of the Emperour or rather God the cause of it But whatsoever the thoughts of men might be yet that in some urgent and necessary cases it is lawfull appeareth First From the examples of it in Scripture and that of God of Angels of godly and holy men yea of Chaist also say some That God did swear appeareth by many places in the Old Testament and the Apostle improveth it for the comfort of the godly Heb. 6. 13. only his Oath is peculiar as his Majesty is infinite for he sweareth by himself because he hath no greater to swear by Some Learned men indeed have thought that it is but an improper and metaphoricall expression when God is said to swear and that it is not truly an Oath but the Apostle doth expresly make his promise and his Oath two things Not that there is a need on Gods part to confirm his word but on our part who are subject to evil Therefore it is our evil that maketh God to swear In some of those Oaths there is an ellipsis or defect as Psal 95. 11. Unto whom I sware in my wrath if they shall enter into my rest If some make the supply of this Oath to be by execration then let me not be God but others more probably make it only for a more vehement attestation conceiving such an execration undecent to the Majesty of God as also because his infinite perfection is such as is not capable of any such execration That Angels did swear appeareth Revel 10. 6. where one is said to swear by him that liveth for ever The eternity of God is the attribute there mentioned because of the fitnesse of it to the matter in hand the Angel declaring what would befall the Church in future ages although it is not likely that Angels swear to one another for the confirmation of any thing for this was done to John for confirmation of the things foretold That Christ did swear some affirm in that expression Amen Amen but other Learned men judge not that to be an Oath but though he did not it must be granted that he might both because as man he was capable of swearing as well as praying to God and also hereby he might confirm the words that he said but his wonderfull miracles did abundantly establish that That holy men also have upon necessary occasions taken an oath appeareth by many examples of Paul So that if our Saviour had intended an absolute prohibition of all Oaths this Apostle would have often offended against that command It is true we told you that all Oaths suppose sinne therefore in the state of integrity there would have been no oath yet Suarez Disput de Juram thinketh there might have been in that condition though not so often because many contingent things might have been known to one which were not to another Therefore he would have an Oath not necessarily to suppose sinne but lesser perfection It is not worth the while to contend in this By these examples we see plainly the lawfulnesse of swearing upon urgent occasions The second Argument is from the commands in the Old Testament as Deut. 6. 13. Deut. 10. 20. The third Commandement in forbidding all irreverent use of Gods Name especially in swearing doth thereby command the lawfull and reverent use of his Name in Oaths yea there are promises of it under the Gospel-time not indeed that it is a duty commanded absolutely and for it self sake so it 's not commanded as prayer is but upon supposition where there is need Thus in some difficult cases in contracts between men for purgation of themselves or discovering the truth an oath is required Num. 30 Lev. 5. 4. Num. 5. 19 21. Lastly The Apostle is clear for this Heb. 6. 16. For men verily swear by the greater and an oath for confirmation is to them ahend of strife That doth not weaken the proof because he saith to men as if he meant only the men of the world they use such a custome but Christians do not for one kinde of men is not there opposed to another men of the world to beleevers but men to God Therefore you heard beleevers did swear as Paul upon many occasions Thus Athanasius did by an oath solemnly purge himself to Constantius the Emperour that he had not spoken any thing against him to his brother Constans Thus you have Scripture-ground for the lawfulnesse of it Neither doth any thing in reason or the nature of an oath make
worke consisteth in a great measure in comforting the afflicted 689 N Names THe prefixing of a Name is not a sufficient argument to prove the Authority of any Scripture 11 Note What things are necessary to make a Note 59 O Oath WHat an Oath is 659 660 661 VVhether words be necessary to an Oath 663 VVhether in faith and by faith be Oaths 665 Officers of the Church vid. Church-officers Ordinances Publick Ordinances usefull and acceptable 374 375 Reasons for it 375 376 377 Oyle The properties of material Oyle compared with spiritual 621 622 623 P Patience 'T Is Patience in sufferings that makes them conduce to our salvation 232 Patience commended by all 233 What goeth to the producing of it 234 235 Motives to Patience 236 237 238 239 Paul Why Saul called Paul 2 Paul's sins 3 His serviceablenesse 3 4 His learning 6 Of the Name Paul being prefixed before his Epistles 10 11 That argues them to be of Divine Authority 11 Why he styles himself an Apostle of Jesus Christ 31 Peace Peace from God and Christ earnestly to be prayed for 108 Wherein it consisteth how wrought and preserved 109 110 c. What are the effects of it 114 115 Directions for the attaining of it 116 People as related