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A34689 A practicall commentary, or an exposition with observations, reasons, and vses upon the first Epistle generall of John by ... John Cotton ... Cotton, John, 1584-1652.; R. D. (Roger Drake), 1608-1669.; Scott, Chr. (Christopher), fl. 1655. 1658 (1658) Wing C6452; ESTC R5113 587,691 443

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commit Adultery and slay Uriah and after that to number the people Ans He may erre through infirmity as a man in a Journey he propounds no other end but to goe on but yet he goes out of the way sometimes through ignorance and carelesnesse but then when he knows it he makes the more hast to get in again so a Christian he aims at a good course even wayes but sometimes through heedlesness or ignorance he falls into by wayes but when he knows it he makes hast to recover himselfe and the cause why he goes aside is because he doth not the Will of God but his own will Vse 1 Justifie the Doctrine of the perseverance of the Saints and confutes the contrary opinion of their Apostacy for every Christian doth the Will of God now he that doth the Will of God abides for ever such make Gods Will their meat and drink and so they lead an everlasting life they feed on everlasting food Joh. 6.26 they have neer union with Christ they are such as fulfill Gods Will and therefore he will fulfil their desire Vse 2. A ground of direction to all such as would find comfort in Life and Death if you follow the lusts of the World they will not last alwayes Conscience accuseth God will judge you Eccles 11.9 Rejoyce O young man in thy youth c. so Riches endure not always nor Honour therefore though a man now pride himselfe in his youth or riches or lusts why these will not hold time will come when you shall be weary of all these but would you abide for ever why this is the way doe Gods will and then thou chusest that part which shall never be taken from thee Luke 10. two last verses Psal 125.1 2. let a man be doing Gods Will he shall never dye there is no man but would have his Estate confirmed to perpetuity from age to age why all the lusts of the World continue but for a while but would you turne all to perpetuity be doing Gods Will and then you shall abide for ever so would you heal all the fleeting unstablenesse of our spirits sometimes you are much inlarged sometimes as much straitned sometimes you have vigour of Spirit and sometimes you are dull and quite out of frame what is the reason all this is because thou art out of the way and therefore the Star hath left thee as it did the Wise men when they went out of the way to Bethlehem to goe to Jerusalem even so when thou art in the way to Bethlehem to seek Ch●ist and give up thy selfe to such courses as leads to him why all this while the comfortable power of the Spirit shall goe with thee but when thou consultest with flesh and blood to satisfie any lust of the World the Star will leave thee till thou come into the way again so if you walke in the even wayes of God you shall find your selves always enlarged though sometimes more sometimes less yet alwayes so much as is sufficient for your present condition Vse 3 Of consolation to every obedient Christian that breaks off from his own will and sets himself with all his power to doe Gods Will and is grieved when he doth any thing against it why this is your comfort that is an everlasting way which leads to eternity He that doth the Will of God shall never see Death that is with fear or danger nay he shall stand as a Mountaine that shall not be shaken which is a great blessing for a poor Christian Obj. May not mountains be shaken and removed are they not shaken by Earthquakes so may not Christians be shaken and removed are they not tossed up and down in the World and never in a setled condition Ans Mountains may be shaken and removed Isa 54.10.11 and Christians may be tossed in their outward Estate but yet though Mountains remove and hills be shaken yet Gods loving kindnesse shall never depart from them Now from the scope the Apostle aims at observe thus much Doct. The disproportion that is betwixt the World and the lusts thereof and the Children of God that doe his Will ought to weane them all from the love of the World and the lusts thereof John 6.27 Labour not for the meat that perisheth as who should say this meat is corruptible and you corruptible but that meat I give you is eternall and will nourish eternall life in you Quest Wherein stands the disproportion between the World and the lusts thereof and those that doe Gods Will 1 The World and the lusts thereof are transitory and fading neither continue at a stay nor last long but all perish But he that doth Gods Will the more he doth it the more he is strengthned and confirmed and supported to everlasting life 2 The World it selfe and all the things thereof are ordinarily bodily and sensuall and not heavenly take all the frame of the Creatures they are bodily things and all the comforts of them tends to sensuall life What will it profit a man to win the whole World and loose his own soul implying a man may have all the World and yet loose his own soul it never feeds a spirituall heavenly life but there is a spirituall eternall bread that feeds to everlasting life it is not for a body to nourish a spirit nor earthly things heavenly not can a transitory thing feed everlasting life Q. 1. Why should this disproportion wean us from the love of the World and the lusts thereof what is the ground 1 From the vanity that is found in all these things they are bodily and transitory it is impossible they should nourish heavenly and permanent life therefore godly men should withdraw their affections from them inordinately Isa 55.2 why doe you lay out your money for that which satisfieth not and for that which is not bread why doe you spend cost and pains about that which is not bread which will never satisfie your souls but your souls in the midst of them may be as Pharaohs lean Kine hungry and empty of grace void of good things Reas 2. From the corruption these things will put upon our spirits if we set our love and lust on them it will be as a running Issue which will empty us of all goodnesse either they will draw us from comming to the Ordinances I have married a wife and cannot come or secondly they will fill our hearts with cares when we come Ezek. 33. ult or else after we are gone they will choak the Word of God so that they draw away our hearts from spirituall food 2 There is a power in them to assimilate us to themselves what we feed on we are like unto feed on wild meats you will be wild men feed on grosse meats your spirits will be more grosse and dull feed on light meats your spirits will be more quick and agill so if a man feed on the World glut himself with the World he can relish nothing but the
Peter James and John Mat. 26.41 when Christ called on them to watch and pray he comes and finds them sleeping what saith he the spirit indeed is willing but the flesh is weak even then when he had most need and themselves also of watchfullnesse they fell into drowsinesse and so fell into Temptation that they all left Christ and Peter especially Simon sleepest thou whom Sathan desires to winnow For thee now to Sleep is a Lust of the Flesh Let us therefore so look at Sleep and Ease as that we must give account of It s a common fault of Gentlemen that live of their own Means they may Live at Ease and rest they think what is a Gentleman but his Ease and Pleasure God forbid that we should be like that Fool in the Gospel Soul take thine Ease thou hast Goods laid up for many years you must not think that God hath given great means and estate to live at ease the glorious Angells are ministring Spirits doing their duties with all agility and chearfullnesse Adam who was Lord of the world yet was set to till the ground from the highest creature to the lowest all have employments appointed them by God Dangers of Idlenesse 1 It will bring you to poverty that you shall be suddenly Beggars and that without remedy 2 It distempers your Bodies and Stomachs 3 It will make your Souls naked and ragged that is plain the field of the sluggard is over-grown with Thorns and Thistles all your impatience vanity idlenesse all your dullnesse unprofitablenesse in your life it springs from your sluggishnesse of heart you have not stirred up your spirits 4 It will make you a Brother to a great waster you waste your outward patrimony and your patrimony of Grace when Peter was once fallen into drowsinesse how wofully was he bankrout how poor and naked Simon sleepest thou and we see Temptation came on him suddenly and strongly 5 Such as do their businesse with a slack unbent hand cursed be that man if you see a sluggish hand God leaves him to himself he curses both himselfe and his businesse therefore be diligent and fruitful and strengthen your selves you shall finde the blessing of God going along with you prospering your estates and Souls Thus we see what are the Lusts of the flesh they are such as the body affects and is satisfied with as intemperancy incontinency love of pastime and love of idlenesse and sleep these are the lusts of the flesh Now for the Reasons why we should wean our selves from these Lusts which may be as so many motives to disswade us from them Rea. 1 All these Lusts are so many Enemies to our Souls 1 Pet. 3.11 they are the diseases of our Spirits now if we satisfie any disease in our body wee feed the disease and make it worse So wee cannot satisfie any of these Lusts but the more we feed them the stronger they grow They are like the Dropsie the more you drink the more you may so satisfying encreases the disease the more you obey a Tyrant and submit your selves to him the more authority he claims over you and the more will be Lord it over you so if you once give up your selves to obey these lusts and let them reign they will Lord it over you and keep you in greater subjection Rom. 6.12 so that when a man pleads for his Lust but this once that I may fullfill my Lust and I hope I shall never do it again but I will bid farewell to it if I now take leave to go into evil Company for one merry meeting I shall hereafter deal with them no more why take this course against a Lust do but once give way to any Lust and instead of satisfying it you will adde fuell to it this will be a way to ingage you to a further commission of that lust many have a conceit may I but now tipple with a customer and get a good bargain I will give it over why give but once way to a lust and it will make such a gap that all the lusts in the Forrest may break in make but one little crevise in the bank of the Sea thinking to abate the rage of the Sea why it will make it wider and overflow all so if you give but a little way to a lust to a little Gluttony or Intemperancy you will never give over modo modo non habent modum the more fuel you give the stronger the fire of lust burns Reas 2 The heavy distempers that bodily lusts put upon the soul of man they do aggravate the diseases that Christians most complain of it is the common complaint of Christians oh the deadnesse and dullnesse and hardnesse and coldnesse of my heart and spirit oh that I could but get a soft heart why the lust of the flesh so overcharges our hearts and makes them so heavy that we have no desire to good Luk. 21.34 take heed that your hearts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 you shall find that whereas our spirits have been enlarged and comforted in Gods ordinances and in his service it is strange how little affection or comfort we find in these if our hearts be overcharged with Intemperancie or Wantonnesse or Voluptuousnesse or Idlenesse it is like lead at a Birds heels what we feed on we grow into the nature of it let a man feed on earthly things he grows earthly and unsavoury so if a Christian gives way to any sensuality he shall find his spirit grow so sensual and worldly that it is made very unfit for spiritual things Reas 3 From the end of these lusts if we affect any pleasure of the World for it self it is a lust of the flesh to cleave to the Creatures now we shall find that none of these lusts commend us to God neither meat nor drink nor pastime nor sleep if we affect any thing for it self it never commends us to God or makes us draw near to him though we had all these pleasures in the largest measure as Paul saith of them 1 Cor. 8.8 now if these draw us not to God but many a poor soul that wants these hath far more fellowship with God than such as enjoy abundance thereof why then a Christian should thus reason am not I a whit the nearer God for these why then should my heart affect them 4 Nay as they do not commend us to God so 1 Cor. 6.13 Meat for the belly and the belly for meat they are all corruptible both the chear we affect and our bellies both corruptible therefore let us set our minds on eternal incorruptible things Vse May dehort both old and young from affecting the lusts of the World you see from the Father they are not but from the World and the means to help us against these lusts are 1 Abstain from fleshly lusts as Peter speaks Rom. 13.14 make no provision for the flesh take heed of all occasions I have made a Covenant with mine eyes saith Job not
World his spirit is made carnall and stupid and worldly and can arise no higher therefore when Solomon gave himselfe to seek pleasure Eccl. 2.3 to try what was in them though he did not neglect Wisdome as Eccles 1.8 yet he found by experience deal as wisely as he could in the end they did so stupifie him that he was led away by them to Idolatry 1 King 11.4 then is a man become stupid when he is serious about trifles and trifling about serious things by pursuit of these his judgment was quick in earthly matters but in matters of Religion he began to grow very weak and ignorant how much more then they that wholly give themselves to the lusts and pleasures of the World Reas 3. Ever since the fall of our First Parents there lyes a Curse of God upon all the Creatures Gen. 3.17 18. now in cursing the ground he Cursed all the Creatures with it so that now there is a disproportion and unsuitablenesse betwixt the Creatures and man for whom they were made so that the whole Creature is subject to vanity Rom. 8.19 20. Eccles 1.2 Vanity of vanities all is vanity Now if they be all accursed you shall finde that there is a venemous corruption in them all which with-holds us from that chiefe good for which we were made so that let any man put upon you any Profit or Honour or Credit continually you would think your selfe engaged to him and set your selves to be serviceable to him and should not we deale as kindly with God should not we be more obedient to God for his following us with his blessings one would think we should but what is the reason of it the more we have of Profits and Honours and Credit the more full we are of our selves and the more loose from God so that the more he blesseth us the more we neglect him the more he comforts us the more we grieve him how comes this but from a secret curse that lies upon all the Creatures otherwise it could not be that we should grow so carelesse and stupid as the Moon when it wants light it draws nearer to the Sun but when it is at the full and hath most Light it is furthest from the Sun so when God fils us we sit furthest from God our spirits become empty of grace and regardlesse of God therefore this should move us from affecting the World and the lusts of the World Vse 1. A ground of strong exhortation to both old men and young Love not the World nor the lusts of it for there is no proportion betwixt the World and a Child of God what proportion betwixt transitory and everlasting things fading and permanent these are bodily and carnal your hearts are spirituall and heavenly therefore it is for you to look out for other things that will ab de nay why doe you spend your strength for that which will not profit all will not help your souls why should a man swear and toyle for that which when he hath he may loose his own soul he may get credit in the World and yet may be base in Gods eyes it is that which will not satisfie the soul the immortall soul will not be contented with transitory fading things these are but as dreams they dream of abundance but their souls are all this while empty and starving and if these be so transitory why doe we feed on meats that are so unsuitable to our souls if we have once made the World our Element if we be lifted up out of the World to heavenly and Spirituall things we are like a Fish out of the water we faint and gasp and are weary and must return to our mud again we have no comfort at all is not this a woful disproportion Nay further seeing all the things of this World are vanity and folly even lawfull pleasures I said of mirth it is madnesse and folly Eccl. 2.2 why therefore let us be exhorted to wean our affection from them walke among them as snares take heed you be not trapt by them all the Blessings of this life are but Curses if you use them for themselves and then they weaken your spirits and corrupt your hearts therefore love not the World nor the things of the World for these all fade away there is a disproportion betwixt the cursed things of this World and spirituall Blessings indeed they are not Curses if you receive them as coming from God and use them to him otherwise if you set your hearts on them and use them for themselves they will prove a curse to you Vse 2. Let us be exhorted to lift up our hearts to more heavenly and spirituall things let us lift up our souls to those pleasures and profits that endure for ever Joh. 6.26 labour for those pleasures that may truly satisfie your souls desire God to lift up your hearts from worldly to spititual things and then we shall find the Word of God sweeter than Honey and the Honey-comb therefore feed not on Husks and Chaff but feed on Spiritual things which may nourish you to eternal life and for earthly things use them as helps to Spiritual things to make you more vacant for religious exercises more fruitfull in good works so you shall find them helpfull to you and you shall draw near to God by them when we look not so much at honour or pleasure or profit as Gods hand giving them 1 JOHN 2.18 19 20. Little Children it is the last time and as ye have heard that Antichrist shall come even now are there many Antichrists whereby we know that it is the last time c. SAint John writing to all sorts of Christians Old Young and Children he speaks particularly to them all to Young-men and Old he wrote Vers 14 15. Love not the world but for Babes he writes not to them about the love of the World for they are not easily subject to it but no age so flexible as young Children so that if they be once set in a right way and live under faithful Instructers there is no great danger of them therefore he writes to them here to make them beware of false Teachers and cleave to sound Doctrin First now he describes and sets out these false Teachers 1 By their coming in the last time vers 18. 2 By their Apostacy they went out from us 3 By shewing the cause of it they were never of us vers 19. Secondly he gives them signes whereby they may know them and discern them and that is from their Unction they have received vers 20 21. Thirdly He gives a mark of Antichrist he is a Lyer who denieth Jesus is the Christ is a lyer c. vers 22. Fourthly He layes down some means to help them 1 By looking to their Doctrin Keep close to sound Doctrin 2 Cleave to your holy Unction have a speciall care to live righteously Vers 18. In this verse he plays the Trumpeter and warns the Church Little Children
