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A80611 Christ the fountaine of life: or, Sundry choyce sermons on part of the fift chapter of the first Epistle of St. John. Preached by that learned judicious divine, and faithfull minister of Jesus Christ, Mr. John Cotton B.D. now preacher at Boston in New-England. Published according to Order. Cotton, John, 1584-1652. 1651 (1651) Wing C6418; Thomason E630_1; ESTC R206444 209,049 264

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thinke a dead man is able to feed upon Christ you know what God said of the Idolatrous people in old time Esa 44.11 12. Esa 44.11 explained The same saith 〈◊〉 to every naturall man He feedeth upon what upon Christ No no upon ashes why upon ashes ashes is farre from feeding upon the living God and yet truly a man feeds upon ashes every soule that feeds not upon Christ hath some Idol for his God and so falls downe to worship it some god of profit or pleasure and this is the estate of all wicked men they feed upon ashes upon ashes it seemes to me to be a borrowed speech or similitude taken from children or some women with childe that being sometimes taken with some ill humour and distemper of stomach they have an eager desire to feed upon ashes and such like dry unsavoury meat Children will be eating coales and ashes and so will sometimes women with childe so truly it is with every naturall man he is a naturall Idolater he worships something besides Gods he feeds upon ashes some dry and unsavoury and unwholsome meat which cannot profit him in the day of wrath which gives not his soule any nourishment for the soule of man is an immortall spirit and we only feed it with profit and pleasure and credit and these be but ashes bodily food The good things of this life are no more suitable to a mans soule then ashes be to a mans body and therefore Solomon so compares the estate of all the sonnes of Nature Eccles 3.21 Who knowes the spirit of a man that goes upward and the spirit of the beast that goes downeward to the earth his meaning is this he complaining of the vanity that lyes upon the sonnes of nature he speakes not in the person of an Epicure as some conceive but his meaning is Who knowes which of all the sonnes of men considers or takes it to heart that his soule goes up to any better place then the soule of a beast which of all the sons of Nature feeds his soule upon better food then the soule of a beast is fed upon Doe they not all feed as if they all went to one place and therefore upon the dust of the earth they feed turne me out the man that is in an estate of nature considers that his soule is to live for ever and therefore takes care to feed his soule to immortality this is the wofull distemper of all the sonnes of nature that we feed not upon Christ but upon the blessings of this world so long as we are without Christ all our food is upon earthly things here below there is not any power in a man by nature not any wisedome or strength in us to deliver our soules and then is not this a false course A lying vanity is not my heart deceived with this and that he is not able to aske his heart such a question am I such a foole to forget all good to my soule thus long it would deliver his soul if hee did but consider that there was a lye in the other way and he flatters himselfe in his good estate before God and considers not the truth of the thing he thinkes hee is as faire a dealing man as any of them all but his heart deceitfull and desperately wicked and so cannot see the falsehood of his way And for growing which is a third act of spiritual life a man is dead to any growth never comes to any growth in grace but he is apt to grow in evil and sin evill men and deceivers shall wax worse and worse 2 Tim. 3.13 take you any natural man and he is ever growing worse and worse ever growing of the worse hand he growes more and more unprofitable and more loose from God and estranged from the wayes of his grace and settled in the wayes of sin And this is that which the Prophet Jeremiah complaines of chap. 9.3 they proceeded from evill to worse and this is the estate of us all without Christ we grow from prodigality to covetousnesse and from wantonnes to voluptuousnes and so goe on til we come to take pleasure in all sinne though it be but for a season This is al the growth and progresse that such men make And in the fourth place for cleansing our selves from al superfluous and noysome lusts that we doe not neither can we be freed from them O Jerusalem wash thy heart from thy wickednesse how long shall thy vaine thoughts lodge within thee Jer. 4.14 Purge out all those sinful lusts God knowes the thoughts of the hearts of men are but vaine 1 Cor. 3.18 and they being vain God would have us to wash our hearts how long shal it be that we suffer these lusts to lodge within us we never cleanse our selves from these but such woful cleansing it is that if we goe about to purge them out by the motions of the spirit of grace that he casts into our hearts we think its a troublesome worke and doth crosse the tranquility and peace of our estates we thinke they are noysome and therefore if any good motion be darted into the heart in the Ministery of the Word or in the Counsell of Christian friends we are sick of it till we have cast out all those good motions againe and what ever good affection God hath been pleased to cast into us wee are not wel til we be shut of it as was the case of Ahab he comes sadly and mourning from Eliahs sharpe reproofe 1 King 21. two last verses but he could not be well at ease til he had cast it all off with putting Naboth to death and put it off