to Minister Vide Ministers Perseverance 'T is Perseverance that is the crown of holinesse 458 Hopefull beginnings in the wayes of Religion are not enough without Perseverance 459 Propositions clearing it 459 460 461 Prayer The most eminent in gifts and graces still need the Prayers of the meanest 359 Reasons of it 360 People ought to Pray for their Minister 361 362 363 Prayers to be made not only privately but publickly 375 Reasons of it 375 376 Praising It is our duty to Praise God for all his mercies 364 What is required to our Praising God 365 366 367 Motives to it 367 368 Vide Blessing Publick Praises vid. Publick Prayer Preaching Christ is the only object of our Preaching 557 When Christ is Preached 557 558 559 Presumption Signes of Presumption 350 351 Principles Two distinct Principles in every regenerate man 271 272 Of Principles in general 525 526 527 Of the Principles of a godly man 527 528 529 Principles of flesh vid. Flesh Professours Carnal Professours make great opposition to the Ministry 261 262 263 Who are they which Professe Religion meerly upon carnal ends 263 264 c. Promises God hath made many Promises to us in Christ 581 Propositions clearing it 581 582 583 584 Of the several sorts of Promises 585 586 Promises are the executions of Gods Decrees 587 No wicked man hath any right to the Promises ibid. The Promises suppose faith 588 God hath sealed them to us ibid. 'T is great skill to make use of the Promises 589 The Promises are all confirmed in Christ 591 Propositions clearing it 591 592 593 What a Christian should doe that doubts whether the Promises belong to him or no. 596 597 598 The Promises of God will never be altered 598 599 The Promises give glory to God both as made by him and as believed by us 600 601 Wherein the glory of God is manifested in his Promises 601 602 How faith in the Promises gives glory to him 602 603 Our establishment in the Promises is the work of G●…lone 605 Propositions clearing it 606 607 Signs of our interest in the Promises 640 Prudence What is that holy Prudence that Ministers are to use in the exercise of their Ministerial power 678 679 Wherein it doth consist 680 681 R Raising WHat is implyed in Gods Raising from the dead 328 329 Rejoycing An holy Rejoycing and glorying in the graces of God lawfull 380 What is required to this holy Rejoycing 380 381 In what respect 't is lawfull 381 Wherein unlawfull 382 383 Religion Religion opposed by two sorts of people 262 Who are those who professe Religion onely upon carnal grounds 263 264 c. S Saints GOd of great sinners oft makes eminent Saints 2 Reasons for it 4 5 All that are of the Church are Saints by profession and ought to be so by conversation 83 Of the nature of real Saintship 86 87 89 Two motives to it 88 89 Saints ought to joyne themselves in a Church-way 91 Yet some reasons may excuse them 90 What those reasons are 91 92 What reasons are not justifiable 93 94 The soul of the poorest Saint not to be neglected 94 Salvation The Salvation of believers is promoted by their suffering for Christ 228 There is a two-fold Salvation temporal and spiritual 241 The Salvation of Gods people is furthered by all his dispensations 242 What this Salvation doth imply 242 243 Two sorts of dispensations whereby Salvation is promoted 244 Saviour Our Saviour how called Jesus Christ 1 24 26 How Christ is a Saviour 25 What kind of Saviour he is 26 Vide Jesus Saul Why Saul was called Paul 2 Scripture The Penmen of the holy Scriptures were instruments not the authors 12 We are to rest satisfied with the style and method of Scripture 12 The authority of Scripture not to be questioned 13. Four considerations whereby to arme our selves against the opposers of Scripture 13 14 Sealing The people of God are his Sealed ones 625 Propositions clearing it 625 626 What the Sealing of the godly implies 626 627 628 629 The description of the Sealing of Gods Spirit 632 633 634 c. Whether all the people of God be his Sealed ones 645 646 How this Sealing may be stopt 647 648 Self-confidence Vide Confidence Simplicity Godly Simplicity affords much comfort 404 Of the nature of Simplicity as it relateth to God 405 406 407 408 c. As it relateth to man 411 412 Sincerity How 't is called godly Sincerity 413 Godly Sincerity carries a man above all other things to God himself 414 What it is in God that a Sincere heart looks upon 415 416 Propositions discovering the nature and effects of godly Sincerity 418 419 420 Spirit How the Spirit witnesseth with our consciences 390 Spiritual Spiritual mercies to be desired before temporal 96 A natural man cannot desire Spiritual things ibid Onely the regenerate 97 What ars the qualifications which provoke the godly to esteem Spiritual favours before others ibid. The reasons of it 98 Gods Spiritual works upon his people are not only for their but also for others good 179 Two kinds of Spiritual gifts ibid. What are these Spiritual things whereby we may be seruiceable to others 180 181 Suffering What is implied in the Sufferings of Christ 196 197 What in the Sufferings of Christ abounding 197 The profession of Christ is accompanied with Sufferings sometimes excessive ibid. Propositions clearing it 198 199 200 What is required in our Suffering for Christ ex parate objecti 201 202 203 What ex parte subjecti 205 206 207 208 How Christ makes our comforts to abound in our Sufferings for him 210 The advantages of our Suffering for Christ 213 Our Sufferings for Christ are for the Churches good 218 219