extreame and deadly 3. It is new and rare because they have been wonted to no such thing Vse Let the world know that Gods people have more cause to think strange of the world then the world of them they give the world no cause to hate them Acts 17.6 Doct Gods children are not to marvell at the worlds hatred 1 Thess 3.3 Reas 1. God hath appointed you to it you must take notice of it God hath done it for many ends How else should you shew forth your patience how should you be kept off from bad company God will lay bitter pills to the breasts of the world that so you may be weaned from it Psalm 119.115 2. The world many times doth it out of ignorance The world knows it not therefore we may take it the better that we are ill dealt withall A King takes it not ill to be badly dealt withall at strangers hands 3. The world hated Christ therefore no marvell if it hate us 4. It is no new thing it hath continued from Cain 5 From the inclination of your own hearts if you were in the worlds case you would doe the like Therefore marvell not Tit. 3.2 3. Vse 1. Of instruction to such as live in places of Religion If we be hated wonder we not at it We shall condemne the generation of Gods people The cause is partly from the tempter partly from the wickednesse of the world Vse 2. Do not lay down Religion for fear of the worlds hatred This is not the way fear not the hatred of the world Some Subjects will not feare the body of a State so they may have the Kings favour Much lesse should Gods servants fear though the whole body of a Countrey should fall foule upon them 3. This should teach Gods servants to walk so much the more circumspectly humbly lovingly If a man were to walk amongst his friends he would care the lesse but if he live among his enemies he will looke to every step so soon as you trip you shall have mouthes enough open against you Therefore Daniels course was notable he so walked that they could not taxe him Daniel 6.1 to 7. 1 JOHN 3.14 We know that we have passed from death unto life because we love the Brethren he that loveth not his Brother abideth in death THe Apostle layes down this as a second reason why they should not marvell implying that they that know they have passed from death to life need not marvell though the world hate them Doct. Gods people have passed from death to life Gods people are opposed to the world they are translated out of the world John 5.24 They are redeemed out of the world by death he means a contrary state to life Death and Condemnation are Synonymaes By death is meant death for sin and death in sin the naturall estate in which a man lives whilest he is in this world which is called a state of death in a fivefold respect 1. All death presupposeth life to go before We do not say that a stone is dead Death is a privation of life A man that hath no life but what the world gives he is dead because he had a life at least in possibility in the loyns of Adam Ephesians 2.3 2. Death in the proper notion of it is a separation of the soul from the body We are said to be dead Gal. 2.20 because our souls and bodies which are capable of life are separated from the Lord Jesus the fountain of life Eph. 4.17 18 19. 2.12 3. From the definition of life which is a power to move it selfe in it's owne place When we see a thing to move it selfe in it's owne place we say it is quick and hath life A man may do many things yet not from an inward principle as Judas and Jehu Matth. 27.18 19. 2 Kings 10.15 16. is this life There are some motions from common grace but it is not spirituall life unlesse it aim at spirituall ends and upon spirituall grounds As if a man be humbled for sin because it is displeasing to God Judas was troubled in his conscience not for sinning against God for then he would not have grieved God by hanging himselfe It was not an inward motion and voluntary so Jehu he did it to establish his owne Kingdome he regarded not the commandements of the Lord 1 Kings 10.30 31. 4. In regard of the binding over to eternall death as a condemned man is counted a dead man John 3. ult 5. From the power required to make such a man alive 2 Cor. 5.17 There must be a new a breathing power The state of grace is called life 1. Because we have received fellowship with Christ he lives in us and we in him Gal. 2.20 John 15.1 2. We have an inbred power in our selves to move upon spiritual grounds and for spiritual ends Rom. 8.2 Mat. 5.3 to 10. Passed from death to life from the hatred of our Brethren to the love of them There are these steps of it from one to another 1. A man is a poor man and that 1. In debt 2. Hath nothing 3. An hard creditor 4. No surety 2. He begins to mourn bitterly for this his estate 3. He becomes meek 4. He hungers and thirsts and prayes for grace and cannot be satisfied without it 5. He begins to be mercifull he pities every soul that is in a state of nature and under a spirit of bondage 6. He is pure in heart abstains from sin doth Gods commandements 7. He is a peace-maker he is at peace with God and with his own conscience and now he labours to make others at peace 8. He will now suffer persecution for righteousnesse sake Vse 1. This convinceth all the works of the Heathens as dead works Some are famous for courage justice c. But all these are but dead works Gods pure Martyrs have suffered not for any glory of theirs but Gods glory 2. It refutes a main ground of Popery the doctrine of Free-will which gives a man power to be converted when he will If a dead man can rise from death to life then may a dead man in sin come to the life of grace 3. Gather hence how our estate stands We come to Church it may be repeat Sermons and do many good duties Would we know whether our life be a dead life or no Consider we upon what principles we do good duties if we do good duties because they are pleasing to God if we have respect to all Gods commandements if there be a change in our hearts which makes us willing this is a signe we are passed from death to life 4. To teach us not to rest in our naturall condition for then thou art but a dead man although thou hast all morall grace 1 Cor. 13.2 3. 5. This may be a comfort to every soul that hath passed from death to life God is his God and he shall never come into condemnation Math. 22.23 John 5.24 Doct. The love of our
discerned but also he will have heresies that so they may be ●e●●ed in judgement as well as in affections 2. That so 〈…〉 made manifest as by the wind you may ●ee the difference betwe●● 〈◊〉 and ●haffe 2. From the envious man who sowed tares while the husbandman that sowed good seed in the field slept Matth. 13.24 25. 3. From the ignorance and darknesse of the minds of professors Rev. 9.2 those Locusts were false teachers which came out of the smoake of the bottomlesse pit Vse 1. If in St. Johns time there were so many mists 〈…〉 reproves such men as when they see such variety of opinio● in Religion● do s●t down till all men be agreed but do●● St. John make this 〈…〉 Prophets are gone out into the world therefore sit down 〈…〉 true Teachers No but rather makes this use of i● to 〈…〉 of their Ministers because many false Prophets are gone out 〈…〉 2 This may teach us not to wonder although many also Prophets be gone out in these dayes in the light of the Gospel 〈◊〉 they durst look such ●lorious sight in the face as were St. J●●● and Paul 〈…〉 dayes there is not such power of godlinesse in the hearts 〈◊〉 Profe●● but Christians now are given to much worldlinesse and many rest in 〈◊〉 therefore wonder not though the ●●ce of the earth be 〈…〉 with heresies 3. This should teacheth of 〈◊〉 to take heed of opening a door to 〈◊〉 Prophets Take heed of ignorance in your judgement of ambition and sensuality this is the smoak of the bottomelesse pit 4. Try the spirits of false Prophets in these dayes and take not up every instruction at the first blush but try them there are sundry spirits o● false Prophets you shall find in Popery a spirit of presumption doubt despaire hypocrisie not one point in Popery but is carryed 〈◊〉 some of those wings 1. They teach a man cannot be assured of salvation this is doubting yet a man may merit salvation this is presumption they worship stocks and stones 2. The sp●●●ts of Arminians are a spirit of bitternesse 〈…〉 the brethren a spirit of emulation of disloyalty to ●●●ir Prince of liberty and security 3. Among the 〈…〉 shall find a spirit of unconformity and whoredome 4. There is a doctrine of faith and 〈…〉 which doth and 〈◊〉 the doctrine of Jesus Christ Rom. 8.2 3. 〈◊〉 doctrin● of free grace is maintained to free a man from prayer preaching and an● Christian duty that God ●ath ordained to maintain grace 〈…〉 not David pray God 〈◊〉 create in him a 〈…〉 and to renew a ri●●●●irit within 〈…〉 therefore a man ought to 〈◊〉 that he 〈…〉 of God q●uickened in him this doctrine of faith and 〈…〉 secretly withdraw a man from the Ordinances of God Lastly There is a spirit 〈◊〉 ●om● on Prot●●●nt which fashion their Religion according to the 〈…〉 their profit and case they follow ● course of the Court and 〈…〉 1 JOHN 4. ● Hereby know ye the Spirit of God 〈◊〉 spirit that confesseth that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh is ●● God IT is not rightly translated come 〈…〉 that Christ was come in the flesh as the 〈◊〉 of Balaam and the N●●laitans Hymeneus and Philetus but it should 〈…〉 translated thus Christ that hath come in the flesh Christ veiled over with ●●mane 〈◊〉 Doct. That the people of God may well 〈◊〉 the spirit of their Ministers by the confession which their spirits make of Christ come in the flesh What is it to confesse There is a threefold confession in Scripture 1. To acknowledge the truth doctrine and worship of Christ even before Rulers Matth. 22.25 to confesse is to professe to bear witnesse of the grace of Christ 2. 〈…〉 of a mans Ministry as it is said of John John 1.20 3. There is a conf●sion of a mans work Tit. 1.16 that is by our life or 〈…〉 be Saviour Matth. 1.21 the anoynted of the Lord 〈…〉 Prophet and King Jesus Christ the second Person in the Trinity 〈…〉 in the flesh which is a great mystery 1 Tim. 3.16 What is it 〈…〉 spirit of a Prophet to confesse Christ Jesus By spirit is not 〈…〉 for body 1 Thess 5.23 but the i●●mation both of soul and body 〈…〉 else it is carnal sensuall and devillish when the spirit 〈…〉 the be●t both of soul an● body the inclination of 〈◊〉 whole man doth ●old forth Christ Jesus that is the mighty saving 〈…〉 revealed in humane infirmities What is Pauls meani●● when he saith I desire to know nothing 1 Cor. ● 3 4. He means he desires to expresse nothing in his life and 〈…〉 Christ Jesus revealed in the flesh in 〈◊〉 infirmities wh●● the Corinthians 〈◊〉 a sign of Christ in 〈…〉 acknowledgeth that for his outside he was weak but yet he did ex●● 〈◊〉 the mighty ●●ving power of Christ crucified in his Ministry 2 Cor. 13.3 ● 5. and he tels the Galatians They knew that through 〈◊〉 infirmities of the flesh he preached the Gospel at the first Gal. 4 13 14 15. Was any doctrine weakly delivered he speaks of his bodily presence for in his life he shewed such a mighty power of Christ as that they looked at him as an Angel of God yea they did so affect him that if it were possible they would have pluckt out their eyes to have doth him good Reas 〈…〉 ●is cannot 〈◊〉 from mans nature for mans spirit comes short of it Phil. ● 20 every man s●●ks his own Demas hath forsaken Christ and embraced this present world 2 Tim. 4.10 Some men look too high they look to their own profits and preferments in 〈…〉 and account the seeking to save souls a matter n●t pertainin● 〈…〉 if they preach they 〈◊〉 some moral discourse ●hich 〈…〉 ●hose that are looking towards the wayes of grace 〈…〉 the mighty saving power o●●●rist Jesus is not 〈…〉 their Ministry 2 It 's not from the spirit o● 〈…〉 spirit far exceeds his spirit he c●v●● own Ch●●●●●sus Ezek● ● 22. he speaks with envy against Christ therefore it must needs ●e the 〈…〉 that confesseth Christ Jesus come in the flesh Vse 1 To teach Gods people 〈…〉 acq●ainted with the Lord Jesus or else they will not be able to discern 〈…〉 their Minister in doctrin 〈◊〉 and carriage it is 〈…〉 Saints to expresse their carnall excellencie● 〈…〉 complains of the Galatians that they made a fair shew 〈◊〉 flesh●● 〈◊〉 ●●at make a fair shew i● the flesh when they come to 〈…〉 out their spirits will not bear it a Christian should sa● of those outward 〈…〉 Da●●d of Sauls armour if any man will come after Christ he must 〈…〉 wisdome life and carnal excellency God ●●ts ho●●●r upon many Christians and gives them carnal excellency but they must take heed that they doe not darken the power of the Lord Jesus Christ 〈◊〉 by 2. 〈◊〉 tryal ●●ur estates 〈◊〉 whether the bent of our carriage doth hold forth the Lord Jesus in 〈…〉 infirmities God is not
The Sun is the life of many Vermine take away the Sun and they dye as flyes but when the Sun shines in its season they live let God take away the Sun-shine of his favour from us we can neither pray nor preach we live a life of grace of holinesse Prov. 16.14 15. Rom. 8.2 Ephes 2.4 5. there is life enougst in Christ to procure us life 2 There is a life of glory of which it is said John 10.27 28. That Christ gives to his sheep eternall life 1 Cor. 15.4 5. John 5.24 28 29. so many whose souls receive life by the Word of the Gospel their bodies shall rise to eternall life How did Christ procure us this life He procured this by his death Rom. 5.9 10. while we were yet enemies we were yet reconciled by the death of Christ We received life of grace and holinesse by his means I will pour out my Spirit of grace upon all flesh Reas 1. It was unpossible our corrupt nature should fulfill any law of God Rom. 8.4 Gal. 3.21 2 The glory of Christ requires that as the Father quickneth so he also John 5.21 Vse 1. This shewes us what our condition is without Christ if God send Christ that we might live through him then in Gods fight without Christ we are dead as dead flyes dead wormes in a cold frost we are utterly dead without true peace we are like thorns that give a blaze but we lye down in sorrow Isa 50.11 Christ is our life without him we can doe nothing we are not able to put forth any spirituall action 2 Let us try our estates Whether can we say that God sent his Son into the world and hereby manifested his love to us Doe you live in Gods sight without him we are but dry bones untill we can say we live in Christ we cannot say we have any sense of Gods favour 3 It teacheth such as have any evidence of life in Christ Joh. 10.10 to come into Gods presence as dry bones intreat God that he would so speake the word as that those dry bones may live 4 To teach all such as have received this manifest token of Gods love to acknowledge the Lord Christ to be their life Phil. 1.21 For me to live is Christ and to dye is gain now Paul is crucified with Christ Gal. 2.20 and now for him to live is Christ now every day he lives he doth the more expresse Christ 1 JOHN 4.10 Herein is love not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins Doct. THe love of God to us was not procured by our love to him but his own good pleasure he therefore loved us because it pleased him So that in these words we have the freenesse of Christs love he loved us freely because he loved us when we loved not him we did not begin in love to him but he to us and this is set out by the effect and end of it the pardon of our sins What is that love God bare to us before we loved him Answ There is a threefold principle of love which God magnifies and manifests to his people before they love him 1 That love whereby he chose us to life and to redeem us by Christ 2 Tim. 1.9 and the choyce to life was not according to workes but free grace 2 Gods love in redeeming us by Christ was before any love of ours to God Joh. 3.16 3 His love prevented us by effectually calling us drawing implies unwillingnesse therefore it prevented all good affections in us he must draw us out of presumption then out of despair Reas From the difference between the care of Gods love and of our love self love is so ●iveted in our hearts that we cannot love any unlesse it be for some cause concerning us a natural man loves none any further then tends to profit or pleasure but a Christian is inlarged to all Gods children he loves them all and the ground of this is because we know such to be incorporated into the same body with us and so as we see them in some kind our own and so we should never have loved God unlesse we had found his love to us Object A christian comes off freely to many ●ffices of love to them that love not him Answ True but it is because he knows God can abundantly recompence it they sometimes may lay down their lives for their brethren and for the Truth but they know that Christ hath done it for them before 2 From the eternity of Gods love now Jer. 31.3 an everlasting love can have no cause the cause is alwayes before the effect no temporall thing can be the cause of an eternall love 3 From the end of Gods love that he might bring us to walke in love Ephes 1.4 Tit. 2.14 The love of God to his people of old is a fir president to all his children Deut. 7.8 9. compared with Deut. 9.4 5 6. Vse 1. Refutes a popish and Arminian conceit that God chooseth none to life but out of foreseen faith and good works else he had chosen none to life but this is a mercenary love let a servant labour never so hard yet he knows he shall be well paid at the years end and therefore it is servile love this is that love which they would put upon God 2 It exhorts all to begin betimes to love God begin never so soon God hath prevented us Rom. 11.35 it was an early love of Josiah at twelve years of age when he sought after God but Gods love was up before him you cannot be in your love before him though you begin as soon as you are warm in the womb John Baptist was very early when he leaped for joy in the womb yet Gods love was before him an Angel had appeared to his Father and had promised a blessing before John was begotten 3 To teach old people if God have prevented them with love long before how should this stir them up to love God and to be humbled for the want of love to God that hath loved them so long Shall we be to seek in our love to God and cleave to worldlinesse in our old times and let God stay till our children be provided for What an unworthy dealing is this with God This should exhort all Gods servants that have had experience of Gods love to acknowledge the freedome of Gods love Job by Gods testimony was a man that feared God and eschewed evill What saith the Devill Doth Job serve God for naught No but though God had stript him of all as he did yet he had shewed such marvellous love to his soul as that he had just cause to love God for ever if God should not have bestowed on him one dram of wealth 4 This should teach Gods children to be as observant in love to Gods children as God is to them to love them freely to doe kindnesse to them freely Psal 16.2 3.
