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A76707 The copy of the covenant of grace With a true discovery of several false pretenders to that eternal inheritance, and of the right heir thereunto. Together with such safe instructions as will inable him to clear his title, and to make it unquestionable. Exactly evidenced by many perspicuous and unconstrained testimonies of scripture. Penned, and published upon mature deliberation, and good advise. / By Robert Bidwel, a servant, and minister of the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. Bidwell, Robert. 1657 (1657) Wing B2886; Thomason E2117_1; ESTC R212678 175,027 429

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Leaf greenness In the blossom sweetness and in the Fruit juice So faith draws vertue from the Lord Christ Jesus and send it through the blessed soul in love to all the powers and faculties thereof thereby inriching every spirituall grace according to its proper use and action It maketh and preserveth faith unfained Hope unwearied charity open-hearted Humility undisguised Patience undistracted Prayer delightfull Thanksgiving cheerfull and obedience fruitfull To every grace it giveth life luster and sincerity which without Love are dull deceitfull and hypocriticall I cannot well tell where I should begin or how to end in the just commendations of this incomparable blessing There are many affections or strong and powerfull motions of the minde as joy grief Hope Fear Hatred and the like But when affection is simply and singularly nominated without any other addition you know we take it usually for Love By which we may conceive and understand that Love is the absolute affection It is also said that a good thing the more common it is the better it is And love is common unto every creature that onely hath the benefit of sense They do all generally love themselves their seed their food their fellows and their friends or whatsoever is most precious to their instinct or inclination Yet Love in man is of a nobler strain in regard that it proceedeth or should proceed from reason and discretion But when this Love extracted by true faith from God the onely substance of pure Love is placed upon God in Christ and the image of God in man The onely sound and unsuspected Objects Mat. 22. 37 38. Then verily it is of wondrous use First it becomes the nourse of pregnant faith to cherish and improve her precious fruit strengthening decking and beautifying every infant grace which would otherwise grow crooked deformed and contemptible 'T is faith that seales our interest in Christ But such a faith as works by Love saith Paul Gala. 5 6. Faith if it hath not works is dead saith James Ja. 2. 17. Yet Faith with works is nothing without Love as saith believing working loving Paul 1 Cor. 13. 2 3. True faith and Love have such a strict relation they cannot live the one without the other And therefore if our Love be not sincere we have great reason to suspect our faith And in the second place we finde that Love is Christ his cognisance or livery whereby he will have his Disciples known By this shall all men know ye are my Disciples saith he if ye have love one to another Jo. 13. 15. And it is a most compleat robe it hideth all our infirmities and deformities yea all our sins and transgressions Love covereth all sins saith Solomon Pro. 10. 12. And therefore blessed is the man that weares it Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven and whose sin is covered Psa 32. 1. This in all likeness is that wedding garment for want of which the Intruder was cast out of the bride chamber into utter darkness Mat. 22. 12 13. And it is an everlasting Ornament It never faileth 1 Cor. 13. 8. Our faith and Hope will help us into heaven and there they leave us but our endless Love will enter with us where it shall surpass in strength in sweetness and perfection as much as having exceedeth hopeing or injoying excelleth believing But every one that loves himself will say though Love be such a precious livery yet it is not so costly as 't is common I hope we are not so ungracious or so ungratefull but we love the Lord. Neverthelesse wise Solomon informs us That he that trusteth in his own heart is a fool Pro. 28. 26. And therefore let not us delude our selves in matters of such infinite concernment by trusting to our own deceitfull hearts without a serious examination We shall not finde it so easie a matter to lovc God really as most men unadvisedly imagine For first our Love is as narrow as G●ds election Gods election is the first wheel that moveth in this great work It is he That hath chosen us in Christ before the foundation of the world that we should be holy and without blame before him in love Ephes 1. 4. And therefore untill we have given diligence to make our election sure by inquiring into the soundness of our faith we have great reason to suspect our Love Secondly if we have not the Spirit of God we have not the love of God For Love is a prime fruit of the Spirit Gal. 5. 22. Thirdly if we do not love the children of God we do not love God For every one that loveth him that begat loveth him also that is begotten of him 1 John 5. 1. Fourthly if we do not keep Gods words we do not love God For if any man love me he will keep my words saith the Son of God John 14. 23. Fifthly if we be not carefull to keep Gods commandments we do not love God For this is the love of God that we keep his commandments 1 John 5. 3. Sixthly if our hearts be not circumcised if our hearts be not broken and humbled for sin so that our carnall corruptions are mortified and our sinfull lusts and affections subdued in some good measure we cannot love God For the Lord thy God will circumcise thine heart to love the Lord thy God with all thine heart and with all thy soul saith Moses that man of God Deut 30. 6. And Seaventhly if we do love the world we do not love God If any man love the world the love of the Father is not in him 1 John 2. 15. Now it will be necessary for us to examine our selves in order to these seaven particulars And if we shall then presume that we love God we are in the next place to consider what manner of Love it is wherewith we do love him For we must know that there is a false Love as well as there is a true Love the love of an harlot as well as the love of a virgin The love of an harlot is First mercenary secondly hypocriticall thirdly inconstant and fourthly contemptible First I say the love of an harlot is mercenery when Tamar deceived Judah by playing the harlot she said unto him what wilt thou give me Gen. 38. 16. And probably there may be many that do seem even unto themselves to love God very dearly when as yet the secret inquisition of their heart is what shall we get by it what pleasure what profit what preferment They say with the wicked what can the almighty do for them Job 22. 17. Naaman the Syrian will go to the Prophet in Samaria 2 Kings 5. 9. But it shall be to be cleansed of his outward leprosie And being cleansed he will thenceforth offer neither burnt-offering nor sacrifice unto other gods but to the Lord vers 17. But in this thing the Lord pardon thy servant saith he that when my master goeth into the house of Rimmon to worship there and he
the penalty that 's due to her transgressions eternal death in everlasting torments And being thus affrighted at her sins the onely cause of her afflictions the Soul bestirs her self about the Cure And to that end she sighs weeps vowes resolves and fasts and prayes and cries unto the Lord. Behold O Lord for I am in distresse my bowels are troubled mine heart is turned within me for I have grievously rebelled Lament 1. 20. Bowels of grief beg bowels of compassion and all to little purpose For now the more she mourns the more she may her spirit is ingaged in the conflict And a wounded spirit who can bear saith Solomon Prov. 18. 14. Poor Soul for life she labours does undoes she spends her spirits and torments her self and all to satisfie incensed Justice Which she is never able to perform by her own passions were they strong as death and deep as hell The Law is broken and it is Gods Law her sute is entred and her case reported one day of hearing craveth for another night unto night doth utter lamentations Justice must be appeas'd or no discharge every hour fresh summons to the barr she gives attendance but receives no comfort her time runs on her taske is but begun her work is always doing never ended And so her case seems to be desperate Because she seeketh not the cure by Christ by God in Christ Oh! there is heavenly musick That very name revives her and commands her ears and heart to dwell upon that sound which they suck in with a delitious relish For now that God and man that Mediator not won by tears but of his own free grace turns o're the mighty volume of his book the glorious records of free-election and finds her name written in that Book of life Revela 3. 5. And now though haply he may forbear for some short time to utter his affections until her heart be throughly mollified and well prepared to receive impression yet he forgets not to compassionate the pining wretch but in the best of times his own good time he says concerning her like as he did concerning Ephraim Is this my dear daughter is she a pleasant child for since I spake against her I do earnestly remember her still therefore my bowels are troubled for ber I will surely have mercy on her saith the Lord Jer. 31. 20. And to her self as to his spouse he saith O my dove that art in the clefts of the rock in the secret places of the stairs let me see thy countenance let me hear thy voice for sweet is thy voice and thy countenance is comly Cant. 2. 14. In a little wrath I hid my face from thee for a moment but with everlasting kindnesse will I have mercy on thee c. Isa 54. 8 9 10. And thus her Lord bemoanes and greets and cheers her till being big with Christ her comforter she singeth with the blessed virgin Mary My soul doth magnifie the Lord and my spirit hath rejoyced in God my Saviour For he hath regarded the lowe estate of his handmaiden c. Luke 1. 46 c. This is a happy progresse you may say But where appeareth this humility Truely she meets with it in every passage First she survayes her sorrows and she says Remembering mine affection and my misery the wormwood and the gall my soul hath them still in rememberance and is humbled in me Lament 3. 19 20. And secondly she sees the work of God in her afflictions and therefore She humbleth her self under the mighty hand of God According as St. Peter teacheth her 1 Pet. 5. 6. Thirdly perceiving sin to be the cause of all her miseries she humbly begs to have it done away Have mercy upon me O God saith she according to thy loving kindnesse according to the multitude of thy tender mercies blot out my transgressions wash me throughly from mine iniquitie and cleanse me from my sin as Psal 51. 1 2. And with like meeknesse promiseth amendment I have born chastisement saith she I will not offend any more as Job 34. 31. But Justice pleads for satisfaction The soul saith he that sinneth it must die At this the poor soul seems as dead indeed she 's utterly dejected quite cast down She 's not so stiff in her opinion to bring in writs of errour or false-judgement All that she desires is to obtain the mercy of the Book where she is taught to read The wages indeed of sin is death But the gift of God is eternall life through Jesus Christ our Lord Rom. 6. 23. And here she breathes for here 's the breath of life And thus restor'd she humbly thanks the law her schole-master for bringing her to Christ She hangs upon this promise claims this gift and by this Jesus Christ her Surty she tenders satisfaction unto Justice and is dismissed without cost or dammage And not so onely But she 's made an heir an heir of God and a joynt-heir with Christ Rom. 8. 17. And is she proud of this preferment now No verily Till now she never felt the kindly force of sound humility All her humilty unto this present was meerly legal troublesome and slavish but now 't is evangelicall and free or if it be constrained any way It is constrained by the love of Christ Indeed The love of Christ constraineth her because she thus judgeth that if one died for all then were all dead 2 Cor. 5. 14. If all were dead then she amongst the rest And that she now lives or begins to live 't is onely by the purchace of his grace He died the death that she deserved to die that she may live with him eternally And where is boasting then it is excluded By what law of works Nay but by the law of faith Rom. 3. 27. Now she believes and loves and hence proceeds a modest willing sweet humility She 's not dejected through a servile fear but she is humbled by attractive love Because her Lord requires to have it so Take my yoak upon you and learn of me for I am meek and lowly in heart saith her beloved Lord Math. 11. 29. Let this minde be in you which was also in Christ Jesus who being in the form of God thought it not robbery to be equall with God But made himself of no reputation and took upon him the form of a servant and was made in the likenesse of men And being found in fashion as a man he humbled himself became obedient unto death even the death of the crosse saith his learned Apostle Phil. 2. 5. to the 9. Thus councel wooes her and example wins her And she walkes humbly with her God in Christ According to that of the Prophet Micah 6. 8. And thus effectuall humility is brought and wrought into the sinful soul But what doth this humility perform what doth it work For that is the fourth Question I answer that this true humility being impowred and improved by Faith hath principally these five operations It
over her and covered her nakednesse and sware unto her and entred into a Covenant with her and made her his own Then he washed her and anointed her he decked her with the richest Ornaments both of Jewels and Rayment he fed her with the chief est nourishment And her beauty was made perfect through his comelinesse that he had put upon her Ezek. 16. 8. to the 15. verse And in consideration of these so great so undeserved favours she crieth out with that good Prophet David O give thanks unto the Lord for he is good for his mercy endureth for ever Psal 107. 1. And so thirdly she falleth upon his mercy which she cannot but mightily commend for that so soon as she became sensible of her own lamentable condition he then appeard to her most mercifull For no sooner did she finde her self to be by nature the child of wrath Eph. 2. 3. And by sin the child of the Devil 1 Joh. 3. 8. But suddenly she perceived that he had redeemed her to God by his bloud Rev. 5. 9. That when she was yet his enemy he had reconciled her to God by his death and most assuredly saved her by his life Rom. 5. 10. And all this without the least satisfaction by or from her self For not by works of righteousnesse that she had done but according to his mercie he saved her Tit. 3. 5. And she is most confident that he will continue her in her now happy estate For he hath said I will never leave thee nor forfake thee Hebr. 13. 5. Neither can she doubt but what he hath said he will most certainly perform For she findeth Fourthly That he is full of Grace and Truth John 1. 14. Yea he is the very Truth it self John 14. 6. And therefore she sings with David Her Lord is good his mercie is everlasting and his truth endureth to all generations Psal 100. 5. Nor Fifthly is she afrighted at his Justice But rather she rejoyceth therein For albeit The wages of sin is death Rom. 6. 23. And every transgression and every disobedience must receive a just recompence of reward As Hebr. 2. 2. Yet the law of the Spirit of life in her Lord Christ Jesus hath freed her from the law of sin and of death Rom. 8. 2. And in such a case it is not the office of Justice to condemn but to acquit protect and justifie And sixthly she can never forget his wisdom who is the wisdom of God 1 Cor. 1. 24. She apprehendeth by faith that it was he which made the earth by his power which established the world by his wisdom and stretched out the heaven by his understanding As Isa 51. 15. He knoweth them that are his 2 Tim. 1. 19. And he knoweth how to deliver the godly out of temptations and to reserve the unjust unto the day of judgement to be punished 2 Pet. 2. 9. And she doubteth not but she may most safely and savingly resign her self to his direction and disposition For in him are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge Colos 2 3. The soul that adds a thousand fold to these shall yet fall short a thousand thousand fold of his essentiall super-excellencies and lose her self at last in admiration Yet by these dear indearing contemplations she acts and strengthens and improves her Love and works it to a prosperous conditon For as the roote by vertue of the Sap causeth the tree to put forth fair green leaves So worketh Faith by Love and fits the soul the chast soul for a flourishing profession ANd now though somewhat bashfull yet she dares discover her affections to her friends the sweet companions of her virgin Love I charge you O daughters of Jerusalem if you finde my beloved that ye tell him that I am sick of love Saith she Cant. 5. 8. And therefore as the virgin lover first delighteth much to meditate upon the rare perfections of her Paramore So in the second place she will be talking of him very often extolling and comending his person parts and properties that so he may the better come to the knowledge and assurance of her intire affection towards him In like manner the love-sick soul that panteth after Christ will not omit the least occasion or opportunity of conference concerning her dear Lord but will evermore be magnifying his goodness loving-kindness and the like and setting forth the promises due thereto Because thy loving-kindness is better then life therefore my lips shall praise thee saith David Psal 63. 3. And to that purpose she consorts her self with his true servants his trustie friends whom she inviteth kindly to a sweet harmoneous concord and conversation O come saith she let us sing unto the Lord let us make a joyfull noise to the rock of ovr salvation Let us come before his presence with thanksgiving and make a joyfull noise unto him with Psalms For the Lord is a great God c. Psal 94 to the 8. And from hence she proceedeth to a more eminent and evident Profession of her true zeal and pure integrity which will appear the more infallibly by loving that which he is known to love and hating that which he abhors and hates Resolved thus She findes he loveth righteousnesse and hateth wickednesse Psal 45. 7. And therefore she directeth her affections of love and hatred towards the same Objects In the first place she loveth righteousness whether it be the righteousness of faith which justifieth the person or the righteousness of the law which justifieth the faith of the person For she knoweth that as the one is the cause of her justification so the other is the evidence of her sanctification And this her Love appeareth very precious upon the account of these four properties First it is Cordiall secondly it is Constant thirdly it is Confident and fourthly it is Comprehensive First I say it is cordiall It is no brain-sick fancy begotten by imagination brought forth by opinion nursed by ignorance and maintained by impudence Neither is it an outward formall profession modalled by self-seeking and magnified by self-conceit These are degenerate monsters bastard brats abominable to her virgin brest She owns no other love but what proceeds from the assurance of a saving faith infused by the Spirit of her Lord into the hidden corners of her heart I sleep saith she but my heart waketh Cant. 5. 2. her loving heart is evermore in labour Neither can any thing prevent or hinder her amourous desires from running out towards the righteousness of her dear Lord Because He is the Lord her righteousnesse Jer. 23. 6. Secondly her love is constant She regardeth not the face of the times nor the course of the tide the praise of a parasite nor the partling of a Parrat Neither will she take the spirit of giddiness for her guide least by any means she should wax wanton against Christ and wed her self to some unworthy creature like the younger widows Tim. 3. 11. Profits Pleasures and preferments
He bursteth out with the Prophet David in his 51. Psalm Sometimes by way of confession saying I acknowledge my transgressions and my sin is ever before me verse 3. Behold I was shapen in iniquity and in sin did my mother conceive me verse 5. Sometimes by way of petition for the remission of his sins Purge me with Hysope and I shall be clean Wash me and I shall be whiter then snow Make me to hear of joy and gladnesse that the bones which thou hast broken may rejoyce hide thy face from my sins and blot out all mine iniquities verses 7. 8 9. Sometimes by way of supplication for supplies of spiritual grace Create in me a clean heart O Lord and renew a right spirit within me Cast me not away from thy presence and take not thy holy Spirit from me Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation and uphold me with thy free Spirit verse 10. 11 12. O Lord open thou my lips and my mouth shall shew forth thy praise verse 15. And thus with David the poor humble Soul bemoans her self after a mournfull manner yet in the midst of all her passions she 's confident to say with the same Prophet A broken and a contrite heart O God thou wilt not despise verse 17. For the Lord hath pronounced her blessed and promised her comfort saying Blessed are they that mourn for they shall be comforted Math. 5. 4. The second question is this By whom is this humility wrought To which I answer By the Lord our God God maketh my heart soft saith Job Job 23. 16. Thou shalt remember all the way which the Lord thy God led thee these fourty years in the wildernesse to humble thee and to prove thee saith Moses to the Congregation of Israel Deut. 8. 2. It was the Lord of heaven that humbled the proud heart of Nebuchadnezzar King of all the earth and made him a companion unto beasts whereby he perceived that he was no better then a beast in comparison of the living God Insomuch That he blessed the most high and praised and honoured him that liveth for ever c. Dan. 4. 33. 34. And because his son and successour Belshazzar humbled not himself though he knew all this but lifted up himself against the Lord of heaven the same Lord did put him into a condition worse then of a beast As appeareth by his desperate agony and his unexpected end Dan. 5. 22 23. Now albeit this abasing or humbling did work upon these mighty heathens no otherwise then to manifest Gods more mighty power and Majesty Yet where it becometh effectual through faith it fitteth and prepareth the heart towards the attaining of everlasting salvation And the preparations of the heart are from the Lord saith Solom●n Prov. 16. 1. But how is this humility wrought Or by what means doth our God work it in us For this is the third question Verily it appeareth unto me that the ordinary means whereby the Lord begins to break and soften and humble our rebellious hard hearts is by affliction which being sanctified unto us by the sweet influence and operation of his holy Spirit it directeth us unto the Agent the Cause and the Cure of all our miseries both outward and inward temporal and eternal Insomuch that every one who is become poor in spirit will freely confesse with the Prophet David I know O Lord that thy judgements are right and that thou in faithfulnesse hast afflicted me Psalm 119. 75. For our better satisfaction in this particular we must consider that we are all by nature proud insolent disobedient and obstinate No man repenteth him of his wickednesse saying what have I done Every one turneth to his course as the horse rusheth into the battel saith the Prophet Jer. 8. 6. And that is fiercely furiously and dangerously untill the Lord in pity of our Souls claps his restraining bridles in our jaws And to abate us of our desperate speed layes burdens of afflictions on our backs on some more heavy and on some more light according to his wisdom and our temper For he knoweth our frame he remembreth that we are dust saith David Psalm 103. 14. And when the Lord with his afflicting hand hath fill'd her with occasions of complaint the Soul beginneth to cast down her pride her stout behaviour and her haughty looks and to devise from whence those woes proceed And being now in this perplexity 't is ten to one but some of her acquaintance some miserable carnal comforters are ready to perswade her that her distresses come by accident by chance by fortune or by evil tongues or by the disposition of the Stars or by the malice of her enemies or treachery of some deceitfull friends And hereupon they will prescribe her remedies suteable to these devilish suggestions To turn her eyes from looking towards God and so to drown her in a Sea of sorrows But having now begun his work of grace her God strikes in and sends her to his word where she findeth That affliction cometh not forth of the dust neither doth trouble spring out of the ground Job 5. 6. But the L●rd killeth and maketh alive he bringeth down to the grave and bringeth up The Lord maketh poor and maketh rich c. 1 Sam. 2. 6 7. And being thus instructed and confirmed in these and the like godly principles she crieth out with mournfull Naomie The Lord hath testified against me and the Almighty hath afflicted me Ruth 1. 21. And having found the Agent to be God she knows the action must be just and right For the Lord is righteous in all his wayes and holy in all his works Psal 145. 17. And going forward in her heavenly search She findes that God doth not afflict willingly nor grieve the Children of men Lam. 3. 33. And therefore there is some impulsive cause which doth constrain him to these sad proceedings Well what is the cause for which the Lord afflicteth why this his Church confesseth to be sin We roar all like Beares saith she and mourn sore like Doves we look for judgement but there is none for salvation but it is far from us For our transgressions are multiplied before thee and our sins testifie against us c. Isai 59. 11 12. c. And thus by the Prophet Jeremie We lie down in our shame and our confusion covereth us for we have sinned against the Lord our God Jerem. 3. 25. And this the Scriptures every where affirm And what is sin why sin is the transgression of the law 1 John 3. 4. Resolved thus the Soul draws forth her life and layes it to the level of the law and findes it so repugnant to the rule so crooked crosse deformed and destructive That now she feels not what she hath received but fears to think of what she hath deserved Her sorrow now is turned into anger Anger against her self her sinfull self she wonders how the Justice of the Almighty hath spared her so long and not inflicted