weakest believer as well as the strongest Christ to be prayed to for grace and peace Jesus Christ is a Lord. Of a threefold blessing spoken of in Scripture It is a Christians duty to be much in praising God What goeth to the making up a thankfull spirit Motives to be more affected with spiritnal mercies than temporal Motives to bless God for all his mercies God is the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Propositions explaining how Christ is the Son of God How Christs being the Son of God is the foundation of a Christians comfort God is a mercifull Father to all his children What is implied in Gods being called the Father of mercies Of the multitude of Gods mercies Of the variety of Gods mercies Of the Properties of Gods mercies Who are the fit objects of Gods mercies God is a God of all comfort to all his children What is comprehended in that expression God is the God of comfort What is implied in the word consolation How he is a God of all consolations Propositions obviating practical and doctrical objections about the mercy or comforts of God Of the Calvinists Doctrine concerning Gods absolute Decrees and how they stand with the mercy of God God not only can but doth comfort his children How God comforteth his people God is a God of comfort only to believers God will comfort his children in all their affliction whatsoever Propositions explaining the Observation Several sorts of soul or spiritual troubles in all which God comforts his children How God comforteth his people in outward tribulations No Philosopher ever had the true grounds of comfort Gods children deficient in a two-fold respect concerning Gods comforts What are these good things that God hath prepared for those that love him to comfort them What grounds of comfort the Scriptures afford unto us Psal 102. 13. How God comforreth his children in all their tribulations though they often may be disconsolate Comfort not absolutely necessary to salvation There is a two-fold joy direct and reflex Joy is either spiritual or sensitive and corporeal Gods spiritual works upon his people are not only for their own but for others spiritual advantage Of the distinction of the Schoolmen of spiritual Gifts 1. Gratiae gratis datae 2. Gratti● gratum facientes The Gifts of Gods Spirit are better distinguished into Dona Ministrantia and Sanctificantia Gifts are encreased by being improved What are those ●…ice things wherein more particularly we are to be serviceable to others 1. Humiliation 2. The Knowledge of God and true saith 3. Temptations 4. Consolations Those only can make fit applications to others who have the work of Gods Spirit upon their own souls A two-fold knowledge of spiritual things 1. Speculative and Theoretical 2. Practical and experimental This speculative and practical knowledge of spiritual things differ in the whole kind All knowledge that is accompanied with some kind of affections is not an experimental knowledge All experimental workings upon the soul are to be tryed by the Scriptures How our experiences are to be judged by the Word 1. Are they from Scripture rightly understood 2. Are they from the Spirit of God 3. Do they make thee more holy and humble Reasons confirming the Doctrine 1. They that have not this experimental knowledge they have no skill to cure others 2. They can have any sutablenesse of of pity and compassion 3. Because such only are found reall and in earnest 4. Because such alone are faithfull It is a special duty in a right manner to comfort the afflicted Propositions clearing the truth 1. There are two sorts of troubles 1. Spiritual and inward 2. Outward 2. The afflicted need the help of others to comfort them though themselves be never so skilfull in the comsorting others Reasons 1. Because remptations darken the judgement 2. Because the sense of their grief doth wholly possesse them 3. Because the most eminent when in troubles are subject to much unbelief and frowardness 4. Because the Devil is then most busie Lastly God hath appointed Ministers and Christians as a means to comfort others 3. The dispensation of comfort to the afflicted is either Charitativè or Potestativè 4. What is required to the comforting others in a right manner 1. Knowledge of the temptation and disposition of the person 2. The discovery of sin and then the application of comfort The same grounds of comfort that revive the heart of one godly man may do so to another too 1. There are both general and particular grounds of comfort What are the general grounds of comfort 1. All afflictions come from a Father 2. The end is good 3. The advantages that come from Christ Of the special and particular grounds of comfort The grounds of the point 1. Because all godly men are of the same nature 2. Because all have the same spirit 3. Because promises are made alike to all The sufferings of Christ abound in us What is meant by the sufferings of Christ What is meant by the sufferings of Christ abounding What be these sufferings abounding in us The true and faithfull owing of Christ is sometimes accompanied with great sufferings Propositions declaring the truth of the Doctrine 1. A Saints sufferings may be as extensive as his comforts 2. At some time their sufferings abound more then others 3. To suffer for Christ is very