that make us more sufficient but we above all things are to desire and strive with God for the annointment of his Spirit mentioned 1 John 2.27 And Again the Apostles being such simple men were fitted to deliver it so as might be most for Gods glory not in excellency of words but in evidence of the Spirit 1 Cor. 4.5 and therefore Paul though otherwise a learned man imitated their simplicity 1 Cor. 2.12 13. And here Chemnitius his modesty is to be commended who when he cometh to speak of some points of Divinity carved out by the School-men too curiously is wont to say Hac non sapiunt Piscatoriam sapientiam Vse 1. Behold then the great and fearfull unthankfulnesse of the World who put most of these men to death who did declare unto them Eternall Life Vse 2. If the Apostles shew unto us Eternall Life it is easie to discern how far they be from Eternall Life who doe not receive their Witnesse alas how many poor souls through the greatest part of the World Jewes Turks all the rest of the Pagans and Infidells are by this means cut off from all hope of Eternal Life how true alas is that speech of our Saviour Mat. 7.13 14. many there be who go in the broad way to destruction Vse 3. Then how much to blame are the Wolves rather than Shepheards of the Church of Rome who shut and lock up from the people in a strange Tongue the Writings of the Prophets and Apostles is not this one way to barre them from Eternall Life how truly upon them is that verified Luke 11.32 Vse 4. Then we all of us are to be exhorted diligently to be conversant in the Writings of the Apostles John 5.39 where what our Saviour spake of the Writings of the Prophets my Text speaketh the very same of the Writings of the Apostles they bear witnesse of Christ and shew unto us Eternall Life and as the Apostle spake unto our Saviour so may we to them John 6.68 Ministers most of all are to be conversant in their Writings because they succeed the Apostles in bearing witnesse unto Christ and declaring of him so little differing from that of theirs else we bring a curse upon our own heads Gal. 1.8 which if the Church of Rome had remembred they would never have thrust out the Apostles from the Chairs of their Professors and brought in the Sentences of Peter Lombard but we are to follow Timothies example 2 Tim. 3.15 16 17. and all Christians are to imitate the forwardnesse of Christians in Chrysostoms time Vse 5. Then we are to praise the Lords goodnesse unto us who hath granted unto us their Writings Consider the like example Psal 147.12 19 20. It was a great preferment to the Jewes to have the Writings of the Prophets Rom. 3.1 2. but their witnesse of Christ is much more dark and obscure than this of the Apostles without their Writings we should but have groped after God Acts 17.27 and as for Christ this Eternall Life we should never have dreamed of him the Lord make us more thankfull and more carefull to walk more worthy of them lest he take them from us 1 JOHN 1.3 4. That I say which we have seen and heard declare we unto you c. IN these two Verses we have of the Apostles Doctrine 1. The subject repeated That which we have seen and heard 2. And declared 3. The end 1 Subordinate fellowship with the Apostles 2 Supream fulnesse of joy The subject is repeated 1. For Explication or plainness sake for the Parenthesis of the second verse would otherwise by interrupting the course of speech have obscured the sentence 2. For confirmation of what he had said before he thrice repeateth that which we have seen and doubleth that which we have heard to shew that he doubted not of what he spake but was most confident and resolute therein Obs Observe hence the certainty and undoubted truth of the Doctrine of the Apostles Reas 1. The Apostles taught nothing but what was manifest to their senses See 2 Pet. 1.16 Compare with him his Successor who seeing great sums of Money brought in by Indulgences Pardons c. said to one of his Cardinalls O quantum fabula ista de Christo nobis proficit Again sense took away doubting even from unbelieving Thomas John 20.25 27 28. 2. The Apostle again and again ingeminates here that what they taught was manifest to their sense now ingeminations are for confirmations Gen. 41.32 Gal. 1.8 9. Ezek. 7.6 this therefore doth shew again how confident he was of it himselfe i. e. therefore no marvell of that speech John 21. penult We know c. For 3. The efficacy of that Doctrin or the power of it argueth the certainty of it for that Doctrine which giveth us union with God communion with the Saints of God fulnesse of joy in our selves must needs be a most certaine Doctrin of heavenly truth there is no perswasion to settle a mans own Conscience answerable to this 4. And for a fourth Reason consider another Branch of the power of this Doctrine the Apostles that declared it were for the most part poor and simple men and unlearned men the Doctrine taught was but of a Crucified Saviour harsh to carnall ears 1 Cor. 1.23 the times were such wherein it was not onely every where spoken against Acts 28.22 but also grievously persecuted throughout the Roman Empire and that with exquisite Torments and yet it did so powerfully work Plut in Apop Pris Regum that in Tertullians time which was the next Age after Christ there were more Christians every where than of all other Professions besides Cyrus indeed allured many to be his followers but he sent out great men to make another kinde of Proclamation Whosoever will come and follow after me if he be a Foot-man I will make him a Hors-man if he be a Hors-man I will make him a Rider in a Coach if a Farmer a Gentleman if he posesse a Cottage I will give him a Village if he have a Village I will give him a City and if he be Lord of a City I will make him Prince of a Region or Country and as for Gold I will pour it out to him by weight and heaps and not by number But Christs Proclamation is contrary Luke 9.23 14.26 and yet had he infinitely more followers All other Reasons as the testimony of the Church c. are but like the woman of Samaria preparing us to believe John 4.29 this convinceth us so strongly that in comparison we reject other Reasons moving us to believe as they did John 4.41 42. How true is that of Picus in his Conclusions as Faith which is but a bare credulity is in a degree of perfection inferior to science so that Faith which is wrought in us by the work of the Holy Ghost is greater and more certain than any science gotten by demonstration Vse 1 If the Apostles Doctrin were so certain that
you believe it How do you believe it on what ground 1 Have you found Christ purifying your Consciences by his blood If you have found that then you know that you know him Phil. 4.7 2 Do you finde your Consciences purified Do you finde your Corruptions mortified Do your Lusts grow abominable Do you finde your hearts cleansed from wrath and impatience c. certainly then you know that you know Christ for none else could have pacified and and purified your hearts If it be so that you dare not sin you seek peace and ensue it then you may know that you have Christ but if these signs be wanting especially purifying then you know him not Vse 3 To exhort us never to rest till you know that you have acquaintance with Christ if a man had all the knowledge in the World what comfort would it afford him if he knew not that he had fellowship with Christ never count you know any thing if you know not Christ Si Christum discis satis est c. and yet rest not there till you know that you know him Beasts see and hear but they know not that they do so because they are irrational and want the faculty of reflection and in sprituals a carnal heart is blinde but it is for a Christian to know Christ and not only so but to know that he knows him we must not rest either in mens good perswasions that they hope and are perswaded well of us or that they speak well of us but we must never rest till we know that Christ dwels in us and we in him which we may know by his pacifying and purifying of our consciences Vse 4 Of Consolation to such as do sin and fall daily and find their own emptinesse their knowledge is but small their experience little their outward comforts shallow yet this is a mans comfort that he knows Christ and not only so but knows that he knows Christ God never gives us a blessing but he is willing that we should know it if he set up a light in our minds he would have us discern that light and walk in the light thereof therefore let us thankfully acknowledge it and comfort our selves therein We come now to the Evidence whereby we come to know that we know Christ hereby we know that we know him if we keep his Commandments for the understanding of this we must know that there is a perfect keeping the Commandments without sin and that St. John disclaimed before Cap. 1. Vers 8.10 2 There is another keeping the Commandments that is not perfect without sin yet perfect without dissimulation or hypocrisie and that is here meant Doct. Sincere obedience or keeping the Commandments of Christ is a scientifical argument and sign of our undoubted and known fellowship with Christ Q. What is it to keep his Commandments A. The keeping of his Commandments is usually in Scripture exprest by divers comparisons 1 Sometimes it is exprest by keeping his Commandments as a man would keep his way turning neither to the right hand nor to the left Josh 1.7 and then we must look at the Commandments as our way as a Travellor doth not go out of his way if he doth it is besides his intention 2 Sometimes it is exprest by keeping Jewels we should keep them as our Treasure set our hearts on them Prov. 6.20 21. binde them about thy heart Which implies they are to be lookt at as our greatest treasure and worne about our neck he would have us look at them as our Ornaments many men would be rich but they would not always have it known but a Christian is not only to look at Christs Commandments as his Treasure but as his ornaments and credit a man is then said to keep the Commandments when he looks at them as his Treasure and Ornaments he fears not to shew himself and let it appear that he keeps Christs Commandments he is not ashamed to wear them about him openly 3 It is compared to the keeping of the apple of a mans eye Prov. 7.1 2. keep them as the apple of thine eye a man keeps the apple of his eye very tenderly every moat is ready to trouble him therefore he would not have the least moat come into his eye so that is true keeping of Gods Commandments when the least offence or scruple against Gods Commandments is b●tter and noysome to him as moats to the apple of his eye he cares not what the World thinks of it if it be against the the Law of God it is noysome unto him 4 It is exprest by keeping the Commandments as a man would keep his Soul Prov. 19.16 as if it come to this pinch either keep the Commandments or lose your life a Christian will lose his life and keep the Commandments nay of the two he would rather lose his Soul Luke 14.26 a man must be willing to sit loose from his life for Christ now if we thus keep his Commandments it is an evident signe that we know that we know him Obj. But such a keeping is very strict and hardly to be attained who can do this in many things we offend all and who is it that goes not astray Ans A Christian may keep the Commandments as his way when he intends to go on and if he be out it is besides his intention he may keep them as his treasure though sometimes upon some temptation he may part with something thereof yet after he knows it he mourns for it and it is the grief of his heart and though a Christian may sometimes be ashamed of his Profession yet afterwards he is ashamed of his Fact as Peter and though a Christian may sometimes offend the Commandment yet he is never well till he hath got out this moat sometimes a man may rather chuse his life as Peter but afterwards he grieves and weeps bitterly and would rather part with his life than the Commandment and if it be thus with thee it is a signe thy keeping is sincere Quest How is such obedience a certain signe of our acquaintance with Christ Ans 1 This sincere keeping of the Commandments our Saviour looks at it as an act of friendship in him Joh. 15.14 then are ye my friends if ye do whatsoever I command you as we take it for a point of special friendship when a man is ready at our command and willing to do what we would have him nay Joh. 15.10 our Saviour takes it not only as love but as abiding constant love and if it spring from our love to Christ it must needs spring from Christs love to us for we could not have loved him except he loved us first 1 Joh. 4.19 1 Joh. 5.3 no man keeps any thing that is grievous a man may have fire about his house or a moat in his eye but he keeps it not it is grievous a man may be out of the way but it is grievous but when he keeps the Commandments as his
way his treasure his eye his life this is not grievous to him every Office be it never so bad it seems easie because he loves Christ dearly as Jacobs seven years service for Rachel seemed but a little space because he loved her Gen. 29.20 if there be such mutual love it is a certain sign of acquaintance 2 This keeping of his Commandments is a sign of our abiding in Christ and so of our acquaintance with him Joh. 15.1 Hos 14.8 upon me is thy fruit found otherwise we are barren it is Christ that puts forth any fruit in us Ezek. 36.27 how comes it to passe a man keeps Gods Laws and Judgements but because he hath his Spirit within him he keeps us and then we keep his Commandments Vse 1 To refute that Popish Error that a man may keep the Commandments perfectly without sin 2 That though he can thus keep them yet he cannot be sure of his Salvation But this is contradictory hereby we know that we know him if we keep his Commandments so that it is either certain they keep not his Commandments or if they do they may be certain of their fellowship with Christ and so of Salvation by him 2 It refutes them in this in that they say we are wont to discourage men from good works we say indeed none can be justified by the works of the Law but we do not discourage them from good works for we say thus if men keep Gods Commandments which is to perform good works hereby we say we may come to know that we know Christ we say more not only a perfect keeping but a sincere keeping of them though imperfectly with respect and care though this doth not justifie us yet we say it doth justifie the truth of our Estate and that is no small matter we challenge them for discouraging of men from good works for they will not grant that hereby we know that we know him but still leave a man in doubt but we grant much comfort from good works for though they do not justifie us yet hereby we know that we are justified Vse 2 To confute the Arrians this shews a certain ground of the divinity of Christ because by keeping his Commandments we may come to know him now this would not hold if he had not the same authority to command with God himself Iam. 4.12 there is but one Law-giver therefore if Christ be our Law-giver he is one God with the Father his Commandments are of like benefit and use with the Fathers Commandments Vse 3 Shews the cause why many men do not know that they know Christ none can know Christ but such as keep his Commandments 1 Therefore such cannot know Christ that do not know his Commandments for if they do not know them how can they keep them Gods ways are too hard to be found in the night in Ignorance or Darknesse 2 Though a man do know them yet if he divide them some he will keep and some he will not keep if he do thus he cannot come to know that he knows Christ because he doth not keep his Commandments there are some Commandments he doth not keep if you take liberty to break the Sabbath and will not keep it though you know it is Gods Commandment it is impossible you should come to a saving Knowledge of your Estate in Christ if you be content to live in the least known sin if you do not as gladly root out any sin as you would pull a moat out of your eye you cannot know Christ or come to know that you know him 3 There are others that know Christ and yet do not know that they know him why because thy do not keep his Commandments as their way do not look at them as their Treasure as their Ornaments do not keep them as the Apple of their Eye but swallow many moats this doth very much hinder their souls many would do much for Religion but would not have it come to life then no wonder if we see not our Estates if moats be in our Eyes we cannot see as otherwise we might so if sin lye on our souls no wonder if we be so blinded that we cannot see our Estate in Christ nor know that we know him Vse 4 It shews a ready way to peace of conscience would we have our consciences pacified Why labour to know that we know Christ and that will pacifie the conscience when we come to know that wee are acquainted with Christ this being peace of conscience but how shall we know that Why keep the Commandments of Christ as our Way as our Treasure as the Apple of our Eye as our Life then we may know that we know him that we have Fellowship with him and then our consciences will be at quiet both in life and death if we keep the Commandments as our way and if wee bee out of the way it troubles us if wee keep it as our Treasure and if we loose any it grieves us when we grieve for the losse of it as for the losse of our Ornaments if we cannot suffer any sin to be in our souls but it afflicts us then our consciences will be at peace if we keep the Commandements carelesly we keep the peace of our consciences loosely as we keep the Commandements so we keep the comforts of our souls it may be we walke in Gods wayes but not so closely and charily as we should this hinders our own peace it was a speech of Jonah when he was now in a good temper and dissembled not Jonah 2.8 they that follow lying vanities forsake their own mercies they that follow lying vanities any comfort of the World if there be any way any Treasure any Ornament any life that we prize above the Commandements of God these are lying vanities deluding things and then we forsake our own mercies that is the portion of mercy which God hath appointed us and he spake it by wofull experience he clave to his credit a lying vanity and thought he would prevent his discredit but God found him out and he found it by experience that they that stick to any pleasure more than God they forsake their own mercies he might have had mercy if he had been obedient but now he saw no hope of mercy in this world at least therefore it may teach us to take heed of trusting to any deluding vanity Vse 5. Of consolation to constant keepers of Gods Commandements sometimes a man may keep them and yet be in feare and doubts of his Estate why goe on in that way still keep them as your Way your Tresaure and Apple of your Eye your life that is the way to comfort be it known unto you if you doe thus that you doe know Christ for did you not love God you would never go on in a constant course of keeping his Commandments and you could not love him except he loved you first and you could not keep his Commandments but by his
13.10 1 Tim. 1.5 and so hope 1 Joh. 3.3 patience is joyned with obedience and meeknesse springs from obedience and from the spiritual experience of a mans weaknesse and experience of Christs power in him springs humility so that all graces either spring from obedience or serve to it or accompany it so that even these very graces that are more in the understanding and speculation they either spring from obedience or help to obedience the Knowledge of a Christian is not unfruitful 2 Pet. 1.8 which shews that a Christians Knowledge brings forth fruits of obedience no gift a Christian hath but he considers what good he may do with it and if he see it not serviceable he regards it not so that if every grace do breed or nurse or accompany obedience then whosoever professes he knows God and doth not keep his Commandments there is no truth in such a man no true grace Vse 1 For tryal of the truth of our profession would you know the truth of your Grace of your Repentance of your Faith of your Humility You shall know it by your fruitfullnesse what use do you make of your Graces would you know whether your Repentance bee sound or your Love c. sound would you know this Why consider do they make you obedient and carefull to keep Gods Commandments as your Way your Treasure your Ornaments your Eye your Life if any grace bee fruitfull make you conscionable in the keeping of Gods Commandments that is a witnesse of the truth of that Grace a painted Tree bee it never so fair yet it bears no fruit but a living Tree brings forth fruit you have cause to suspect your Grace if it make you not fruitfull and carefull to please God if Grace make you obedient it is sincere but if a man hath never so many Gifts and Graces if they lead him not to obedience truly they are but counterfeit and there is no true Grace in him Isa 47.10 if they caused them to rebell there is no truth in them if any Grace leave you more corrupt or lesse fruitfull there is no truth in you Vse 2 It exhorts us to a conscionable diligent keeping of Gods Commandments hereby we shall keep our profession true our Consciences void of offence and shall have an evidence that we know Christ if a man say he knows God and yet keep not his Commandments his profession is not true but he that both saith so and doth so his profession is sincere 2 It will keep your Consciences in Peace when your Conscience checks you not but bears you witnesse that you desire to do Gods will in truth this brings great Peace 3 It keeps your Grace sound the more fruitfull and the more obedient the more doth Grace increase a Christian that lets his Grace lye at rest it grows rusty and hee may doubt of the truth of his Grace if any mettal lye up and rust we may suspect whether it be right or no but if it be kept with continual use we suspect it not take a Christian that doth not exercise himself in Grace he grows so rusty that he suspects the truth of his Grace but put thy grace to employment let it be in continual use and thou shalt easily see it is good metal and currant the employment of Graces proves the truth of them therefore as we desire to keep our profession true or our conscience clean or our graces sound keep in a daily course of obedience always be doing good and that from Gods Commandment Vse 3 Of Consolation to all such as take a good course and labour to keep Gods Commandments who may sometimes suspect all their grace is counterfeit and there is no sincerity in them why if there be no sincerity in you you do not keep Gods Commandments as your way but you cannot say but you would gladly finde your hearts keeping them as your way and you endeavour it and it is the grief of your souls when you go out of the way do you keep them as your treasure and ornament and apple of your eye and life Why then there is truth of grace in you truth of sincerity though not of Perfection you must not look to keep them without sin but if you desire to keep them as the most precious thing as your treasure your ornament your life the apple of your eye though a man may sometimes have a moat fall into his eye but in this case do not say your Graces are counterfeit for if they were counterfeit you would not keep Gods Commandments Psalm 36.1 Wickednesse saith to the wicked there is no fear of God before his eyes how doth that appear to David vers 4. he sets himself in no good way he is in a bad way and goes on therein and such a one it is plain he hath no fear of God before his eyes by their fruits he knows them if you set your selves in no good way your profession cannot be true but if the way you take be good and if not thou dost not take it up why if it be thus your profession is true and your grace sound it is a question whether Solomon fell finally or his graces were true or no you may know his repentance was true because he found his lust to women as bitter as death Eccles 7.6 7. well then if an Adulterous or Idolatrous Wife were as bitter as death to him then it is an evident sign if he looked at his transgression as death he looked at the Commandment as life and therefore his repentance was sincere so then if a man finde his sin as as bitter as death it is a sign his repentance is true But yet we must here distinguish between the horror of sin and sin it self the horror of sin may be as bitter to us as death but not the sin it self as Judas the horror of sin was so bitter to him that for it he hanged himself but had Judas been troubled with the sin of his conscience as he was with the horror of his conscience he would not have gone about to help one sin by another had he hated sin for it self he would have hated Murther as sin So would you know whether it be horror of sin or sin that troubles you If it be horror you will seek to drive it away by sin as some do by merry company and merry Books this is a plain signe that sin troubles them not for then they would not seek to help one sin by another but if a man look at the breach of the Law as the losse of his way it troubles him as much as the losing of his Treasure it is as a moat in his eye he had as lieve part with his life if it bee thus with thee thou mayest have comfort thy profession is true thy conscience clear thy profession sound and sincere 1 JOHN 2.5 6. But he that keepeth his Word in him is the love of God perfect indeed c. THe words