when the Soul deliberately findeth she is confirmed she hath found her Lord. ANd now the chiefest thing that she desireth is to be sure of his affection And to that purpose she indeavoureth to satisfie her self in these three Queries whereof the first is this whether the Lord who is of purer eyes then to see evil and cannot look up●n iniquitie Habak 1. 13. Can notwithstanding set his love upon such simple Creatures as the sons of men Seeing we are all as an unclean thing and all our righteousnesses are as filthy rags as Isa 64. 6. Therefore to be resolved in this point she turns her self towards the word of God and sets her self to search the holy Scriptures where her dear Lord directeth her to these and many the like precious promises The mountains shall depart and the hills be removed but my kindnesse shall not depart from thee saith the Lord that hath mercie on thee Isa 54. 10. Can a woman forget her sucking Childe that she should not have compassion on the son of her womb Yea they may forget yet will I not forget thee saith the same loving Lord Isa 49. 15. But I saith the Soul am very sinfull exceeding subject to transgresse True saith the Lord thou hast made me to serve with thy sins thou hast wearied me with thine iniquities But I even I am he that blotteth out thy transgressions for mine own sake and will not remember thy sins Isa 43. 24 25. I knew that thou wouldest deal very treacherously and wast called a trunsgressour from the womb but for my name sake will I defer mine anger c. Isa 48. 8 9. Again the Soul objects against her self But I have felt the goodnesse of my God and sometimes tasted something like his favour whereby I have been seriously resolved to give my self for ever to his service And yet as one forsaking her first love I have returned to my former courses and lost the hold of all my precions hopes Why I will heal thy back-sliding and will love thee freely saith her good Lord Hos 14. 4. Thus comforted the weary Soul proceeds to ruminate upon her Lords performances The wonderfull works that he hath done for the Children of men The glorie which thou gavest me I have given them that they may be one even as we are one I in them and thou in me that they may be made perfect in one and that the world may know that thou hast sent me and hast loved them as thou hast loved me saith our Lord in his prayer to his father on the behalf of his Apostles together with all other believers John 17. 22 23. I lay down my life for the sheep saith our good shepheard John 10. 15. No man taketh it from me but I lay it down of my self saith he again verse 18. And greater love hath no man then this that a man lay down his life for his friends Jo. 15. 13. Most true it is no man hath greater love But our dear Lord both God and Man hath greater for he did lay down his life for his enemies when we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his son Rom. 5. 10. These are excellent arguments of his more excellent affection Yet to confirm her faith beyond all scruple she will examine some of his chief witnesses And first St. Paul who testifieth that our Lord hath purchased his spouse with his own bloud Take heed therefore unto your selves saith he and unto the whole flock over the which the holy Ghost hath made you overseers to feed the Church of God which he hath purchased with his own bloud Acts 20. 28. Again Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law being made a curse for us Gal. 3. 13. And ye know that ye were not redeemed with corruptible things as silver and gold c. But with the precious bloud of Christ as of a lamb without blemish and without spot saith St. Peter 1 Pet. 1. 18. c. his own self bare our sins in his own bodie on the Tree that we being dead to sin should live unto righteousnesse by whose stripes we are healed saith the same Apostle 1 Pet. 2. 24. Now hereby perceive we the love of God because he laid down his life for us saith that beloved Disciple 1 John 3. 16. And therefore unto him that hath loved us and washed us from our sins in his own bloud and hath made us Kings and Priests unto God and his father to him be glorie and dominion for ever and ever amen Rev. 1. 5 6. Scarcely for a righteous man will one die saith our Apostle Rom. 5. 7. But that the onely begotten Son of God whom he hath made Heir of all things should die a cursed death to redeem the foul Souls of filthy despicable sinners Hear O Heavens and be astonished O earth This is an unconceiveable love a bottomlesse affection But now the Soul having perused his promises considered his performances and examined his witnesses till she is well resolved in this truth In the next place she asks to what intent did Christ redeem us at so deer a rate And learned Paul informs her Eph. 5. Husbands love your wives saith he even as Christ also loved the Church and gave himself for it that he might sanctifie and cleanse it with the washing of water by the word That he might present it to himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing but that it should be holy and without blemish c. Eph. 5. 25 c. But can so great a Lord vouchsafe such grace as to betroth or marry to himself such wretched weak and undeserving creatures As Paul in that place seems to intimate This is the second question in which the Soul desireth to be satisfied And thereupon she runs to his Records and there by his assistance findes it written I will betroth thee unto me for ever Hosea 2. 19. And by his Prophet Jeremy Turn O back-sliding Children for I am married unto you Jer. 3. 14. Having considered these testimonies Then from his word she frames such arguments as may confirm her in this blessed truth First it appeareth that the Lord doth marry his Church unto himself In that he ealleth her his spouse Cant. 4. 8. Come with me from Lebanon my spouse And in the four next ensuing verses of that Chapter he extolleth her beauty her affection her profession and her ehastity four several times under the title of his spouse his sister his spouse His sister in regard that he had taken unto himself her flesh And his spouse in regard that he had joyned her unto himself in the spirit Secondly it is evident that the Lord marrieth his church unto himself For that he will have her call him husband Thou shalt call me Ishi that is in the Originall my husband and shalt call me no more Baali that is my Lord saith he to his church of the Jews Hos 2. 16. Thirdly it
is plain that the Lord marrieth his church unto himself In regard that he calleth himself her husband and her his wife Thy maker is thy husband the Lord of hosts is his name and thy Redeemer the holy one of Israel the God of the whole earth shall he be called For the Lord hath called thee as a woman forsaken and grieved in spirit and a wife of youth Isa 54. 5. 6. And fourthly it is manifest that he marrieth his church unto himself In respect that he will have her called after his own name we finde that his holy Spirit directeth us to call him by the name of The Lord our righteousnesse Jere. 23. 6. And this is the name wherewith she shall be called The Lord our righteousnesse saith the same Spirit by the same Prophet Jer. 33. 16. And in that it is said this is the name wherewith she shall be called it is evident that she was not so called formerly And we know that there is no ingagement no relation whatsoever that can make a woman capable of any other name then what she formerly had but that of marriage onely Again the soul demands this question How is it that our gracious Lord vouchsafeth so great an honour to his church to own her according to that high degree of marriage And after some expostulation she thus resolves her self Surely it is to evidence unto us that intire Union that exceeding nearnesse that is between the Spirit of our Saviour and the dear souls of his beloved saints There is a near relation among countrymen and kindred Insomuch that Paul professed he could wish himself accursed for his kinsmen according to the flesh Rom. 9. 3. Yet we see they little deserved it at his hands Acts 24. 1 c. Some what more near then that is the relation among brethren Behold how good and how pleasant it is brethren to dwell together in Vnity saith David Psal 133. 1. Yet we finde that Cain killed his brother Abel Gen. 4. 8. And Esau intended the like to his brother Jacob Gen. 27. 41. There is also a near ingagement among friends A friend sticketh closer then a brother saith Solomon Prov. 18. 24. Yet we know that there is falshood in friendship Joab slew his great friend Absalom 2 Sam. 18. 14. And Judas abused that sweet attribute most basely Mat. 26. 50. But very strict and very binding are those Obligations between the parents and their children lo children are an heritage of the Lord and the fruit of the womb is his reward As arrows are in the hand of a mighty man so are children of the youth Happy is the man that hath his quiver full of them they shall not be ashamed but they shall speak with the enemies in the gate Psal 127. 3 4 5. And therefore St. Paul Honour thy father and thy mother which is the first commandment with promise saith he Ephes 6. 2. Neverthelesse our Lord acquainteth us That the brother shall deliver up the brother to death and the father the child and the children shall rise up against their parents and cause them to be put to death Mat. 10. 21. And have not we seen or credibly heard of the like unnatural actions performed in our dayes But so ought men to love their wives as their own bodies he that loveth his wife loveth himself No man ever yet hated his own flesh but nourisheth and cherisheth it even as Christ the Church saith Paul Ephes 5. 28 29. Here indeed is the right cordial relation that strict and strong Obligation that nothing should cancel but death He is not worthy of the name of man that forsaketh or abuseth his own wife No man ever yet hated his own flesh but nourisheth and cherisheth it There is the lovely shaddow of a tender compassion even as the Lord the church There is the true substance of a dear and dureable affection And therefore the main reason as the soul conceiveth why the Lord vouchsafeth this most acceptable expression of marriage is to shew us that integrity that exact and absolute Union and communion that is betwixt himself his church He that is joyned unto an harlot is one body saith the Apostle Paul 1 Cor. 6. 16. Where Paul insinuateth that marriage is so strict a tie that the very abuse thereof is of an uniting quality But he that is joyned unto the Lord is one Spirit saith he verse 17. Now whatsoever is carnal is mortal and dubious but that which is spirituall is eternal and glorious O! saith that sweet and amorous soul that I were sure my Lord had such a love to me as that he would espouse me to himself I am perswaded now that he hath such a love unto his church in general But how shall I appropriate the same unto my self or how may I be sure that I shall thus in joy my gracious Lord For this is the circumstance wherein the soul desireth satisfaction And thereupon she listens to St. Paul The life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God who loved me and gave himself for me Gala. 2. 20. True saith the tender soul if I were such a chosen vessel as was good St. Paul I might triumph with the like confidence yet after some debate within her self she thus replies why what had Paul but what he did receive Or what made him to differ was it not my Lord with whom there is no respect of persons as Paul himself saith Rom. 2. 11. Doubtlesse my God who onely can fit me for this preferment he looketh not upon the man but his Mediatour he regardeth not the metall but the stamp the image and superscription whose is that Surly if the image of Christ be graven in me it makes no matter either what I am or how I am called For there is neither Jew nor Greek there is neither bond nor free there is neither male nor female for we are all one in Christ Jesus Gala. 3. 28. And as neither nation nor sex nor any outward state or condition nor any other earthly distinction can make a difference in the sight of God so neither can sin exclude me from his favour For God commendeth his love towards us in that while we were yet sinners Christ died for us saith St. Paul Rom. 3. 8. These things considered the Soul begins to be perswaded that her Lord both may and will love her as well as any other For now she sees ther 's no impediment that can destroy or contradict her hopes Yet still she 's sick of love nor can her minde receive or cure or comfort till she meets with such an argument of his affection towards her self in every degree as is both certain and infallible Therefore she cries and gives her Lord no rest until he openeth her understanding that she may learn this mystery of love That never any soul did love the Lord but the same soul was first beloved by him And this must
needs be so for many Reasons First because God is the onely perfect substance of true love God is love saith St. John 1 Jo. 4. 16. And therefore we cannot love God but by vertue of that love which is essentially in God For otherwise we offer him but a shaddow instead of a substance Secondly because God is the onely Authour and giver of love love is of God 1 John 4. 8. And therefore unlesse God doth first in love to us bestow his love upon us we can have no love at all to dispose of as in relation unto him Thirdly because every one that loveth is born of God 1 John 4. 7. And it would be a preposterous thing for the child to love before the father Behold what manner of love the father hath bestowed upon us that we should be called the sons of God 1 John 3. 1. And as it is a far greater argument of love that we should be made the sons of God then that we should be called the sons of God And Fourthly because Gods love to us is the cause of our love to God we love him because he first loved us Saith the same loving and beloved Disciple 1 John 4. 19. Now the cause must of necessity be before the effect And therefore unlesse God doth first love us efficiently it is impossible that we should love God effectually And altogether to this purpose is that in the Prophet Jeremy I have loved thee saith the Lord with an everlasting love therefore with loving kindnesse have I drawn thee Jer. 31. 3. Because the Lord did love his Church with an everlasting love therefore with loving kindnesse he did draw her to love him again For this I humbly conceive to be the most proper and suteable end of this attraction It being likewise the most principal or onely duty which the Lord requireth Deut. 6. 5. and Math. 22. 37. And being thus confirmed in this truth the willing Soul hath nothing else to do to fatisfie her fully in this case but to examine the sincerity and goodnesse of her own love to her Lord. And thereupon she brings it to the tryal And first she findes it eager to injoy She sings with that melodious Prophet David As the heart panteth after the water brooks so panteth my Soul after thee O God! My Soul thirsteth for God for the living God when shall I come to appear before God Psal 42. 1 2. And in the 48. Psal 1. 2. How amiable are thy Tabernacles O Lord of Hosts My Soul longeth yea even fainteth for the Courts of the Lord my heart and my flesh crieth out for the living God Secondly it is fervent or ardent in the act of injoying 't is no Laodicean luke-warm love It makes the Soul say with the blessed spouse Set me as a Seal upon thine heart as a Seal upon thine arm for love is strong as death Many waters cannot quench love neither can the flouds drown it Cant. 8. 6 7. Thirdly she findes it very generous It soorneth to be base or trivial Too generous to be so mercenary as with those fools to say unto the Lord Depart from us and what can the Almighty do for us as Job 22. 17. It makes her scorn to stand for any wages That she refers to her beloved's goodnesse She knows her wages will be better far then all her works can any way deserve She remembers the words of her Lord Jesus how he said It is more blessed to give then to receive as Acts 20. 35. And thereupon her love will not be bought at any rate If a man would give all the substance of his house for love it would utterly be contemned Cant. 8. 7. Neither will this loving Soul be bribed but will rather say with Peter Thy money perish with thee because thou hast thought that the gift of God may be purchased with money Acts 8. 20. And secondly it is so generous that it will not be overcome by any base or lewd or carnal lust It will say with Joseph How can I do this great wickednesse and sin against God Gen. 39. 9. And with Moses it will chuse rather to suffer affliction with the people of God then to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season as Hebr. 11. 25. Thirdly it is so generous that it will not be daunted either for fear of losse or displeasure or death it self According to the example of Shadrach Meshach and Abednego Dan. 3. And of Daniel himself Dan. 6. Fourthly it is so generous that it scorneth to be nigardly in prosperity It will buy the truth and not sell it as Prov. 23. 23. It sayeth with David What shall I render unto the Lord for all his benefits towards me Psal 116. 12. And therefore he will not offer burnt-offerings unto the Lord his God of that which doth cost him nothing as 2 Sam. 24. 24. Yea with the people of Israel it will give more then is necessary to the work as Exod. 35. 22. c. and Exod. 36. 5. Fifthly it is so generous that it will not be dismayed in adversity In case of derision or reproch it will say with David I will yet be more vile then thus as 2 Sam. 9. 22. In case of danger it will say with Peter Though I should die with thee yet will I not deny thee as Mat. 26. 35. And in case of extremity it will say with Job Naked came I out of my Mothers womb and naked shall I return thither the Lord gave and the Lord hath taken away blessed be the name of the Lord Job 1. 21. And with Paul None of these things move me neither count I my life deer unto my self so that I might finish my course with joy and the Ministery which I have received of the Lord Jesus to testifie the Gospel of the grace of God Acts 20. 24. Sixthly it is so generous that it will not spare for any expressions nor any opportunities It will strive to out-strip the sinfull woman who when she knew that Jesus sate at meat in the Pharisees house brought an Alabaster box of oyntment And stood at his feet behinde him weeping and began to wash his feet with tears and wipe them with the hairs of her head and kissed his feet and anoynted them with the oytment Luke 7. 37 38. Or what it cannot do to him in his person it will do to him in his Members when he is an hungry it will give him meat when he is thirsty it will give him drink when he is a stranger it will take him in Naked it will cloath him Sick it will visit him in Prison it will come unto him For which the Lord shall say unto this Soul Verily in as much as thou hast done it to one of the least of these my brethren thou hast done it unto me as Math. 25. 40. ANd thus the Soul having examined her love by these and the like properties and finding it to be sincere and sound her joyfull heart is
commend them for this Let all things be done decently and in order saith St. Paul 1 Cor. 14. 40. We do all strive to seem very spiritual But glorifie God in your bodie and in your spirit which are Gods saith the same Apostle 1 Cor. 6. 20. Glorifie God in your body as well as in your spirit if you will acknowledge that your body belongeth unto God It is a fault amongst us that in matters of religion we do commonly indeavour to make our out-sides seem better then our insides really are But if our insides be not much better then our out-sides in this particular we are in nothing so good as we ought to be Let the wife see that she reverence her husband saith this third rule But if she do not reverence him in her outward actions as well as in her inward affections who can see that she reverenceth him at all besides her self We proceed to the fourth rule Let every woman have her own husband 1 Cor. 7. 2. The Soul that 's married unto Christ must have none other husband but Christ wherefore she will not suffer her affections to run out towards her old acquaintance her old suter sin For she reckons her self to be dead indeed unto sin being alive unto God through Jesus Christ her Lord as Rom. 6. 11. And therefore she will love her Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity as Eph. 6. 24. That so in every case of dread or danger She may indear him with good Hezekiah I beseech thee O Lord remember how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart 1 Kings 20. 3. The fift Rule is this let not the wife depart from her husband 1 Cor. 7. 10. And therefore when the Soul is truely wedded to her dear husband Christ the flesh the Devil the world with all their provocations assaults allurements and temptations can neither draw nor drive her to depart or flee away from her beloved Lord they cannot make her such a wicked harlot as to forsake the guide of her youth and to forget the covenant of her God like that strange woman Prov. 2. 17. They peradventure may so over-power her that they may force her accidentally to slip aside or slide a little back But she remembereth immediately that gracious invitation of her Lord Turn O back-sliding children for I am married unto you Jer. 3. 14. Together with that excellent assurance I will heal thy back-slidings and will love thee freely Hosea 14. 4. And thereupon she makes a quick return she humbly sues unto her Lord for pardon which she through faith obtaineth and by love renews her covenant and so resolves to walk more wisely for the time to come She bears in minde that wholsome caveat Take heed brethren least there be in any of you an evil heart of unbelief in departing from the living God Heb. 3. 12. And she forgetteth not that woefull curse which doth attend on such Apostasie cursed be the man whose heart departeth from the Lord for he shall be like the heath in the desert and shall not see when good cometh but shall inhabit the parched places in the wildernesse in a salt land and not inhabited Jer. 17. 5 6. There is a fixth Rule yet And that she findeth implyed by St. Paul Tit. 2. 4. Whereby it doth appear that women ought to love their husbands And this in truth compleateth all the rest For first if the wife submitteth her self unto her husband and not in love all her submission is but constrained Secondly without love her obedience is but slavish Thirdly her reverence without love is hypocritical Fourthly if she keepeth her self to her own husband and not in the way of love it is but to avoid reproach or scandal or shame or some such inconvenience And Fifthly if it be not for loves sake that she departeth not from her own husband it is in reference to some self-ends some carnal or sinister by respects Wherefore the Soul that is married unto Christ will be exceeding carefull that this rule of love be well and faithfully observed ANd now the spouse being resolved to please her husband after these and the like Rules desireth to conceive a godly seed That she may be filled with the fruits of righteousnesse which are by Jesus Christ unto the glory and praise of God as Phil. 1. 11. For as the foresaid tree that 's richly planted well rooted full of vegitable Sap will bring forth fruit as well as leaves and blossoms Even so the Soul that is by faith and love united unto Christ not onely will professe her pure zeal and prepare her self to entertain please her heavenly husband But likewife she is evermore in labour to bring forth fruit after her Lords own likenesse such as deserves the name of godlinesse And therefore she doth constantly endeavour to walk worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing being fruitfull unto every good work as Col. 1. 10. If you demand how our imperfect works can gain the title of true godlinesse I answer thus every work or thing will passe before our God for godlinesse that is performed by a true believer according to these three ensuing Rules set forth unto us by the Apostle Paul where he implyes the power of godlinesse Remembering saith he your work of faith and labour of love and patience of hope in our Lord Jesus Christ 1 Thes 1. 3. First our work must be undertaken by faith Secondly it must be laboured in by love And Thirdly it must be continued by Patience by Patience of Hope in our Lord Jesus Christ First I say it must be undertaken by faith Not onely such a faith as makes a man a true believer in the common sense A justifying and a saving faith For this is alwaies to be presupposed But we must undertake what we intend in order unto such a special faith as onely minds that very thing it self For in this sense we are to understand that place of our Apostle Paul whatsoever is not of faith is sin Rom. 14. 23. And this faith must be established either by precept or by president By the word precept I intend not onely an absolute command but every word of exhortation or incouragement and every necessary consequence provided they be clear and unsuspected proceeding freely from the word of Truth not forced fained doubted or desired nor flattering nor favouring the flesh but answering the dictates of the Spirit in the design of Gods eternal glory By the word president I understand the pure example of our Saviour and of the pen-men of his holy Spirit there where their words and works are paralels But where the word of God is not the Rule the surest Saints may prove no safe examples And he that shall examine all his actions and square them to this principle I doubt not but he is one step in the way to godlinesse For this is that obedience of faith for which Gods holy Gospel is made known as Rom. 16. 25 26.