grievous to flesh and blood 'T is a glorious and blessed thing to own Christ in the midst of sufferings What it is to suffer for Christ 1. Ex parte Objecti 1. It must not be for any sin 2. It must be for the name of Christ 3. For righteousnesse sake 4. For a good conscience What are the qualifications of those who suffer truly for Christ 1. Faith 3. Spiritual ●ortitude and heavenly courage 4. Holy wisdom and prudence 5. Patience 6. An heart mortified to all earthly comforts 7. Pure and holy motives As our sufferings are for Christ so are our comforts by him How our comforts abound by Christ 1. Efficiently 2. Meritoriously 3. Objectively How many wayes Christ makes his comforts to abound to those that suffer for him 1. By perswading them of the goodness of the cause why they suffer 2. By sorewarning of their sufferings 3. By informing us of his Sovereignty and conquest over the world 4. By vertue of his prayer put up in that very behalf 5. By instructing them of the spiritual advantages which come from such sufferings God doth proportion our comforts to our sufferings Christ alwaies accommodates himself to the capacities of his people The mercies of God do often overflow Reasons 1. Because God in all his administrations doth still regard his own glory not our desert 2. Because of Gods faithfulnesse to his Promises 3. Otherwise God in his expressions of mercy would be exceeded by man 4. Because otherwise Gods glorious and in his afflicting could not be obtained Object Answ Why God often denies comfort in trouble 1. To teach us that comforts are his gifts 2.
of the Church They include and suppose the publick receiving of it by the people yea some do clearly expresse it By this pure and true preaching of the Word we may discern the true Church from Jewes and Pagans as also from Heretical and Idololatrical Societies yet pretending to a Church Fourthly When these Notes especially the former are said to be proper and inseparable to the Church of God You must alwayes remember here is a latitude in the application of these Notes For some Churches may have the Word more soundly preached and the Sacraments more dispensed than another and yet for all that not to be denied to be Churches This Church of Corinth was foully out of order And so most of those Churches in Asia were sharply reproved yet they did not cease to be a Church Yea the Church of Israel had many corruptions both in worship and life yet it was a long while ere God did cast her off So that we must not for some defilements either in the Doctrine Worship or Manners of a Church presently deny her to be a Church and separate from her for this is against Scripture information Yea there is no Church so perfect but needeth some Reformation They may build hay and stubble though they keep the foundation So that he must go out of the world that would live in a Church where nothing is amiss Even that Church of Smyrna the Apostle mentioneth Revel 2. 8. that was as her Name signifying sweet smelling and fragrant like a Garden or bed of Spices yet she was troubled with some who said They were Jews but were not but were of the Synagogue of Satan But of this more when we come to the next Doctrine Fifthly These then being the visible Marks of a visible Church we must not confound them with the properties of the Church invisible The Church of God hath as it were a two-fold Form one Internal and Essential which consists in their Union with Christ and communion with his benefits Now none but those that are truly godly are of the Church in this invisible manner he must be regenerated and graffed into Christ that can have any saving benefit by Christ But then 2. The Church of God hath an External and outward Form which consists in the external profession of faith and observance of Christs Ordinances Now a man may be of the Church in respect of this outward standing though he be not truly godly Therefore Dr Ames said well That it was a false thing which Bellarmine objected to us about the constitution of a Church as if we required internal graces to the making of a man a member of the Church in respect of the visible state of it We read in the New Testament that upon the outward profession of their faith they were baptized and received into the Church though it 's plain all of them had not true internal grace So then when the Question is put Whether may a man that is not truly godly be of the Church or no You must distinguish between the inward form of the Church which is union with Christ the Head and so he is not no more than a wooden leg is a member of the body that is not animated by the soul and the External visible state of it and so he is of the Church till by his obstinacy in wickedness he be cast out as unworthy We must not therefore give those Notes of the Church as visible which belong to it only as invisible viz. Election Vocation and Justification c. Sixthly The Papist to avoid this extream he giveth such Marks of a Church as savour rather of worldly ambition and pride Yea the true Church of God many times is known by the contrary Marks they give amplitude and universality as also temporal felicity Now this is rather a Description of some worldly Monarchy than Gods Church For as for the Churches amplitude though absolutely in it self it may be sometimes numerous yet at other times it hath been brought into a narrow compasse Elijah thought none was