restrained it from any fellowship with them 2 As Chirurgions apply Corrosives so Christians to mortifie their lusts apply such Corrosives may subdue their lusts Rom. 8.13 If ye walk after the flesh ye shall dye but if ye through the Spirit mortifie the deeds of the body ye shall live either kill your lusts or else you will kill your souls therefore mortifie your lusts through the Spirit that you may live which is a notable Corrosive to mortifie them by the Spirit of God so another Corrosive is when a man applies the threatnings of God to his soul and against his Lusts if you shall lay to heart all the dangers of your lusts it will eat out the corruption of the flesh Another special Corrosive is the Death of Christ when we consider Christ dyed for us and we are dead in him how then should we live any longer to sin Rom. 6.1 to 6. 3 As Chirurgions cut off that Member that is thus mortified so Christians that they may not love their lusts must cut off those lusts and cast them away Matth. 18.8 9. were our lusts as near and precious to us as our right eye were they never so convenient or necessary even as our right hand though we should dis-inable our selves in our Callings yet cut them off it is better you should be lame in your businesse better you should goe with reproach and shame in the world than at length be cast body and soul into Hell fire cut off the members of sin which are as near and dear and necessary unto you as right eyes and hands in regard of your worldly employments yet away with them mortifie them Like to this phrase of Mortifying is the Crucifying of the flesh with the affections and lusts Gal. 5.24 they that are in Christ have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts they have crucified the whole body of sin partly in the affections which are not sinful in themselves but as they are inordinate but they keep in their affections and passions in such order that they sinne not in anger or joy or love c. and partly their lusts of the flesh also covetousnesse pride vanity wantonnesse they are crucified they look at all their lusts as Crucifying Christ and they look up to Christ for the pardon of sin and so also for the healing of sin for pardoning and healing goes together Hos 14.3 4. 1 Joh. 1.7 8. they that are Christs looking up to the vertue of Christs Death they find their lusts not only pardoned but healed crucifying of our lusts hath some resemblance with Christs Death as 1 They attach Christ seek him out and are content to give money rather than to find him so will a Christian doe in regard of his lusts 2 He layes them open as enemies to Caesar to the great God and desires vengeance on them 3 He considers that Christ is dead for him and he is crucified with Christ therefore what hath he to doe to live to the world or the lusts thereof Reas 1. Why all should be weaned from lusts from the enmity which these lusts have against God which is a sufficient motive to weane us from the world Gal. 5.17 if they be enemies to God then a Christian hath reason to hate them as enemies to his best friend and indeed he cannot love God and those lusts too He that loveth the world the love of the Father is not in him he is not fit for any duty he that loves the world cannot accomplish the will of the Father every lust hinders spiritual duties hearing of the Word Prayer receiving of the Sacrament any one lust tolerated or lived in hinders all Spirituall duties Reas 2. From the enmity they have against our souls 1 Pet. 2.11 Dearly beloved as strangers and pilgrimes abstain from fleshly lusts which fight against your souls they fight against your souls and so fight that either you must kill them or they will kill your souls either mortifie them or they will mortifie your souls either captivate them or they will captivate your souls Therefore seeing they are so contrary to God and any Spiritual life and our own souls as we would not have our lusts hinder our peace with God and eat out our grace as we would maintain our communion with God and the life of our souls Love not the world nor the lusts of the world Vse 1. To teach us it is not enough for us to abstaine from outward gross sins but love not your lusts thou mayest refrain from the outward acts of sin but yet thy heart may be strongly affected towards sin and thou mayest delight therein if thou dost thou lovest the world and the things of the world therefore labour to cleanse your selves from secret lusts Circumcision was the cutting off the fore-skin of a secret member and yet God would have another Circumcision more secret and that is of the heart we must not content our selves with outward reformation but circumcise our hearts Levit. 3.3 4. God took speciall care that he might have all the Kidnies and Fat the Kidnies and Fat are our strongest desires and lusts why when we come to offer Sacrifice we must bring them before the Lord and burn them there is no savour so sweet in Gods nostrils as the burning of our strongest lusts the more our lusts stink in our nostrils the more sweet smelling savour it is to God so long as our lusts smel sweet in our nostrils so long we are loathsome to God Vse 2. It must teach us it is not enough to cut off some lusts but those that we love most a good husband that hates prodigality you shall not need to exhort him to frugality so prodigality cannot endure covetousnesse it hates basenesse and pinching he cannot abide it it is not his own lust so another he cares not for this pride and bravery so he may ly close at the pot or an Harlot why this is no great matter to cry out against those lusts that are not ours but it is a Christian duty not to love our own lusts covetousnesse is not thy lust but if prodigality be thy lust doe not thou cry out against covetousnesse and thou which art covetous doe not thou stand out against another mans prodigality but strive against thy own covetousnesse there are lusts which are to us as Eves apple fair to the eye such lusts as our souls lust after Rev. 18.14 look thou to these lusts which thy soul lusts after let them depart from thee Vse 3. This reproves our aptnesse to cherish and nourish our own lusts when we are commanded not to love them to mortifie them not to make provision for them if we then provide for them we are justly to be reproved Job 24.15 Prov. 7. Woe be to them that draw iniquity with the cords of vanity and sin as it were with Cart-roaps Isa 15.18 that take occasion to fulfill their sins that draw them on with Cart-roaps that give way to such
of any sins than the Sun is the cause of the stench of a Dunghil God forbids it hates it and punishes it was Absalom therefore innocent because God gave his Fathers Wives into his hands No God punishes his sin before all the people because be committed his sin openly before them all Vse 3 To teach every man and woman to abhor all these sins all Pride Gluttony Adultery Covetousnesse detest them why because they are not of the Father God takes no pleasure in high looks what pleasure takes he in unclean lusts in covetousnesse he detests them and abhors them therefore if they be not from God what should good men have to doe with them what should we meddle with that which we have no Word or Commandement for abhor these lusts therefore and detest them let those follow them whose chief good is in the World but live you as become Gods Servants Vse 4. May teach us to cloath our selves with the contrary Graces if those lusts be not from the Father then surely contrary Graces are therefore deck your seves with humility God resisteth the proud but gives grace to the humble Mat. 11.28 Learn of me for I am humble and meek Humility is of me but Pride that is not of the Father but of the world so for heavenly-mindednesse Col. 3.1 If ye be risen with Christ seek those things that are above heavenly mindednesse that is from Christ therefore be of an higher minde than the world Alas are these worldly things your highest things it is a sign you are not risen with Christ and so for the lusts of the flesh there is other meat than bodily food John 6.29 John 4.34 we may make use of our bellies but we may not make them our gods 1 Cor. 6.9 10. deck your selves with sobriety chastity temperance liberality humility thus walk and you shall finde rest to your souls Doct. That which is not of the Father the love of young men and old is to be weaned from The Syllogism stands thus Whatsoever is not of the Father the love of old and young must be weaned from But these lusts are not of the Father Ergo. All the comforts of this world if they come not from the Father our love must be weaned from them if honour come not from God and people affect it it hinders their Faith they cannot believe John 5.44 what kept Joseph from the lusts of the flesh but Gods providence in with-holding his Mistris from him if God with-hold a thing it is not for us to put forth a reaching desire to it this satisfied Jacob Gen. 30.2 If God with-hold such a blessing why should our desires be set upon it Shall we take it unkindly that Gods hand with-holds it so for profit this was the claim that Jephtah made when the King of Ammon contended with him Judg. 11.24 he told him What God gives us we will possesse if God had not given it he had usurped it as did the King of Ammon so if our God give us not a thing let us not reach after it and to this a promise is made to him that shakes his hand against any unjust thing Isa 33.15 vers 16 17. such though they have lesse yet they shall be confirmed in it it shall be like strong foundations Obj. What is there that any man receives but it is from Gods hand good and evill come from him 2 Sam. 12.7 8. I gave thee thy Masters house and thy Masters Wives into thy bosome and I gave them up to their hearts lusts so Zech. 11.16 Lo I will raise up a Shepheard in the Land which shall not visit those that be cut off c. So that we cannot be given to our lusts but it is from God Ans It is one thing when God gives us a blessing in his Providence another when he gives us a blessing in his Ordinances we may have many things by way of Gods providence and yet have little comfort in them it was his providence to give them up to their lusts it was Gods providence that sent Monarchs against Nations that they had no right to so Gods providence you will say sends a Bribe I never fought after it but we must not reason thus for these are but tryalls of our obedience and not for seduction so if a Bribe comes God tries whether you will shake your hands against it so if an Harlot presse on you God tries your chastity by this this is Gods providence but if God offer us a thing in an Ordinance that is either by his Command or our Calling that we may safely take Heb. 5.4 so that Gods Command and our Calling are Gods Ordinances whatsoever he calls us to receive he ordains and whatsoever he calls us not to receive he ordains not so that whatsoever is ordained by God in his Ordinance that we may take but what comes not thus let us shake it off Vse 1. To teach us to take heed of all unlawfull Honours and Riches for though they may comfort us a while yet they shall doe us no good if they come not from God all lawfull Honour and Riches come from God 1 Chr. 29.12 and that as a Father We need not be afraid to receive any lawfull Honour so for pleasures 2 Cor. 1.3 he is the God of all comfort if it be a lawfull comfort so that these we are not to be weaned from but from all the lusts of the World though we may receive Honour yet we must not be ambitious so Riches they are Gods gifts but let us not use ill means to come by them so for Pleasures if we cannot come by them but by violating Gods Command why let not your hearts reach to them and this should be a notable motive to mortifie all lusts because they come not from the Father of Lights but from the Prince of Darknesse if no Ambition or Pride or Covetousnesse be from God mortifie it so if there any love to pleasure and wantonnesse root it out for it is not of the Father therefore what should Christians have to doe with it Mens Children may lawfully take gifts from others besides their Fathers because they are not able to give us all kinde of blessings but Gods Children must take nothing that comes not from their Father whatsoever is not from him is a lust and our love must be weaned from it and the reason is from the amplitude of Gods bounty there is no good gift but comes from God and that in his Ordinance and God will bestow upon his Children whatsoever is good and needfull for them Vse 2. May quiet our hearts in the want of all such blessings as come not from God as God gives us not you see you cannot have such riches or such pleasures or profits but Gods Providence or Ordinance with-holds them why wean your hearts from them and be content without them it is the wisdome of men to follow an occasion when they see Gods providence leading them to
4 When we look at a wrong end when as in our pastime we look at no higher end than our own pleasure whereas Paul saith Whatsoever ye do do it for the glory of God we should hereby be the better fitted for Gods service Lastly When we abuse our pastime in regard of gain though carding were lawfull yet to make a gain of it Aristotle could reprove it as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for pastime should be for our delight and not to make a gain of it is not a vendible matter to pay for our pastime that a man should sell his pastime is filthy lucre indeed if you play for no more than you would spend betwixt you or give to the poor it is not unwarrantable but to make a gain of recreation is an abuse of the pastime The last lust of the flesh is the lust of Idlenesse or ease or sleepinesse for it is the body that craves sleep and ease and is satisfied with it sleep begets drowsinesse and case begets Idlenesse now these both young and old are to be weaned from Q. 1. How is a man carried inordinately to ease or sleep First Either in unseasonable objects or secondly In excessive measure or thirdly when we use them not to a right end 1 When we sleep at such times as are unseasonable to sleep and be drowzy 1 In holy duties when we are so drowzy that we cannot attend to them the very inclination to sleep is now a sinfull lust this lust fell heavily on Eutiches Acts 20.29 an heavy sleep fell on him and an heavy hand of God followed it which shewed his judgement though he restored him because he would not have such assemblies scandalized but alwayes some hand of God or other falls on them either in body or soul however the spirit gets such a cold by such sleepinesse and drowsinesse that a man findes it lustfull 2 So in the duties of a mans calling if a man be drowzy this is a lust of the flesh Prov. 10.15 He that sleeps in harvest is a shamefull Son he shames himselfe and his Master and indeed the fitnesse of his work implies that in harvest he should be at it early and late not but that a man may take a little sleep to fit him for his work but when the Sun is risen and calls him to his businesse he loves his bed this is a lust of the fl sh and this is called deceitfull working Cursed is he that doth his work deceitfully that is with such deceit as comes from slacknesse for so it is interpreted Prov. 10.14 and the Metaphor is taken from a bow that is slack bent which deceives Psal 68.57 a man never reaches the mark he aimes at because it is not strongly bent so when a mans heart is not strongly bent to his businesse he will never reach to his businesse throughly to purpose and so it is a deceitfull work cursed is he that aimes at any businesse with a slack bent hand Prov. 29.9 He that is sloathfull in his businesse is Brother to a great waster a sloathfull man and a prodigal are both of one womb bred of the same lust of the flesh and so wasts that which he might have increased Eccl. 4.5 6. Better is an handfull with ease c. saith the sluggard but such a one shall come to beggery Prov. 26.21 Idlenesse will cloath a man with rags rags will be their rayment Prov. 19.15 he doth not onely mean that an Idle person shall want outward means but were he of better means yet he shall finde his body shall be so distempered that he shall have no stomach to his meat so that an idle person shall either want meat or a stomach to eat it when as a diligent shall have both but that is not all for it may be extended to the soule by rising late and being drowzy he is so distempered that he either omits good duties or else he findes no favour nor life nor strength in them In Gods ordinances we complain of sluggishnesse but is not the fault in our selves better fares a sluggish soul with an handfull with ease c. so a sluggish man rosteth not that which he catcheth in hunting it hath no warmth no spirit in it our bodies and souls should be as a burnt sacrifice therefore must not be cold and to this end he exhorts us not to be sluggish in businesse Eccl. 9.7 whatsoever thou doest doe it with all thy might therefore when we have any work to doe that requires diligence yea though it were to slaughter the enemy as he understands it Jer. 48.10 Cursed be he that doth the work of the Lord deceitfully that keeps back his sword from blood 2 It is a lust of the flesh when a man is carried to sleep above due measure Prov. 5.9 10 11. poverty comes on such a one suddenly and strongly most mens natures require seven hours sleep some eight and that is the most and if we observe it we shall finde the same distempers arise from too much sleep that arise from want of sleep it makes the body drowzy and the brain dull and makes a man unfit for any thing 3 This love of Sleep and Rest is a lust of the flesh when we use it not to a right end now the end of all Sleep and Rest is to refresh the Spirit and strengthen the body and help digestion like the unbending of a Bow to make it stronger if a Bow stand always bent it weakens it therefore so much Sleep as may help digestion and comfort and refresh a mans body and spirit God allows God knows all the Comforts of this life are little enough to uphold us against vexations and discouragements but when a man is grown to love Sleep and Ease a little more Sleep a little more Slumber one ease after another and never looks how to imploy it to Gods service now he propounds no right end but we ease our selves that we may be eased and never look further than Ease and Sleep and so we rest in the Creature and never look up to God to whom all our Ease and refreshment should tend otherwise it s a Lust of the Flesh because we look no further but to satisfie the Flesh Prov. 26.14 As a door sometimes turnes this way and that way but is never off the Hinges so a sluggard would tosse himself from one side to another the door hath some end in turning upon the Hinges to open and shut but a Sluggard doth no good by it but rowls himself from one side to another after he is satisfied with Sleep but cannot get up and then when he is up hee doth nothing but rowl himself from one thing to another hee hath no setled businesse to imploy himself about but takes care what to do he goes from one Company to another from one Game to another till he shuts out the day and then he returns to his Rest and Ease and sleep again as it was with