between them to that purpose Verily he was fore-ordained before the foundation of the World saith St. Peter 1 Pet. 1. 20. Secondly we read that Abel the second son of Adam did offer unto God a more acceptable sacrifice then Cain the first born And this was by faith saith the Apostle Hebr. 11. 4. Now this faith of his could not have been so effectual had it not been built upon some sure foundation And what might that be His own righteousnesse in order unto the Covenant of works Surely No He could not but know that to be a false ground for it sunk under his father whereby both they and we became liable to death and destruction And therefore Abels faith must of necessity be established upon some such promise as that of eternal life which God that cannot lie promised before the world began Titus 1. 2. And to whom might this promise be made before the World began But to Christ the wisdom of God 1 Cor. 1. 24. who was set up from everlasting from the beginning or ever the earth was Prov. 8. 23. Nor can we imagine that this promise of eternal life was made by God the Father but upon some conditions to be accomplished by God the Son which were to be revealed and performed in their season When he shall make his Soul an offering for sin he shall see his seed he shall prolong his dayes and the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in his hand Isa 53. 10. There is the condition prescribed and the time prefixed Thirdly this Covenant of Grace will appear to be eternal if we shall consider how mightily Gods truth was ingaged in the Covenant of works Of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil thou shalt not eat of it for in the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die saith the Lord Gen. 2. 17. Yet we see that Adam did eat and died not accordingly Gen. 3. 6. Now how shall the truth of God be preserved in this case but by vertue of some such former act as might dis-ingage Gods resolution before it proceeded to execution which in all probability must be according to that eternal purpose which he purposed in Christ Jesus our Lord Eph. 3. 11. For albeit the truth of God might seem to suffer in the breach of the Covenant of works yet grace and truth came by Jesus Christ John 1. 17. Fourthly if we shall seriously regard the Justice of God we shall finde this Covenant of Grace to be eternal Almighty God createth Adam and freely gives him great possessions reserving to himself the fruit of one tree onely in signe of homage due to his supremacy And in case of disobedience by eating thereof he decrees the penalty of death Neverthelesse Adam transgresseth in this very particular And shall he eat and not die Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right saith Abraham Gen. 18. 25. But Adam eateth and dieth not Now the justice of God which must not cannot be violated sends us of necessity to some further consideration There must be some preconclusion made by way of prevention Doubtlesse if Christ the Redeemer had not been ready by vertue of this Covenant of Grace to satisfie Gods Justice even in that very instant of mans rebellion against the Covenant of works Death destruction had immediately seised upon sinfull man together with the whole Creation But in that very point of time the Son of God appeareth in the presence of his Father on the behalf of miserable man Saying Deliver him from going down to the pit I have found a Ransome as Job 33. 24. And in order thereunto Christ suffered the just for the unjust that he might bring us to God or reconcile us to God 1 Pet. 3. 18. Fifthly if we look back towards Gods Election that will also prove unto us the eternity of this Covenant Blessed saith St. Paul be the God and father of the Lord Jesus Christ who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ According as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the World Eph. 1. 3 4. Now in all reason there was no occasion why God should choose any in Christ before the foundation of the world but that foreseeing mans general ruine by his disobedience to the Covenant of works a remnant might be preserved from destruction by Christ according to the Election of Grace And therefore most excellent to this purpose is that of Paul to Timothie Be not thou therefore ashamed saith he of the testimony of our Lord nor of me his prisoner but be thou partaker of the afflictions of the Gospel according to the power of God who hath saved us and called us with an holy calling not according to our works but according to his own purpose and grace which was given us in Christ Jesus before the World began 2 Tim. 1. 8 9. Let us consider the latter verse more seriously Who hath saved us and called us He saved us intentionally before he called us actually Not according to our works or according to the Covenant of works made with us but according to his own purpose and grace or his own purpose in the Covenant of Grace which was given us in whom why in Christ Jesus when before the world began The certainty of all these former four particulars will appear yet more clearly if we shall conceive and consider That God the Father almighty together with Christ his onely begotten co-essential Son did from eternity contrive to advance their glory and to make it shine through their illustrious attributes of Goodnesse Power Wisdom Justice Grace and Truth And to that purpose this individual two the Father and the Son did in the unity of the Spirit comply and conclude to modellize or frame a goodly creature called Man Such a one as may be sensible of their intentions capable of their commands and active to proceed in their designs The better to affect him with their goodnesse they will create him of contemptible materials The dust of the earth But they will shape him in a royal mould In their own Image And least he should be wanting in any particular whatsoever To manifest the greatnesse of their power They 'll frame for him a spacious Universe A World compleatly and abundantly supplied with all things necessary convenient and comfortable far beyond humane apprehension over all which Man shall have the sole dominion To qualifie and fit him for such a vast command They will inrich his person with excellent endowments and his minde with admirable instructions Neverthelesse in reservation of their own original right they will binde him by Covenant to the observation of certain particulars And in case of his disobedience thereunto they will cast him from the height of honour into the depth of horrour and destruction But in their boundlesse wisdom they foresee that man their great Vicegerent will miscarry and fall away from his integrity And therefore in reference to
their Justice they can do no lesse than confound and destroy him for ever together with all those excellent dignities and dominions wherewith they are resolved to indow him But least by this means their glorie should be buried in the untimely ruines of such a promising fair enterprise The Son supports it with the pillar of his grace the Monument of a most dear Redeemer Father saith he I will not undertake to keep the Rebel from his cursed fall least happily he boasts himself to stand by his own strength But in his fall I will keep him from the curse yet satisfie thy Justice to the full Be pleased to deliver to my hand his Covenant so forfeited return him over debtour unto me and leave him wholly to my custody I 'le be his surety In the interim O my Father to magnifie the riches of our Grace let thou and I contract a Covenant A preventing Covenant to take effect just at the very instant of his fall wherein I 'le rise a Mediatour between thy Justice and his weaknesse which if he or any of his lost posterity shall willingly receive and seal unto I will not onely save him from thy wrath but likewise I 'le restore him to thy love in which I will establish him for ever To this the Father gives his free consent And thus the Father and the Son conclude to ratifie this Covenant of Grace And truely I doubt not but all such as are truely godly will very well admit of this supposed conference provided that it be with holy reverence For we read That Jesus Christ through the eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God Hebr. 9. 14. And that God received him with this congratulation In an acceptable time have I heard thee and in a day of salvation have I helped thee and I will preserve thee and give thee for a Covenant of the people to establish the earth to cause to inherit the desolate heritages That thou mayest say to the prisoners go forth to them that are in darknesse shew your selves And they shall feed in wayes and their pastures shall be in all high places c. Isa 49. 8 9. c. I beseech you let us take these words of God the Father unto God the Son into our further consideration For verily we cannot conceive at the first view how punctually they may be applied to that eternal Covenant In an acceptable time have I heard thee on the worlds behalf And I have helped thee to work salvation in a day most proper for that purpose And I will preserve thee and give thee for a Covenant of or concerning the people or on the behalf of the people to establish the earth which otherwise would be destroyed To cause to inherit the heritages which otherwise would be made desolate Adam and Eve together with their whole posterity in them shall be prisoners to my Justice But thou shalt inlarge them That thou mayest say to the prisoners Go forth they shall hide themselves from my presence as in darknesse but thou shalt make them confident saying shew your selves And they shall live safely pleasantly and plentifully They shall feed in the wayes and their pastures shall be in all high places c. By this conclusion between God and Christ their Creation is finished furnished Man their great Governour is constituted by Commission and confirmed by Covenant which he rebelling breaks and tumbles headlong towards condemnation But in that very point of time the Son by virtue of this Cov●nant of Grace redeems him from destruction Restores him to his Fathers favour And re-estates him in his first Command Where he with all of his elect posterity persisting in the faith of Jesus Christ are mounted from the degree of servants to the dignity of Sons according to the Tenor of eternal truth For as many as received him to them gave he power to become the sons of God even to them that believe on his name John 1. 12. And thus we see that Jesus Christ gave himself for us that he might redeem us from all iniquity and purifie unto himself a peculiar people zealous of good works According to that of St. Paul Tit. 2. 14. And God so loved the world that he gave his onely begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life According to the words of our Text. PRoceed we now to the second point or Member contained in this Copy of the Covenant of Grace Being the Consideration or motive that invited the Lord to contract this Covenant which we finde to be his Love God so loved the World So loved A vehement forcible expression So So abundantly So infinitely Indeed we may not conceive that any other but an infinite Love should proceed from an infinite God For Love in God is not accidental but essential And therefore it is attributed unto him in the abstract by that beloved Disciple God is Love saith he 1 Joh. 4. 8. Love it self It is impossible for any creature sufficiently to commend the Love of God because we are not able to comprehend the love of God Yet we may commend it for a great love wherewith he loved us even when we were dead in sins According to St. Pauls expression Ephes 2. 4. And according to the Lords own example For God comemndeth his love towards us in that when we were yet sinners Christ died for us Rom. 5. 8. Neither doth this commendation of the Love of God the Father from the mouth of God the Son fall any thing short of either of the former God so loved the world that he gave his onely begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life But you will say how doth it appear that the Love of God was the onely Consideration or motive that procured him to conclude this Covenant of Grace We must understand and consider That God being Love it self As having the very pure and perfect substance of love in himself essentially He loveth himself by the necessity of his nature And his Creatures by the liberty of his will And so resolving to create the World with every particular therein contained he looked on them with a general love as being his good Creatures Gen. 1. 31. But on man he looked with a more peculiar affection First In respect that man was the onely Creature by whom the Lord intended to advance his own immortal glory Isa 43. 7. Secondly For that the Lord intended to create him in his own Image As well in regard of the substance of his Soul being immortal and immaterial Gen. 2. 7. As also in regard of the perfections of his Soul consisting of Righteousnesse and true Holinesse Eph. 4. 24. But then foreseeing mans accursed fall procured wholly by his own default The God of goodnesse looks upon him then even with the love of pity and compassion which so prevailed in his Son Christ Jesus That He gave himself for us an offering
mistaking of these or any of these infirm kindes of faith instead of the true justifying and saving faith several errours have received their original especially that uncomfortable errour of the Saints falling from Grace received through the unsteadfastnesse of their faith But I dare be bold to affirm that such Apostates did never feel the force of an effectual faith of a justifying faith This is the gift of God Rom. 12. 3. And the gifts and calling of God are without repentance Rom. 11. 29. I will not say but a man may fall grievously in it but he can never fall finally from it For the Lord hath said I will never leave thee nor forsake thee Heb. 13. 5. And truely I conceive this discovery to be very pertinent to our present purpose For faith being the onely condition to be performed by us in this Covenant of Grace It is very necessary that we be rightly instructed therein Least peradventure we either satisfie our selves with empty shadows instead of the true substance Or torment our selves with causelesse discomforts concerning the losse or uncertainty of that glorious inheritance which our gracious God by the purchase of Jesus Christ hath so long since estated upon a true and a lively faith according to this eternal Covenant We proceed now to consider why the Lord propoundeth faith for the Proviso or Condition of this Covenant of Grace First I conceive because he would have his gift received which would otherwise become fruitlesse and unprofitable He gave his onely begotten Son And were it not a world of pitie that such a precious gift should be neglected and not received applied and improved Well how are we to receive him Into our houses No but into our hearts By what instrument or means Verily by faith onely According to the Scriptures By faith Christ liveth in us Gal. 2. 20. And by faith Christ dwelleth in us in our hearts Eph. 3. 17. Questionlesse there is no relation between the Saviour and the souls of his Saints but what is contracted fixed and confirmed by his affection and their lively faith Secondly the Lord requireth faith That so this gift of his might be beneficial to the whole World in all places and at all times indifferently For were Christ to be received any other way then by faith All men could not have been capable of receiving him at all seasons Suppose he had come into the World in the day of the Creation and continued in the World till the day of dissolution Yet in regard of his passive Nature his humanity he could not have been received by any two persons in any two several places at one and the same time But wheresoever he abideth faith will instantly finde him out and lay hold upon him And therefore there is no cause now why any man should say in his heart who shall ascend into Heaven that is to bring down Christ from above or who shall descend into the deep that is to bring up Christ from the dead The word is nigh thee even in thy mouth and in thy heart that is the word of faith which we preach saith St. Paul Rom. 10. 6 7 8. And this word of faith which we preach if truely believed and rightly applied will do both It will bring down Christ from above with the virtue of his Resurrection and Ascention And it will bring up Christ from beneath with the virtue of his death and passion It will do all things that may concern the Remission of our sins the justification of our persons and the salvation of our Souls by Jesus Christ our Lord. So then saith the same Apostle in the same Chapter faith cometh by hearing and hearing by the word of God But I say have they not heard Yes verily their sound went into all the earth and their words unto the ends of the world Rom. 10. 17 18. And to that very purpose the Lord Jesus Christ after his Resurrection gives his Apostles this universal Commission Go ye saith he into all the world and preach the Gospel unto ev●ry Creature Well what is the tenour or substance of that Gospel He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved That is he that receiveth Christ by faith and manifesteth the same in his Profession shall be saved as Rom. 10. 10. he that believeth not shall be damned Marc. 16. 15 16. And as this Gospel this word of faith is universal so is it likewise everlasting And I saw another Angel fly in the midst of heaven having the everlasting Cospel to preach unto them that dwell on the earth and to every nation and kindred and tongue and people saith St. John Rev. 14. 6. But why doth God require nothing else but faith We know there may be divers Provisoes in one and the same Conveyance or Covenant Truely faith by it self is enough provided that it be such a faith as apprehendeth Christ He that hath the Son hath life saith Saint John 1 John 5. 1. And it pleased the Father that in him should all fulnesse dwell saith St. Paul Col. 1. 19. Whatsoever had been required besides faith according to our apprehension either it must have proceeded from or reflected upon our own persons or performances And then it is more then probable that our corrupt nature would have mislead us to neglect this all-satisfying gift to repose our selves either wholly or partly upon our own deserts or abilities But faith comes empty-handed and by that means it takes the surer hold When a man gives liberally we say he is open-handed And truely he that will receive freely and hold firmly it is necessary that he be empty-handed Faith is very fitly called the hand of the Soul For as we use to receive an earthly gift from man by the hand so we must receive this heavenly treasure from God by faith And therefore the Evangelist in reference to this most blessed gift intimateth unto us that receiving and believing do signifie the same thing As many as received him saith he to them gave he power to become the sons of God even to soem that believe on his name John 1. 12. A place very well worthy of our consideration for the proof of this particular Verily this onely begotten Son of God is beyond all thought of exception the most satisfying solid and substantial gift the most compleat and weighty gift that either heaven or earth can possibly afford us And therefore whatsoever we have or seem to have of our own whether it be work or worthinesse suffering or satisfaction ability or possibility our faith must cast it wholly to the ground or otherwise we shall never receive the Lord Jesus Christ so as to make him our own for ever A second Reason which I conceive to be most proper in this case is this Because whatsoever had been required with or besides faith It would have been destructive of the very nature of this Covenant of Grace For if by grace then it is no more of works
of the Church of Sardis Thou hast a name that thou livest and art dead Rev. 3. 1. The cordial death if I may so call it or the death of the heart is that which happeneth upon the sense or apprehension of some extream danger or distresse when discreet Abigail had told her husband Nabal of the danger he was in by reason of his churlish behaviour towards Davids young men The Text saith That his heart died within him and he became as a stone 1 Sam. 25. 37. And Pharaoh in the plague of locusts desired Moses and Aaron to intreat the Lord that he might take away that death onely Exod. 10. 17. The natural death consisteth in the dissolution of nature or the separation between the body and the Soul It is said That when Rachels Soul departed she died Gen. 35. 18. And when the widow of Zarephaths son was dead Elijah cried unto the Lord and said O Lord my God I pray thee let this Childes Soul come into him again And the Lord heard the voice of Elijah and the Soul of the Childe came into him again and he revived 1 King 17. 21 22. The last is eternal death consisting in those eternal torments which the damned shall be cast into upon that peremptory sentence Depart from me ye cursed into everlasting fire prepared for the Devil and his Angels Mat. 25. 41. In these four sorts or degrees of death are comprehended all the discomforts mischiefs and miseries that mankinde can suffer or suspect whether they be spiritual temporal or eternal And now I shall prove that every one of them is the reward or punishment of sin First the spiritual death is the reward of sin Because that when they knew God they glorified him not as God neither were thankfull but became vain in their imaginations and their foolish heart was darkned professing themselves to be wise they became fools And changed the glory of the uncorruptible God into an image made like to corruptible man and to birds and to four-footed beasts and creeping things Wherefore God also gave them up to uncleannesse through the lusts of their own hearts to dishonour their own bodies between themselves Rom. 1. 21 22 23 24. For this cause God gave them up to vile affections c. verse 26. Secondly the cordial death or the death of affliction trouble and distresse that is also the reward or the punishment of sin We grope for the wall like the blinde and we grope as if we had no eyes we stumble at noon day as in the night we are in desolate places as dead men We roar all like bears and mourn sore like doves we look for judgement but there is none for salvation but it is far off from us For our transgressions are multiplied before thee and our sins testifie against us for our transgressions are with us and as for our iniquities we know them Isa 59. 10 11 12. Thirdly the natural death that is also the wages of sin And unto Adam God said Because thou hast hearkened unto the voice of thy wife and hast eaten of the tree of which I commanded thee saying thou shalt not eat of it cursed is the ground for thy sake in sorrow shalt thou eat of it all the dayes of thg life Thorns and Thistles shall it bring forth to thee and thou shalt eat the Herb of the field In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread untill thou return unto the ground for out of it wast thou taken for dust thou art and to dust thou shalt return Gen. 3. 17 18 19. And lastly eternal death is the punishment of sin And it shall come to passe that from one new Moon to another and from one Sabbath to another shall all flesh come to worship before me saith the Lord. And they shall go forth and look upon the carcases of the men that have transgressed against me for their worm shall not die neither shall their fire be quenched and they shall be an abhorring unto all flesh Isa 66. 23 24. Thus we see that sin hath laid us open to every degree of death and destruction And verily the penalty annexed unto the breach of the Covenant of works that original rebellion importeth no otherwise In the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die Gen. 2. 17. Dying thou shalt die saith the original Thou shalt die every kinde of death And now if it be demanded how it may be said that we are redeemed from these miseries distresses and calamities by this Covenant of Grace I answer that Almighty God hath redeemed us from them by taking away the onely cause of them which we find here to be sin And that for and through the merits and mediation the sufferings and satisfaction of Jesus Christ his onely begotten Son whom he gave us and for us in this Covenant Provided alwayes that we receive him by faith according to the condition of this Covenant And here we may do well to take notice That the evil of sin is three-fold That is to say The guilt of sin The punishment of sin And the power of sin And it is necessary that all these be removed before we can certainly be said to be redeemed For where the guilt remaineth the punishment is not to be avoided and whilest the power continueth neither shall the guilt be forgotten nor the punishment forgiven You know that whosoever transgresseth the Law and is found guilty thereof he must suffer punishment according to the nature of his offence And whosoever committeth sinne transgresseth the Law For sin is the transgression of the Law 1 John 3. 4. Now where is that Soul that dares stand upon her own justification and plead Not guilty to the whole Law of God Or whether our own hearts condemne us or not God is greater then our hearts and knoweth all things 1 John 3. 20. It is in vain for us to dissemble or conceal our iniquities For all things are naked and opened unto the eyes of him with whom we have to do Heb. 4. 13. Verily the Lord sees our sins before we commit them I knew that thou wouldest deal very treacher●usly saith he and wast called a transgressour from the womb Isa 48. 8. And he that transgresseth the Law in the least particular he is cursed For it is written Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things that are written in the book of the Law to do them Gal. 3. 10. And being cursed he can expect no better then to be condemned unto eternal torments For the Son of Man sitting upon the throne of his glory shall say unto them Depart from me ye cursed into everlasting fire prepared for the Devil and his Angels Math. 25. 41. But being possessed of the Lord Jesus Chri●t by an effectual faith according to the tenour of this Covenant of Grace we are redeemed both from the Curse For Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us Gal.
of Grace I answer that as our Lord Jesus Christ did therein and thereby redeem us from all manner of death as it is a curse or a punishment for sin as I have already proved so I shall now endeavour to prove that he hath therein and thereby purchased and procured for us every sort or degree of life as it is a part of or a passage to eternal salvation And first concerning the first kinde being the natural life This Adam injoyed but conditionally In the day that thou eatest of the Tree of the knowledge of good and evil thou shalt surely die saith the Covenant of works But Adam eateth and must die therefore his present farewell to this natural life must be his welcome to eternal death When in that very instant Christ our Saviour appears for Man And by virtue of that precontract he stayes Gods justice and preserves mans life And by this means we all injoy our lives For had Adam then died according to his desert we had all died in him as the fruit dieth in the root It were little wisdom to expect a posterity from him that never did beget a Child And it appeareth that he had not begotten any before that great rebellion of his which called for present death But afterward in the time of his reprive Adam knew Eve his wife and she conceived and bare Cain Gen. 4. 1. And she again bare his brother Abel Gen. 4. 2. And Adam knew his wife again and she bare a son and called his name Seth Genes 4. 25. And the dayes of Adam after he had begotten Seth were eight hundred years and he begat sons and daughters Gen. 5. 4. And whosoever hath lived heretofore do now live or shall live hereafter They did do and shall receive their natural life originally from that old feeble stock And therefore his life being preserved to a posterity by Christ in this Covenant of Grace It follows necessarily that we do all receive our natural lives meerly by virtue of that Covenant The second sort or degree is the spiritual life This as I said is the fruit of regeneration or of the new birth In our first birth we are born men In our second birth we are born Christians good men blessed men The first benefit that we received by this Covenant of Grace is our Election in Christ before the foundation of the world Eph. 1. 3 4. The second benefit is our natural life which we received in Adams reprive by virtue of the said Covenant Yet I dare not call this a benefit absolutely or otherwise then as it putteth us into a possibility of attaining unto this spiritual life And therefore the first Lesson that our Saviour taught unto Nichodemus was the necessity of Regeneration saying verily verily I say unto thee except a man be born again he cannot see the Kingdom of God John 3. 3. The next absolute and undeniable benefit proceeding from this Covenant is the spiritual life whereby we become the sons of God not according to any carnal condition but according to the Spirit of adoptition Rom. 8. 14 15. By this spiritual life we likewise become sensible of the first benefit conveyed unto us in this Covenant being our Election which cannot be perceived either in us or by us in the state of nature before we begin to live this life of grace And for this spiritual life also if we desire to know it either in our selves or others we shall finde that it consisteth in the putting off the old man and putting on the new Ye ought so to learn Christ that ye put off concerning the former conversation the old man which is corrupt according to the deceitfull lusts And be renewed in the spirit of y●ur minde And that ye put on the new man which after God is created in righteousnesse and true holinesse Ephes 4. 22 23 24. And to the Galatians walk in the spirit and ye shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh saith the same Apostle Gal. 5. 16. In this spiritual life it pleased the Father of our L●rd Jesus Christ to communicate unto us his divine nature 2 Pet. 1. 4. His Image 2 Cor. 3. 18. And his spirit 1 John 4. 13. And by this means it cometh to passe that they which live this spiritual life Their eyes are opened they are turned from darknesse to light and from the power of Satan unto God that they may receive forgivenesse of sins an inheritance with them which are sanctified by faith which is in Christ Jesus Acts 26. 18. And all this we injoy in and through Jesus Christ our Lord. If Christ be in you the body is dead because of sin but the Spirit is life because of righteousnesse saith the Apostle Rom. 8. 10. I have not read of any whom I conceive to have lived this life of grace more fruitfully then St. Paul did Neither was he ashamed to confesse how and from whom he received it I am crucified with Christ saith he neverthelesse I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God who loved me and gave himself for me Gal. 2. 20. Likewise reckon ye also your selves to be dead indeed unto sin but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord saith the same Apostle Rom. 6. 11. Verily our Lord Jesus Christ is not onely the procurer and purchaser of this spiritual life but also the Authour and the essence thereof The dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God and they that hear shall live for as the Father hath life in himself so hath he given to the Son to have life in himself Joh. 5. 25. 26. And again I am the Resurrection and the life saith Christ he that believeth in me though he were dead yet shall he live John 11. 25. Though he were dead in sin yet shall he live by grace And you being dead in your sins and the uncircumcision of your flesh hath he quickned together with Christ having forgiven you all your trespasses saith St. Paul Col. 2. 13. And as this great benefit is conferred upon us in and by the Lord Jesus Christ so is it likewise confirmed unto us in and by this Covenant of Grace As for thy Nativity in the day thou wast born thy Navel was not cut neither wast thou washed in water to supple thee thou wast not salted at all nor swadled at all None eye pitied thee to do any of these things unto thee to have compassion upon thee but thou wast cast out in the open field to the loathing of thy person in the day that thou wast born saith the Lord by his Prophet Ezek. 16. 4 5. Here is the wretched estate of every Soul by nature in regard of sin delivered expresly concerning Jerusalem but is to be applied to Adam and all his posterity But when I passed by thee saith the Lord and saw thee polluted in thine own bloud I