left and God speaks of but seven thousand that did not how the knee to Baal which was a very inconsiderable number to the Idolaters Therefore respectively to the wicked of the world even when they are most ample they are but a little flock And as for any glorious felicity though the Church of God hath sometimes had her respite and halcyon dayes yet for the most part a crown of thorns hath been on her head and therefore she is justly called the Militant Church while in this world because of her spiritual conflict with all sorts of enemies So that the Church of Christ may sometimes say as Christ once did The Foxes have their holes and the Birds of the air their nests but the Sonne of man hath not where to lay his head Thus the Foxes of the world the crafty subtil men have great abundance many times when the Church hath hid her self in the wildernesse And Fowls of the air men of proud and lofty minds have their nests when the Church like Noah's Dove hath not where to set her foot Seventhly I shall not enlarge my self to prove these only to be the proper Notes of the Church only consider that place Act. 2. 41 42. where you have all of them conjoyned together 1. They received the Word gladly There is a solemn profession of it 2. There is the administration of the Sacraments They were baptized and continued in breaking of bread with prayers There is the solemn calling upon God And as an epitomizing of all this it 's said Then were added unto the Church about three thousand souls Thus 1 Tim. 3. 15. the Church is called The pillar and foundation of the truth that is by the Ministeries preservation of it and the peoples submitting unto it Lastly If to this it be objected as Socinians do who hold this way of Notes to find out a Church to be useless and vain That true Doctrine cannot be a sign of the Church because it 's the Form and Essence of it Now that which notifieth the essence of a thing must be distinct from it To this it is answered That the form as it giveth being to a thing so it giveth to distinguish from others Forma dat esse distingui Although we do not say True Doctrine is the Note of a Church but the external preaching and receiving of it that is a Note incurring into our senses Even as Reason though it give a man his rational being yet speaking is the proper and true sign that manifests this So let true Doctrine or a true faith be the soul and life of a Church yet the external profession is the outward Note and Sign of it And if further it be said That every Sect doth claim to it self the pure preaching of the Word and the right administration of Ordinances Therefore these cannot be a sign It 's answered The consequence is denied for true preaching and
confession is a sign although Hereticks pretend thereunto As true Miracles were a sure Argument to prove the truth although others have done and Antichrist will pretend to true Miracles And indeed though all Sects as the Socinians especially pretend much to the Scripture yet it is not the words only but the sense of it that is by the Context and Scope to be discovered that is the word of God Therefore Irenaeus of old said elegantly That Hereticks making the Scripture to speak what sense they pleased did as if a man should take the Statue or Image of a King and so transpose the parts of it as to make it the image of a Dog or some other vile thing These things concluded on let us draw some Uses by way of Corollaries As 1. In that the holy Ghost is pleased to appropriate this Word in the New Testament to his people which among the Heathens signifieth the meaner sort of people for that they called Ecclesia and it was opposite to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Senate which consisted of more noble men Hence we may see who they are that are most commonly called to be of his Church even the meaner sort Not many rich not many noble hath God called 1 Corinth 1. We should not despise the Church of God if it be not so externally pompous and glorious as Kingdoms and States For Christ is more peculiarly present with his Church and shed his bloud for that 2. That if we speak properly the Church is not a material place not this building of stones and wood but the people of God meeting there Indeed it may tropically be well enough called a Church as Synagogue is applied to the place He built us a Synagogue whereas properly it signifieth the people meeting together as you heard Thus Concio amongst the Latines signifieth both the place and the company met together Bellarmine would have the word to signifie a place 1 Cor. 11. as also where it is said Let the woman keep silence in the Churches And those learned men Fuller and Mede expound it so in 1 Cor. 11. But there is no necessity of such Interpretation But though the Scripture doth not call it so we may by a Trope give it that name and use must authorize in these things Though Ifidore Pelusiota in one of his Epistles sharply reproving a Bishop that adorned the material place with Images and Ornaments but neglected the Church of God the true professours he persecuted doth call the people 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lastly Is it a Church a company called by God Then this sheweth of what consequence Unity and Concord is amongst all the Members thereof How can a body be kept together without ligaments and nerves How can the building stand if the wood and straw be not aptly fastned and cemented together How can the Church subsist if there be not Love Union and Concord It 's observable Phil. 4. 