eye be set on wrong objects this the Scripture calls an hastie eye that have it he will per fas nefasque Prov. 28.22 23. a man of an evil eye hasts to be rich never staying on Gods Providence such was Achans lust and Ahabs after Naboths Vine-yard he made hast to obtain it so a man makes haste when he pursues some gain not lawfully but by Symony or Sacriledge or Bribery or Deceit Isa 33.16 so that a man looks at his gain and not at God Quaerenda pecunia primum est Virtus post nummos so that a man hastes so much after wealth that he cannot stay Sermons or Prayers he must follow his gain and he will have it by hook or by crook this lust is against Piety because our love to God should make us affect nothing but what we may lawfully enjoy and in subordination to his will and to imploy it to his service 2 This lust of the Eye is expressed in excessive measure and this is called a greedy eye a man perhaps will not get it but by honesty but when he hath laid hold on goods he is never satisfied Eccl. 4.8 so Eccl. 5.9 10 11. like a Dropsie the more a man drinks the more he desires so the more a man hath the more he desires Prov. 27.20 there a greedy eye or covetous heart is compared to Hell and the Grave you may as soon satisfie Hell as a covetous heart you may sooner fill his Land or Houses or Barns than fill his eye that is never satisfied This greedy eye offends against that inward contentment that a man owes to his Soul when he is so covetous that his heart is never satisfied Q. When should a man think himself satisfied and how far may he desire those things A. In our Callings we must be diligent and we may desire Wealth of God partly for our necessity and expediency and partly to leave to our Posterity thus far a man may desire Wealth but we are never to desire more than we have good use of and glorifie God by a man must be content as well to want as abound but when a man is insatiably craving when hee hath much hee would have more and when he hath most he is not satisfied that is a greedy eye 3 There is a lust of the Eye that fails in the end as it is insatiable so it is an unprofitable desire and when a man craves Wealth for Wealths sake and never takes care to use it well and this I call a needy eye when God calls him to bestow some on Church or Common-wealth or Family or Friends what saith he what know I whether I may have need my self and so for fear of future need he will not provide seasonably for Family or Church or Common-wealth he will part with nothing willingly unlesse hee see it be for his profit Deut. 15.19 this needy eye is therefore reproved and this was in Nabal 1 Sam. 25.11 he was afraid his Servants should want and therefore would not supply Davids necessity This needy eye trespasseth against Liberality and Charity The ground of this evil eye is an evil judgment it springs from a blinde eye whereby it is possest that wealth is good in it self and he places his happinesse in his riches and his safety and life stands in it contrary to the assertion of our Saviour Luke 12.15 A mans life consisteth not in the abundance of the things which hee possesseth and therefore hee desires wealth above all things Vse 1 It discovers the true nature of Covetousnesse you will say I hope frugality is not Covetousnesse and providing for Children and Family true but dost thou see thy heart carried after wealth though by unlawful means by Symony or Deceit or Sabbath-breaking then thy heart is covetous because thou hastest to be rich thou art so hasty that thou canst neither stay for Sermons or Prayer or grace certainly then Covetousnesse transports thee the first born of Hell 2 When thou art diligent if gain come not in thou art not content or if much come in yet thou art not satisfied 3 When thou hast wealth thou takest no care how to use it thou grudgest to give any thing to Church or Common-wealth or poor Friends thou saist what if thy self and thy Children should want why truly this needy eye is Covetousnesse but when thou takest lawful pains and it hinders thee in no good duty if God crosse thee thou art content if God blesse thee thou art forward to be helpful to do any good then thou art not covetous Vse 2 Of exhortation to Young men and Old-men Love not the World nor the things of the World you see how such trespasse against Piety and Liberality and Charity it is the root of all evil 1 Tim. 6.10 not so much the breeding root as the feeding root of all evil and it is called the root of all evil in three respects 1 It separates from God the fountain of all good Col. 3.5 and therefore it is called Idolatry because hee blesseth himself in his riches Psal 49.18 Prov. 18.11 Mat. 6.24 wealth makes him serve Mammon rather than God Deut. 13.18 2 It choaks the best seed of the Word sometimes keeps him from coming to the Word Luke 14.14 or distracts him there or choaks the Word afterwards 3 Covetousnesse exposeth a man to every temptation of Satan lays him open to Satan to be a slave unto him makes him to Apostatize Swear Lye Deceive if he propounds wealth to himself as the chiefest good 2 If you belong to God you shall seldom finde your hearts straitned and Gods face turned away but it is for your Covetousnesse Isa 57.17 18. he sees you neglect him and his Ordinances for wealths sake Remedies against Covetousnesse 1 A contented desire Heb. 13.5 if you can say once I have enough I am full I am content to part with any thing Q. But how shall the content 2 Godlinesse is both great gain and contentment and till God gives grace the Soul is never satisfied when the Soul is endued with grace it is content in regard of these outward things There are two things in godlinesse that breed content and satisfaction 1 It makes God our portion and then dry bread and cold water with Gods favour and mercy is a sufficient portion to us and our Children Psal 16.5 6. this made Paul content Phil. 4. 2 It doth not only fill our hearts with God but it turnes the desire of the Soul to Gods Ordinances godlinesse will make a man look at the Word as more precious than gold 119.27 and as an hidden treasure that he will part with all for Psal 36.6 7. Psal 63.13 Now we come to the third sort of Lusts the Pride of life Doct. Pride of Life Young and Old are to be weaned from Pride of Life is an inordiate affection of our hearts unto Carnal excellency i. e. to be great in our selves and for our selves a proud man contends with God about
of Antichrist so then the question is Where is this Spirituall Unction alas it is an hard thing for blinde natural men to know but yet as the Ambassador of Persia said Quot Senatores tot reges so where you see a company of Christians Quot Christiani tot reges so many Kings Priests and Prophets Psal 45.16 the children of the New Testament shall be answerable to the Fathers of the Old and shall be endued with suitable graces they are Princes in what part of the World soever they are Princes judging of things in difference indued with a Princely spirit to overcome the World and Sathan and their own Corruptions they have a Priestly Office to pray and instruct to sacrifice themselves and their Families to God c. therefore if you find such a company verily there is the Church of God and let not the Separatists say you have prophane persons among you We say though they be amongst us yet they are not of us and therefore that hinders us not from being the Church therefore whither should we go to seek the Church but where this Unction is Vse 3 For all you that have received this Unction it is not for Kings and Princes to be digging in the earth it is not for Priests and Prophets to be ignorant and blinde and dumbe 1 Cor. 6.1 to 7. Paul is confident that the meanest Christian is a Judge What a shame is it for a Christian at every temptation to be carried Captive What a shame is it for Kings to soyl and besmut themselves for Saul to cast away his shield was a vile dishonour so for Christians to be soyled and carried away with every temptation for you to cast away your shield as if you had not been annoynted is a great dishonour It becomes Christians to fight like Princes and to be victorious and to judge like Kings so walk as Priests of the high God know how to pray how to instruct your Families how to offer all your wayes to God all your Families you are not to be only holy day Priests but daily Priests Vse 4 It may teach every Christian that stands in need of healing or suppleing your stiff spirits you need balme and oyle for healing the wounds of your souls and suppleing and softning your stiff spirits why here is an unction that will heal thy wounds and soften thy heart intreat God that he would shed abroad his spirit into thy heart that he would heale thy spirit soften thy heart and chear thy soule look up to the holy one he is able to powre floods of consolation on thee and establish thy soul in peace do wee find our spirits hard and stiff and bound our spirits very straight and stand in need of a great deal of alacrity why yet this spirituall unction will so inlarge thee and supple thee that thou shalt find thy selfe helped and quickned that thou mayest do things not weakly but with power and life so if we find corruptions so strong that we know not how to overmaster them there is an unction from this holy one able to strengthen us against them intreat God therefore to power it down upon thy soul so doe you want power and life in Gods ordinances why in any need look up to him Vse 5 Here is a ground of much consolation that God is pleased to bestow such a mercy such a blessing as this upon us how are we bound to Christ that is pleased to annoynt us with the same oyntment wherewith himselfe was anoynted it is a ground of much consolation Christians are often called to great imployments which if they look on themselves they see themselves altogether unfit for such as Moses said send by whom thou wilt send but is not this unction able to make us Kings and Priests we know where to find supply and if God call us to more imployments that is our comfort that we have an unction which is able to fit us for every work and imployment God shall call us to Vse 6 Of exhortation to every Christian not to rest contented in an empty name of Christianity ●●ll you get this spirituall unction rest not in any known strength but what you receive by this spirit otherwise you shall find much want of help Matth. 25.1 to 10. the wife Virgins had their oyle continually ready and prepared whensoever Christ came but the foolish Virgins some oyle they had some common gifts and graces but they were spent and it was too late to seek for oyle when the Bridegroome came so do not only hear the Word but labour to find some oyle dropt into your souls that so in stormes you may find the life and comfort of the spirit 1 JOHN 2.20 But ye have an unction from the holy one and ye know all things IN these words the Apostle prescribes a means to preserve them against seducements and the first means is the unction they had received from the holy one which is a comparison from the legall oyntment this spirit of Grace should be as an Antidote against all Antichrists Now we come to speak of the vertue of this unction Doct. The little Children of God by vertue of the oyntment of the spirit of Grace they know all things So Verse 27. so that there is an abiding oyntment and so sufficient that they need not be taught more or better things than it will teach them For Explication 1 Consider the subject yee know all things This universality of Christian knowledge is amplified by the subject yee know all things 1 For the desire of their hearts they desire to know all things necessary to salvation Acts 10.33 this is the frame and disposition of a converted heart to know all things and so great is the desire of Gods Children to know this that they desire to know those things that are most against them 1 Sam. 3.17 Eli knowing by Samuels lingring that he had some terrible message yet he would know it and urged him by a curse to declare it and when he had told him yet saith he Good is the Word of the Lord so that a godly heart desires to know all the Will of God especially if it belongs to him though it be never so bitter it is contrary with a carnall heart few are willing to know all things especially if they be against them and crosse their lusts they would not know it so Mark 6.12 in Herod so Isa 13.10 they were men of that frame that would have the Prophet speak pleasing things Mal. 2.11 2 As in their desire so in the preparation of their hearts they know it so that if God reveal his Will at any time they have hearts ready to hear it and apprehend it better Joh. 10.4 5. there is a vertue in them whereby they discern betwixt the truth of Christ and false Doctrin so the noble Bereans were more noble because they received the truth with all readinesse and fear Acts 17.11 12. they searched the Scriptures so
at first by Christ and after by his Apostles Luke 1.2 There are three Graces especialy whereby Gods Word is said to continue in us for it is not enough for a Christian to have it rest in his judgement and assent the Devil himself knows and beleeves that Antichristian Doctrin is a lye and he knows the truth yet because he continues not in the truth he hath neither fellowship with the Father nor the Son nor any hope of Salvation therefore there are some more speciall Graces whereby the Word is said to continue in us as David saith I have hid thy word in my heart Psal 119.11 1 By faith 1 Thess 2.13 when ye received the Word ye received it not as the word of man but of God c. men then receive the Word aright when they beleeve it and when they think it effectuall to Salvation able to save their souls Jam. 1.21 when we receive it as the word of life when we receive it as our stock and portion then it dwels in our hearts by faith let a man receive the Word as true only and not as good it will not continue in him the Devils receive it as true but do not receive it as good but think it mischievous to them and therefore they get no good by it 2 It dwels in our Consciences by an holy awe and fear of this Word unless the Word awe us and rule in our hearts we have no fellowship with it Psal 119.161 the heart is taken for the Conscience in the Old Testament we read not of the word Conscience although his heart stood in awe of Princes as when he cut off Sauls skirt yet it was the Word that over-awed him that he would not hurt him this awe of the Word over-awes that authority we might use to evill so Job when he had it in his hand to do wrong yet the fear of God kept him from doing any wrong Job 31.13 14 15. even to the least servant or maid he had Jer. 32.40 3 Obedience keeps the Word in our lives and our lives in the Word Teach me O Lord the way of thy statutes and I shall keep it to the end Psal 119.32 if a man take liberty to live sometimes by the Word sometimes beside it he will break off from fellowship Herod for a while kept an awe of John but in his life he would not exercise it therefore he shaketh off John and his word and cleaves to his lust so that the Word abides in us by faith fear and obedience Q. What is meant by continuing in the Son and in the Father A. 1. It implies communion with them a man cannot continue in them without communion with them 2 It implies perseverance in them for ever so that he that hath the Word abiding in him hath fellowship with the Son he hath Christ for his Saviour his Brother his King Priest and Prophet and he hath God for his Father an All-sufficient God blessing him with all blessings He shall persevere in this estate for ever What are the Reasons why such continue in the Son and in the Father Reas 1 From the intercession of Christ Joh. 17.20 21 22. without which we neither could have fellowship with them nor eternal life Christ himselfe hath prayed for this and doth and he was heard alwayes Joh. 11.42 therefore when he prays that all they that believe in his Word may be one with him and with the Father they shall have union with them and glory everlasting and so vers 24. Obj. You will say Christs intercession for himself was not sometime heard did not he pray that the Cup of his Passion might passe from him A. He prayed against it and yet did drink it but he prayed conditionally if it might stand with his Fathers Will therefore he had his desire because he fulfilled Gods will Hebr. 5. Secondly He prayed not so much that he might not taste of it as that he might not be over-whelmed by it and so he was supported by his eternall God-head so that he was saved in death and from death therefore Christ having prayed for our union with him and eternall glory we shall attaine it Reas 2 From the effectuall power of found heavenly Doctrin it is the power of God to Salvation it is called the arm of the Lord Joh. 12.38 it is called the glorious ministration of the Spirit 2 Cor. 3.8 2 Corinth 10.4 5. Jam. 1.21 so that this Doctrin is the Ministration the mighty power of God to conveigh to us the Spirit of God which gives us fellowship with the Father and the Son and eternal life the breath of the Word breathes the Spirit of God into us and makes us live spiritually here and gloriously hereafter Vse 1 May shew us what an hard thing it is to persevere and abide in the Doctrin of the Apostles which appears from this strong exhortation one would think that the honesty and purity of the Word should prevail with us to cleave and abide in their Doctrin but yet we see that is not enough but the Holy Ghost useth as strong motives here as any can be he knows the World might over-reach us some come and tell us if we continue in the Word we shall lose our Friends and Goods and may be our Life and why then will you be singular now seeing that the World offers so largely to with-draw us therefore he gives a farre larger offer such an offer as all the World cannot give he out-bids the World and even promises Fellowship with the Father and the Son or Eternall life therefore that we might be established against all the subtilties of the World he offers us such Promises as may eternally establish us in the truth Vse 2 Exhorts us to take hold of this Doctrin while we may have it if we preach no other Doctrin but what hath been delivered from the beginning why then if you would have fellowship with the Father and the Son and eternall glory cleave to this Word abide in it receive it with Faith and fear and expresse it in obedience Lord thou hast the words of eternall life therefore whither should we go from it Prov. 19.16 he that keeps the Commandement keeps his own soul but he that regards not his wayes whether he walk according to this rule or no he shall dye What encouragement would it be to keep a Pill if the Physician should say keep this and you keep your life cast it up and you dye why truly such is the Word of Christ keep it and you keep your life but if you despise the Commandement care not how you live you shall certainly dye this is the promise that if we receive and keep this word we shall not only keep a long life but even a life for ever and ever that is a promise God hath given you even eternall life why this is more than all the World can give this is an argument that countervails all other Arguments Vse 3 Of
Brethren is a known and undoubted evidence that we are passed from death to life What is it to love our Brethren Love is an affection whereby we desire communion one with another and communication of good one to another A man in nature prizeth his Brethren and will do more for them then any other So it is in grace Acts 4. ult 2.42 44. Phil 1.2 We must affect to be of one heart Eph. 3.3 4. There must be brotherly equality if we be Brethren You are of the same Father Gal. 6.26 one Mother one Seed 1 Pet. 1.23 one Inheritance 1 Pet. 1.4 We will desire to communicate brotherly offices to the inward man Rom. 2.11 12. and to the outward man if need be Acts 2 44. Reas 1. From the naturall pronenesse which is in our nature to strangenesse envy c. We doe not naturally seek any mans good but our own or so far forth as reacheth our own ends 2 From the affection of every mans heart to liberty Now a man delights onely in such company as are like himselfe because otherwise he is restrained If Gods people be the men of your delight and counsell you were never so well as wirh them Psal 115.115 16.3 This is a sign we are passed from death to life 3. From a mans backwardnesse of communication of brotherly offices Gal. 6.10 4 From the great distance that is between us and the love of our Brethren and how many steps there are before we come to it Matth. 5 3. to 9. Vse 1 Of tryall of our own estates whether we are in a state of death or life It is one of the plainest notes in Scripture and most evident Gal. 6.10 If our love run in an equall channell to all men if we know not Gods people we know not Christ 1 John 3.1 2. If you know them how doe you affect them Do you think it were good if the Town were cleansed of them Gen. 49.4 5 Psal 101 we are not as yet born of God Obj. Doe not many love Gods children and honour them and yet are not the children of God Gen. 27.29 Acts 5.13 That they did not joyn with them was a signe that they were not born of God Gen. 39.1 2 3. 2 To convince the doctrine of doubting Papists who say a man cannot know himselfe to be in a state of grace Eccl. 9.1 2. No man can know it by outward things They say here by knowledge is meant conjecturall knowledg not certain knowledge Answ This is a contradiction A man lyes if he saith he knowes a thing and is not certain of it There is no peace of conscience in this Religion 3 To exhort such as know not yet that they are passed from life to death to labour to love the Brethren Prov. 13.20 4 Of consolation to every soul that hath nothing in this world but this they love the Brethren This is such a thing as upon which thou mayest build a certain knowledge that thou art passed from death to life and therefore thou mayst take comfort He that loveth not his Brother abideth in death The Apostle in the former words did imply the world was in death for want of love And left any should think that he did but imply it and not directly expresse it he sets it down expresly Here is a description of a man that loves not his Brother 1 He is in death 2 Abides in death By death is meant the same that was meant in the former part of the verse Abiding implyes not only a being in that estate but continuance and residence in it Doct. The want of love to any of our Brethren is a sign of abidance in the state of damnation or in an unregenerate and carnall estate And he saith not he that hates but he that loves not and he saith not brethren but brother any or every brother Mat. 18.6 Offend not one of these little ones Christs little ones are such as have but little grace and great corruption Reas From the want of love that is found in such a one towards God and that is an argument of being in a state of death If a man love God in obedience to his commandements he should love his brother by the same commandement That commandement which requires me to love one Brother requires me to love all Jam. 2.10 11. Breake one commandement break all for who gave one gave all whoso neglects offices of love to one performes none to any nor to God It is a note of sincerity that a man hates all sin as well as one Psal 119.101 104 For it is an argument of love when there is no Brother or Sister but we enlarge our affections towards them Gal. 3.28 So much want of love so much hypocrisie 2. From the bitter or deadly root of want of love to this or that Brother It springs from two occasions 1. Either from his infirmities in himselfe Or 2. From spirituall injuries to our selves True a man will say such Christians I would away with but they have such unsavoury corruptions The first root of this is the condemnation of the generation of Gods people If a man may condemn this or that man for this or that corruption he may come to condemn the best of Gods servants because the best of Gods servants may be in the same failings for which thou hatest such a Brother Prov. 30.12 The greatest of Gods servants have shamefully faln David Peter Lot Noah The second root is from the enmity against Gods free justification of sinners Take away this and you take away all Christian religion If you love not a Brother because of some infirmities you doe overthrow the free justification of Gods grace of a sinner For God that hath justified the greatest hath justified as well the least as freely and as fully and wilt thou justifie some and condemn others God condemns none Rom. 8.1.33 34. If Christians doe beleeve the free justification of sinners then let us imitate our Father which is in heaven justifie whom he justifies The third bitter and deadly root If there be the least sparke of grace in his heart all his corruptions are his enemies and he but a shrimp in grace and hath many enemies What good nature is this when a man would love a man if he had no enemies but when he hath enemies and such as are ready ever and anon to beat him down he cannot love him The fourth want of a member like spirit for the more naked unseemly or deformed any member is the body is the more carefull of it if it may be it shall be healed if not it shall be covered 1 Cor. 12.23 24. If we want this it flowes from want of a member like spirit 2 Somtimes neglect of our Brother springs from some personall injury done to our selves We cannot love them This springs from this root want of forgivenesse of our own sins for we pray for forgivenesse upon this ground Mat. 6.12 15. Our Saviour