and land upon land by right or by wrong But because he knoweth not that It is God onely that maketh poor and maketh rich that bringeth low and lifteth up as in 1 Sam. 2. 7. Because he knoweth not that A mans life or the happiness of mans a life consisteth not in the abundance of the things which he possesseth as Luke 12. 15. Which our Saviour maketh plain by the Parable immediatly following Because he knoweth not that They that will be rich fall into temptation and a snare and into many foolish and hurtfull lusts which drown men in destruction and perdition as in the 1 Tim. 6. 9. That he that getteth riches and not by right shall leave them in the midst of his dayes and at his end shall be a fool as Jer. 17. 11. Peradventure he knows that these things are so written but he is not so wise as to consider or perswade himself of the truth thereof Would the temporizing fool depend upon the arm of flesh and wave still as the blast bloweth like a Reed shaken with every winde If he did know That the Lord changeth not as Mal. 3 6. Would any prophane person blaspheme the name of God contemne his Ordinances corrupt his truth or pollute his sabbaths If he did know that He is an holy God and a jealous God c. Iosh 24. 19. Durst the private Thief the secret Adulterer or the swinelike drunkard loose themselves in their base abominations their filthy deeds of darknesse If they knew that Darknesse hideth not from God and that darknesse and light are both alike to him as Psalm 139. 12. Or that nothing is secret that shall not be manifest neither any thing hid that shall not be known come abroad according to that of our Saviour Luke 8. 17. Or in a word durst any wicked Reprobate whatsoever delight and live in or by his odious and Soul-damning sins If he knew that The wrath of God is revealed from Heaven against all ungodlinesse unrighteousnesse of men According to that of the Apostle Rom. 1. 18. But this ignorant Infidel will again alledge That there are many men that know as much of these things as any man can tell them and yet they continue in their sinnes neverthelesse Truely of all fools they are the greatest and most ridiculous that will make themselves enemies to God and slaves to the Devil and that knowingly and willingly Yet this proveth nothing to the contrary but that ignorance is the cause of sinne I conceive it will not be denied but that the Jews especially the Scribes and Pharisees were knowing men both in the Law the Prophets insomuch that they could not be ignorant that the Messias should come into the world Neverthelesse when he was come they cried out incessantly to have him Crucified Now albeit the death of the Messias was the greatest mercie that ever the Lord vouchsafed to the sons of men yet it was a most abominable sin in those that practised and procured it Thou couldest have no power at all against me saith our Saviour unto Pilate except it were given thee from above Therefore he that delivered me unto thee hath the greater sinne John 19. 11. And those great sins which were committed in order to his death were carried on by ignorance as St. Peter affirmeth to the Jews saying Ye denied the holy one and the just and desired a murderer to be granted unto you and killed the Prince of life whom God hath raised from the dead whereof we are witnesses Acts 3. 14 15. And now brethren I wote that through ignorance ye did it as did also your Rulers verse 17. And to this very purpose is that of Saint Paul we speak the wisdom of God in a mystery saith he even the hidden wisdom which God ordained before the world unto our glory which none of the Princes of this world knew for had they known it they would not have Crucified the Lord of glory 1 Cor. 2. 7 8. And can any man imagine that if Judas the Traitour had not been ignorant of the true value of his Lord and Master that ever he would have sold him for thirty pieces of silver and afterward have hanged himself upon the consideration of his bad bargain But this ignorant wretch will alledge yet further That he can say the Lords prayer the Creed the ten Commandments and he hopeth that this will be sufficient to save the Soul of a man that is altogether unlearned Truely I cannot deny the sanctified use of the Lords prayer as some do in these dayes for it is a very compleat and compendious form or pattern of prayer prescribed by the wisdom of God and therefore not to be rejected by the pride of man Yet many there are that do but onely say it and that without either benefit or comfort for there are many thousands that do not rightly understand so much as why they call God their Father That which we call the Apostles Creed containeth the substance or History of the Gospel But being barely or simply considered without particular application it will furnish us but with a bare Historical faith The Devils believe it and tremble neverthelesse And as for the ten Commandments they may shew him his transgression and so assure him of his damnation But they can never bring him to Heaven or so much as one step towards it unlesse they lead him to Christ and there leave him For there is none other name under Heaven given among men whereby we must be saved Acts 4. 12. But his concluding and conquering Allegation as he conceiveth will be this He is confident that he shall do well enough yet For did not Paul tell Timothy That he was before a blasphemer and a persecuter and injurious but he obtained mercy because he did it ignorantly in unbelief 1 Tim. 1. 13. Now the sins that he committeth are likewise ignorantly in unbelief And why should not he finde mercie as well as Paul Doubtlesse he shall if he ceaseth not to follow Paul's example But Paul obeyed Gods calling and conversion and was not disobedient unto the heavenly vision Acts 26. 19. And in reference thereunto instead of persecuting as in time past he preached the G●spel which once he destroyed Gal. 1. 23. Whereas this wilfull wretch is still as ignorant in the truth as ever he was and so he is like to continue For though thou shouldest bray a fool in a morter among Wheat with a Pestel yet will not his foolishnesse depart from him saith the wise man Prov. 27. 22. These with many other blinde allegations he hath for ignorance will seldom or never be put to silence Neither is he without his evidence And it is this He believeth that he shall easily say Lord have mercie upon me at the last hour And then he doubteth not but all will he well enough For doth not the Prophet say That whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lond shall be saved
and shall cease to be God in Christ personally that God may be all in all essentially According to that of the Apostle 1 Cor. 15. 28. Thus you see in some measure how it may be understood That God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself And now we come to prove the fourth particular contained in this definition of faith That this justifying faith inableth us to believe the promises of God in Christ according to his Gospel Not according to the law For the law is not of faith Gal. 3. 12. For if there had been a law given which could have given life verily righteousnesse should have been by the law But the Scripture hath concluded all under sin that the promise by faith of Iesus Christ might be given to them that believe Gal. 3. 21 22. And no man ought to doubt but that the promise of the grace of God in Christ is the onely voice of the Gospel whether it proceedeth from the Apostles or from the Prophets And therefore it is called the Gospel of the grace of God Acts 20. 24. And the Gospel of Christ Rom. 1. 16. And that this justifying and saving faith inableth us to believe the promises of God in Christ According to his Gospel it is most evident For neither can faith justifie or save us without the Gospel neither can the Gospel justifie or save us without faith And to this purpose faith is called The faith of the Gospel Phil. 1. 27. And the Gospel is called The word of faith Rom. 10. 8. Neither is this Gospel restrained to any time place or person but was is and shall be effectual through faith to all believers in all ages for ever For the Scripture foreseeing that God would justifie the Heathen through faith preached before the Gospel unto Abraham Gal. 3. 8. And it is the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth to the Jew first and also to the Greek Rom. 1. 16. Fifthly Faith inableth us to rest and repose our selves confidently upon the said promises of God in Christ Not onely to believe them but also to rest and rely upon them Every true believer can affirm that freely which Balaam the wizard was inforced to testifie in spight of his own teeth God is not a man that he should lie neither the Son of man that he should repent hath he said and shall he not do it or hath he spoken and shall he not make it good Num. 23. 19. I know saith Iob that my Redeemer liveth and that he shall stand at the latter day upon the earth and though after my skin worms destroy this body yet in my flesh shall I see God whom I shall see for my self and mine eyes shall behold and not another though my reins be consumed within me Job 19. 25. 26 27. Lo we have left all and followed thee saith Peter unto Christ Luke 18. 28. We have left all the possibilities of this World and depended wholy upon thee and thy promises I am not ashamed of my sufferings saith Paul for I know whom I have believed and I am perswaded that he is able to keep that which I have committed unto him against that day 2 Tim. 1. 12. I am perswaded saith the same Apostle that neither death nor life nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor heighth nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord Rom. 8. 38 39. And very much to this purpose is that of Iohn the Baptist concerning faith in Christ He that hath received his Testimony saith he hath set to his Seal that God is true Joh. 3. 33. That is he that by the hand of a lively faith hath received the Testimony of God in Christ concerning the promises of the Gospel he hath set to his Seal that God is true in all those promises He hath not onely witnessed it with his mouth or subscribed unto it with his hand But he hath set to his Seal which is an argument of the greatest assurance that may be Verily the several deportments or behaviours of the Patriarchs Prophets Apostles Martyrs and generally of all the faithfull in all ages even to this present hour will abundantly testifie the truth of this particular If we shall look back upon their doings and sufferings but any thing seriously unto all which they were wholy induced and incouraged by the assured hope of eternal life which God that cannot lye promised before the world began Tit. 1. 2. For if in this life onely they had hope in Christ they had been of all men most miserable According to that of the Apostle 1 Cor. 15. 19. The sixth and last particular belonging to this definition of faith is this That it inableth us to receive the Lord Iesus Christ or God in Christ for our Saviour and our Soveraign Lord First for our Saviour when many more of the Samaritans believed because of Christs own word They said unto the woman now we believe not because of thy saying but we have heard him our selves and know that this is indeed the Christ the Saviour of the world Joh. 4. 41 42. Thus when the Lord beginneth to incline the Soul to listen after Iesus Christ He first presents him as a Saviour As being the most acceptable object to a distressed conscience who apprehending her own cursed condition by reason of sin and the Justice of God against sin armed with no gentler weapons then all manner of temporal calamities together with eternal death and destruction The poor blinde Soul sits now down in the darknesse of sorrow and discomfort imploring relief or direction to relief Like blinde Bartimeus who sate at the high-wayes side begging Mar. 10. 46. In this perplexity Gods holy Spirit whispereth and revealeth that Christ the Saviour is at hand to help her Hereupon with the same blinde man she beginneth to cry out Iesus thou Son of David have mer●y on me And being charged by the Devil and despair to hold her peace she crieth the more a great deal Thou Son of David have mercie on me To whose sad cries the Saviour attendeth and sendeth faith to call her Faith saith unto her be of good comfort arise he calleth thee At this the cheerfull Soul casts off her Garment The rags of her own righteousnesse and riseth and cometh unto Iesus Iesus saith unto her what wilt thou that I should do unto thee The soul replieth Lord that I may receive my sight So much sight as that I may cleerly see thee to be my Saviour Jesus saith unto her Thy faith hath saved thee And immediately she receiveth sight and denieth her self and taketh up her crosse and followeth him according to her Saviours own direction Mark 8. 34. By this you may perceive that faith doth first set us on work to receive Christ for our Saviour or Redeemer Yet this is no infallible property of a
were negligent and carelesse Be sober therefore be vigilant saith St. Peter because your adversary the Devil as a roaring Lion walketh about seeking whom he may devoure 1 Peter 5. 8. And be ye doers of the Word and not hearers onely deceiving your own selves James 1. 22. Secondly take heed how ye hear deceitfully Thou son of man saith the Lord to his Prophet Ezekiel the Children of thy people still are talking against thee by the walls and in the doors of the houses and speak one to another every one to his brother saying come I pray you and hear what is the Word that cometh forth from the Lord. And they come unto thee as the people cometh and they sit before thee as my people and they hear thy words but they will not do them for with their mouth they shew much love but their heart goeth after their covetousnesse Ezek. 33. 30 31. See how these Hypocrites do vilifie the Prophet of the Lord in private Neverthelesse they seem to be very zealous for the word of the Lord in publick and thereupon they come unto the Prophet and they sit before him as Gods own people and they do hear his words But here is the deceit they will not do them for they are Hypocritical and self-ended with their mouth they shew much love but their heart goeth after their covetousnesse And may there not be deceitfull hearers in these our dayes that follow the word meerly that they may be accounted good Christians or because they think this to be the onely prevailing way both to make them capable of all manner of imployment though they be never so unfit and undeserving And likewise to countenance all their proceedings though never so corrupt and unconscionable And therefore if you observe it they will seldom or never hear the word though never so sincerely plainly and powerfully delivered but when they think it may conduce to their carnal profit or preferment The cry of their heart is who will shew us any good not Lord lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon us as Psalm 4. 6. Is not this to hear the word of God deceitfully Is it not a work of the Lord to hear the word of the Lord Truely it is such a work as doth very well manifest who is our Master He that is of God heareth Gods words Ye therefore hear them not ●ecause ye are not of God saith the Son of God to the unbelieving Jews John 8. 47. And cursed is he that doth the work of the Lord deceitfully saith the Prophet Jer. 48. 10. Thirdly take heed how you hear despightfully Whoso despiseth the word shall be destroyed saith Salomon Prov. 13. 13. He that heareth you heareth me and he that despiseth you despiseth me and he that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me saith Christ to his seventy Disciples Luke 10. 16. He therefore that despiseth despiseth not Man but God saith that Apostle 1 Thessa 4. 8. But you will say that there is no man so ungracious as to despise the word of God in the mouth of his Ministers No What think you then of those factions frantick spirits that wry the mouth at every Doctrine which agreeth not with their own erronious or peradventure blasphemous opinions Or what do you think of those foul stomacks that will by no means disgest the sincere milk of the word but will rather spet it out in reproches unlesse it be sweetned with faithlesse revelations flattering Prophesies fair promises false invectives fresh intelligence or the like frivolous extravagancies which taste like Sugar to their corrupted appetites Or what do you think of those preposterous hearers that come to Gods Ordinances Not with Davids resolution To hear what God the Lord will speak as Psal 85. 8. But with an Athenian prejudice What will this babler say as Acts 17. 18. Neither shall the Son of God escape better then his servants For some said he is a good man others said Nay but he deceiveth the people John 7. 11. Whereas in truth they deceived themselves Is not this to despise both Christ and his Gospel He that despised Moses law died without mercy under two or three witnesses Of how much sorer punishment suppose ye shall he be thought worthy who hath trodden under foot the Son of God and hath counted the bloud of the Covenant wherewith he was sanctified an unholy thing and hath done despight unto the spirit of grace saith the Apostle to the Hebrews Hebr. 10. 28 29. Wherefore let the Preacher perswade you to keep your feet when you go into the house of God and be more ready to hear then to give the sacrifice of fools Eccl. 5. 1. That is keep or see to your affections which carry about the Soul as the feet do carry about the body and be more ready to hear then to give the sacrifice of fools what sacrifice is that why you know that under the Law they did use to offer beasts in sacrifice And these as natural brute beasts made to be taken and destroyed do offer themselves to speak evil of the things that they understand not and shall utterly perish in their own corruption according to that of Peter 2 Pet. 2. 12. But take heed that ye do hear the word of God attentively reverently and obediently First take heed that ye hear attentively We finde that the Lord commended Mary for attending to his Sermon when her sister Martha accused her for neglecting his service Luke 10. 39. c. Attention is the Lords own work for it was the Lord that opened the heart of Lidia that she attended unto the things which were spoken of Paul Acts 16. 14. And the Lord himself will reward it We are all here present before God to hear all things that are commanded thee of God saith that good Centurion to St. Peter Acts 10. 33. Here was a Testimony of their attention And the holy Ghost fell on all them that heard the word verse 44. There was the reward of their attention They received the gift of the holy Ghost A gift so precious that it is impossible for any to value it but onely such as have truely received it Secondly take heed that ye do hear reverently Receive with meeknesse the ingrafted word which is able to save your souls Ja. 1. 21. And for this cause thank we God without ceasing saith Paul because when ye received the word of God which ye heard of us ye received it not as the word of men but as it is in truth the word of God 1 Thes 2. 13. Contrary to these are they who proud of their own parts do creep into the sheepfold of Christ to put the whole flock into a confusion endeavouring not to obtain grace from Christ but to disgrace the faithfull Ministers of Christ And to that purpose where they cannot take occasions of offence they will be sure to make occasions of offence Neither can the most weighty and well-grounded arguments suffice to
shine unto them As in the 2 Cor. 4 4. And well may the Apostle call it the glorious Gospel not onely in regard that it bringeth us unto glory or for that God is so much glorified thereby But principally because that whatsoever God purposed or performed In by or cencerning his said Gospel he did it altogether in relation to the advance of his immortall glory And in testimony of this truth I beseech you let us First consider this glorious Gospel in the Originall thereof even in this eternall covenant of grace concluded and agreed upon between God the Father and his onely begotten Son for and on the behalf of mankinde before the foundation of the world By vertue whereof we were elected and predestinated before the world began And we shall finde that in this great design the Lord did wholy aym at his own glory Bl●ssed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ saith St. Paul who hath blessed us with all spirituall blessings in heavenly places in Christ According as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world that me should be holy and without blame before him in love Having predestinated us unto the adoption of children by Jesus Christ to himself according to the good pleasure of his wil To the praise of the glory of his grace Ephes 1. 3 4 5 6. Secondly let us consider our redemption and see how that relateth to Gods glory The Son of God being about to suffer and so compleat the work of our Redemption Father save me from this hour saith he but for this cause came I unto this hour Father glorifie thy name glorifie thy name in the redemption of sinfull man even by the death of thine own sinless Son Then came there a voice from heaven saying I have both glorified it and will glorifie it again Jo. 12. 27 28. I have both glorified it from everlasting and I will glorifie it again to everlasting And excellent to this purpose is that of the Apostle Ye are bought with a price saith he therefore glorifie God in your body and in your Spirit which are Gods 1 Cor. 6. 20. Thirdly he created us for his glory Bring my Sons from farr saith the Lord and my Daughters from the ends of the earth even every one that is called by my name for I have created him for my glory Isa 43. 6 7. Fourthly it is for his glory that he preserveth us For my name sake will I defer mine anger and for my praise will I refrain for thee that I cut thee not off behold I have refined thee but not with silver I have chosen thee in the furnace of affliction for mine own sake even for mine own sake will I do it for how should my name be polluted and I will not give my glory to another Isa 48. 9 10 11. Fifthly it is for his own glory that he calleth us Ye are a chosen generation a royal priestho●d an holy nation a peculiar people that ye should set forth the praises of him who hath called you out of darknesse into this marvellous light 1 Pet. 2. 9. And whose offereth praise glorifieth me saith the Lord Psalm 50. 23. Sixthly he justifieth us for his own glory Thy people shall be all righteous they shall inherit the land for ever the branch of my planting the work of my hands that I may be glorified saith the same God Isa 50. 21. Seventhly he sanctifieth us for his own glory I am the true Vine saith the Son of God and my Father is the husband-man every branch in me that beareth not fruit he taketh away and every branch that beareth fruit he purgeth it that it may bring forth more fruit John 15. 1 2. And in the 8. verse Herein is my Father glorified that ye bear much fruit And this I pray saith St. Paul that your love may abound yet more and more in knowledge and in all judgement That ye may approve things that are excellent that ye may be sincere and without offence till the day of Christ being filled with the fruits of righteousnesse which are by Jesus Christ unto the praise and glory of God Phil. 1. 9 10 11. And lastly it is for his glory that he saveth us Father saith our Lord Jesus Christ I will that they also whom thou hast given me be with me where I am that they may behold my glory which thou hast given me Joh. 17. 24. And this shall he accomplish most compleatly when he shall come to be glorified in his Saints and to be admired in all them that believe 2 Thes 1. 10. See here how infinitely the glory of God is interessed in all his Evangelical actions and concessions As namely in his Election Redemption Creation Preservation Vocation Justification Sanctification and Salvation of the Sons of men And doest thou want a sure ground for thy faith Cast away all execrable opinions of humane perfections and performances As truely as I live all the earth shall be filled with the glory of the Lord saith Almighty God Numb 14. 21. Ingage thy Soul therefore boldly upon this eternal design of Gods glory with this assurance that it can never perish so long as the God of all power and glory is able to preserve it This I am confident is the soundest and the most substantial foundation that any Christian can build upon having its Warrant from the manifold wisdom of God Ground thy self therefore firmly thereupon and then doubt not but thou art well rooted in Christ by faith Thirdly to be setled in the faith is a very good argument that we are well rooted in Christ by faith To be setled that is to be confirmed or established in the faith according to that of this Apostle Col. 2. 7. And this is done chiefly by observation and experience Doest thou desire to be setled in the faith Observe Gods mercy and loving kindnesse towards thee Prospering thine honest endeavours in the works of thy lawfull calling blessing thee in thy person and in thy posterity providing for thy necessities preserving thee from thine enemies comforting thee in all thine afflictions delivering thee out of thy distresses and graciously answering thee in thy fervent prayers and supplications But especially consider what great things God hath done to thy Soul In weaning it from the world redeeming it from the bondage of sin and Satan Translating it from darknesse unto light supplying it with good motions and godly desires fixing it firmly upon thy Lord and Saviour And working it to the willing obedience of faith and love If thou shalt thus apply thy self to see the good hand of God upon thee and to feel the sweet influence of his holy Spirit within thee Thou shalt come to know God experimentally Thou shall know that thou knowest him According to that of the Apostle 1 John 2. 3. With Job Thou shalt know that thy Redeemer liveth Job 19. 25. With David thou shalt know that God fav●ureth thee Psal 41.