2. that the Apostle thought it not too low a thing even in canonical Scripture to intreat two women that were at difference to be of the same mind I beseech Euodias I beseech Syntyche that they be of one mind Two godly women differing the Apostle doth passionately intreat reconciliation and agreement how much more then would he have intreated the Pastors and Officers in the Church to take heed of discord SERM. XV. Why Paul writeth to the Church not the Churches of Corinth What is implyed in the Churches being called the Church of God 2 COR. 1. 1. To the Church of God which is at Corinth c. THe Nature of a Church hath been considered with the Marks thereof from the name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 given here to the society of believers at Corinth So that we might dispatch this only in that the word Church is used in the singular number The Church at Corinth not Churches It 's disputed What one Church it was whether one single Congregation exereising all Church-government within it self or a combined and collective Church united into one but consisting of particular Congregations and it may seen● probable that this Church of Corinth was a combined or associated Church partly because Act. 18. we may read of much people that God had in that place and therefore Paul staid above a year there which argued a multitude of converts The plenty also of their Teachers and Officers with the diversitie of tongues And lastly in that 1 Cor. 16. 19. Aquila and Priscilla are mentioned with the Church in their house It is true what is meant by the Church in an house is controverted we find the expression four times in Scripture Rom. 16 15. where Aquila and Priscilla are saluted with the Church in their house So 1 Cor. 16. 19. these persons are mentioned again with the Church in their house Col. 4. 15. There one Nymphas is saluted with the Church in his house Phil. 2. There likewise Philemon is mentioned with the Church in his house Mr. Mede doth from hence inferre That even in the Apostles dayes and so in the primitive times that the Christians had publick places fixed and setled being set apart for the publick Assemblies to worship God in answering those places of Arnobius and others who told the Heathens they had no Templa nor Aras he saith these mentioned in the Texts named did set apart some piece of their house for that end But it should seem by other passages that in the Apostles dayes there were no fixed places for to meet in Therefore sometimes they meet in one house and sometimes in another yea They went from house to house Others they think by the Church in their house is meant many believers For they say Whereas when other families are saluted only some are named sometimes the Master of the house is omitted as Salute the houshold of Narcissus because he was thought to be an infidel Yea Calvin thinketh it is that infamous and wicked Nar●issus so notorious wicked and great with Nero of whom Historians speak Now when the Apostle salutes the men and the Church in their house it was because there were no unbelievers but all were of the Church Howsoever it be it 's plain there were many believers in that family more than ordinary and therefore called a Church which should argue That the Church of Corinth was a combined Church That passage also makes it likely 1 Cor. 14. 34. Let your women be silent in the Churches Your women therefore he speaks of the Corinthians there who are said to have Churches and yet here it is called a Church This will still appear the more likely if we consider that here were believing Jews as well as Gentiles in this Church of Corinth as Estius observeth in the Preface to the first Epistle Therefore when the Apostle speaketh of some who said they were of Cephas that relateth to the believing Jews yet because they were few comparatively to the Gentiles therefore the Apostle
other helps no more than he will make you understand Greek and Hebrew Know then it is a very sad and almost incurable condition when the holy Scriptures do become a snare to us when we suck poison out of these sweet herbs Although indeed we cannot from the Scripture get any hurt but our own corruptions procure it to us because we bring the Scripture to our ends and affections not them to the Scripture Thirdly To the having of a well-ordered conscience There is greatly required pure aims and intentions For although a good intention cannot sanctifile an unlawfull action yet corrupt intentions will blast and defile the best actions Insomuch that if we had the gifts and parts of the ablest men yea of Angels themselves yet sinfull aims would be like Locusts and Caterpillars to devour this hopefull fruit But oh the unsearchable hypocrisie and deceitfulness of mans heart even in this very respect How ready is every Pharisee every Heretick and Papist to appropriate this to themselves How often do we find them professing to the whole world that it is not any outward advantage any temporal emolument that they look at or regard but the glory of God and that therefore they have much rejoycing because of this But if the counterfeit will bring such peace what will the real and sincere intentions of a man do And certainly though a man be cloathed with never so much