to send Christ Rom. 5.8 John 3.16 Christ saith God so loved the world that he gave hu only begotten Son into the world c. Reas He dyed for us to make an atonement for us Christ did not come unsent he was sent before he went Heb. 5.45 Quest How can this be seeing the death and blood of Christ is the Originall of our reconciliation Rom. 5.10 Rom 3.24 25. Answ 1. Christ by his blood wrought reconciliation because God loved us before yet we loved not him before for there must be a mutuall fellowship in reconciling us to God 2 Cor. 5.16 not so much in reconciling himselfe to the world in the 20. verse he saith we pray you in Christs stead which shewes you that Christs blood did not so much reconcile God to us as us unto God that we seeing the blood of Christ shed for us we might be stirred up to love God who out of the abundance of his compassion takes a course that we may be brought unto him 2 Because though he did bear love to us before yet his love was secret and he did not breake forth into a manifestation of his love to us untill he sent his Son into the world though God did love us with an everlasting love Jer. 31.3 yet God did not manifest it to our conscience neither could it stand with his Justice so to doe untill he had given his Son the Lord Jesus Christ to dye for us Quest What kind of love was it that God bare to the world in that he sent his Son Tit. 3.5 was it his love towards mankinde by which he did love the whole world or a peculiar love which he bare to the people of the Election of grace Joh. 3.16 The Arminians say that he bare a love to the World and this love was generall to all before the sending of Christ and therefore all may be saved The truth is that God bare a love to the world a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 reaching to all but he bare an antient love to his owne people had he onely bore a generall love as they say all men might have perished for if God sent his Son that whosoever believed should be saved was it in the will to believe or not yes say they he gave them means but they might will or not if this was a generall love then there was a greater love then the sending of Christ which is contrary to Scripture Greater love then this hath no man Vse 1. Let us magnifie the love of God to us in Christ we esteeme much of ancient love it like wine is the best God loved us before he did send Christ before the foundation of the world was laid Jer. 31.3 This love was without reason on our parts for we were enemies to him 2 This exhorts us to accept this love shall God send his Embassadors 2 Cor. 5.20 and shall we still stand out with God 3 If God so loved the world we ought to love one another Doct. God sending his only begotten Son into the world is a manifest token of Gods love to us John 3.16 God so loved the world this love is manifest 1 If we consider that God doth not only send us bodily bread every day but the bread of eternall life not so much the gift as the giver himself 2 Consider upon what tearmes we stood with God when he sent us his on Even then when we provoked him to his face and were enemies to his Majesty Rom. 5.8 3 Consider we that God looked not at the Angels but the seed of man God passed over Angels left them in chains of darknesse Heb. 2.16 but of man he said shall he fall and not rise again Consider we were strangers and enemies to God dead in sins and trespasses and so we did neither desire nor deserve love yet us he hath reconciled Col. 1.21 Ephes 2.4 5. 4 Consider Christ who was sent had it been a morsell of dayly bread it had been a great mercy but in Christ he sent an horn of salvation Psal 89.19 Luke 1.69 Consider Christ not as a servant but a Son and a well-beloved Son in whom he was well pleased and such a Son as thought it no blasphemy to think and say he was equall with God Phil. 2.5 6. 5 Consider whither God sent his Son into the world our salvation could not be wrought in heaven it was no place for suffering no place for a man to be born in therefore needfull that Christ should come down Consider the world did not put on Christ that honour which was due unto him but rather dishonour a Crown of thorns Consider the more the world knew him the more they hated him in heaven they adore and honour him but you have known me and hated me saith he John 15.18 This is the heir come let us kill him Vse 1 Learn hence to acknowledge the Divinity of the nature of Christ he is called the only begotten Son of God therefore of the same nature with God Phil. 2.5 6. 2 This shewes you the love of the Father to us in that he sends his Son to be a ransom for us when all other signes fail you if God give you his only Son that is a true token of Gods love Eccles 9 1. 3 This shewes us the woeful misery that we naturally ly in when as Christ must come down from heaven or else we could not have heen saved no man nor Angel could doe it 4 This should stir us all up to accept of this love of God that God sends forth such a manifest token of his love to us and shall not we accept of it We should accept a small gift from a Prince 5 To perswade us all that if God gives Christ he will deny us nothing Rom. 8.32 we may goe boldly to the throne of grace and he will fill our mouthes 6 This should cause us to returne back again to God manifest pledges of our love to him let us give body and soul to God since he hath not been wanting in his love to us doth not love require love Psal 116.12 Train we up our children to know God and draw we as many as we can to know God there is no greater dishonour to God then to refuse this manifest love of God The end for which God sent his Son into the world was that we might live through him Doct. That our life was the end why God sent Christ Or thus God therefore sent Christ that we might live by him Joh. 1.10 11. Quest What is the life that Christ came to procure for us Answ 1. A life of Gods favour in poynts of Justification sanctification and consolation that is the chiefest life for the soul of a christian the manifestation of Gods love to his conscience though God loved us before he sent Christ yet we knew not so much there is a life of Justification Rom. 5.18 that is the pardon of our sins In his favour is life Psal 30.5
when other mens hearts shall quail and tremble for fear and shake like the leafs of a tree Isa 7.2 then a loving Christian may lift up his head with joy because then he knows his love shall be consummate and when others are ashamed of their riches learning and honors he is not ashamed of his love a loving Christian is safe and bold both in life and death look at all the straights of a Christian if they be upon any ground it s for want of love he that neglects this duty of love God and his conscience will take him by the throat and exact the due debt because he walked with a private spirit in the publique world whereas if we doe but walk in a spirit of love and helpfulnesse to our brethren and learn to walk with a publique spirit neglecting private respects the Devill and thy conscience shall find nothing to accuse thee of but thou shalt meet death and judgement in the face without fear or shame 1 JOHN 4.18 There is no fear in love but perfect love casteth out fear because fear hath torment he that feareth is not made perfect in love VErse 17. he ●roved that such as love one another may have boldnesse in the day of judgement this he proved 1. From the likenesse to God v. 17. 2. He proves it from the contrariety that is betwixt fear and love There is no fear in love which he proves by an effect of love perfect love casteth out fear and therefore perfect love and fear cannot stand together this he proves by a double argument 〈◊〉 fear 1. Fear hath ●●●ments therefore love a peaceable grace casts out fear 2. Because he that feareth is not perfect in love therefore he that is perfect in love fears not In this 18. verse 1. Observe the estate of a soul troubled with fear and that is a state of torment 2. The unsound and uncomfortable condition of such a soul he is not perfect in love 3. The remedy of this estate perfect love casts out fear 4. The exemption of perfect love from all fear or the comfortable condition of a soul so healed by love There is no fear in love Doct. A fearfull conscience lies in torment Fear hath torment and he speaks of the fear of death but specially of judgement where that fear is there is torment the word translated torment 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is elsewhere so translated Mat. 25. ult The torment here spoken of is such a kinde of torments as hell is not for measure but for kind For the handling of this we may see what the Scripture speaks of this torment in the severall descriptions and metaphors First This torment is sometimes called pricking of conscience Acts 2.37 they were pricked at their hearts with fear and shame for sin though but a little before they scoft at the Apostle v. 13. yet now they were struck with such torments as they knew not what to doe Secondly It s called a wounding of the spirit Prov. 18.14 which wounding is a larger gash then pricking and so implyes more anguish fear and shame Thirdly It is compared to the sting of a Scorpion Rev. 9.5 the Jesuites doe so sting men with torments of hell and horrour of conscience and God gave them not power to heal themselves again hence they thought every thing little enough to satisfie their conscience and so they suck out their estates in building Hospitalls and bestowing on their Cloysters Fourthly The wrath of God in the soul is compared to venomed arrows Job 6.4 Fifthly This torment is called the rending of the heart Joel 2.13 Rend your hearts and not your garments the heart and thoughts are so rent and distracted that one thing will not hang by another David calls this melting of spirit Psal 119.28 as if the heart were like wax and Gods wrath like burning fire therefore a man in this case is in a bitter estate Job 13.26 Thou writest bitter things against me Isa 38.15 I shall goe mourning in the bitternesse of my soul for this the soul is troubled Psal 77. and sorely vexed Psal 6.3 Why doth a soul lying in fear lye in torment Reas 1. Consider this fear in the effects of it this fear sometimes brings men into trembling of body so that all the spirits flie inward 2. If it continue it leads oft times to inward Consumptions of body or burning Agues Hab. 3.16 Psal 30.4 5. 3. Sometimes it causeth terrible dreams which doe amaze and affright us Job 13.14 4. It causeth wearinesse of life so that a soule long exercised with this kind of fear cryes out in bitternesse and heartily wisheth for death Job 7.15 My soul chooseth strangling rather then life if he might have his choyce he would rather choose strangling then life there are worse effects then those proceeding from this fear when Satan sets on withall against us 1. Sometimes Satan so follows us with fears and horrours that though a man be o● a large measure of patience yet he is able to bear no longer but breaks out in impatience Cursed be the day that ever I was born Job 3.1 2 3. and this is a sinfull effect 2. It breeds in some a flying from the presence of 〈◊〉 that they dare not read or pray they are afraid the earth should swallow 〈◊〉 up and God suddenly consume them so Cain when he was pursued wit●●orror of conscience he fled from the presence of God from Adams family from the Church 3. This fear sometimes brings destruction when the soule is so wearied with sence of horrours with cares and watchings that the brain growes frenzy so that you can be able to doe them no good till God puts in his help Psal 88.15 16. This was Hemans case through the terrours of God he was distracted yet when God healed his spirit he grows one of the wisest men upon the earth except Solomon 4. Sometimes upon this fear follows despaire the soul is perswaded it shall never see the light of Gods countenance again but that its utterly cast off Psal 3.6 7. Psal 77. but this was but for a time but sometimes this despair is finall as Judas his was 5. From hence followes sometimes selfe-murther as in Judas Mat. 27. Reas 2. From the properties of this fear its incomprehensible when Job would expresse it he could not tell how to set it forth but O that my afflictions were laid in the ballance Job 6.2 3. Lam. 1.12 13. Is there any sorrow like my sorrow 2. It s insupportable A wounded spirit who can bear Prov. 18.14 the stoutest heart is not able to stand under it 3. It s immoveable nothing in the world is able to remove it no balm can cure the conscience but the bloud of Christ Reas 3. From the causes of this fear which are two 1. The sence of Gods wrath here and the expectation of greater hereafter Psal 90.11 Who knows the power of thy wrath 2. A terrible expectation of violent fire to consume
see in us either to pride on covetousnesse or wrath if we would lye smooth and sure in the building we must pare off all these out-running and swellings of our hearts and so bring 〈◊〉 smooth and even we shall lye sure upon the foundation 1 JOHN 5.11 And this is the record that God hath given to us eternal life c. VErs 7 8. having declared the three witnesses in heaven and three on earth that bear witnesse of the divinity of Christ vers 9.10 he exhorts us to receive their testimony in these 10 11. vers he tels us what this divine record is which he presseth us to believe and this record is threefold 1 Of an heavenly gift eternal life 2 That this life is given us by Christ 3 That this life is given only to believers Doct. Eternal life is the gift of God Here two things are to be opened 1 That the life given us by God in Christ is eternal life 2 That this eternal life is the gift of God 1 It 's eternal life 1 John 3.16 Eternal ab ante because it was given us before the foundation of the world it 's more ancient then the world or mans fall and this was not only purposed in Gods Councel but this was manifestly promised before the world began Tit. 1.2 And The Trinity then concluded that the Lord Christ should be made head of all 2 That all that did believe on him should have eternal life therefore it 's said He chose us in Christ before the foundation of the world Ephes 1.4 and therefore God choosing us as members of Christ he promised to Christ that he would give them all eternal life 2 Tim. 1.9 There was not only a purpose of God but a declaration of the same to Christ of this gift our Saviour speaks John 17 6. Revel 13.8 and this gift is more ancient then our actual vocation for a man is said to be given to Christ when he gives up his heart and service to him but this is given in fulnesse of time but we were given to Christ before we were called to the fellowship of his Spirit and adoption of sons John 6.39 2 It 's called eternal life because the fountain and principles of this life are eternal the Word of God was revealed from eternity and of this Word were we begotten 1 Pet. 1.23 And as in seed there is something more material something more spiritual so in the Word there is both the matter of the word and there is the Spirit of the Word John 3.5 Now we are born of the Spirit and this Spirit in us is a fountain of living water springing up to everlasting life John 4.14 3 The continuance of this life is to everlasting He that believes on Christ shall never dye but have everlasting life John 3.36 John 5.24 and this eternal life is a record which God hath given us of his Son because the gift was given to Christ and througst him as by our Head is the life conveyed to all the members 2 This life is a gift of God Rom. ● 23 All the life we have is Gods gift There is a fourfold life and all given us by God First The life as justification is a free gift Rom. 5.15 we lay all dead in sin now the pardon of all these is the very life of our souls Col. 2.13 Secondly There is a life of holinesse whereby we live to God are for his ●nds and walk by this rule and this life is the free gift of God Ephes 2.4 ● Thirdly There is a life of consolation which is called a mans life 1 Thes 3.7 8. We live if you stand fast he means a life of comfort and this life is given by free grace 2 Cor. 1.4 5. When God so comforts a poor soul he is to be looked at as the Father of mercies and God of all consolation Fourthly There is a life of glory which God hath given us by Christ Rom. 6.23 Reas 1. A minori If our naturall life be Gods gift how much more this spirituall and eternall life Job 10.12 Thou hast granted me life and favour and he speaks of naturall life that is thou in thy favour hast granted me life and preservest it Now if that be a gift of God as it is for it was neither Father nor Mother that could give us life how much more is eternall life the gift of God It was Mephibosheths speech to David 2 Sam. 19.28 What was all my Fathers house but dead men before my Lord the King so take us without Gods gift we were but all dead men before him Now if this naturall life be a gift of God and that of his favour too how much more is this spirituall and eternall life a free gift from God 2. All our life must needs be Gods free gift by removing all that might concur to the making up of our merit of this life Four things must concur to merit which are all wanting in this gift 1. If you would merit you must prevent the other in giving but who hath given to God first Rom. 11.35 and if we give God but his own how then doe we merit 1 Chron. 29.13 14 15. 2. In the nature of merit is required that what we give we should give ●eely not of due debt nor due recompence Luke 17.9 10. If we doe but ou● duties what doe we merit When we have done what we can we have done but our duty and how then doe we merit 3. What merits at Gods hands should be perfect and par● without spot else it deserves nothing Now our best righteousnesse is defiled Isa 46.6 Exod. 28.38 Our best offerings if God did not accept of them in Christs holinesse he might justly reject them 4. In all merit it is requisite that there should be something proportionable betwixt the work and the reward now what proportion is there between naturall life and spirituall and betwixt our life of grace and the life of glory Our sufferings which are the highest part of our obedience they are not worthy to be compared to the eternall weight of glory indeed they work for 〈◊〉 a plentifull recompence of reward 2 Cor. 4.17 But this is through the free gift of God Vse 1. For reproof of Popish merit if eternall life be the free gift of God then the life of grace is not given us of merit ex congru● not this life of glory ex condigno if it be gift then sure we pay no answerable price for it there is no purchase on our part but a gift on Gods part I would know whither this naturall life was given us of merit who d●re say ●e hath merited to be a man rather then a Beast of a Serpent or a Toad and how then can we say our eternall life is of merit Doth not every Christian freely confesse at his first conversion that if God should utterly cast him off and never shew him mercy just and righteous should his proceedings be
And how dare any appear that dare claime grace and glory of merit In the continuance of his faithfull obedience who dare claim the least mercy ex condigno how much lesse eternall life Whereas è contra Gods servants doe not think God beholding to them for their service but they never think themselves more engaged and beholding to God then when he inables them to most service they say with David Who are we that we should be able to offer thus willingly 1 Chron. 29.14 they know every jo● of mercy is free grace every sin pardoned is free grace No Malefactor on earth but if the King send him a pardon he acknowledgeth it to be of the Kings free grace and Royall compassion but yet the Synagogue of Rome will not acknowledge Gods pardon to be of free grace but Gods people acknowledge they are 〈◊〉 but as dead dogs before God and were at not for the free grace of God they had never seen life Vse 2. Of exhortation to all the sons of men that never look after Christ why as ever you desire to see me and that life for ever look up to God for it to derive it from him it is his free gift Every man is a friend to him that giveth gifts Prov. 19.6 Shall we respect Princes so that have but earthly honours and profits to giue that we think it our happinesse to doe them any service and shall we neglect God that hath such great gifts to give even eternall life and a Kingdome of glory it is God that gives us these naturall lives and that gives us power to get wealth Deut. 8.18 nay it s he that gives life of comfort and the life of justification and holinesse and also the life of glory and shall we neglect this great gift and more respect the poor comforts of the world then him in whose hands is our breath and life Skin for skin and all that a man hath will he give for his life he means for his naturall life and shall eternall life lie by like a refuse thing that no man looks after Vse 3. Of tryall whether God hath given us this life or no and this we may discern for the eternity of the gift consider whether there be any eternall life shed abroad in thy heart or not hast thou found any pardon of sins that whereas thou sawest thy soul as a dead dog for want of this life now God hath justified thee from thy sins Why the life of justification is eternall life if he hath once pardoned thy sins he will remember them no more Jer. 31.33 Secondly Hast thou found a spirit of life in thee to obey and serve the Lord Rom. 8.2 Why this is eternall life that will never decay John 17.3 hath God shed abroad the comfort of his Spirit and the joy of the holy Ghost into thy heart which is better then life Psal 63.3 this is eternall life which though it may be sometimes overwhelmed yet it shall spring up again as trees after winter if thou finde none of these works in thee then thou hast no life Vse 4. Of consolation to all those that have received this life if we have found the life of justification in the pardon of our sins the life of holinesse in our Christian obedience if we have found the lively comforts of Gods Spirit Why know this is a life that will never decay this is the record of God himself that the life which he hath given us is eternall life it was given us before we were born and will he take it away when we are born that which he gave us before there was a world he will not take away when the world shall be no more it comes from everlasting principles 3rd therefore it cannot decay if therefore we finde this life in us we may be assured that God hath given us this life will preserve it to eternity if it be eternall how can it decay Therefore let us walk worthy of this eternall life and pray with David Consider me Lord if there be any way of wickednesse in me and lead me in the way everlasting Psal 139. ult Sinfull lusts are dead lusts and what hath eternall life to doe with dead lusts keep your hands off from a sinfull carnall life but lay fast hold on eternall life 1 Tim. 6.12 get sure possession of it and let neither Satan not the world wrest it out of your hands 1 JOHN 5 11. the latter part And this life is in his Son Doct. THe Eternall life that God hath given us is laid up for us in Jesus Christ John 11.25 26. Col. 3.3 John 14.6 This life is fourfold of Justification Sanctification Consolation and Glorification All these are laid up in Christ Jer. 23.6 He is the Lord our righteousnesse Psal 4.1 2. For them altogether see 1 Cor. 1.30 He is made our Wisdome Righteousnesse Sanctification and Redemption Our Redemption not onely from the guilt eternall and punishment of sin but from all the afflictions both inward and outward that Gods servants he exposed unto as for inward temptation in sicknesse and griefs c. Col. 3.3 Your life is hid with Christ in God It s sometimes under a veil of corruptions sometimes of affliction but yet laid up in Christ Quest How is our life said to be laid up in him Answ 1. Because he hath received it for us from God the Father to give unto us John 5.21 26. 1 Thes 5.9 10. He hath appointed us to salvation through Jesus Christ that so whether we remain alive or die yet we may live in Christ 2. Christ hath purchased this life for us 1 Thes 5.9 10. the Father hath not onely appointed us life but he hath appointed it through the death of Christ John 10.10 I am come that my sheep may have life and that they may have it in abundance and this is by giving his life for us 3. It s laid up in Christ as one that prepares it for us and us for it Col. 1.12 it s he that makes us meet to be made partakers of the Inheritance of the Saints in light that whereas before we were unfit now he hath adorned us and made us fit Spouses for himselfe which he doth by turning us from darknesse to light by giving us of his Spirit by dispensing himselfe to us in his Sacraments and Christian communion wherein all the members receive nourishment from the head Eph. 4.16 and as he thus prepares us for eternall life so likewise he prepares a place for us John 14.2 3. 4. It s reserved for us principally in himselfe notwithstanding the communication of it dayly to us Jude 1. we are said to be preserved in Jesus Christ to life all our life of grace here and of glory hereafter is preserved in Christ First Because all the claim of eternall life is laid up onely in him we neither desire nor beg any pardon of sin or any grace or comfort or glory but through Jesus Christ