leaneth on my hand and I bow my self in the house of Rimmon when I bow down my self in the house of Rimmon The Lord pardon thy servant in this thing verse 18. He will be still an idolater rather then he will lose the countenance of the king his master This is the mercenary love of an harlot for which the Divell accused Job though very injuriously Job 1. 9 10. Secondly the love of an harlot is hypocriticall doubtless Sampsons harlot Dalila did profess very much affection towards him before she could win him to tell her wherewith he might certainly be bound But if her love had been reall and sincere she would not have delivered him into the hands of the Philistines As Jud. 16. 18 c. This was Judas his charity to the poor Jo. 12. 4. c. And his love to his Lord Mat. 26. 49. And this is the love of all such as will serve both God and Mammon Thirdly the love of an harlot is unconstant when God complained of Judah for her inconstancy and apostacy Thou hast played the harlot saith he with many lovers Jer. 3. 1. And truly that love which is mercenary must needs be unconstant that which was bought will be sold The love of a poor passive Christ will never continue long in a mercenary bosom And whosoever loveth God for giving will cease to love if God shall cease to give or at least if he shall take away that which he formerly did give This is one of the Divells surest weapons and it is to be feared that there are but few Jobs to beat him at it And lastly the love of an harlot becometh contemptible Thus saith the Lord because thy filthiness was poured out and thy wickedness discovered through thy whordoms with thy lovers c. Behold therefore I will gather all thy lovers with wbom thou hast taken pleasure and all them which thou hast loved with all them that thou hast hated I will even gather them round about against thee and will discover thy nakedness unto them and they shall see all thy nakedness Ezek. 16. 36 37. And I will also give thee into their hand c. verse 39. And to conclude with this particular observe the shamefull end of Jezebel 2 Kings 9. 30. c. But the virgins love is of another nature Because of the favour of thy good oyntments thy name is as ointment poured forth therefore do the virgins love thee saith the chaste spouse unto her loving Lord Chap. 1. 3. You know that a pleasant sent or savour hath nothing that is outwardly beneficiall but being drawn in with the breath it refresheth and comforteth the inward parts And oyntment or unction or anoynting do signifie unto us the Spirit of God 1 Joh. 2. 20. Wherewith their blessed Bridegroom was anointed to be their Priest their Prophet and their King And by the influence of the same Spirit the very name of Jesus Christ infuseth both life and sweetnesse into all his Saints and therefore do their Virgin chaste Souls love him Thus it appeareth that the Virgins Love unto her Lord is neiher mercenary nor carnal but most pure and spiritual And it is most excellently compleated through these four passages First it is improved by Contemplation Secondly it is manifested by Profession Thirdly it is confirmed by Preparation And fourthly it is perfected by Practice When a chast Virgin first begins to love her heart delighteth much in Contemplation Her thoughts are very much upon the object of her affections alwayes meditating upon his amiable person his outward greatnesse and his inward graces In his person she considereth the beauties or comelinesse of his countenance and composition In his outward greatnesse she reflecteth upon his birth his wealth his power deserts and dignities Concerning his inward graces she recordeth his love his goodnesse his mercy truth Justice and wisdom With these and with the like sweet contemplations she feeds her fancies and augments her fires For the coals of love are coals of fire which hath a most vehement flame Cant. 8. 6. By this poor scantling you may partly aim at things that are incomprehensible Thus the sweet Soul that is in love with Christ with God in Christ revolves her amorous thoughts first on the person of her Lord and Lover Thou art fairer then the children of men saith she Psal 45. 2. Of this you shall finde a most elegant and excellent description Cant. 5. 10. c. Where she setteth forth his beauty sweetnesse strength and lovelinesse by way of allusion or similitude My beloved saith she is white and ruddy the chiefest among ten thousand his head is as the most fine Gold his locks are bushy and black as a Raven his eyes are as the eyes of Doves by the Rivers of water washed with Milk and fitly set His cheeks are as a bed of spices as sweet flowers his lips like lilies dropping sweet smelling myrrhe his hands are as Gold rings set with the beril his belly is as bright Ivory overlaid with Saphires his legs are as pillars of Marble set upon sockets of fine Gold his countenance is as Lebanon excellent as the Cedars his mouth is most sweet yea he is altogether lovely This is my beloved and this is my friend O daughters of Jerusalem In the second place she surveyeth his greatnesse his outward greatnesse according to our apprehension and expression As first the greatnesse of his birth where she findeth that he is the Son of God Lu. 1. 35. Not an adopted Son or younger brother But the onely begotten Son of God 1 John 4. 9. Secondly the greatnesse of his wealth or estate He is the Heir of all things Heb. 1. 2. The earth is his and the fulnesse thereof the world and they that dwell therein Psal 24. 1. Thirdly the greatnesse of his power Even the windes and the Sea obey him Mat. 8. 27. Yea all power is given to him in Heaven and in Earth Mat. 28. 18. Fourthly the greatnesse of his deserts or worthinesse Worthy is the Lamb that was slain to receive power and riches and wisdom and strength and honour and glorie and blessing Rev. 5. 12. And fifthly the greatnesse of his Dignities He is the blessed and onely Potentate the King of Kings and Lord of Lords 1 Tim. 6. 15. In the third place she admireth his inward essential Graces And first his Love that he should love her so as to purchase her with his own bloud Acts 20. 28. As to die for her Rom. 5. 6. Even a cursed death Gal. 3. 13. Next this she wondreth at his matchlesse goodnesse the goodnesse of his Love or his goodnesse in loving her when she deserved no such thing as love when no eye pitied her to have compassion upon her but she was cast out into the open field to the loathing of her person Ezek. 16. 5. Then even then he passed by her and looked upon her and behold her time was a time of Love and he spread his shirt
may haply wooe her but cannot win her to leave her first Love For she findes that he reproved that lightnesse in the angel of the Church of Ephesus Reve. 2. 4. She cannot do such desperate wickedness and sin against her blessed Saviour who hath betrothed her unto himself in righteousness and ratified his contract by the sweet and precious ingagements of his Gospel And therfore her Love is so deeply rooted in the center of her soul that she cannot be tossed to and fro and carried away with every wind of Doctrine c. Ephes 4. 14. But being sincere in love she groweth up into him in all things which is her head vers 15. My righteousnesse I hold fast and will not let it go my heart shall not reproach me so long as I live saith Job Job 27. 6. This was a notable sign that he loved righteousness with much constancy Thirdly her love to righteousness is confident It will not be daunted nor discouraged Though proud Haman despiseth poor Mordecay and projecteth the destruction of himself and all his people As Esther 3. 6. Yet Mordecay will not give divine reverence to that ambitious upstart Ester 5. 9. Though Nebuchad-nezzar the mighty king of Babylon maketh an idolatrous decree and threatneth a burning fiery furnace to such as shall be disobedient thereunto Dan. 3. 10 11. Yet Shadrach Meshach and Abednego the servants of the most high God will not serve his gods nor worship the golden image that he hath set up Dan. 3. 18. Though Darius by the policy of his presidents and councellers establisheth a royall statute That whosoever shall ask a petition of any God or man for thirty daies save of the King himself he shall be cast into the den of lions Dan. 6 7. Yet Daniel though he knows that the writing is sealed will kneel upon his knees three times a day and pray and give thanks before his God as he did aforetime Dan. 6. 10. See here how confident these godly men appeared in their love to righteousness And read yet further how the Lord succeeded their confidence with strange deliverances Cast not away therefore your confidence which hath great recompence of reward for ye have need of patience that after ye have done the will of God ye might receive the promise for yet a little while and he that shall come will come and will not tarry Heb. 10. 35. 36. 27. Fourthly her Love is very comprehensive It comprehendeth owneth and imbraceth all righteousness where ever it resideth She is not hypocritically proud so as to say Stand by thy self come not neer me for I am holier then thou like rebellions Israel Isa 65. 5. But in lowliness of minde she esteemeth each other better then her self As Phili. 2 3. Nor gainfully superstitious to cry out Great is Diana of the Ephesians with Demetrius and his fellow craftsmen As Acts 19. 34. But she acknowledgeth That godlinesse is profitable unto all things As 1 Tim. 4. 8. Nor is she insolently factious To despise dominion and speak evil of dignities with the Apostle Judes filthy dreamers As Jude 8. But she endeavoureth To keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace According to Saint Pauls preswasion Ephes 4. 3. I am a companion to all them that fear thee Saith good David unto his God Psal 119. 63. To all them that fear thee without any exception or limination And the Apostle Paul commends the Ephesians for their love to all the Saints Ephes 1. 15. But you will say 't is very difficult for us to know a sinner from a saint in times of tolleration wherein profession usurps the forme and undermines the power of godliness Thererore we shall do wisely to consider what David saith concerning this particular My Lord saith he my goodnesse extendeth not to thee but to the excellent in whom is all my delight Psal 16. 2 3. Or thus according to the vulgar reading All my delight is upon the Saints and upon such as excell in virtue A morall vertue shall not misse of a suteable reward if it be cordiall though it be constrained This we may see in the example of Ahab 1 Kings 21. 29. But wo be unto you ye hypocrites saith Christ eight times in one and the same chapter Mat. 23. Neverthelesse they that are truely godly lest they should be or partial or prejuditious in their love to righteousnesse do not forget to pray with our Apostle that The Lord would make them to increase and abound in love one towards another and towards all men As in 1 Thessa 3. 12. And as the virgin soul doth thus professe her fervent love unto her dearest Lord by loving righteousnesse which he doth love So on the other side she doth expresse the like unfained Love by hating sin and wickednesse because he hateth it But haply you will say the very name of wickednesse is harsh and odious Is there a man that hates not wickednesse 'T is true indeed 't is hard to finde a man so vile or gracelesse but that he would seem to be an enemy to wickednesse But yet in practice there are very few but do allow commit defend or love it And therefore first let me demand this question when thou art set upon by any sin dost thou resist it by the power of faith and fight against it under Gods command Canst thou sincerely say with godly Joseph How can I do this great wickednesse and sin against God as Gen. 39. 9. This is a signe thou hatest sin indeed Or doest thou otherwise refrain from sin for fear of shame reproach or punishment Verily thou hast thy reward But this is fear proceeding from self-love No love to God no hatred against sin Ye that love the Lord hate evil saith the Prophet Psal 97. 10. And therefore secondly let us consider the nature and the properties of hatred This hatred is no giddy frantick passion but a mature deliberate affection Such a notorious opposite to Love that they can never be so reconciled as to imbrace or favour the same object They are agreed ever to disagree Yet they are Twins both strugling in one wombe not to be parted not to be atoned consent begets and emnity preserves them For hatred lives by love love thrives by hatred Love first gives hatred an occasion and hatred prosecutes loves adversaries And therefore whosoever loveth God must hate all sin as grievous unto God Thou hast made me to serve with thy sins thou hast wearied me with thine iniquities saith the Lord to Israel Isa 43. 24. Now we must know that many men do much mistake themselves in this particular A man may be inraged against sin and yet not hate it Yea he may protest and vow against it very seriously and yet not hate it really and rightly And therefore we may do well to consider that hatred which is perfect and compleat hath these three properties First it is impartial Secondly it is impetuous And thirdly it is implacable
David as a King and thus do thou according to thy power or do not say that thou hast any hatred against sin And as that hatred which is warrantable is both impartial and impetuous So in the third place 't is implacable never to be appeased or reconciled This is not hatred to fall out with sin or quarrel with it at some special time or for some extraordinary cause For thus the most ungracious Reprobate may sometimes hate his best-beloved sin And yet return with the Dogge to his vomit and the Sow that was washed to her wallowing in the mire If thus the unclean spirit goeth out of a man it is but onely to recruit his forces he will return and take unto himself seven other spirits more wicked then himself and they will enter in and dwell there and the last state of that man is worse then the first According to that saying of our Saviour Luke 11. 26. But when a man in expectation of Gods eternal Love by Jesus Christ doth dedicate his love to God in Christ the violence and perpetuity of his impartial hatred will be such against all sin and every transgression That he will chuse to suffer the afflictions of Joseph Psal 105. 17 18. Much rather then he will be reconciled to any sin or become serviceable unto the Prince of darknesse though with Ioseph he be solicited thereto day by day as Gen. 39. 10. And thus the Soul that is in love with Christ declares it by her Christian profession especially In loving righteousnesse because he loves it and hating wickednesse because he hates it And having thus throughly endeer'd herself by manifesting her affections and fixing them upon their proper objects In the next place she doth prepare herself to seek and entertain her princely lover For as the Tree that is planted in a fruitfull soyl doth not onely increase her sap in her self and send it forth in flourishing green leaves but likewise by the vertue of that sap she putteth forth her beautifull fair blossoms whereby we are induced to conceive that she will bring forth fruit accordingly Even so the Soul that by a lively faith is planted into Christ doth not onely improve her love by Contemplation and manifest it by Profession But likewise she most earnestly endeavoureth to fit and confirm it by Preparation ANd this her hopefull preparation sets forth it self in seeking her beloved It is a principal part of Iehoshaphats commendations That he prepared his heart to seek God 2 Chron. 19. 3. And Hezekiah one of his successours both in his Kingdom and his piety having proclaimed a solemne Passeover He besought the Lord saying The good Lord pardon every one that prepareth his heart to seek God the Lord God of his fathers though he be not cleansed according to the purification of the sanctuary 2 Chr. 30. 19. And the Lord hearkened to Hezekiah and healed the people verse 20. And in this search the loving Soul considereth when where and how she may so seek her Lord that she may soon safely and surely finde him And to that purpose she doth call to minde that the holy Ghost sets forth a threefold prescription in order to the time when she 's to seek him First early Prov. 8. 17. Secondly continually Chron. 16. 11. And thirdly evermore Psal 105. 4. Early in regard of opportunity Continually in reference to constancie And evermore in relation to perpetuity First early without delaying In the morning of her youth Remember thy Creatour in the dayes of thy youth saith that kingly Preacher Eccles 12. 1. And thus good Obadiah to Elijah I thy servant fear the Lord from my youth 1 Tim. 18. 12. Secondly continually without wavering For he that wavereth is like a wave of the Sea driven with the winde and tossed Let not that man think that he shall receive any thing of the Lord James 1. 6 7. And thirdly evermore without revolting or apostatizing He that endureth to the end shall be saved saith the Son of God Mat. 10. 22. It is registred of Asa That he did that which was good and right in the eyes of the Lord his God 2 Chron. 14. 2. Neverthelesse it is a notable blemish to his integrity that towards his latter end In his disease he sought not to the Lord but to the Physicians 2 Chr. 16. 12. And thus the love-sick Soul will seek her Lord early least having withdrawn himself she seek him but cannot finde him and call him but he gives her no answer as Cant. 5. 6. She will seek him continually least he cometh in a day when she looketh not for him and in an hour that she is not ware of Mat. 24. 50. And she will seek him evermore least she be unprovided at his last coming and the door be shut against her as it fared with the foolish Virgins Mat. 25. 10. And in the second place she doth consider where she may safely seek for her beloved And is resolved that this must be in his Ordinances and especially in his word which is sometimes called the Scriptures according as he himself hath taught her saying Search the Scriptures for they are they which testifie of me John 5. 39. And therefore the Prophet David professeth unto the Lord That he rejoyceth at his word as one that findeth great spoiles Psal 119. 162. And the faithfull spouse in the Canticles desireth to hear the voice of her dear Lord saying Thou that dwellest in the gardens the companions hearken unto thy voice cause me to hear it Cant. 8. 13. But I conceive it may be Objected That we may hear severall voices speaking in the holy Scriptures and therefore how shall we know the voice of Christ from other voices I answer it is true indeed the Scripture do discover unto us severall voices especially the voice of God in his law and the voice Christ or of God in Christ in his Gospel And they are so frequently and so diversly mixed or intermingled the one with the other according to the wonderfull wisdom of the Spirit and that both in the old and new Testaments that it requireth a good and a willing understanding to distinguish rightly between them For all that is contained in the new Testament although we do generally call that the Gospell is not to be understood as the voice of the Gospel or the voice of Christ according to his Gospel Every idle word that men shall speak they shall give account thereof in the day of judgement There is the voice of the law in the midst of the Gospel Mat. 12. 36. Neither may we think that whatsoever is found in the old Testament which is commonly called the law is to be referred to the voice of the law For the Scripture foreseeing that God would justifie the Heathen by faith preached the Gospell before unto Abraham Gal. 3. 8. Saying In thee shall all nations be blessed Gen. 12. 3. And the like we finde many very many times both in the old
and new Testament Neither are these severall voices divided severally into certain Books or Pages or Chapters seeing we do somtimes meet with them both in one and the same verse The wages of sin is death there is the voice of the law Rom. 6. 25. But the gift of God is eternall life through Jesus Christ our Lord. There is the voice of the Gospel in the same verse The like may be observed 1 Cor. 15. 22. And in many other places wherefore that we may arive at a right understanding in these so necessary differences or distinctions we will first lay down two generall rules and afterwards proceed to more particular observations First when we finde any work injoyned to be done or the contrary commanded not to be done under any penalty either temporall or eternall whether it be curse or captivity famine or pestilence destruction death or damnation or any promise made upon doing or not doing This we must understand to be the voice of God in his Law Secondly wheresoever the subject matter is of Christ or his kingdom or the promise of grace or the condition faith and the reward either spirituall in its own nature or spirituallized by grace This we may be sure is the voice of Christ in his Gospell These we shall finde to be the two generall Rules From whence we will deduct these following particulars First the voice of God in his Law is a voice of command These words which I command thee this day shall be in thine heart Deut. 6 6. This thing commanded I them saying obey my voice and I will be your God and ye shall be my people Jer. 7. 23. But the voice of the Gospel is a voice of intreaty As though God did beseech you by us we pray you in Christ stead be ye reconciled to God 2 Cor. 5. 20. Secondly the voice of the law is a voice of compulsion If his Children forsake my law and walk not in my judgements If they break my statutes and keep not my commandments Then will I visit their transgression with the rod and their iniquitie with stripes Psal 89. 30 31 32. But the voice of the Gospel is a voice of attraction or invitation I have loved thee with an everlasting love therefore with loving-kindenesse have I drawn thee Jer. 31. 3. Come unto me all ye that labour and are beavie laden and I will give you rest c. Mat. 11. 28 c. And him that cometh unto me I will in no wise cast out saith the Son of God Jo. 6. 37. Thirdly the voice of the law is a voice of bondage cursed is every one that continueth not in all thing which are written in the book of the law to do them Gal. 3. 10. But the voice of the Gospel is a voice of liberty The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me because the Lord hath anointed me to preach good tidings unto the meek he hath sent me to binde up the broken hearted to proclaim libertie to the captives and the opening of the prison to them that are bound c. Isa 61. 1. c. Stand fast therefore in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free Gala. 5. 1. for if the Son shall make you free ye shall be free indeed John 8. 36. Fourthly the voice of the law is a voice of enmity Ye adulterers and adulteresses know ye not that the friendship of the world is enmity with God whosoever therefore will be a friend to the world is the enemy of God James 4. 4. And God shall wound the head of his enemies Psal 68. 21. But the voice of the Gospel is a voice of reconciliation when we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Sons Rom. 5. 10. And God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself not imputing their trespasses 2 Cor. 5. 19. Fifthly the voice of the law is a voice of wrath The law worketh wrath Rom. 4. 15. For by it the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodlinesse and unrighteousnesse of men As Rom. 1. 18. But the voice of the Gospel is a voice of love God commendeth his love towards us in that while we were yet sinners Christ died for us Rum 5. 8. And therefore the love-sick soul in the Canticles It is the voice of my beloved that knocketh saying Open to me my sister my love My dove my undefiled Cant. 5. 2. Sixthly the voice of the law is a voice of terrour I heard thy voice in the garden and was afraid So Adam to God Gen. 3. 10. And when the Lord gave the law unto the Israelites There were thunders and lightnings and a thick cloud upon the mount and the voice of the trumpet exceeding loud so that all the people that was in the camp trembled Exod. 19. 16. And this did fore-shew the effects of the law to all such as are under the law for ever But the voice of the Gospel is a voice of comfort The Lord shall comfort Zion he will comfort all her wast places c. Isa 51. 3. And Blessed are they that mourn for they shall be comforted Saith the Son of God Mat. 5. 4. Seaventhly the voice of the law is a voice of conviction By the law is the knowledge of sin Rom. 3. 20. For I had not known sin but by the law saith St. Paul Rom. 7. 7. And sin by the commandment is become exceeding sinfull saith the same Apostle Rom. 7. 13. But the voice of the Gospel is a voice of Appeal For the Father judgeth no man but hath committed all judgement unto the Son John 5. 22. And he is not an high priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities but was in all points tempted like as we are yet without sin let us therefore come boldly unto the throne of grace that we may obtain mercy and finde grace to help in time of need saith the Apost He. 4. 15 16. Eightly the voice of God in his law is a voice of condemnation The soul that sinneth it shall die Saith the Lord Ezek. 18. 4. And cast ye the unprofitable servant into utter darknesse Mat. 25. 30. But the voice of Christ in his Gospel is a voice of pardon verily verily saith he I say unto you he that heareth my word and believeth on him that sent me hath everlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but is passed from death to life John 5. 14. And this pardon hath three degrees First a Reprive Secondly an Intercession And Thirdly a Satisfaction The first I say is a Reprive And this hath been generall to all mankinde since the fall of Adam He was the first that received the benefit thereof And meerly by vertue of the said Reprive both he and all of his posterity have do and shall injoy their naturall lives some shorter and some longer according to the blessed will and pleasure of Christ our Lord and onely Mediatour I have the Keyes of hell
and of death saith he Reve. 1. 18. Whereby it may appear that there is no passage that way but when and by whom he pleaseth to appoint it This I conceive to be the first degree in order to this free and gracious pardon The second is our Saviours Intercession He made intercession for the transgressours Isa 53. 12. And he ever liveth to make intercession for them Heb. 7. 25. The third and highest is his satisfaction He was wounded for our transgressions he was bruised for our iniquities the chastisement of our peace was upon him and with his stripes we are healed Isa 53. 5. His ownself bare our sins in his own body on the tree saith St. Peter 1 Pet. 2. 24. Now if we shall in time of this reprive lay hold and rest upon his Intercession by an effectuall embracing faith then we are certain that we shall injoy the benefit of his full satisfaction And so we may be truly confident that this our pardon is both signed and sealed Due satisfaction is acknowledged Gods justice is compleatly vindicated his indignation throughly pacified And what can hinder us from being saved For it is God that justifieth who is he that condemneth It is Christ that died yea rather that is risen again who is even at the right hand of God who also maketh intercession for us Rom. 8. 33 34. But if through all the time of our reprive we shall reject relinquish or neglect so great salvation as is offered in this intercession and satisfaction Then as the voice of God in his law hath passed upon us the sentence of condemnation So the voice of Christ in his Gospel shall passe upon us the sentence of execution For he that believeth not shall be damned This is part of that Gospel which the Lord Christ commanded his Apostles to preach unto every creature Mark 16. 16. The Scriptures mention other voices also As of Prophets that prophesie lies Jer. 23. 25. Of those that speak perverse things to draw Disciples after them Acts 20. 30. That by good words and fair speeches deceive the hearts of the simple Rom. 16. 18. That speaks lies in hypocrisie 1 Tim. 4. 1. That speaks evill of dignities 2 Pet. 2. 10. That speake evill of the things they understand not 2 Peter 2. 12. That speak great swelling words of vanity 2 Pet. 2. 18. That speak great things and blasphemies Rev. 13. 5. These voices are remembered in the Scriptures but they are all condemned by the Scriptures And these with every other of like nature may be referred to the voice of Strangers John 10. 5. Which though they be extolled and applauded by giddy multitudes of brain-sick beasts of old ordained to this condemnation Jude 4. This constant Lamb of Christ will by no means incline to hear or listen after them Least they should drive her into mire and dirt As Isa 57. 20. Or draw her from her Shepheards tender bosom As Isa 40. 11. Such were the watchmen that did smite and wound the searching soul The keepers of the walls that rifled her and took away her vail Cant. 5. 7. And therefore she avoids them day and night their publick musters and their private meetings As swarms of hurtfull locusts that proceed out of the smoak of hells infernall furnace As to the sacred voice of God in his law she doth believe it as it is the voice of such an Authour Exod. 20. 1. She learned it as a Rule to guide her goings Phil. 3. 16. She loves it as an argument of Love John 14 15. But looks upon it as a cancelled scroul a dead caracter in relation to any Obligation or ingagement Col. 2. 14. And so she leaves it with much reverence And listens to her Lords voice in his Gospel Jo. 7. 37. And being thus instructed when and where she is to seek for her beloved Lord. In the third place she sets her self to learn How she may seek him so as that she may be sure to finde him And to that intent She goeth her way forth by the foot-steps of the flock and feedeth her Kids besides the shepherds tents According to her Lords direction Cant. 1. 8. She walketh in the pathes of Christs own sheep to feed and fill her ears with his pure doctrine delivered by his faithfull Ministers As for her mortall enemies the Divell the World and Flesh that labour to betray and intercept her in her heavenly search with these she holdeth a continuall combate As for example when the Divel meets her in her delightfull way unto the word And would divert her by his lewd suggestions as that she shall be rebuked and reproved for her sins and threatned with misery death and destruction for her transgressions against the law of God with such like terrours not to be indured She telleth him that she hath been already at mount Sinay that might not be touched and that burned with fire and with blackness and darknesse and tempests c. Heb. 12. 18. But now the law like a good Schole-master leading her from thence unto mount Sion and unto the city of the living God the heavenly Jerusalem and to an innumerable company of angels to the generall assembly and Church of the first born which are written in heaven and to God the judge of all and to the Spirits of just men made perfect and to Jesus the mediatour of the new covenant c. Heb. 12. 22 c. And therefore with the Prophet David She will hear what God the Lord will speak for he will speak peace unto his people and to his Saints Psal 85. 8. When by his black mouth'd execrable agents the shame and bane of Church and Common-Wealth the Devil doth revile the Ministers of Jesus Christ with base reproachfull titles of purpose to blow up the zealous blaze of his own smoaking firebrands and to darken or quench the pure light of the glorious Gospel That so she may not be able to see when the Sun of righteousnesse shall arise with healing in his wings As Mala. 4. 2. The good soul onely renders him that answer wherewith the angels of the Lord reproved him long since upon the very like occasion The Lord rebuke thee O Satan Zech. 3. 1 2. And when that subtile serpent now perceiving that all his hellish engines cannot hinder the soul from listening to the word of God endeavoureth by all means possible to steal it from her least it should prove fruitfull She tells him plainly that she will both hear the word of God and keep it for so she shall be certain of a blessing Luke 11. 28. Next when the world would win her from the word by his most specious invitations of pleasures profits or preferments She answers That to live in pleasures on the earth is to nourish her self as in a day of slaughter James 5. 5. But the word will direct her to the Lord her God In whose presence is fulnesse of joy and at whose right hand are pleasures for