glory in the Church of God so that we are ready to say not only a greater than Austin or Chrysostome but even than Paul or Peter For some have cried up the heads of their parties as having greater gifts than the Apostles themselves Yet without sincere intentions they are but as a tinkling cymbal This therefore is the life soul and the all in a good conscience But that will come in more seasonably afterwards Fourthly To a right ordered conscience whose witness may be received and comfort taken thereby That there is required the inward sanctification and effectual renovation thereof So that till this be every mans conscience is like a man himself a meer liar There is no believing of it no trusting of it When it is said Jer. 17. That the heart of a man is deceitfully wicked or crafty and supplanting a man This comprehends conscience as well as any part else For you have heard that original sinne is in this as well as in other powers of the soul So that in these two respects the natural conscience doth alwayes fail For either it doth not witness that which is right or not to a right end Insomuch that though a natural man is not to gainsay or contradict his conscience yet nothing lieth upon him more than to have his conscience rightly informed or regulated by Gods word What is the reason you see every civil man every formal man so applauding himself in his good condition It is because his conscience is not a spiritual conscience a Scripture-conscience for that would make him abhor himself and flie out of the Sodome he was in For in most things the conscience doth not witness the truth at all but it doth fl●tter and deceive thee How seldom doth it tell thee thou art the drunkard the hypocrite the neglecter of private duties c Or if it doth then it is to a false end either to drive to despair and to flie from Christ whose blood only can cleanse the conscience or else to quiet it again by some superstitious usages and non-instituted remedies And this is the reason why so few are brought out of the troubles of their conscience into an Evangelical and Gospel way Know then here is the root of all thy misery thy conscience being unsanctified lulleth thee asleep whereby thou rejoycest in thy condition when thou hast cause to fear and tremble SERM. LXXXVI Further Discoveries of what is required to a well-regulated Conscience with Distinctions concerning it 2 COR. 1. 12. For our rejoycing is this the testimony of our conscience THere remain more particulars to be insisted upon which are requisite to make a well-regulated conscience whose testimony you heard is the cause of such unspeakable comfort And First There is in a peculiar manner necessary the witnessing and sealing power of the holy Ghost to and with our consciences The illumination and sanctification of Gods Spirit is not enough to make our consciences speak fully and clearly so as to have rejoycing thereby unlesse the Spirit of God doth also bear witnesse with it Hence we have them both put together Rom. 8. 16. The Spirit it self beareth witnesse with our spirit that we are the children of God And therefore you heard that Bernard understood this testimony of conscience in the Text of a Testimonium percipientis not Perhibentis but they are both included For our conscience cannot give any eviden●e and sure testimony of the grace inus unlesse inabled thereunto by the Spirit of God and this is called The work of Gods Spirit sealing and witnessing with our spirits The Text is very famous and greatly agitated in the controversie about the assurance of our sanctification and salvation Grotius and some others neglect the Preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and would have it no more than simply 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But the word is not any where so used the instances of Grotius are against him Rom. 2. 15. For Conscience there is said to bear witnesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in respect of God and so doth relate to his testimony We therefore conclude That the Spirit of God is here said to bear witnesse with our spirit only the difficulty is How this is done And 1. It is not done by any external voice and sound made in the air as Christ had when it was said This is my beloved Sonne Neither may we apprehend any immediate testimony by an extraordinary revelation as some have pleaded for but in a mediate way partly by exciting and inabling of our spirits to call God Father against that slavishness and servility which is apt to bear us down and partly by working in us those heavenly and holy qualifications by which we do certainly gather that we are the children of God Indeed the Papists make the testimony of Gods Spirit to be no more as applied to particular subjects though in it self they say it is infallible then a moral certainty by probable conjectures and signs But this is derogatory to the Spirit of God and taketh away all that Evangelical joy and holy boldness which we are allowed to have at the throue of grace This witnessing then of Gods Spirit is two wayes 1. Effectivè When it doth enable the conscience of man to cast off all legal terrors and tormenting fears and so in serenity of spirit to believe God is our Father And for this end it is called The Spirit of Adoption For alas take the conscience of the most holy man without this Spirit of Adoption How legal and timorated