Christ liveth in me and the life I now live I live by faith in the Son of God live upon Christ daily fetch all your help and comfort and life from him and for eternall life seeing it is laid up in him let us lay claim to it in his Name and lay up the security of all our life in him that so though it be unsetled yet in him it may be sure 1 JOHN 5.12 He that hath the Son hath life and he that hath not the Son hath not life THis Verse contains the third record God hath given us of his Son and that is the subject of this eternall life to whom this life is given and that is onely to the true believers He that hath the Son hath life and he that hath not the Son hath not life Doct. Vpon our having or not having of Christ depends our having or not having life Prov. 8.35 36. He that findeth me findeth life but he that hateth me loveth death Eph. 2.11 12. Without Christ we are aliens from life and strangers from the Covenant Quest Why doth our life depend upon the having of Christ Reas 1. From the insufficiency of all the creature to give life Heb. 10.1 4. For it is impossible that the bloud of Bulls or Goats should take away sin Besides should we die for our sins our selves yet we could not satisfie for our sins because we could never overcome death neither can our obedience to the law give us life Gal. 3.21 23. David speaks it fully in the Name of Christ Psal 22.29 No man can keep his soul alive he cannot keep naturall life much lesse a spirituall yea Adam in innocency was taught to look for the preservation of his life out of himselfe and therefore he was to eat of the tree of life implying that the maintenance of that life he then lived could not have been in himselfe but he must eat of the tree of life a type of Christ How much lesse could Adam fallen keep this life in him Quest Why is the creature insufficient to give life Answ 1. From the preciousnesse of that price which was to be paid for our life the matter of our justification is the price paid for our redemption Psal 49.8 The redemption of souls is precious and it is beyond the power of the creature it was onely the obedience of Christ as suffering to the death that could give a sufficient price for us and none but Christ could doe it because he thereby declared himselfe mightily to be the Son of God 2. For our life of Sanctification and Consolation that proceeds from the Spirit of God within us springing up in us to everlasting life John 16.7 John 4.10 Now its onely Christ that can give us this life it s he that must ascend up to heaven and send down the Comforter it s he that sets open this living Fountain 3. For eternall life that can onely be given by Christ in regard of the difficulty of it above all humane reach no man is able to deliver his soul from the grave Psal 49.7 8. Death is the passage to eternall life now for a man to die and aftewards to raise up himselfe is above created power John 11.25 Reas 2. From the good pleasure of God that hath appointed That in Christ should all fulnesse dwell Col. 1.19 Col. 3.4 All the springs of life flow from him onely there is no deriving of life from any other fountain Vse 1. From hence we may have an evident ground of tryall whereby we may know whether we be alive or dead why if we have the Son we have life if we have not the Son we have not life For the understanding of this we are to consider 1. What it is to have Christ 2. What it is to have the Son 3. Shew some signes of life For the first we are said to have Christ four wayes 1. By way of service 2. By way of purchase 3. By way of Covenant 4. By way of acceptance 1. By way of service or worship a man is said to have God that worships God as some Princes are chosen by the peoples adoration so by our adoring of God we have God Exod. 20.3 Thou shalt have no other Gods but me that is Thou shalt worship no other Gods but me if thou worship me you have me Psal 45.11 12. For he is the Lord thy God and worship thou him we receive Christ to be our Lord by worshipping him This Moses sang at the red Sea Exod. 15.2 3. to exalt and worship God makes him our God the worship of God is performed in our minds in our wills in our live● 1. In our mindes we then have Christ when we have him in high estimation Cant. 5.10 My Beloved is white and ruddy the chiefest of ten thousand who is like unto thee among the gods Psal 8.7 Exod. 15.10 11. when the soul prizeth Christ above all then we have him this is the difference between spirituall and earthly things a man may prize gold and silver and riches and yet not have them but we never prize spirituall things especially Christ but we have them and this is worship for all worship stands in exalting another and debasing my selfe now if I give Christ divine esteem its divine worship now when the soul thus esteems Christ as the highest and debaseth himselfe to the lowest it hath Christ John 1.27 John the Baptist he so advanceth Christ that in comparison of him he thinks himselfe unworthy to loose the lachet of his shoe no mortall man so great but another may be worthy to loose his shoe but Christ is so highly advanced that we are not worthy to doe him the meanest service when a mans heart thus advanceth Christ and thinks himselfe most unworthy of the meanest service about him much more of having Christ himselfe when once we have Christ in such high esteem we have him indeed and this high prizing of Christ may a poor soul have when it can expresse little else and this is an evident argument of our having Christ when we can think the worst thing in Christ honourable and precious this was Moses his faith that he lookt at the very reproaches and afflictions of Christ as greater riches then the treasures of Egypt Heb. 11.25 26. 2. We honour Christ in our minds when we esteem nothing more worthy knowing then Christ 2 Cor. 2.2 For I determined to know nothing among you save Jesus Christ and him crucified John 17.3 and to know Christ is to know the vertue and worth of Christ as Paul knew him Phil. 3.7 8 9. that is to esteem all his best outward priviledges as base and filthy in respect of the knowledge of Christ an evident sign that Paul had him In Nature we never have a thing but we desire to know the worth and use of it Phil. 3.10 so every one that hath Christ desires to know what the power of his death is and the vertue of his Resurrection and
after another pitch one sin upon another till he be burthened with our sins and what parts and gifts and liberties God gives them they abuse to Gods dishonour And is not this monstrous rebellion for poor creatures to make God serve a wearisome service Wonder not therefore if he say Rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft 1 Sam. 15.26 As a Witch gives her soul to the devil to have her own liberty for a while so rebellious sinners are at league with the devil and hel to serve their lusts whilst they live 2 As a witch makes the devil serve her all her life but at death she serves the devill So God shall serve them all their life time but at death they would serve God and then they will do him the best service they can Why do you think God will accept our service when we dye when we have made him serve us all our life time 2 To have Christ for our Prince is not onely to serve him but we must give him Princely service such service as becomes so royall a Prince Mal. 1.8 Serve not him with blinde and lame sacrifices but with the best and fattest crucifie your fattest and dearest lusts to him let him have your best parts and best affections righteous Abel brought to God the firstlings of his flock and of the fat thereof Gen. 4.4 So let God have our first years and the strength of your affections give not him your old decrepit age 2 Sam. 24.24 I will not offer to God saith David that which cost me nothing Araunah indeed gave them all freely to the King like a King If a man give to a King he must give as to a King he must give as a King Nay saith David if you as a King give those things to me must not I then who am a King give as a King to that King of Kings Let God have all you have give up your selves and all your families to him For application Would you know then whether you have life Why if you have Christ you have life and if you would know whether you have Christ or no you must consider God hath exalted him to be both Saviour and Prince Dost thou finde thy heart looking up to him for help in all thy miseries Then thou hast him as a Saviour If in cases when thou knowest not what to doe yet thy eyes are towards him Why this very looking towards him is of an healing nature as was the looking towards the brazen Serpent Numb 21.9 The Conies are but a feeble folk and yet they make their nests in a rock so it 's good for us in our distresses to have recourse to the rock that is higher then we Again consider are there any lusts in us that we desire to be spared in and would not be saved from Why then we have not Christ for our Saviour So consider Have we Christ for our Prince Do we subject every thought unto him Dost thou not entertain an evill thought if they rush in upon thee dost thou strive to thrust them out Then thou hast Christ for thy Prince But if thou findest evil thoughts in thy heart and sufferest them to rest in thee Dost thou make God to serve a wearisome service from moneth to moneth and year to year and over burthen his patience and mercy Then Christi not thine If thou lookest at him as thy Prince he should have the best service thou couldst afford him A third head of signes whereby we may know whether we have Christ or no is exprest in the text He that hath the Son hath life For we may as well argue from having of life that we have the Son as from the having of the Son that we have use they are reciprocall he that hath the Son hath life and he that hath life hath the Son This Life is fourfold Of Justification Of Sanctification Of Consolation and Of Glorification If we have good evidences of the three former we may have assurance of the latter The signes of life are of three sorts our spirituall life may be discerned three wayes By the causes By the effects By the properties For the causes the holy Ghost gives us three causes of our spirituall life which if we finde we may assure our selves that we have life and so consequently we have the Son 1 Cause of our spirituall life is Gods own good pleasure Of his owne will hath he begot us Jam. 1.18 This St. John proves by denying all other causes of our begetting to life John 13 Not of bloud that is not of parentage for godly parents may have wicked children though Gods commandement do much yet it is not from their good parentag● but from Gods pleasure in the covenant Nor of flesh that is not of corrupt nature nor of the will of men that is not of the will of our best friends that desire it and pray for it unlesse God set in with all those of his good pleasure he shall not have life Ezek. 16.6 It was od that said to us when we were in our bloud Live This is an eviden● signe of the life of grace Such a mans heart acknowledgeth all the grace he hath to be of Gods good pleasure Take a naturall man he thinks well of him elf that he hath alwayes had a good nature and towardly and hopefull and all his friends could say no lesse But now a regenerate Christian acknowl●dg●th that he had no heart to goodnesse by nature onely some outward correspondency towards his friends to please them but he acknowledgeth what Paul doth Gal. 1.15 16. When it pleased God to call me by his grace and to reveale Christ in me then I lived but not before A living soul never attributes any thing to his good nature or towardlinesse but when it pleaseth God to call him to his grace A second cause of life is a word of promise for all that are of Abraham are not the Children of Abraham onely the seed of promise such as are begot of a word of promise as Isaac was and least you should think it belongeth to Isaac onely he makes it common to all the elect that they are all children of promise Gal. 4.28 But yet Isaac had the peculiar in that even his birth was by promise to Abraham and Sarah But the Apostle would thereby inferre that all our spirituall birth is by a word of promise Here therefore try thy life thou sayst thou livest but what word of promise wert thou begot of Faith comes by hearing Rom 10 17. Gal. 3.5 There is some word of promise dispears●d in the word preached which the soul layes hold of and is thereby knit to Christ by faith Indeed many a good soul cannot tell what word of promise he was first begot of yet sure it was by a word of promise and though thou dost not know this promise yet there is no Christian but he sustains himself by some promise which shews plainly that he was bred
a dead heartednesse to the world For a man to rise early and sit up late follow his work hard take much pains is not a thing to be discommended Prov. 10.14 Prov. 31.27 It 's commended in the good Housewife even the greatest Princesse may not eat the bread of idlenesse then we see diligence in worldly businesse may well stand with grace but yet the same person must be dead to the world his heart must be set on things above these are not his life that is laid up in Christ Col. 3.1 2 3. His heart is crucified to the world Gal. 6.14 Though his employment be in the world yet his conversation is in heaven Phil. 1.20 Prov. 6.5 6. It 's made a part of wisdome to be as busie Ants gathering and laying up but all the while his hands are there his heart is in heaven he doth things in obedience to God by the rule of his Word and for his freedome in Gods service another may do the same work with the same care and successe and yet the heart far unlike 3 The love of our enemies is a particular virtue of Gods Saints Matth. 5.45 to 47. Now this very grace hath in it contrary works in our heart it 's like fire and water both naturally our hearts are very cold and hard and frozen like ice towards our enemies but Christ comes and thawes these frostlings and warms us with compassion towards them that his heart oftentimes mourns for them to see them take such unjust courses against them who have not wronged them and on the other side whereas a naturall man if he see his enemy he boyls in wrath and passion against him love comes like a cool water and cools the heat of passion in our heart For application Wouldst thou know whether thou hast life or no Why hast thou found thy heart affected with joy for Gods goodnesse to thee and yet withall grieved and sorrowfull for thy unkinde dealing with him These are certain evidences of the life of grace in thee You may find many affected and comforted with the Word as Herod was but if this joy were of God it would not vanish away like smoak but would administer so much the more sorrow and mourning for sin though a Christians joy may suddenly vanish yet it alwayes leaves behinde an inward grieving for sin to keep possession for it 2 How do you finde your hearts affected to Gods worship Do you finde your hearts generally unwilling to pray or hear This is an ill signe But if you finde your hearts willing and the more willing the more carefull withall In this case there is life But if a man have fear without joy or joy without fear the heart is not in a good temper 3. How dost thou finde thy heart in tribulation Dost thou finde no consolation supporting thee This is an ill signe But if thou findest with David in the multitude of thy troubled thoughts Gods comforts sustain thy soul Psal 94.18 in this case thou hast life 4. Observe your carriages Doe you bear patiently with bad men and yet not so patiently as to bear with evill Patience and zeal must goe together 5. Are you of a meek gentle and flexible temper It s well But how are you in Gods cause Are you there inflexible and immovable so that you will not abate an hoose in Gods cause Why both these are a life of grace 6. Thou sayst thou art modest and thinkest meanly of thy selfe I but how is this grace coupled for God sends them two and two together as he did his Disciples to ballance one another Hast thou withall a lofty spirit in the wayes of God an heart lift up to heavenly things Why such a spirit hath life The most modest should be most magnanimous 7. Look at worldly businesse Canst thou be diligent in thy calling Why this God requires But how stands thy heart Art thou busie in the world and yet thy heart dead to the world This is a signe of true spirituall life 8. If we finde our hearts so abounding in love that like fire it thawes our cold frozen affections and again like water can cool our hot passionate spirits why this love is a fruit of faith and a signe of life it s a signe our sins are forgiven us if we have hearts forgiving others Now we come to the effects of Sanctification as they are exprest in the life of a Christian and they are answerable to the effects of naturall life The effects of naturall life are principally five 1. Motion When a creature is able to move it selfe in its place to those duties of this or that life it s said to live If a thing move not but by others it s not alive or if it move out of its place it s not alive as a stone thrown up moves downward and fire moves upward but this is not properly life but rather a desire of rest and for things that move they move according to the life they have as a tree a vegetative life a beast a sensitive life a man a rationall life but if a man have a spirituall motion in his proper place it s a signe of spirituall life sometimes a man reacheth out of his place reaching to higher matters and more ambitious thoughts then his calling leads to those move not from an inward principle of grace but from levity of heart so the Pharisees they moved to holy duties but it was for credit others for profit for loaves John 6.26 It s one thing to move to spirituall duties out of an inward inclination and affection to them another thing to move out of levity or desire of eminency it is one thing to move to them out of love another thing to move to them out of respect or credit or profit Why this is but as the moving of a stone out of its naturall gravity Absolom had a marvellous affection to reign and oh that he were King every one should have justice 2 Sam. 15.13 But he was now out of his place and therefore the thing he did was but to attempt the cutting off his Fathers life but that is life properly that moves in its place Again a man may move in his place and yet by an outward principle as a clock moves by the weight that hangs on it so a man may move to some duties of Religion by the weight of the Law or authority hanging on him Again Jehu may move in his calling very busily and yet have no spirituall life so it must be inquired whether the duty a man doth be spirituall or no. And a duty is spirituall 1. When we are sensible of our insufficiency and therefore depend upon Christ that thorough him we may doe all things 2. When we have respect to the Word of God as our rule 3. When we doe all for the glory of God Gal. 2.20 The life I now live I live by faith in the Son of God So far a man lives as he denies