evermore Psal 16. 11. As for profit although it be a lesson that she could gladly learn yet she will take it onely at Gods teaching I am the Lord thy God which teacheth thee to profit saith her beloved Isa 48. 17. For otherwise what is a man profited if he shal gain the whole world and lose his own soul Mat. 16. 26. And for worldly preferments experience tells her they are little worth But the word teacheth her by the mouth of her own Lord. That whosoever shall do the will of his Father which is in heaven the same is his brother and sister and mother Ma. 12. 50. And these are such perpetuall preferments as all the world cannot present her with And lastly when the dull flesh would detain her from her attendance on the holy word perswading her that she may slumber still and take her rest awile 't is yet two early by an hour or two and that the weather is foul and wet and cold with the like flatteries and indulgencies Neverthelesse she starteth up and saith my beloved speaks and says unto me Rise up my love my fair one and come away for lo the winter is past the rain is over and gone As Cant. 2. 10 11. Or be it ne'r so rainy cold or foul or full of lets and inconveniencies yet neither shall the flesh the World nor Divel prevent her from the search of her beloved till with that Propet she can safely say with my whole heart have I sought thee Psal 119. 10. And thus she is resolved when and where and How she is to seek her saving Lord. But seeing there are now such multitudes that cry up Christ lo here lo there is Christ and yet our Saviour saith believe it not Mat 24. 23. How shall the longing soul be sure to know when she hath found the Christ her Lord indeed In answer to this much materiall question She must consider that this Lord of glory is alwayes guarded by a glorious train of gifts and graces infinite for number with which he enters into every soul that is thus qualified and prepared But least my taske should be as infinite I shall describe but onely six of them As namely Life Light Humility Assurance Peace and Joy These alwayes are at hand if not in sight to give attendance to this royall Bridegroom And to confirm the Soul in this her search FIrst where this Prince of life is there is life He that hath the Son hath life and he that hath not the Son hath not life saith St. John 1 John 5. 12. And this life is evidenced by these four particulars namely Sense Motion Resolution and Action The first thing that appeareth in this spiritual life is Sense whilest we want this life of Christ we are altogether senselesse no better then dead dead in trespasses and sins Verily as the body without the Soul is dead so the soul without Christ is dead also She is alienated from the life of God and being alienated from the life of God she is past feeling saith the Apostle Ephes 4. 18 19. She perceiveth not the things of the Spirit of God 1 Cor. 2. 14. Ye she is altogether ignorant of her own wretched condition She knows not that she is wretched and miserable and poor and blinde and naked As Rev. 3. 17. But when Christ who is her life appeareth unto her he reviveth and quickeneth her For as the father raiseth up the dead and quickeneth them even so the Son doth quicken whom he will John 5. 21. And you hath he quickened who were dead in trespasses and sins saith St. Paul Ephes 2. 1. He gives the soul the feeling of her sins the sight of Gods fierce wrath and indignation and fearfull judgements thereupon depending And being thus made truely sensibe of her own miseries immediately she doth begin to stir and move her self towards the consideration of her present dangerous condition and the most probable means for her recocery Thus the Jews when they were pricked in their hearts at the relation of their former impieties they said unto Peter And to the rest of the Apostles Men and brethren what shall we do Acts 2. 37. And thus the regenerate Jaylour being awaked by the power of God in that great earth-quake feeling the foundations of the prison shaken seeing all the doors opened and the prisoners bands loosed and hearing notwithstanding all this that none of them were escaped immediately he called for a light and sprang in and came trembling and fell down before Paul and Silas and brought them out and said Sirs what must I do to be saved Acts 16. 26 c. Nor will this motion admit of rest until it putteth on a resolution No sooner is the soul thus throughly troubled or moved with the sense of her own miseries but she will carefully resolve upon some way or other to work her release And in like manner this her resolution if it be firm and constant will endeavour to put it self into some suddain action All these four signs degrees or passages of a spiritual life do well appear in that story of those four lepers that sate at the gate of Samaria in the time of the famine the 2 of Kings the 7. beginning at the 3 verse For albeit their parly and proceedings were meerly rationall yet they may be applyed unto this our spiritual purpose First it appeareth that they became sensible of their present distresse for they said one to another Why sit we hear untill we die Secondly their thoughts were moved and stirred to work their deliverance If we say we will enter into the city say they then the famine is in the city and we shall die there and if we sit still here we die also Thirdly they took up a Resolution Now therefore come and let us fall unto the host of the Syrians if they save us alive we shall live and if they kill as we shall but die And what they did so purpose and resolve they fourthly forthwith did perform and finish They rose up in the twilight to go unto the camp of the Syrians c. And the successe was rich and admirable For they not onely relieved refreshed and inriched themselves but their whole city also No lesse remarkable to this very purpose is that Parable of the Prodigall by which our blessed Saviour himself intended a spiritual incouragement Luke 15. 17 c. First he came to himself that is he became sensible of his own calamity Secondly he was moved and troubled that his fathers hired servants should fare so much better then himself How many hired servants of my fathers have bred enough and to spare saith he and I perish with hunger Thirdly he resolveth to cast himself upon his fathers compassion I will arise and go to my father and say unto him father I have sinned against heaven and before thee c. And Fourthly he puts his resolution into action And he arose and came to his father And then
behold his blessed entertainment when he was yet a great way off his father saw him and had compassion and ran and fell on his neck and kissed him And the like happinesse shall every soul receive for certain from her heavenly Father that hath a true sense and feeling of her transgressions that is really moved and troubled for them that resolveth seriously to forsake them that proceedeth in the right course to be delivered from them According to that life which her Beloved brings along with him But as the resolutions and actions of the aforesaid lepers and likewise of the prodigal were undertaken and carried on meerly by necessity and probably might have been as dangerous as they proved advantagious So in like case the soul that is thus newly revived and ingaged upon the like compulsive principles may be exceeding liable and subject to many perilous mistakes O Lord I know that the way of man is not in himself it is not in man that walketh to direct his steps saith the Prophet Jere. 10. 23. And therefore whensoever Jesus Christ appeareth savingly to such a soul he giveth light to rule and guide that life And thereupon the Apostle Awake thou that sleepest and arise from the dead and Christ shall give thee light Ephes 5. 14. And thus the Lord of himself I am the light of the world he that followeth me shall not walk in darknesse but shall have the light of life John 8. 12. This is not a new light But the true light which lighteth every man that cometh into the world John 1. 9. Not an external but an internal light For God who commandeth the light to shine out of darknesse hath shined in our hearts saith the Apostle 2 Cor. 4. 6. Not to inlighten the eyes of the body but to inlighten the eyes of the understanding That the eyes of your understanding being inlightened c. Saith the same Apostle Ephes 1. 18. The light of the body is the eye saith our Saviour Math. 6. 22. And as the light of the body is the eye so the light of the soul is the understanding For as the eye is that member of the body whereby the body receiveth light so the understanding is that faculty of the soul whereby the soul receiveth light also And this spiritual light albeit for substance it is alwayes the same Yet in regard of the several proceedings or degrees thereof it may be said to be threefold The first degree is in Christ or God in Christ essentially The second is in the Gospel exhibitively The third is in the godly derivatively First I say this light is in God essentially and originally God is light saith S. John 1 Joh. 1. 5. And so it is infinite perfect and perpetual First it is infinite It is said that in the Creation God made two great lights the greater light to rule the day Gen. 1. 16. And that greater light is the Sun Psalm 136. 8. But there is no lesse difference between this light of God or this light which is God and the light of the Sun then there is between light and darknesse The Sun cannot shine in all places at one and the same time for we see by experience that the night hideth us from the light thereof But thus the Prophet David unto the Lord If I say surely the darknesse shall cover me even the night shall be light about me yea the darknesse hideth not from thee but the night shineth as the day the darknesse and the light are both alike unto thee Psal 139. 11 12. And upon whom doth not his light arise saith Job Job 25. 3. Verily this infinite light may not be limited It shineth upon all persons in all places and at all times And if any man be not inlightened thereby it is for that he loveth darknesse rather then light because his deeds are evil as John 3. 19. Secondly this infinite light is perfect God is light and in him is no darknesse 1 Joh. 1. 5. Neither is he capable of any the least alteration The Sun may be stayed in his course as in the dayes of Joshua Josh 10. 13. Or turned back as in the dayes of Hezekiah Isa 38. 8. But in this Father of lights there is no variablenesse neither shadow of turning Ja. 1. 17. I am the Lord I change not saith he Mala. 3. 6. Thirdly this perfect light is perpetual or everlasting The Sun shall be turned into darknesse and the Moon into bloud before the great and the terrible day of the L●rd come Joel 2. 31. But the Lord shall be unto thee an everlasting light saith that Evangelical Prophet Isa 60. 19. He shall not onely inlighten thee all thy days in this his Kingdom of grace but he shall be also thine onely light in his Kingdom of glorie Rev. 21. 23. The second degree of this everlasting light is in the everlasting Gospel as S. John calleth it Rev. 14. 6. And here it is communicable conformable and comfortable First it is communicable As the Sun disperseth his light by his beams so the Lord communicateth his light by his Gospel That grace which was given us in Christ Jesus before the world began is now made manifest by the appearing of our Saviour Jesus Christ who hath abolished death and hath brought life and immortality to light through the Gospel saith St. Paul 2 Tim. 1. 9 10. And thereupon St. John The darknesse is past saith he and the true light now shineth 1 Joh. 2. 8. The darknesse of the Law which was vailed under types figures is done away and the true light now shineth in the Gospel And St. Peter thus We have not followed cunningly devised fables when we made known unto you the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ but were eye-witnesses of his Majesty for he received from God the Father honour and glorie when there came such a voice to him from the excellent glorie This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased And this voice which came from Heaven we heard when we were with him in the holy Mount We have also a more sure word of prophesie whereunto ye do well that ye take heed as unto a light that shineth in a dark place untill the day dawn and the day-star arise in your hearts 2 Peter 1. 16 17 18 19. Briefly thus The Gospel of Jesus Christ saith he is no fable for we were eye-witnesses of his Majesty and ear-witnesses of his Fathers Testimony altogether agreeable to the Records of the Prophets which might serve to convince the Soul of ignorance and unbelief untill the Lord Jesus Christ is pleased to reveal himself more abundantly by the light of his Gospel But it may be demanded how God is said to communicate or discover his light by his Gospel seeing the Apostle telleth us That the Gospel is a mysterie which hath been hid from ages and from generations and is now made manifest unto the Saints onely Col. 1. 26. I answer
that the same Apostle doth very well resolve this doubt in another place If our Gospel be hid saith he it is hid to them that are lost In whom the God of this world hath blinded the mindes of them that believe not least the light of the glorious Gospel of Christ who is the image of God should shine unto them 2 Cor. 4. 3 4. It is no wonder that the most glorious light be obscured and hidden from those that are blinded where the defect is not in the light but in those that cannot or that will not see the light Secondly this light of the Gospel is conformable or agreeable in every particular to whatsoever was covenanted and concluded by and between God the Father and his onely begotten Son in and by that eternal Covenant of Grace for and on the behalf of mankinde And to this purpose the Apostle Paul intimateth to the Ephesians That into him this grace was given that he should preach among the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of Christ And to make all men see what is the fellowship of the mysterie which from the beginning of the world hath been hid in God who created all things by Jesus Christ To the intent that now unto the principalities and powers in heavenly places might be known by the Church the manifold wisdom of God According to the eternal purpose which he purposed in Christ Jesus our Lord Ephes 3. 7. to 12. Verily this blessed light of the Gospel is every way so conformable to the whole will of God and so illustrated with the bright beams of his wisdom grace and goodnesse That we all with open face beholding as in a glasse the glorie of the Lord are changed into the same image from glorie to glorie even as by the Spirit of the Lord as in 2 Cor. 3. 18. And thirdly the light of the Gospel is comfortable Blessed are they that mourn for they shall be comforted saith the Gospel Mat. 5. 4. This is the day-spring from on high that hath visited us to give light to them that sit in darknesse and in the shadow of death and to guide our feet into the way of peace Luke 1. 78. 79. It sheweth us the way to finde rest unto our Souls Math. 11. 29. c. And it assureth us that Jesus Christ is made unto us wisdom and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption 1 Cor. 1. 30. And let every true Christian be judge if these be not such comforts as he chiefly rejoyceth or delighteth in The third degree of light is in the Godly And here it is regular singular and exemplar First it is regular It is guided by rule By the rule of righteousnesse the word of God He that is truely godly will not presume to see more then God sheweth him Thy word have I hid in my heart that I might not sin against thee saith David Psalm 119. 10. Thy word is a Lamp unto my feet and a light unto my paths saith the same Prophet verse 105. And therefore the Lord by his Prophet Isaiah To the law and to the testomonie saith he If they speak not according to this word it is because there is no light in them Isa 8. 20. And therefore Woe be unto them that put darknesse for light and light for darknesse Isa 5. 20. Secondly this light in the godly is singular it looketh but one way and that directly If thine eye be single thine whole body shall be full of light but if thine eye be evil thy whole bodie shall be full of darknesse saith the Lord Mat. 6. 22. Where he intimateth that that which is not a single eye is an evil eye You know that a crosse eye that seemeth to look one way when in truth it looketh another is a great blemish in nature but the eye of the Soul that is thus deceitfully affected is a greater enemy to grace Let thine eyes look right on and let thine eye-lids look straight before thee saith the wise man Prov. 4. 25. The eye of the godly looketh alwayes right forward upon Gods glory without any self-seeing or self-seeking But the blear-eyed hypocrite when he most seemingly aymeth at Gods glory he most deceitfully intendeth his own And this is generally the common course of the world For all seek their own not the things that are Jesus Christs saith St. Paul Phil. 2. 21. Thirdly this light in the godly is exemplar It setteth forth it self to be observed intimated and improved The path of the just is as the shining light that shineth more and more unto the perfect day Prov. 4. 18. And therefore Paul to the Philipians Brethren be f●llowers together of me and mark them which walk so as ye have us for an ensample Phil. 3. 17. And to his beloved Timothy Be thou an example of the believers in word in conversation in charity in spirit in faith in purity 1 Tim. 4. 12. And thus our Lord Jesus Christ to his Disciples Ye are the light of the world saith he A city that is set on an hill cannot be hid neither do men light a candle and put it under a bushell but on a candlestick and it giveth light to all that are in the house Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good work and glorifie your father which is in heaven Math. 5. 14 15 16. But you will say what benefit shall the soul receive by all this light Truely she shall hereby receive the greatest and compleatest of all benefits She shall be hereby inabled to see God Not according to his incomprehensible essence and excellencies these are things too high for the highest apprehensions He is high above all nations his glory above the heavens Psal 113. 4. Higher then the highest Eccles 5. 8. For according to his secret councell and inconceivable wisdom these are too deep for the deepest understandings O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearchable are his judgements and his wayes past finding out For who hath known the minde of the Lord or who hath been his counceller saith St. Paul Rom. 11. 33 34. But according to the good pleasure of his own will and the small measure of our human capacity For as the sun it self as touching its matter or substance cannot be discerned by the eye of the body and yet by the luster and bright beams thereof we are inabled to see whatsoever is necessary or convenient to be seen So our immortall and invisible God as he is of himself in himself and to himself cannot be perceived by the eye of the soul yet by the evidence of his works and of his word he is pleased to reveal himself unto us so far forth as is abundantly sufficient for our temporall satisfaction and our eternall salvation These two large lectures of his works and words are they wherein the Lord is seen and read The one is a lecture of Philosophy The other is a lecture of
Divinity And both of these are left upon Record by that sweet singer in his nineteen Psalm The first in the first six verses The heavens declare the glory of God and the firmament sheweth his handiwork c. to the 7 verse This is the lesson of Philosophy That of Divinity is examplified from the sixt to the twelfth verse The law of the Lord is perfect converting the soul c. The mighty volume of the works of God may be perused by the light of nature and it is so fairly and so plainly written that every soul even as they run may read it What is he that sees the heavens and earth and those innumerable creatures contained in them And shall consider their Originall together with their Order Vse and End by which in which for which and unto which they were made placed fitted and intended but must confesse the wisdom power and Godhead of that great arm by which they were created This is in brief the lecture of Philosophy whereby the Lord doth manifest himself to every creature that is indued with Reason The second means whereby we are inabled to see and know God is by the light of his word This is the safest and most christian way This is Gods lecture of Divinity where he presents himself unto the eye of every knowing soul But none can read it comfortably and effectually but such as are Partakers of the divine nature as 2 Pet. 1. 4. I know there are they that esteem themselves great politicians and are indeed very worldly-wise men who will be apt to say do not we understand the holy Scriptures and see God in them what should hinder us Truly I will not say but such as these may read and understand the word of God rationally and morally but not spiritually and savingly These things are written that ye might believe that Jesus is the Christ the Son of God and that Believing ye might have life through his name saith St. John John 20. 31. And thus to know Christ or God in Christ Is not from the flesh but from the Father which is in heaven Mat. 16 17. Again our onely Saviour telleth us That the words that he speaketh they are spirit Jo. 6. 36. And the Apostle Paul That the law is spirituall Rom. 7. 14. Now the naturall man receiveth or perceiveth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishnesse unto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned But he that is spirituall judgeth or discerneth all things 1 Cor. 2. 14 15. But peradventure it will be demanded How much may a judicious morall man see of God in his word by the light of naturall reason industry and experience Truely I conceive that he may see even as much as the spirituall man seeth one thing onely excepted But without that one thing he had as good or better see nothing He is able to see God as he is the creator of all things Gen. 1. 1. c. As he is the almighty God as Gen. 17. 1. As he is a consuming fire as Deut. 4. 24. A God of gods and Lord of lords a great God a mighty and a terrible which regardeth not persons nor taketh rewards as Deut. 10. 17. The King eternall immortall invisible and the onely wise God as 1 Tim. 1. 17. Yea he may see him in a nearer relation so near as to say The Lord our God as Deut. 6. 4. Thou art our Father our Redeemer as Isa 63. 16. Our Saviour as Jude 25. But haply you will say that this is much for a naturall man to see and know by the light of Reason what would you have him know more Truely let me tell you all this is nothing worth unlesse he can see so far as to say with good David O Lord of hosts My King and My God Psal 84. 3. And with the penitent Prodigall I will arise and go unto my Father Luke 15. 18. And with righteous Job I know that My Redeemer liveth Job 19. 25. And with the blessed mother of our Lord My soul rejoyceth in God My Saviour Luke 1. 47. And with believing Paul I live by the faith of the Son of God who loved Me and gave himself for Me Gala. 2. 20. These are such proper and peculiar interests as are discovered by the light of God and none can see or know them savingly but such a one as is the childe of God And as this saving light directeth us unto the knowledge our Sovereign Lord So it instructeth us to know our selves in reference to God and by this means it teacheth us to entertain Humility This the third obedient courtier which still attends upon that King of kings And whom Christ seems to send before his face as to prepare usher in his way into the new illuminated soul Nor did there ever any soul injoy the saving presence of her loving Lord but by the conduct of this favorite For God resisteth the proud but giveth grace unto the humble James 4. 6. And therefore Peter doth advise us saying Be ye clothed with humility 1 Pet. 5. 5. But forasmuch as he is much abused by some that do usurpe his name and office although in nature they are nothing like him I therefore shall endeavour to set forth four sorts that do and do pretend to march under his colours and assume his titles And of these the first is a treacherous Humility The second is a cowardly humility The third is a constrained-humility And the fourth is the true and the sound humility The first I say is a treacherous humility And under this fair-seeming Cloak doth lurk many a foul perfidious design The Prophet David in his description of a wicked person Psal 10. saith That he croucheth and humbleth himself that the poor may fall by his strong ones verse 10. 'T is strange to any honest heart to see how some will counterfeit humility and cast themselves beneath their prouder thoughts to gain the reputation of good men good lowly men but though they gull the world the blear-eyed world yet he that knows their hearts doth see for truth that they are nothing so And whosoever shall believe their forgeries shall finde at length that they are inside Wolves though outside Sheep Wolves in Sheeps cloathing Ye shall know them by their fruits saith our Saviour Mat. 7. 16. Proud Absolon conspiring to depose his tender father David from his Kingdom that he might wickedly usurp the same When any man came nigh to him to do him obeysance he put forth his hand and took him and kissed him And on this manner did Absalon to all Israel that came to the King for judgement so Absalon stole the hearts of the men of Israel 2 Sam. 15. 5 6. See here how this ambitious rebel humbleth himself even to the lowest and worst of the people thereby promoting his conspiracie that so he might advance himself above the greatest and the best of Kings And is it not a
instructeth disposeth removeth reneweth and receiveth First it instructs the new-inlightened soul in those hereditary imperfections which pride would never suffer her to look on so as to own them with a free consent as the onely off-spring of her cursed nature But being humbled she can plainly see sin and corruption in every corner defiling all her thoughts and words and deeds And thereupon she willingly confesseth That every imagination of the thoughts of her heart is onely evill continually as Gen. 6. 5. That her tongue is an unruly evill full of deadly poyson as James 3. 8. Insomuch that she hath wearied the Lord with her words as Mala. 2. 17. And that she loveth darknesse rather then light because her deeds are evil as John 3. 19. And looking back upon her sinfull courses she feelingly complaineth with St. Paul what fruit had I then in those things whereof I am now ashamed for the end of those things is death Rom. 6. 21. Again humility instructeth her in her own wants her spiritual poverty for whereas pride endeavours to perswade her That she is rich and increased in goods and hath need of nothing humility informs her That she is wretched and miserable and poor and blinde and naked as Revel 3. 17. So that in her there dwelleth no good thing Rom. 7. 18. And having shown her that she is full of evil and void or empty of all grace and goodness humility proceedeth to instruct her in her own weakness which is so extream that she hath neither power to suppress her wickedness nor to supply her wants we are not sufficient of our selves to think any thing as of our selves but our sufficiency is of God saith Paul 2 Cor. 3. 5. Thus the poor soul learns to be sensible of her own wickedness and wants and weakness And from this feeling sense humility disPoseth her to seek relief whereby her sins may be supprest her wants supply'd and her much weakness pitied and supported O how she struggles in this three-fold snare how she endeavous to release her self But all in vain until a voice from heaven directeth her to take the little book out of the great and mighty angels hand Rev. 10. The Gospel in the hand of Jesus Christ wherein by his directon she findeth That he is that Lamb of God that taketh away the sin of the world John 1. 19. That the bloud of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin 1 John 1. 7. And that He hath loved us and washed us from our sins in his own blood Revel 1. 5. Here she sees how her sins are washt away and how she is so clearly cleansed from them that she is freed for ever from that bondage Again she reads That in him dwelleth all the fulnesse of the Godhead bodily Colo. 2. 9. And that of his fulnesse we have all received and grace for grace John 1. 16. Here she perceives her wants are all supplyed and that in him she 's fully furnished And to sustain her in her present weakness she hears him say to her as to St. Paul My grace is sufficient for thee for my strength is made perfect in weaknesse 2 Cor. 12. 9. Until she comes experimentally to triumph with that mighty man of God I can do all things through Christ which strengheneth me Phil. 4. 13. And having tasted of these heavenly comforts she ruminates upon this little book from whence she sucketh such exceeding sweetness that now she singeth with the Prophet David How sweet are thy words unto my taste yea sweeter then hony to my mouth Psal 119. 103. But yet before she fully can disgest this book she findes it bitter in her belly For looking back upon her sinfull wayes she sees how ill she hath requited these incomparable favours How she hath grieved the Spirit of her Lord and crucified the Son of God a fresh And looking upon him whom she hath pierced she mourneth for him as one mourneth for his onely son and as is bitternesse for him as one that is in bitternesse for his first born According to that of the Prophet Zechar. 12. 10. Now sin appeareth in its proper colours foul filthy beastly and abominable So that the soul begins to hate her self for loving such a base deformed monster so spightfull treacherous and damnable that nothing can be more pernitious And being thus incensed against sin there 's nothing can content her but her Saviour She doth not cry with Rachel give me children but give ne Jesus Christ or else I die She is extreamly sick of her corruptions and none but Jesus must be her Physitian she seeks no other Physick but his favour no antidote but his affection no balsom but his blood and therefore she will entertain him upon any tearms though never so offensive to the flesh for she hath found that There is none other name under heaven whereby we must be saved Acts 4. 12. And now by vertue of humility that most obedient child of Faith and Love the careful soul endeavours to remove all such impediments as may obstruct the sweet approach of her beloved Lord. And knowing sin to be the onely thing that causeth their unhappy separation as Isa 59. 2. She cries unto her strength and her Redeemer for help against that false infernal foe that seeks to keep her still in his displeasure And being ayded by her Saviour and armed with his well approved armour Ephes 6. 13 c. She setteth first upon those crying sins that are of greatest obloquie and scandal and having routed those prodigions rebels she ransacks every corner of her conscience and haling forth her more concealed crimes she sends them packing she condemns her self of sloath self-saving and hypocrisie she crucifies her own corrupted nature and mortifies her most beloved lusts she suffers not a peevish thought to pass without a serious examination and a severe impartial reproof For the weapons of her warfare are not carnall but mighty through God to the pulling down of strong holds casting down imaginations and every high thing that exalteth it self against the knowledge of God and bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ According to that of the Apostle 2 Cor. 10. 4 5. But for as much as pride rebellious pride is evermore her mortal enemy The child of ignorance the Divels darling the soul of schism the strength of heresie the food of spight the fuell of contention the fools affiance and the wise mans fear the bane of godliness the death of grace hateful to Christ and hurtful to his members Therefore this humble soul constrains her self to cast out this destructive adversary and hold him in perpetual defiance And thus that she may gain her gracious Lord she labours mightily to take away the evil of her doings from his eyes To which she cannot yet conceive her self to be a pleasing Object For though she could cleanse her self from all filthiness of flesh and spirit according to Saint Pauls incouragement 2 Cor. 7. 1.
ye believed in Christ saith Paul ye were sealed with the holy Spirit of promise which is the earnest of our inheritance untill the redemption of the purchased possession unto the praise of his glorie Eph. 1. 13 14. And thirdly he hath it in Christ by possession Christ hath taken possession of it and prepared it for all believers I go to prepare a place for you saith he And if I go and prepare a place for you I will come again and receive you unto my self that where I am there ye may be also Joh. 14. 2 3. And whither I go ye know saith he verse 4. For that Kingdom which was prepared for you from the foundation of the world upon promise of satisfaction I go to prepare for you after performance of satisfaction Where it shall be said unto you Come ye blessed of my father inher●t the Kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world as Math. 25. 34. What Soul can wish a more compleat assurance But haply you will say we do not doubt but every true believer is sure enough to have eternal life by Jesus Christ But what assurance have we of those good things that do concern this life Indeed the Prophet David telleth us There be many that say who will shew us any good Psal 4. 6. But in this case also we have both promise example and experience for our assurance For matter of promise God hath said I will never leave thee nor forsake thee Heb. 13. 5. But what is it poor Soul thou art afraid of Art thou afraid of poverty or want Why a little that a righteous man hath is better then the riches of many wicked For the arms of the wicked shall be broken but the Lord upholdeth the righteous The Lord knoweth the dayes of the upright and their inheritance shall be for ever They shall not be ashamed in the evil time in the dayes of famine they shall be satisfied Ps 37. 16 17. 18 19. Trust therefore in the living God who giveth us richly all things to injoy 1 Tim. 6. 17. Art thou afraid of discredit afraid to lose thy good name and reputation Why the Lord is able to make thee a name and a praise among all people of the earth as Zepha 3. 20. Admit that thy good name be reproched by the mouth of a scorner here upon the earth yet thou hast cause to rejoyce for that thy name is registred in heaven as Luke 10. 20. Art thou afraid of thine enemies Consider that of the Prophet David The Lord saith he is my light and my salvation whom shall I fear The Lord is the strength of my life of whom shall I be afraid When the wicked even mine enemies and my foes came upon me to eat up my flesh they stumbled and fell Psal 27. 1 2. And the Lord thy God will hold thy right hand saying unto thee fear not I will help thee as in Isa 41. 13. Art thou afraid of death Behold the eye of the Lord is upon them that fear him that hope in his mercie to deliver their Soul from death and to keep them alive in famine Psal 33. 18 19. But why should any man be such a coward as to fear an enemy that is already conquered Yea abolished or destroyed 2 Tim. 1. 10. Swallowed up in victory 1 Cor. 15. 54. Truely dear Christian thou hast cause to triumph over these enemies after this manner O death where is thy sting O Grave where is thy victorie The sting of death is sin and the strength of sin is the law But thanks be to God which giveth us the victorie through our Lord Jesus Christ as at 1 Cor. 15. 55 56 57. In a word whatsoever thou fearest or whatsoever thou feelest Thou shall finde God thy refuge and strength a very present help in trouble as well as David did Psalm 46. 1. Onely be carefull That thou suffer not as a Murderer or as a Thief or as an evil doer or as a busie-bodie in other mens matters And then assure thy self That the Lord is faithfull who shall stablish thee and keep thee from evil According unto St. Pauls confidence 2 Thes 3. 3. Again consider What doest thou desire Doest thou desire safety preservation deliverance victory wealth honour long-life or salvation after a moderate and godly manner Acquaint thy self with the substance of the 91 Psalm And with the 3 first verses of the 112 Psal In these words Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord that delighteth greatly in his Commandments his seed shall be mighty upon earth the generation of the upright shall be blessed wealth and riches shall be in his house and his righteousnesse endureth for ever And to confirm thee in thy confidence peruse the 6. 7. and 8. verses of the same Psalm Surely he shall not be moved for ever the righteous shall be in everlasting remembrance He shall not be afraid of evil tidings his heart is fixed trusting in the Lord. His heart is established he shall not be afraid untill he see his desire upon his enemies Thus of the promises If thou desirest yet further to establish thine assurance In the next place see and observe the stories of Abraham Isaac Jacob of Joseph Moses Mordecay David and Hezekiah And consider how the Lord guided and governed preserved and prospered exalted and incouraged them together with all his Prophets and Apostles and all the godly every where and in all ages And verily thou shalt finde sufficient cause to say with that discerning Prophet David The Lord hath pleasure in the prosperity of his servants Psal 35. 27. And lastly recollect thine own experience and meditate how graciously the Lord thy God hath dealt by thee in his outwad blessings and inward consolations his tender mercies and fatherly loving-kindnesses his patience and long-sufferings supplying thy severall necessities with sutable comforts preservations and deliverances wherein he hath prevented not onely thy deserts but often times thy desires also And when thou shalt thus walk with thy God in wisdom and singlenesse of heart Thou shalt finde sufficient in him and from him to say with that holy Prophet Return unto thy rest O my soul for the Lord hath dealt bountifully with thee Psal 116. 7. And furthermore to make thee confident That he shall deliver thee in six troubles yea in seven there shall no evill touch thee In famine he shall redeem thee from death and in war from the power of the sword c. Job 5. 19. to 27. Thus through ou● own discreet experience the saints exemplary prosperity And our dear Saviours never-failing promises as well spiritual as temporal we shall be sure to meet the full assurance of all or every kinde of happinesse Provided still that Christ be with or in us For where the true Christ is there is assurance And this assurance always brings in peace This is the fifth attendant that still waits upon the person of our royal Bridegroom And where
Christ is you cannot want for Peace He is The mighty God the everlasting Father The Prince of Peace Isa 9. 6. But as there is scarce any kingdom where there are not three self-ended sichophants for one true-hearted faithful loyal subject So there are four sorts or kinds of peace yet onely one that is secure or safe The first sort of peace is a sluggish peace The second is a slavish peace The third is a deceitful peace .. And The fourth is the safe peace The first I tell you is a sluggish peace And this is when a man lies snorting in the filthy bosom of a sinful corrupt conversation without any feeling of Gods fierce wrath or of his own desperate condition as being subject even that very instant to be swallowed up of that most horrible and dreadful gulph of everlasting death and endlesse torments This kinde of sluggish peace is very much illustrated by Jonah his example in the first Chapter of his history where the Lord commandeth Jonah to go and cry against Nineveh But Jonah disobeyeth Gods command and goeth down to Joppa where finding a ship bound for Tarshish he payeth the fare thereof and goeth down thereinto to fly unto Tarshish from the presence of the Lord. And in the middest of that mighty tempest whereby the ship is likely to be broken Jonah is laid fast a sleep in the sides of the ship until the Ship-master rouzeth him up and soon after casteth him over-board into the raging Ocean So the Lord commandeth all men every where to repent Acts 17. 30. He exhorteth us to watch and to stand fast in the faith 1 Cor. 16. 13. And to examine our selves whether we be in the faith 2 Cor. 13. 5. Neverthelesse we wilfully rebel against the Lord our God we do despise his Precepts and his exhortations and slighting his Ordinances we betake our selves unto the sloathfull cabin of security we say in our hearts God hath forgotten he hideth his face he will never see it As David speaketh of a wicked person Psal 10 11. And to deceive our selves the more sincerely we keep at a distance with our own hearts and make our selves great strangers even at home in our own consciences we do evill and hate the light neither come we to the light least our deeds should be reproved According to that saying of our Saviour John 3. 20. From whence it proceedeth that like fools we go laughing to the correction of the stocks never fear the rod until we feel it And thus with Jonah we sleep peaceably even in the jawes of danger and distresse and never dreame of our approaching ruine Or if at any time the terrours of conscience do hap do seize upon us and afright us yet they are but as so many troublesome dreams we soon forget and fall a sleep again untill the day of the Lord cometh as a thief in the night And when we say peace and safety then suddain destruction cometh upon us as travail upon a woman with child and we shall not escape as in the 1 Thes 5. 2 3. This is the sluggish peace The second is a slavish peace when a man is contented to submit unto the slavery of sin and Satan without endeavouring or desiring to recover himself out of the snare of the Devill but is taken captive by him at his will as 2 Tim. 2. 26. To instance in one onely particular Is it not a sad thing to see how most men and women do more willingly and chearfully serve the Devil every hour in the day then they will serve God one day in the week yea and in that day I mean the Sabbath day which God hath set apart for his own publick worship if we shall consider how few will afford him their presence for one hour and how many of those few do imploy that hour in wandring thoughts or worse behaviour rather then in sincere and pure devotion verily we shall finde that of the Apostle to be too too true That even the whole world liveth in wickednesse 1 John 5. 19. Lieth in wickednesse not so much as attempting to stir out of it on to strive against it And is not this to serve God despightfully and the Devil obsequiously Indeed this may seem to be a kinde of present peace but it is very dishonourable and no lesse dangerous to hold the Devil in friendship and God at defiance For whilest we do thus promise unto our selves comfort and security by siding with Satan and complying with our own corcuptions we do betray our most hopeful expectations to all manner of temporal distraction and our poor souls to eternal destruction According to that of the Lord by this Prophet Isaiah Because ye have said we have made a covenant with death and with hell are we at agreement when the overflowing scourge shall passe through it shall not come unto us for we have made lies our refuge and under falshood we have hid our selves Isa 28. 15. Therefore thus saith the Lord Your covenant with death shall be disanulled and your agreement with hell shall n●t stand when the everflowing scourge shall passe through then ye shall be troden down by it From the time that it goeth forth it shall take you for morning by morning shall it passe over by day and by night and it shall be a vexation onely to understand the report Isa 28. at the 18 and 19 verses The third is a deceitful peace And this is when a man buildeth his peace upon false foudations And that either through ignorance or through errour First through ignorance as when we either know no danger at all or else when we do not know our danger to be so great as in truth it is When a man knoweth no danger he feareth no danger and therefore he is as confident of his own security as he that is altogether free from danger And likewise he that conceiveth not his danger to be so great as in truth it is albeit he hath not so much peace as he that is altogether ignorant yet he imagineth that his danger is not so great as that it requireth much trouble or travail to prevent or avoid it But all the sinners of my people shall die by the sword which say the evil shall not overtake nor prevent us saith the Lord Amos 9. 10. And in the sixth Chapter of the same prophesie at the third verse c. to the eighth Ye that put far away the evil day and cause the seat of violence to come near that lye upon beds of Ivory and stretch themselves upon their Couches and eat the Lambs of the flock and the Calves out of the midst of the stall that chaunt to the sound of the Viol and invent to themselves instruments of Musick like David that drunk Wine in bowls and anoint themselves with the chief oyntments but they are not grieved for the affliction of Joseph Therefore now shall they go captive with the first that go captive
c. The second sort of these deluded Souls are such as ground their peace upon mistakes perswading themselves that God is as it were ingaged to defend and preserve them And why Because say they he is mercifull It is true indeed the Lord is very mercifull For so he proclaimeth himself Exod. 34. 6 7. But what is all that to thee He will by no means clear the guilty as in the same 7th vers God cannot be so mercifull as to be unjust his justice must be fully satisfied which thou art never able to perform And therefore unlesse the guilt of thy sins be washed away by the bloud of Jesus Christ thou hast no present interest in Gods mercy Thou art still in thy wickednesse And the wicked are like the troubled Sea when it cannot rest whose waters cast up mire and dirt There is no peace saith my God to the wicked Isa 57. 20 21. Now every one of these three sorts of peace is such a judgement as exposeth us to Gods just wrath and indignation For he that blesseth himself in his heart saying I shall have peace though I walk in the imagination of my heart to add drunkennesse to thirst The Lord will not spare him but then the anger of the Lord and his jealousie shall smoak against that man c. Deut. 29. 19 20. But the fourth sort of peace is a safe peace And this is that which doth inseparably attend upon the person of our Lord. And for our better understanding and satisfaction in this particular we must know that this true peace must be grounded upon the assurance of that reconciliation which God in Christ hath concluded between himself and us For it pleased the father that in him should all fulnesse dwell And having made peace through the bloud of his Crosse by him to reconcile all things unto himself by him I say whether they be things in earth or things in heaven And you that were sometimes alienated and enemies in your minde by wicked works yet now hath he reconciled in the bodie of his flesh through death to present you holy and unblameable and unreproveable in his sight Colos 1. 19 20 21 22. Now whosoever hath been formerly sensible of that great emnity that was between God on the one part And his own corrupt sinfull nature and conversation on the other part And is now fully satisfied and assured by a lively faith That God was thus in Christ reconciling the world unto himself not imputing their trespasses unto them As likewise the same Apostle 2 Corinth 5. 19. That Soul I say may confidently boast that she injoyes a safe and solid peace For that she is joyned unto the Lord of Hosts in an offensive and defensive league And is thereby impowred both to fight the good fight of faith and so to lay hold on eternal life as at 1 Tim. 6. 12. And also to resist the Devil and to make him flee as James 4. 7. By which we may perceive that this true peace consisteth not in an absolute freedom from war but in the assurance of Gods Almighty favour and protection Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace whose minde is stayed on thee because he trusteth in thee saith that Prophet unto the Lord Isa 26. 3. Not such a perfect peace as feeleth no interruption but such a perfect peace as feareth no dissolution He shall not be moved for ever saith the Psalmist Psal 112. 6. He may be moved by some violent incounter But it will not be long before he returneth unto his resting place Doubtlesse it maketh much for Gods glory to exercise his Souldiers in a continual warfare That so he may make bare his own holy arm in the eyes of all the Nations and that all the ends of the earth may see the salvation of our God as Isa 52. 10. Verily the godly nor are nor ever shall be without adversaries Neither do they wrestle onely against flesh and bloud but against principalities against powers against the rulers of the darknesse of this world against spiritual wickednesse in high places wherefore they take unto them the whole armour of God that they may be able to withstand in the evil day according to Saint Paul's direction Eph. 6. 12 13. And in truth the servant of Jesus Christ is still more doubtfull of some intestine treachery then of any forraign invasion And therefore he keepeth his heart with all diligence according to that word of command Prov. 4. 23. He placeth a strong century in that center And for his outworks He walketh righteously and speaketh uprightly he despiseth the gain of oppressions and shaketh his hands from holding of bribes he stoppeth his ears from hearing of bloud and shutteth his eyes from seeing evil according to those safe postures Isa 33. 15. And therefore he shall dwell on high his place of defence shall be the munitions of rocks bread shall be given him his waters shall be sure His eye shall see the King in his beauty they shall behold the land that is very far off verse 16. 17. Briefly thus He shall rest securely and fare sufficiently He shall see the King in his Majesty and travail safely under his protection And in every conflict he is sure of conquest I can do all things through Christ which strenghteneth me saith he with St. Paul Phil. 4. 13. And therefore with the Prophet David he likewise concludeth saying I will love the Lord my strength The Lord is my Rock and my fortresse and my deliverer my God my strength in whom I will trust my buckler and the horn of my salvation and my high Tower c. Psal 18. 1. c. This is the godly mans garrison and it is invincible And in this confidence I will both lay me down in peace and sleep saith he for thou Lord onely makest me dwell in safety as in Psal 4. 8. This indeed is a safe peace Such a peace as passeth all understanding And he belongeth to our Saviours guard For he shall keep our hearts and mindes through Christ Jesus Philip. 4. 7. And where this peace is quartered he provides to entertain his pleasant partner joy This is a compleat Courtier whose office most properly proclaims his Prince his presence Psal 16. 11. But being of that frolick disposition he is much mistaken and as much abused by some that seem to be his fellow servants For you shall hardly meet with one in forty but is deceived in this particular which we shall very easily maintain when we shall finde there are five sorts of joy whereof the first is a cursed joy The second is a counterfeit joy The third is a carelesse joy The fourth is a carnal joy And the fifth is a compleat joy The first I say is a cursed joy And this is when a man rejoyceth in any evil either against God or his Neighbour Their Soul delighteth in their abominations saith the Lord Isa 66. 3. Every sin hath some sweetnesse wherewith it delighteth the
made to rejoyce with great joy c. Nehe. 12. 43. At that time were some appointed over the chambers for the treasures for the offerings for the first fruits and for the tythes to gather into them out of the fields of the cities the portions of the law or appointed by the law for the Priests and Levites For Judah rejoyced for the Priests and for the Levites that waited verse 44. But especially the Ministery of the Gospel is to be rejoyced in As it is written How beautifull are the feet of them that preach the Gospel of peace and bring glad tidings of good things Rom. 10. 15. And the ninth spiritual blessing is faith by which we are inabled to believe that these And all other Gospel mercies are treasured up for us and given out unto us in and by our Lord Jesus Christ whom having not seen ye love in whom though now ye see him not yet believing ye rejoyce with joy unspeakable and full of glory saith that Apostle 1 Pet. 1. 8. And St. Paul prayeth Now the God of all hope saith he fill you with all joy and peace in believing Rom. 15. 13. These are such Gospel mercies as are principally spiritual For they are either the assistants or the assurance or the substance of our spiritual and eternall happinesse And therefore much to be rejoyced in Those that are spirituallized are such things as are common in their own nature and do more eminently concern the pilgrimage of this our present life as being the providences and provisions pertaining thereunto And they may all be referred unto these two generall heads Namely Prosperity and Adversity These are the two large arms of providence with our God stretcheth over all his creatures And in both these the righteous man rejoyceth First his joy is more general As when the Object thereof is the prosperity of Gods Church according to that sweet incouragement Rejoyce ye with Jerusalem and be glad with her all ye that love her rejoyce for joy with her all ye that mourn for her that ye may suck and be satisfied with the breasts of her consolation that ye may milk out and be delighted with the abundance of her glory Isa 66. 10 11. Secondly the joy of the godly is more particular as when it reflecteth upon those things that do more properly conduce to their own private prosperity Such are their preservations and deliverances I will be glad and rejoyce in thy mercy for thou hast considered my trouble thou hast known my soul in adversities Thou hast not shut me up in the hand of the enemy thou hast set my feet in a large room saith the Prophet David unto the Lord Psal 31. 7 8. And in the 32 Psalm verse 7. Thou art my hiding place thou shalt preserve me from trouble thou shalt compasse me about with songs of deliverance saith the same sweet singer of Israel Secondly the succesfull return of their prayers is the cause of their joy or rejoycing Ask and ye shall receive that your joy may be full saith our Lord and Saviour John 16. 24. But we have yet more particular and present Objects of our joy As first our wives live joyfully with the wife whom thou lovest all the dayes of the life of thy vanity saith the Preacher Eccl. 9. 9. Secondly our children Thus Sara rejoyced in the child that God had given her Gen. 21. 6. Thirly our families and friends and all the good gifts of God Thou shult rejoyce in every good thing which the Lord thy God hath given unto thee and unto thine house thou and the Levite and the stranger that is among you Deut. 26. 11. But you will say do not all men rejoyce in these necessary and convenient comforts of this life The Reprobate as well as the Righteous They do indeed but their affections differ as much as their profession or their practice The natural mans joy spends it self upon some supposed excellency in the Creatures As their usefulnesse their beauty their bravery their pleasure profit preferment or the like carnal cause of commendations Is not this great Babylon that I have built for the house of the Kingdom by the might of my power and for the honour of my Majestie saith King Nebuchad-nezzar Dan. 4. 30. But they do not rejoyce in them as they are Gospel mercies gifts of grace for they scorne to own them as anothers purchace and they will have hold them and desire no favour But the spiritual man rejoyceth not so much in the goodnesse of the Creature as in the goodnesse of the Creator Not in the gift but in the giver He deriveth his interest in all good things from the just purchace of his Lord and Master He owns them as the blessings of his God and pledges of more large and lasting favours And he is carefull to dispose them to the glory of his Patron and Protectour He sees his God in all that he injoyes and so commends them to his gratefull Soul as Gospel mercies spiritualliz'd by grace But yet this spiritual joy is not compleat unlesse it smiles upon adversity What saith Job shall we receive good at the hand of God and shall we not receive evil Job 2. 10. Or shall we rejoyce in prosperity onely and shall we not rejoyce in adversity also Shall we bewayl Gods fatherly corrections Then surely 't is for want of exercise No chastening for the present seemeth to be joyons but grievous neverthelesse afterward it yieldeth the peaceable fruit of righteousnesse to them that are exercised thereby Hebr. 12. 11. Verily it is Gods good pleasure to keep his Saints in the continual exercise of afflictions that so they may be able to run and not be weary and walk and not faint as Isa 40. 31. Thus he dealt with Paul and the rest of his Apostles Till Paul was able to take pleasure in infirmities in reproches in necessities in persecutions in distresses for Christs sake 2 Cor. 12. 10. And other of the Apostles to rejoyce That they were counted worthie to suffer shame for the name of Christ Acts 5. 41. Wherefore my brethren count it all joy when ye fall into divers temptations c. Ja. 1. 2. c. And the Apostle Peter Beloved think it not strange concerning the fierie tryal which is to trie you as though some strange thing hapned unto you But rejoice in as much as ye are partakers of Christs sufferings that when his glorie shall be revealed ye may be glad also with exceeding joy 1 Pet. 4. 12 13. And thus the Saints afflictions become the objects of their joy as Gospel mercies And through these passages their joy becometh a joy unspeakable and full of glory as 1 Pet. 1. 8. And not a compleat or a full joy onely but fulnesse of joy as Psal 16. 11. These six attendants ordinarily live in the presence of our Lord Christ Jesus New Life true Light and sound Humility Gospel Assurance safe Peace compleat Joy Which
fully satisfied that now the match between her Lord and her is absolutely made and finished For as she apprehends his love by faith so she returns her love by resolution She hears him sing That he is overcome and ravish't with her beauties and her love Cant. 4. 9 10. And in consideration thereof she gives consent and so confirms the contract My beloved is mine and I am his saith she Cant. 2. 16. My beloved is mine or I know that my beloved is mine There is the consideration And I am his or I do freely give my self to be his There is the consent And from these deer conclusions they proceed to solemnize their heavenly nuptials He brings her unto the banqueting house and his banner over her is love Cant. 2. 4. And she holds him and will not let him go untill she hath brought him into her mothers house and into the Chamber of her that conceived her Cant. 3. 4. And now he weds and beds her For as the Bride-groom rejoyceth over the Bride so her Lord rejoiceth over her as Isa 62. 5. And the sweet Soul is made so sensible of her deer Lords embraces that she breaks forth into these the like sacred raptures A bundle of Myrrhe is my well-beloved unto me he shall lie all night betwixt my breasts As Cant. 1. 13. His left hand is under my head and his right hand doth embrace me Cant. 2. 6. And being thus become a married wife she studies how she best may please her husband And to that purpose she consulteth not with flesh and bloud but with his holy Spirit By whom she begs that she may be directed unto the knowledge of his blessed will according to the tenor of his word And first she findes this exhortation under the hand of his Apostle Paul Wives submit your selves unto your own husbands as unto the Lord Eph. 5. 22. Here is both a rule and an example She submitteth her self therefore unto God According to Saint James his exhortation James 4. 7. Yea she submitteth her self to every ordinance of man for her Lords sake whether it be to the King as supream or unto governours as unto them that are sent by him for the punishment of evil doers and for the praise of them that do well According to that of the Apostle Peter 1 Peter 2. 13 14. Secondly she findeth by St. Peter That wives ought to obey their husbands even as Sarah obeyed Abraham 1 Peter 3. 6. And thereupon she saith unto her Lord as the people of Israel sometimes said in the presence of Moses All that the Lord hath said I will do and be obedient as Exod. 24. 7. Yea she saith with the Propher David I delight to do thy will O my God Yea thy law is within my heart Psal 40. 8. Yet lest she should mistake in her accounts she oftentimes doth pray with the same Prophet Blessed art thou O Lord teach me thy statues Psal 119. 12. Make me to understand the way of thy precepts c. verse 26. And teach me to do thy will for thou art my God Psal 143. 10. She prayes that she may do as well as understand And as she prayes so she resolves to practice That so she may prove what is that good that acceptable will of God According to St. Paul his milde request Rom. 12. 2. From whom she likewise meets with this instruction This is the will of God even your sanctification c. 1 Thes 4. 3. c. And from St. Peter thus As he which hath called you is holy so be ye holy in all manner of conversation because it is written Be ye holy for I am holy 1 Pet. 15. 16. And therefore in obedience to his will She endeavoureth to cleanse her self from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit perfecting holinesse in the fear of God as in the 2 Cor. 7. 1. And for as much as she conceives that she cannot attain to that perfection of holinesse that will be requisite she calls upon her husband for supplies Who of God is made unto her wisdom and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption 1 Cor. 1. 30. So that though she be a poor Soul yet she hath a very rich husband Thirdly she findeth that the wife must see that she reverence her husband Eph. 5. 33. And therefore this new-married Soul doth strive to raise her thoughts above the common rate and fix them on such venerable objects as may provoke to reverence and honour Doth Majestie require a reverence Why with her Lord is terrible Majesty Touching the Almighty we cannot finde him out he is excellent in power and in judgement and in plenty of justice Job 37. 22. 23. Is wisdom to be had in reverence Why in him are hid all the Treasures of wisdom and knowledge Col. 2. 3. Is it required that we reverence Age Why he is the ancient of dayes Dan. 7. 9. The eternal God Deut. 33. 27. Or do we reverence and honour goodnesse Surely we ought so to do Why there is none good but he Matth. 10. 17. If these or any other excellencies are to be reverenced in the Creature according to their limits or degrees By how much more must they be honoured and reverenced in the great Creator where they are matchlesse perfect infinite Therefore the Soul that 's married unto Christ considereth his might his Majesty his wisdom goodnesse and eternity with all his fulnesse and perfections that so she may have grace whereby she may serve him acceptably with reverence and godly fear as Hebr. 12. 28. And though she is not superstitious to place the strength of her devotions in outward forms bodily performances knowing That bodily exercise profiteth little as 1 Tim. 4. 8. And that God being a Spirit must be worshiped in Spirit and in truth as John 4. 24. Yet neither is she barbarous or rude to exercise such incivilities in the partaking of Gods Ordinances as she would fear to practice in the presence of civil persons or societies We know there is a reverence belonging to husbands fathers masters Magistrates chiefly as they are subordinate to God whom they do personate or represent according to their weak proportions And shall we honour these imperfect shaddowes more then we honour that most perfect substance for and by whom they are made honourable Do we conceive both cap and knee too little wherewith to reverence our superiours when we do meet them in their several stations And think we one of these to be too much to reverence the great King of Kings withall when we attend him in his Ordinances There are many in this time of pretended or inforced or desired famine of the word that will go as far to a Sermon if they like the Sermoners as to a Sias or Sessions I do not discommend them for that Yet they will not allow the least reverence to the word of God in the Sermon that they will afford to the word of Man in the Sessions I do not