his own sufficiency and depends on Christ for assistance and hath respect to Gods commandements as his rule Psal 119.6 and aimes at the glory of God as his end Zech. 7.5 6. When ye fasted did ye fast unto me at all Did ye it to bring any service or glory to me Did ye it not for your selves for your own safety and deliverance Why if we goe upon such principles we want life till we be in Christ we detain all the graces we have in unrighteousnesse to magnifie our selves to bring about our own ends Obj. May not a good Christian have his heart so dead that he is unfit for prayer or hearing or any holy duty that he is unwilling to pray at all or to receive the Sacrament at all Will you say such a soul is dead because unfit for motion Answ True there may fall such a deadnesse on the heart of a Christian as whereby he may be both unable and unwilling to good duties to which God usually leaves us when we go about things in our own strength and grow selfe-sure but when by this God hath schooled us and taught us thereby that all our life is hid in Christ why in this case God is wont to make us sensible of this sinfull disloyalty and that in us dwells no good thing that we of our selves are unable to doe any good duty and for this distemper we mourn and grieve heartily Why this very sence of deadnesse is an act of spirituall life which in time will work him to a farther dependence on Christ and to be more heedfull of Gods Wo●d and by how much the more we strive thus so much the more life we have A second effect of life is feeding This signe Christ gives John 6.54 Whoso eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood hath eternall life This is not meant of the Sacrament for it was not then instituted but of Christ himselfe but when God hath instituted ordinances this is a sure signe of life if in every ordinance we partake in we feed on Christ on his blood he that feeds not lives not he that forbears his meat and forbears it long he cannot live Indeed for a time a mans stomach may be so distempered that he cannot eat but he recovers himselfe and falls to his food Q. How shall we know whether we feed on Christ A. 1. Doe you finde an inward longing after Christ in every ordinance that nothing will satisfie your soul but Christ he is a sweet savour to you as an hungry man give him silver and gold never so much he is not satisfied unlesse he have meat It was an argument of life in the Spouse that she sought Christ diligently in every ordinance and her soul was grieved because she found him not If a man therefore come to the ordinances and it never troubles him though he goe home without Christ this man feeds not on Christ 2. Feeding implies a finding of sweetnesse and relish in our meat So consider how doe you finde Christ is he a sweet savour to you Doe you finde comfort and strength in him 2 Cor. 2.15 16. Why it s a signe of life that you relish your meat well nay it s a signe of health for a sick man cannot relish his meat and if a Christian finde no relish in the ordinances he complains of it as his sicknesse and looks up to God for help against it 3. In all feeding there is a taking of the meat down we doe not spit it out and when it is down it must continue there we must not cast it out So if Gods Word abide in us and we hide it in our souls by a wise applying of it to our souls Psal 119.11 and therefore give up your selves to be guarded by it this is a signe of life and strength 4. All feeding implies a conversion of the aliment into the thing nourished so that in time our meat is so digested that it s turned into our own nature and this is more then receiving Christ by faith for when we receive him and apply him to our selves this is faith but to be conformed to him in every thing to be fashioned according to his nature this is a farther act of life When a Christian so feeds on Christ that he is of the same nature with him meek lowly and patient as he was this is a signe of life When we are turned into his nature by feeding on him and he into ours why this very feeding on spirituall food implies a spirituall life è contra he that eats not the flesh of Christ hath not Christ he means not a Cannibal-like eating of his very naturall body and blood for if a man should indeed eat the flesh of Christ and suck out his blood it would profit him nothing John 6.63 And this the Capernaites thought a monstrous thing to eat the flesh of Christ therefore it is not the flesh of Christ but the Spirit that quickeneth and giveth life A third effect of spirituall life is growth that which lives grows untill it comes to full maturity and then it either stands at a stay or begins to decay but a spirituall life grows up to full perfection and then it continues in that perfect estate for ever in heaven 1 Pet. 2.2 3.18 Eph. 4.11 12. Col. 2.19 If a Christian grows he lives Obj. Doth not many a Christian stand at a stay or oft-times go back and lose his first love and fruitfulnesse Answ True for a time he may as a living man by sicknesse may lose his strength and vigour and be made unfit for any employment but if he strive to recover himselfe it s a signe of life so a Christian by some corrupt lusts may wast his best graces like a thiefe in a candle but if he be a living Christian he strives against them and prays with David O spare me a little that I may recover my strength before I go hence and be no more seen If he find a decay he considers from whence he is faln and he recovers himselfe and doth his first works Rev. 2.4 Repentance is the purge of the soul it expells out evill lusts and then we doe more at last then at first Rev. 2.17 So then a Christian is continually a growing if not in the bulk of grace yet in more sweetnesse and mellownesse as apples at their full bulk yet grow more ripe and sweet so a Christian though he grow not to more tallnesse yet he may grow to more rootednesse in Christ 2. In more sweetnesse of spirit that is in more love to his Brethren and care of Gods glory A fourth effect of life is this life hath an expulsive power to expell that which is noysome and dangerous to it it will cast it out either by purging or sweat or vomit any noysome humour is burdensome to nature so if grace be living there is a power to expell every thing that is superfluous much more what is noysome and hurtfull nature
flexiblenesse a dead carkase is always stiffe So consider whether you be stiffe or no why if there be life of grace in you That wisdome that is from above is gentle and easie to be entreated James 3.17 There are four things in this plyablenesse First He is easily pleased with any indifferent indevours 1 Pet. 3.8 A gracious man is easily pleased if a man be froward and hard to please it s a signe such a soul is stiffe and dead Secondly If he be offended he is easie to be entreated James 3.17 It s a sign● of a reprobate sence to be implacable Rom. 3.1 Thirdly If he have offended another he is willing to yeeld to that man whom he hath offended so much stiffnesse so much deadnesse Fourthly There is this gentlenesse in every living Christian he is willing to deny himselfe upon unequall terms when he might stand upon his right yet he yeelds his right rather then any offence should grow so Abraham did to Lot Gen. 13.8 9. If we finde it thus we are loving Christians but if men be hardly pleased like Nabal churlish hardly recall'd will not yeeld but stand upon their right to the utmost then they are in a deep swound or dead 3. Whilest the body is alive its savoury a dead carkase is very unsavoury mark your spirits every living Christian is a sweet savour to God his words are savoury Col. 4.5 6. Ephes 4.29 His works savour well in the nostrills of God and man Ephes 5.10 But if your speeches and carriages be unsavoury uncomely and profane are ye not then carnall 1 Cor. 3.3 But a good Christian so carryes himselfe that the bowells of the Saints are refreshed by him Unsavoury speeches and carriages argue the deadnesse of such a soul Vse 2. May shew us the dangerous and uncomfortable condition of every such soul that hath not Christ He that hath not the Son hath not life If we be without Christ we are dead in trespasses and sins Eph. 2.1 5. We may say of men by nature as was said of Senacheribs host Behold ye are all dead carkases 2 Kings 19.35 We by nature have not this act of life Five acts of life we heard of before by Nature we are wanting in them all 1. By Nature we have no spirituall motion all our works are but dead works Hebrewes 9.14 And so dead are we by Nature that we doe no good nay we can doe no good and which is worst of all we will doe no good Rom. 3.12 There is none that doth good no not one All the imaginations of our hearts by nature are wholly evill and that continually Gen. 6.5 And as all his thoughts are evill so are all his words Mat. 12.33 And so are all his works Mat. 7.18 We are as rotten trees we cannot bring forth one good fruit There is not so much in a naturall man as one good thought or word or action that proceeds from faith or is regulated by Gods Word or aymes at Gods glory nay if God should raise us up and inable us to doe good yet we would not Jer. 13. ult Oh Jerusalem wilt thou not be made clean When shall it once be The man that had a bodily disease on him when Christ askt him Wilt thou be made whole He said Yea Lord. But if God ask us the question Wilt thou be made clean we refuse it We finde shifts to put off Christ never could we finde that day wherein we could say This day I would be a Christian but we are either almost perswaded to be Christians or else it must not be this day as bad debtors they would not have the creditors set them a day lest they should break it so wee would be spared from setting God a day for surely we would break it indeed when we are pressed with some fore sicknesse indangering death what say we O! If God would but once restore me to health againe all the world should see I would become a new man and yet when he was in health he said I will seek God and turne to him in sicknesse and thus we put God off from Winter to Summer from Spring to Harvest when we are sick we promise amendment if God will send us health but why not now Doe you know whether ever you shall have health or no And will you hazard your soules And therefore God expects that in afflictions we should seek him 2. They feed not on Christ which was a signe of life but as God said of his superstitious people Isa 44.20 the same may be said of every naturall man He feedeth upon ashes a deceitfull heart hath turned him aside that he cannot deliver his soule nor say Is there not a lye in my right hand Every naturall man hath an idoll that he sets up in his heart and whoever he be that feeds not on the living God feeds upon ashes It is taken from children that for some evill humour delight to be ●●●bling upon ashes and coals So every naturall man he feeds upon ashes that is upon dry and unsavoury meat that will not profit the soule for the soul is spirituall and fed upon spirituall food profits and pleasures and honours are no more fit meat for the soul then ashes for the body Solomon complaines of the vanity of mankinde Eccl. 3.21 Who knoweth the spirit of a man that goeth upward or the spirit of a beast that goeth downward Who knows Who considers or takes it to heart that his soule goes to a better place then the beast Who provides better for his soul then the beasts Doe not they all feed on worldly comfort who should feed on immortall food We by nature all of us feed on ashes so that we cannot deliver our soules and say Is there not a lye in my hand Is not this a false course a lying vanity Will not profits and honours deceive me A seduced heart hath deceived him 3. A third act of spirituall life is growth Now a carnall man is far from growing in grace apt is he to grow in sin to proceed on in evill to increase in ungodlinesse 2 Tim. 3.17 Jerem. 9.3 From coveteousnesse to ambition from ambition to voluptuousnesse this is his best growth 4. A fourth act of life was expulsion of noysome lusts Now by nature we are loath to part with our lusts Jer. 4.14 O Jerusalem wash thy heart from wickednesse how long shall vain thoughts lodge in thee We by nature will never cleanse out our lusts but if we doe cast out any thing it s the motions of Gods Spirit we think them superfluous and burdensome and hinderers of our credit and pleasures so that all good motions and good counsells that have been put in us we cast them out Ahab is struck with fear and humiliation but he casts out all by calling a Councell for War Let Cain have a good motion he puts it off by building a City and so takes off his thoughts from once seeking to God to heal
his sins Felix when Pauls words made him to tremble he would hear him no more at that time Acts 24.25 As Paul complains of the Jewes Acts 13.46 And Stephen Acts 7.52 Ye stiffe-necked and uncircumcised in heart ye have alwayes resisted the holy Ghost They are not well till they have cast out all such thoughts we are not well till we are alive to run from God wise are we to doe evill but to doe good we have no knowledge Jer. 4.22 5 A fifth act of life was begetting men to grace but we è contra endeavour to beget them to the devil and make them seven times more the children of the devill then before Mat. 23.15 Though we understand that chiefly of corrupt Teachers yet Jeremy speaketh it of all men by nature Jer. 6.28 They are all corrupters not onely bad themselves but corrupters of others none that comes amongst them but is made worse by them kept off farther from God they would not have their friends look towards matters of Religion All flesh have corrupted their wayes Gen. 6.11 Vse 3. It may teach us to bemoan all those our friends that yet lye in the state of nature Hast thou any childe or wife or friends that lye in the state of nature look at them as thy dead children and dead friends and if our friends lye dead how bitterly doe we mourn for them Zach. 12.10 They so mourn that they will not be comforted Matth. 2.18 All was full of mourning and lamentation because all the children were dead and have not many parents many children lying in their natural condition and is not the spirituall death far worse then the bodily if they be alive in grace Blessed are the dead that dye in the Lord Rev. 14.17 Therefore mourn not so 〈◊〉 for their naturall death but if they be spiritually dead without God without Christ without the life of grace why weep then for this childe and that friend that lyes dead before you It may be thy whole house is full of dead carkases not one childe or servant alive Oh! then weep over them mourn for them ●e earnest to God for them and never leave till thou hast got life propagated to them And if thou dost th●● he 〈◊〉 hath given thee children will give them life some of them at 〈◊〉 that promise is full 1 John 5.16 If any man see his Brother sin a sin which is 〈◊〉 unto death he shall ●●k and he shall g●ve him life You may therefore so handle the matter that as you have given them natural life so you may give them spiritual life You know what a sore and bitter cry there was in Aegypt so that they arose at midnight why what was the matter there was not one house wherein one was not dead what would they have done then if there had been but one alive in every house Such is the case of many families that a man may rise up in the ●●●ing and not finde one alive in his family beside himselfe it is a just occasion of bitter mourning if there were but one dead how much more then when there is hardly one alive Therefore pray heartily for them that their soul● may live in Gods sight If you have the bowels of parents be earnest with God till you have procured life for them Vse 4. To condemne the Church of Rome that think by nature men have free will to lay hold on Christ but I would ask them when they lay hold on Christ whether they have Christ or no before why before they have received him they have him not and if they have him not they are but dead men and how shall dead men lay hold on Christ If they do lay 〈◊〉 it 's an act of life if we be either able or willing to do any good it proceeds from the grace of Christ Phil. 1.12 13. Vse 5 Let it teach us all if we yet be without Christ let us not give rest to our eyes nor slumber to our eye-lids till we have procured Christ to our selves and ours What if a man have wealth and honour and beauty if he hath not Christ he hath not life Therefore labour for Christ that having him thou mayst have life Motives 1 From the sweetnesse of life Skin for skin and all that a man hath will he give for his life and he means natural life but truly our spirituall life is worth the laying down our natural life What shall a man gain if he win the whole world and lose his own soul If a man live and dye without Christ we may say of him as Christ did of Judas It had been good for that man if he had never have been born Mat. 26.24 2 Consider if we have Christ we have life and that in abundance If you have all the promises for in him they are yea and a men 2 G●● 1.20 All the blessings of God are yours both spirituall Ephes 1.3 and temporal 1 Tim. 4.8 1 Cor. 3.2 last vers If you have Christ the world is yours all the dealings and carriages shall be serviceable to you whatever you want peace or comforts or outward things if you have Christ you have all things Rom. 8.32 Q. But what shall we do to get Christ Are we not by nature unable and unwilling to receive Christ To what end then is this your exhortation Answ Though this be our sinfull distemper yet our exhortations be not in vain for God by his Word oft-times conveys a power whereby we are enabled to lay hold on Christ Peter spake to a lame man to walk Acts 3.6 7. Would you not think it was a vain word No because he conveyed strength withall whereby he was enabled to rise up and walk Means to help us to get life i● Christ. 1 Consider how de●d and lost thou are by nature Christ came to call such as feel themselves lost Luke 19.10 Mat. 9.12 13. 2 If thou knowest any fin●lly thy self ●id thy hands of it cast them such thee Many a man lives in sin which if he would but renounces God would receive him to mercy 2 Cor. 6.17 18. Isa 1.16 17 〈…〉 ●f the Passover except they put away ●●●en Exod 12.19 So if 〈…〉 the old leave● we shall become a new 〈◊〉 1 Cor. 5.7 8. Is● 55.6 7. 3 Seek the Lord whilest he may be found Isa 55.6 Do but seen him and he will be found And how is this done 1 By longing and thirsting after him 2 Seek him in all the means Heare diligently and your souls shall 〈◊〉 Isa 55.13 It 's a notable promise Prov. 8.35 36. Therefore men should be willing to straighted themselves a little in their worldly businesse● to loy● and hear Gods Word 3 Seek him in prayer Isa 55.6 Vse 6. To teach every soul that hath Christ and yet complai●s of the deadnesse and dulnesse of his heart if thou findest a decay of life seek Christ again get faster hold of him and thou shalt increase thy life exercise
your faith live dayly by faith and you shall not want life Vse 7. Of consolation to every soul that hath Christ If thou hast Christ thou hast life and shalt have it more abundantly he that findeth him findeth life and they that seek not Christ seek death 1 JOHN 5.13 These things have I written unto you that believe on the Name of the Son of God that ye may know that ye have eternal life and that you may believe on the Name of the Son of God WE are now come to the beginning of the conclusion of this whole Epistle wherein he sets down the persons to whom he writes These things have I written to you to you that believe 2 The end wherefore he writes these things to these the end is twofold 1 That ye may know that ye have eternal life 2 That ye may believe on the Name of the Son of God which he amplifies in the verses following These words afford three Notes Doct. 1. This Epistle of John was written and delivered to believers only This is evident not onely in the Text but sundry other places of the Epistle cap. 1.4 He wrote it to such as by reading this Epistle might attain to full joy This is evident likewise by recounting the several sorts of persons to whom he wrote cap. 1.12 13 14. Which were of three sorts Babes Young men and Fathers yet all believers so cap. 4.4 Ye are of God little children His second Epistle was written to the elect Lady and the third Epistle to his beloved Gaius vers 1 2. All his writings were directed to believers so were all the Epistles of the rest of the Apostles directed to believers to Saints to the chosen of God to their brethren as will appear in all their first greetings when our Saviour himself wrote he wrote to such in whom he acknowledged many special graces yea even in the worst of them in the Church of Sardis he acknowledged that she had a few names Now this gives us just occasion to enquire Why they were written to believers 2 Why to them only To Believers 1. In regard of the special help and benefit their writings afford the Church the benefits of their writing to the Church were 1 Teaching 2 Thess 2.2 2 Putting them in remembrance 2 Pet. 1.22 23. 3 Stirring them up to practice what they knew 2 Pet. 1.2 3. 4 To humble the spirits of them that were puft up 2 Cor. 7 8. 5 That they might be strengthned in their faith 1 John 5.13 6 That their hearts might be filled with joy 1 John 1.4 which was effected Acts 15.31 7 These writings have bin the foundation of the faith of all Christians to the end of the world because they have afforded matter of all the preaching of the Ministers for by them the men of God are fully furnished and made perfect to every good work 2 Tim. 4.16 17. 2 He writes to believers only the reason is taken from the little use or profit that unbelievers will make of these writings till they be brought on to believe which is so little that not one of the Apostles directs any of their writings to them but only for the believers sake amongst them it 's with the Apostles writings as with prophesies and not miracles Prophesies are not for them that believe not but for them that believe Miracles are not for them that believe but for them that believe not not but that Miracles may confirm believers but believers should chiefly attend to Prophesies Take a company of unbelievers it 's little good they get by reading their writings for no good is done without faith now faith comes not by reading but by hearing had God ordained that reading should be effectual to the conversion of men he would have confirmed it by Miracles as he did the preaching of the Apostles Again had their writings been sanctified for the conversion of men they would have sent them abroad to the most remo●e places of the world where they were never likely to come but we see they did not but rather took pains themselves to goe about the world Rom. 10.15 16 17 18. Object Sometimes God hath blessed the reading of the law to the conversion of men Deut. 31 10 11 12 13. He blessed it not only to them that knew the law before but to their little ones that knew nothing and why then should not the reading of the Gospel be as effectual now seeing of the two it 's fuller of power Answ You shall not read that God blessed the ordinary reading of the law to this end but the reading there spoken of Deut. 31. was a solemn reading of the law at the years of solemn release which was but once in seaven years and the reason of it was because that year of release was an acceptable year and typed out our redemption by Christ for in one of those years of release Christ was put to death therefore to denote that God could give an extraordinary blessing to the reading of the law even to little children and shew that those that are released by Christ they shall read with understanding and profit this solemne reading every seaventh year was instituted and blessed 2 He doth not speak of bare reading but of expounding and applying it likewise which ordinarily accompanyed their reading● of the law for so we read expressely that they did at that very feast Neh. 7. ult cap. 8.4 to 9. Ezra stood up and read and then gave the sense whereat they were so much affected that they all wept abundantly Vse 1. May shew us the reason why so many good books written by learned godly men have so little prevailed to bring on any of the Papists few or none converted by any of our writings and no wonder for the writings of the Apostles themselves were not sanctified to this end it 's true writings have ever been useful to the convincing of some to the establishment of others to the satisfaction of others but none have prevailed to the conversion of any Vse 2. The like may be said of our reading Ministers look at all the good that hath been done in such Congregations where they have only readings you shall find them as ignorant of Christ and empty of grace as if they had never heard of such things You will say this is an uncharitable saying But I would know whether is more uncharitablenesse to flatter you in your woeful condition to your destruction or to tell you of your danger 2 Chron. 15.2 3. Now for a long time Israel had been without the true God and without a teaching Priest it cannot be conceived but that they had the law read in their Synagogues for the very Judicial law of Moses was the form of the Government which they could not be ignorant in but yet they are said to be without God because they had not a Priest to teach Object Acts 15.21 For Moses of old time hath in every City them that