this we wait upon the Lord our God without repining murmuring or offence even in the greatest tryals or distresses Ye have heard of the patience of Job saith Saint James and have seen the end of the Lord that the Lord is very pitifull and of tender mercie Jam. 5. 11. This patience expecteth no reward but what the Lord is pleased to allow and she as willingly will wait his leisure for the performance of his gracious favour If we hope for that we see not then do we with patience wait for it saith St. Paul Rom. 8. 25. Be of good courage therefore and he shall strengthen your heart all ye that hope in the Lord as Psal 31. 24. I will not say but patience may miscarry And hope deferred may make the heart sick But this Patience of Hope in our Lord Jesus Christ who is the God of patience and of hope Rom. 15. 5 13. This verily is such a threefold cord as never can be broken And thus according to this patience we must continue and conclude the work begun by faith and laboured in by love For let this patience have her perfect work and ye shall be perfect and entire wanting nothing According to that of the Apostle Ja. 1. 4. And when our actions shall be undertaken by such a faith as onely respecteth Gods Commands and laboured in by such a love as onely affecteth Gods glory and continued by such a patience as onely expecteth Gods favour Then we may certainly assure our Souls they have brought forth the fruit of godlinesse And to confirm you further in this Rule I shall present you with some few examples Behold it first in father Abraham In that great work of offering up his son He undertakes it first by Gods command Gen. 22. 1 2. And therefore in the obedience of faith And Secondly his labour is of love of love to God For in comparison of that his love to God he loved not his Son his onely Son Thirdly his willingnesse did manifest his patience his patience of hope who against hope believed in hope saith the Apostle Rom. 4. 18. See it again in Josephs abstinence His Mistris courts him to commit a sin odious to God injurious to his Master and thereupon he could not but believe it was the minde of God he should refuse her Gen. 39. 7. 8. And here his love to God was evident How can I do this great wickednesse saith he and sin against God verse 9. And was it not a sign of Patience that he would rather suffer then accuse his lustfull Mistris or excuse his own abused innocency as verse 20. We likewise find this power of godlinesse in the three children as we use to call them In Shadrach Meshach and Abednego The king injoyns them to fall down and worship his golden image Dan. 3. 14 15. A thing quite opposite to Gods command Exod. 20. 4 5. And therefore in obedience to faith they disobey his heathenish injunction For they answered and said O Nebuchad-nezzar we are not carefull to answer thee in this matter our God whom we serve is able to deliver us from the burning fiery furnace and he will deliver us out of thine hand O King But if not be it known unto thee O King that we will not serve thy gods nor worship thy golden image which thou hast set up Dan. 3. 16 17 18. In which reply it likewise may appear they loved God more deerly then their lives Nor is their patience lesse observable in that they went to their intended torture without recanting murmuring or repining As verse 21. Yet one example more and that from Paul The author of this Rule this Golden Chain and in relation to his Ministery unto the which he was commissionated by God in Christ Acts 9. 15 16. Which is yet more exactly set forth Act. 26. 15 c. And set his matchlesse love unto his Lord in his undaunted resolution Act. 20. 22. to 26. And with what patience of hope in our Lord Jesus Christ he suffered the afflictions of the Gospel it may most perfectly appear unto us in that he gloried in such tribulation We glorie in tribulation also saith he knowing that tribulation worketh patience and patience experience and experience hope and hope maketh not ashamed c. Rom. 5. 3 4 5. Now these and every work of the like nature whether it be of doing or of suffering of speech of action or of abstinence begotten by God in the womb of faith and born unto God by the hand of love and nursed for God at the breast of patience This is the sweet fruit which the teeming Soul doth usually bring forth unto her husband to God in Christ her husband And therefore it may very well be called according unto Gods name Godlinesse or after Christs name Christianity I will not say that ever any man except the Son of God both God and Man did fully and exactly steer his course according unto these points But I say that he which failes in any one of these so far he falleth short of godlinesse And yet 't is not denied but he may be a godly man that oftentimes doth misse to shape his actions to these principles Provided that his heart be well disposed that his desires be orderly and good and his endeavours vigorous and constant A Ship at Sea may sometimes be becalm'd and sometimes weather-beaten by a storm so as she cannot keep a steady course Sometimes the winde may set so sore against her that you would think her sailing to a Coast far distant from the Port that she intendeth And yet the Pilot is a skilfull man and brings his Vessel to his wished Haven in a good hour Even so the precious Soul may sometimes want Divine assistance sometimes such a storm of strong temptations may circumvent her as may inforce her from her good desires or Satan in his malice may beset her with some such difficulties as may drive her far distant from the course of her endeavours And yet the body joyned with this Soul is a good godly person and so full both of the seed and fruit of godlinesse That he may lay a warrantable claim unto the title of eternal life as a joynt Heir with Jesus Christ his Lord through the obedience of faith and love by vertue of that Covenant of Grace For God so loved the world that he gave his onely begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life FINIS The chief Heads contained in and pertaining unto this Copy of the Covenant of Grace   Page Page THe Covenanters 1. to 25. The Consideration 25. to 29. The Gift 29. to 38. The Provisoe 38. to 55. The Prevention 55. to 65. The Inheritance 65. to 93. Several Pretenders to the said Inheritance together with their Actions their Allegations and their Evidences 93. to 125. The right Heir discovered 125. to 133. His Evidence examined 133. to 200. His rich Plantation 200. to 243. His Souls affection 243. to 258. Her Profession 258. to 270. Her Inquisition 270. to 288. Her Confirmation 288. to 371. Her Satisfaction 371. to 388. Her gracious marriage 388. to 397. Her godly seed 397. ad finem Errata PAge 23. l. 3. r. in the wayes p. 54. l. 3. r. and of the gift p. 103. l. 6. r. of the Lord p. 14. l. 15. r. yet it p. 152. l. 11. r. me to do 193. l. 6. r. but in de p. 199. l. 16. r. such as p. 201. l. 4. r. find it in p. 204. l. 6 r. yet this p. 210. l. 4. r. strange flesh p. 206. l. 5. r. must not be p. 251. l. 13. r. Cant. ● 3. p. 298. l. 24. r. the praises due p. 270. l. 27. r. his prayer p. 271. l. 28. r. 1 King p. 277. l. 19. r. Son p. 281. l. 28. and 29. r. speak p. 283. l. 3. r. learns p. 284. l. 14. r. is leading p. 298. l. 4. r. if the. p. 301. l. 14. for intimated r imitated p. 302. l. 14. r. nor according p. 307. l. 6. r. this is p. 328. l. 13. r. Jo. 1. 29. p. 329. l. 21. r. and is in p. 346. l. 26. r. world lieth in p. 349. l. 2. r. drink wine p. 360. l. 8. r. Haman l. 17. r. or future p. 373. l. 15. r. wary Soul p. 381. l. 8. r. is the third p. 383. l. 19. r. and it is p. 408. l. 17. r. and see his
these Covenanters do injoy in this eternal life we finde it shadowed out unto us under the notion of Abrahams bosome Luke 16. 22. as being the secure and safe receptacle for all the seed of Abraham according to the faith Of Paradise Luke 23. 43. Of a Kingdom Math. 25. 34. Of a Crown of righteousnesse 2 Tim. 4. 8. Of an exceeding and eternal weight of glory 2 Cor. 4. 17. With other the like alluring expressions For the manner how the faithfull are to enjoy this everlasting life St. John telleth us that They are before the Throne of God and serve him day and night in his Temple and he that sitteth on the Throne shall dwell among them They shall hunger no more neither thirst any more neither shall the Sun light on them nor any heat For the Lamb which is in the midst of the Throne shall feed them and shall lead them unto living fountains of waters and God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes Rev. 7. 15. 16 17. And they sing the song of Moses the servant of God and the song of the Lamb saying Great and marvsllous are thy works Lord God Almighty just and true are thy wayes thou King of Saints Rev. 15. 3. But to set forth the truth and perfection either of the matter or manner of those glorious infinite and unconceiveable injoyments by these or any other expressions visions or revelations were to shew you the brightness of the Sun by the light of a Candle For eye hath not seen nor ear heard neither have entred into the heart of man the things which God hath prepared for them that love him 1 Cor. 2. 9. And now I am to prove that every one of these several sorts or degrees of life is part of Christs purchase conferred upon us for and through his merits and mediation and that in and by this Covenant of Grace And for the more clear manifestation hereof I desire you still to consider that whatsoever Christ hath done or suffered for and on the behalf of mankinde the same he did and suffered before the world began not onely intentionally according to our understanding but effectually and actually according to the tenor of Gods will and the satisfaction of his justice He was the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world Rev. 13. 8. And thus the Prophet Isaiah He was wounded for our transgressions he was bruised for our iniquities c. Isa 53. 5. You know though a man hath a bad or a bankrupt debitour yet if he hath a good sufficient surety he will not be hasty to exact the penalty upon the poor principal in regard that he is well assured of full satisfaction from the surety and haply upon that security he keeps the bond unsued for divers years after the forfeiture even till his own occasions call upon him Christ is our surety in this Covenant And Christ his promise stands for present pay his free ingagement for full satisfaction He gave himself a ransome for all to be testified in due time saith St. Paul 1 Tim. 2. 6. Not presently but even at such a time as God determined and agreed upon And next I desire you to call to minde what Moses that man of God hath delivered concerning the Creation How God in creating the light the firmament the waters the earth and those other Creatures necessary and convenient for mans use and sustentation He onely said let it be so and it was so But coming in conclusion to make man he calls his privy Councel Son and Spirit and sayes Let us make man in our own image after our likenesse and let him have dominion over the fish of the Sea and over the fowle of the aire and over the Cattel and over all the earth and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth Gen. 1. 26. As if he had said this is our great vicegerent this is he for whose sake and for whose posterity we have created this great universe And on whose behalf we did conclude that Covenant of Grace to take effect at the instant of his fall That so both he and all his seed may know it is not of themselves whereby they stand but meerly of our goodnesse and our grace which apprehended by a lively faith their faith will work obedience by love Therefore let us make man in our own image c. In the first Chapter of Genesis verse 27. Man is created in the 28. verse he is blessed in the 29. verse he receives his Commission In the second Chapter at the 16. and 17. verses he receives his charge The Covenant of works In the third Chapter at the sixth verse he forfeits his recognisance In the ninth verse God gives him summons And in the fifteenth verse he shews him his Saviour The seed of the woman Neverthelesse least man should grow too idle too insolent or too old in his iniquity In the 19th verse of the same third Chapter God shews him his Task his Original and his End In the sweat of thy face thou shalt eat bread till thou return unto the ground there is his task For out of it wast thou taken there is his original For dust thou art and unto dust shalt thou return there is his end But you will say If there were such a precontract such a Covenant of Grace formerly provided as you speak of why did not Christ thereby deliver Adam and his posterity from this tedious task this sense of their base extraction and this subjection to a sad return I answer that in the first place we may conceive that our Creatour thought it necessary to leave us in perpetual imployment thereby to keep us still in action we have a proverb that idlenesse is the mother of all evil But without doubt idlenesse is the Devils best opportunity It is like that the Serpent found Eve gazing as Shechem found Dina gadding otherwise the one had not been so soon deceived nor the other so easily defiled Secondly he was pleased to continue us under the sense of our contemptible original to keep us from presumption pride Had Adam formerly considered the simple stuffe whereof he was created haply the haughty desire of being like his Master had not made him Gods enemy Behold saith Abraham I have taken upon me to speak unto the Lord which am but dust and ashes Gen. 18. 27. There is his humility And he was called the friend of God James 2. 23. And thirdly he left us subject unto death even by that means to better our condition Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord saith the Spirit that they may rest from their labours Rev. 14. 13. And likewise that in the interim in the time of this natural life he might keep our Souls in action as well as our bodies whilest we walk by faith and not by sight According to that of the Apostle 2 Cor. 5. 7. But where is then the benefit you will say of this eternal Covenant
now is made manifest unto the Saints of God Col. 1. 26. But you may say Do we not see that in these dayes many ignorant and unlearned persons even they that cannot or can but very hardly read do neverthelesse take upon them to teach the word of God publickly and with much confidence whilest men of great learning and such as have improved their knowledge and judgement by a long continued exercise and industry are slighed and neglected This indeed we find to be true by lamentable experience neither hath the divell a more destructive engine to batter and beat down the truth or to bring the Gospel into contempt and unto confusion For doth not the Apostle Peter say That in his brother Pauls Epistles there are some things hard to he understood which they that are unlearned and unstable wrest as they do also the other Scriptures unto their own destruction with this caveat Ye therefore he loved seeing ye know these things before beware least ye also being led away with the errour of the wicked fall from your own stedfastness 2 Pet. 3 16 17. But they Object that Christ did advertise his Apostles saying Take no thought how or what ye shall speak for it shall be given you in that same hour what ye shall speak Mat. 10. 19. True But this was in case of their own defence where the Saviour charged his Apostles not to be carefull to provide themselves of any cunning or artificiall excuse but to commit themselves confidently to the Lord for their protection and assistance who will undoubtedly stand with them and strengthen them in all such trialls As Saint Paul did afterwards finde by experience 2 Tim. 4. 17. But in other cases and places especially in the house of God Be not rash with thy mouth and let not thine heart be hastie to utter any thing before God Saith that kingly Preacher Eccles 5. 1 2. And amongst Pauls admonitions to Timothie Study saith he to shew thy self approved unto God a workman that needeth not be ashamed rightly dividing the word of truth 2 Tim. 2. 15. But were not the Apostles ignorant and unlearned men They were so And it was very much agreeable to Gods wisdom to choose such as were neither cunning Statesmen nor eloquent Oratours least his Gospel should be suspected to have been invented by policy or maintained by sophistry My speech and my preaching was not with enticing words of mans wisdom but in ademonstration of the spirit and of power That your Faith should not stand in the wisdom of men but in the power of God Saith that learned Apostle 1 Cor. 2. 4 5. But those ignorant men had an incomparable master who could as well inable as command them to speak or do whatsoever was expedient or necessary to the publication and confirmation of his Truth and Gospel which appeared most manifestly in that he personally impowered them to work miracles Mat. 10. 1. And soon after his ascention inriched them with the gift of the holy Ghost in a visible manner whereby They began immediately to speak with other tongues as the Spirit gave them utterances Acts 2 3 4. And whosoever can make it appear that he is truely qualified with these extraordinary indowments I shall easily allow him that title of an Apostle which many novices do now usurpe merely by vertue of their ignorance Or otherwise I need not fear to say unto them as our Saviour some time said unto the Sadduces Ye erre because ye know not the Scriptures nor the power of God Mat. 22. 29. Secondly in obtaining faith reading is not comparable to hearing for though a man hath never such an excellent apprehension yet the nature of man is generally proud and partiall to his own inclinations Insomuch that when he meeteth with any exhortation or reproof that crosseth or contradicteth his beloved corruptions he is easily inclined to pass it by as a thing little materiall to his purpose he will not readily fasten it upon himself And by this means he seldom or never acquainteth himself with the doctrine of self-deniall whereas our Saviour saith whosoever will come after me let him deny himself Mar. 8. 34. And truely till a man feeleth himself sinking under the weight of his corruptions and utterly lost in all his other expectations he will hardly lay hold upon the Son of God to save him And whosoevet doth not lay hold upon him by the hand of a saving faith he must perish eternally He that beleeveth on the Son hath everlasting life and he that beleeveth not the Son shall not see life but the wrath of God abideth on him John 3. 36. But shall a man come to the knowledge of his own corruptions rather by hearing then by reading I answer that it is the more promising way by much for whereas a man may favour himself in reading yet the word of God in the mouth of his minister is or ought to be powerfull and impartiall For if I yet pleased men I should not be the servant of Christ saith Paul Gal. 1. 10. And to this purpose it was that the same Apostle did give that forcible charge to his beloved Timothie I charge thee therefore before God saith he and the L●rd Jesus Christ who shall judge the quick and the dead at his appearing and his kingdom Preach the word be instant in season out of season reprove rebuke exhort with all long-suffering and doctrine 2 Tim. 4. 1 2. And I doubt not but I may say of reproof as the Apostle said of Chastening No reproof for the present seemeth to be joyous but grievous nevertheless afterward it yeeldeth the peaceable fruit of righteousnesse unto them that are exercised thereby Heb. 12. 11. But he that being often reproved hardeneth his neck shall suddainly be destroyed and that without remedie saith Solomon Pro. 29. 1. Thirdly reading is not so necessary as hearing Because we find no such precept or command for the one as for the other The priests lips should keep knowledge and they should seek the Law at his mouth for he is the messenger of the Lord of Hosts Malac. 2. 7. And if the church of the Jews were to seek the Law at the mouth of the sacrificing Priest How much rather are we to seek the Gospel at the mouth of the minister of Christ For if the ministration of condemnation be glory much more doth the ministration of righteousnesse exceed in glory Saith the Apostle 2 Cor. 3. 9. Wherefore my beloved brethren let every man be quick to hear slow to speak Saith James Ja. 1. 19. And the Spirit of God crieth out seaven times in the second and third Chapters of the Revelation He that hath an ear let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the Churches Fourthly we find no such promise made to reading as is made to hearing Incline your ear and come unto me hear and your soul shall live And I will make an everlasting covenant with you even the sure mercies of
David saith the Lord by his Prophet Isa 55. 3. And thus his onely Son verily verily I say unto you he that heareth my word and beleeveth on him that sent me hath everlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but is passed from death to life John 5. 24. And fiftly we have no president or example of any that beleeved by reading But we find that many thousands beleeved by hearing Acts 2. 41. and 4 4. and 13. 48. and 17. 12. For it pleased God by the foolishnesse of preaching to save them that beleeve 1 Cor. 1. 21. And you know that preaching hath its relation to hearing and not to reading But you will say to what purpose then do we bring up our children to reading or what do we with our Bibles and other godly books if reading in them be so unnecessary as you say it is Good Christians I pray mistake me not I do not say it is unnecessary But I say it is not so necessary or commodious for the getting of faith as hearing is The word which we read in the book is not so powerfull so full of spirit and life as that which we hear from God by the mouth of his ministers The words that I speak unto you they are spirit and they are life saith our Lord Christ Joh. 6. 63. Nevertheless I am so farr from condemning reading although it may be much abused as the best things too often are That I commend it for a beneficiall and a blessed excercise to all sorts of people both unbeleevers and beleevers For in relation to unbeleevers First it prepareth them for hearing by acquainting them with the history and making them familiar with the body of the Scriptures And you know that a man will more freely and willingly receive and entertain that which is familiar unto him then that which is strang or unknown unless he be of such an Athenian or Atheisticall spirit as to spend his time in nothing else but either to tell or to hear some new thing as Acts 17. 21. Secondly it inableth them to hear with the greater discretion and the more readily to find out the severall places of Scripture cited by the Minister either at the present or at their better leisure The Jews to whom Paul preached at Berea were commended for the more noble In that they received the word with readiness of mind and searched the Scriptures daily whether those things were so Acts 17. 11. Therefore many of them beleeved vers 12. And as for the true beleevers who are neither wedded to their own understandings nor captivated by their own corruptions For the Spirit of God is with them And where the Spirit of God is there is liberty 2 Cor. 3. 17. To them I say reading is yet more profitable and proper For it serveth to assist their memories to improve their meditations and likewise to strengthen and confirm their Faith And questionless it was principally for these ends and purposes that the Apostles did write their Epistles to be read in divers churches or congregations which they dedicated to the Saints of God Such are were in Christ Jesus by faith whereunto they had been formerly converted by hearing the Gospell preached unto them either by the Authours of the same Epistles or by some other of the Apostles or Evangelists And therefore I say unto all men women and children concerning reading and hearing as Paul some time said to the Corinthians concerning spirituall gifts and prophesying 1 Cor. 14. 1. Desire reading but rather that ye may hear For faith cometh by hearing and hearing cometh by the word of God preached How can they hear without a preacher saith the same Apostle Rom. 10. 14. Now the reason why I have thus taken upon me to answer this question concerning reading is this Because many think to excuse themselves very well from attending upon God in his publick Ordinances by pretending that they do benefit themselves as much by reading good books at home But truely they do very mightily deceive themselves He that knoweth God heareth us he that is not of God heareth not us hereby know we the Spirit of truth and the Spirit of errour Saith that loving and beloved Disciple John 4. 6. WE are now come to answer the fift and last Question compleatly pertinent to the examination of this Beleevers evidence which is this How shall a man know whether he hath this saving faith or not That we may possess our selves of a right understanding in a matter of such consequence let us exactly consider that place of the Prophet Jeremy Where he compareth or likeneth a faithfull person to a goodly Tree that is richly planted well rooted full of sap flourishing fair and fruitfull You shall finde in the seventeenth of the Prophesie of Jeremy at the seventh and eighth verses In these words Blessed is the man that trusteth in the Lord and whose hope the Lord is For he shall be as a Tree planted by the waters and that spreadeth out her roots by the River and shall not see when heat cometh but her leaf shall be green and shall not be carefull in the year of drought neither shall cease from yielding fruit First this Tree is richly planted For she is planted by the waters And Job telleth us That though a Tree be cut down and that the root thereof wax old in the earth yet through the sent of water it will bud and bring forth boughs like a plant Job 14. 7 8 9. Secondly she is well rooted for she spreadeth out her roots by the River she spreadeth out her roots and that by the River Not by filthy myery or muddy waters but by the pure and pleasant streams When the Lord had planted a Garden in Eden with every Tree that was pleasant to the sight and good for food He provided a River to water the Garden Genes 2. 10. And it was the first commendation of the land of Promise That it was a good land a land of brooks of water of fountains and depths that spring out of vallies and hills Deut. 8. 7. Thirdly she is full of sap The Trees of the Lord are full of sap saith the Psalmist Psal 104. 16. And how can she be otherwise seeing she is so richly planted and so well rooted And therefore she shall not see or be sensible when the parching heat passeth over her Fourthly this Tree is flourishing for her leaf shall be green Her leaf shall not wither saith the Prophet David upon the like occasion Psal 1. 3. Fifthly she is fresh and fair and so she shall continue For she shall not be carefull in the year of drougth she shall put forth beautifull buds and blossomes never the lesse Sixthly and lastly she is fruitfull very fruitfull For she shall not cease from yielding fruits But you will say what resemblance or likenesse is there between this flourishing Tree and a true believer I answer let this be alwayes considered that those things which are spoken
And as we must begin our works by faith So we must labour in those works by love Not that whereby we love pleasures for that is the part of a mad man Eccles 2. 1 2. Nor that whereby we love riches for that is the property of a fool Jer. 17. 11. Not that whereby we love them that hate the Lord for that is dangerous 2 Chro. 19. 2. Nor that whereby we love lies for that is damnable Revel 22. 15. Not that whereby we love the world for that will make us Gods enemies James 4. 4. Nor that whereby we love pride for that will make God our enemy 1 Pet. 5. 5. Not that whereby we love sin for that is Satan-like 1 John 3. 8. But that whereby we love the Lord for that is Saint-like Psal 31. 23. And therefore such a love as will be proper and fit to carry on a godly work must have God for its object and Gods glorie for its end More plainly thus If we will labour in a work by love so as to bring it to a godly frame Our love must be sincere to God in Christ firm to his will and zealous of his glory And verily it must be qualified in reference both to God and man like that which Paul sets forth in his Epistles Namely in the thirteenth Chapter of his first to the Corinthians beginning at the fourth verse Love suffereth long saith he is kinde it envieth not it vaunteth not it self is not puffed up doth not behave it self unseemly seeketh not her own is not easily provoked thinketh no evil rejoyceth not in iniquity but rejoyceth in the truth it beareth all things believeth all things hopeth all things endureth all things And he that shall according to this love or to a love not much unlike to this proceed in those designes which he hath first begun by faith he may be confident that if his patience be answerable he hath attained to the power of godlinesse And therefore it remains that we consider what kinde of patience will be suteable and proper to continue our ingagements For we do finde four kindes of patience Namely a patience of falsehood A patience of folly A patience of force And a patience of hope The first I say is a patience of falsehood or a false pernitious patience And this is when a man dissembleth his anger till he can finde a fitting opportunity to do the greater mischief Thus hatefull Esau did conceal his anger that he conceiv'd against his brother Jacob. And he said in his heart the dayes of mourning for my father are at hand then will I slay my brother Jacob Gen. 27. 41. And thus proud Haman did dissemble his against good Mordecay for near twelve moneths For he thought scorn to lay hands on Mordecay alone c. Esther 3. 6 7. Untill he falls upon that cursed decree to destroy to kill and to cause to perish all Jews both young and old little Children and women in one day as verse 13. This is a false treacherous patience or a patience with a mischief The second is a patience of folly A foolish and a partial patience And this is when a man can hear or see Gods glory vilified or abused or in his name or truth or Ordinances and not to be moved or offended at it Alas how hot and furious we are in the defence of our own reputation although it scarce be worth the speaking of But in Gods case we are as calm and cool as if we had nor spleen nor spirit in us We read that Jehu the son of Nimshi was very zealous in destroying the posterity of the Kings of Israel and Judah and in removing all obstructions and impediments that might hinder or molest his possession in the Kingdom of Israel Neverthelesse he was so patient in reference to the sins of Jeroboam the son of Nebat who made Israel to sin that he departed not from after them To wit the golden Calves that were in Bethel and that were in Dan 2 Kings 10. 26. For these he supposed to be as supporters to establish him in his Throne According to Jeroboams first intention 1 Kings 12. 26. And may there not be some in these our dayes that are very zealous to root out Monarchy Magistracy and Ministery which zeal they Jehu like proclaim to be for the Lord. Notwithstanding they continue their Golden Calves of covetousnesse and ambition whilest un●er the colour of liberty of conscience every one that is factious may do that which is right in his own eyes We finde likewise that Eli was so zealous for the Ark of God that when he heard it was taken by the Philistines he fell down and died 1 Sam. 4. 14. But he was so patient in relation to the sins of his own sons that he thereby provoked the Lord to denounce a fearfull curse upon his whole posterity 1 Sam. 3. 13. c. And are there not amongst us that will rage and inveigh very bitterly against the least mistakes of their opposers as scandalous and therefore execrable whereas they can with much patience passe by the lewd proceedings of their friends and followers as humane frailties therefore tollerable I cannot say but this kinde of patience may be of credit with Apostates But I conceive it was not so with the Apostles I am sure it was otherwise with impartial Paul when Peter came to Antioch I withstood him to the face because he was to be blamed saith he Gal. 2. 11. Be angry but sin not saith the same Apostle Eph. 4. 26. Assuredly this purblinde patience is opposite to the right Christian zeal neither complying with the work of faith nor with the labour of a godly love And is not this a foolish patience or a patience of folly The third kinde is a patience of force And this appeareth when a man conceives that he hath just occasion of offence And no lesse will to execute his anger had he not some restraint imposed on him This we may see was verified in Laban when he pursued hotly after Jacob It is in the power of my hand to do you hurt saith he but the God of your father spake unto me yesternight saying take thou heed that thou speak not to Jacob either good or bad Gen. 31. 29. How often would the High Priests Scribes and Pharisees have seized upon Christ before the time but that they feared the people And thus the Lord doth oftentimes suppresse the fury of his Churches adversaries either by their confusion As he dealt with Pharaoh and his Egyptians Exod. 13. 23. c. Or he restraineth them to their conversion For thus he dealt with persecuting Saul who afterwards was also called Paul Act. 13. 9. And he that was made patient by force now teacheth us the Patience of Hope This is the fourth and last kinde of patience A hopefull and a happy patience This is the right way to possesse our souls in matter of desertion or death Luke 21. 19. By