with calling a Councel about going to War and so damped all the sorrow that was in his heart Let Caine have any good motion come in his heart and he wil put it off with building of Cities His sin and punishment is great Gen. 4.13 and would he not now seek to God for mercy that his soule might live no he goes out from the presence of God and from all good company and good councel and whither goes he then Into the land of Nod and there he builds Cities and calls them by such and such names and so takes off his thoughts from any good motion and extinguishes all the motions of grace And truly so stood the case with Foelix Act. 24.25 when he trembled at Pauls Sermon he would not indure to hear him any further but when he had convenient leasure he would hear him again but he never sent for him And so you shall ever find this frame in a naturall mans heart those motions which the spirit of God casts into his heart that might induce him and lead him on by the hand to better courses we are not wel til we have cast them all off Just as Paul complaines of the Jewes Act. 13.46 since you have put it away from you loe we turne to the Gentiles we purge and cast out the
give where and to whom he will 3 And for a third ground why eternall life cannot bee given by any but by Christ is taken from the invincible difficulty of the passage to eternall life from the hand of death and the grave there is no redemption What man is he that can deliver his soule from the hand of the grave Psal 49. And if the soule be severed from the body no man can quicken his owne soule that is beyond the power and reach of the creature death is the passage to eternall life and this passage is of invincible difficulty for a man to dye and then to translate himselfe from death to life is far beyond the capacity of the creature and therefore saith our Saviour I am the resurrection and the life Joh. 11.25 and hee speakes of it formally and properly as if he should say being risen from the dead my selfe I rise my selfe and therefore raise up others also so that if you looke at the invincible difficulty of it you shall see that it onely is the Lord Jesus that can give eternall life it is a signe of an hypocrite when with Simon Magus we thinke this gift may be bought with money Reas 2 It is taken from the good pleasure of the Father whom it hath pleased that in Christ all fulnesse of life should dwell Col. 1.19 And when he which is our life shall appeare wee shall appeare with him 1 Cor. 1.30 And therefore since God hath concluded and shut up all the springs of life in Christ and out of Christ there is nothing but death the good pleasure of the Father hath determined this point that he having given us this eternall life in his Son there is no deriving life from any fountaine but only from the Son Vse If upon our having or not having of Christ depends our having or not having of life then from hence you see an evident ground of triall of every one of our estates whether we be alive or dead would any man know whether he have or not have life consider then whether you have or not have Christ And from hence you may discerne three grounds of triall to discerne whether we have Christ or no. First consider what it is to have a Christ Secondly what it is to have the Son Thirdly what signes there be of life and hereby wee shall have direction whether we have Christ or no and by this we may informe our selves aright in this particular This point containes in it the pith and marrow of Christianity so far as any comfort of it may redound to us First then let us consider what signes the Holy Ghost hath given us of our having of Christ We are said to have Christ four wayes in Scripture First by the honour or service or worship of him Secondly in some sense wee are said to have Christ by purchase Thirdly by way of Covenant Fourthly by way of free acceptance when God offers him First a man is said to have God or to have Christ that worships him and the very worshipping of him is the having of him so you read Exod. 20.3 Thou shalt have no other gods but me it is the expresse words of the Commandement And by having of God there he meanes thus much Thou shalt worship no other gods but me worship me and thou hast me worship any other and thou hast another god and not me So have the Lord Jesus Christ by worshipping of him and you have him fully Psal 45.10 11. He is the Lord thy God and worship thou him implying that as God hath set over his Son to us to be our Lord so we must receive accept and worship him this is that which Moses and the people of Israel sung He is my God and is become my salvation Exod. 15.2 He is my God and he is my Fathers God and therefore I will exalt him So that to set up and exalt God in our hearts and lives and to worship him is all one this sets up the Lord to worship him is to be our God Now a little better to understand this point that you may conceive what this worship of Christ is you are to conceive that worship is performed to Christ in minde in heart in life both in our obedience that wee performe in our life in suffering and patience which wee yeeld to God in our lives by all this we worship Christ and so have him 1 Part of the worship of Christ viz. in the mind and judgement First in our mindes we then indeed worship Christ when we have him in high estimation The worship and honour that we owe to Christ is to have him in high esteem Cant. 5 10. She the Spouse there may well call him her beloved Christ is my Christ when he is to me the chiefest of ten thousand Psal 89.6 Who among the sonnes of the mighty can be likened to the Lord. And Exod. 15.11 Who is a God like unto thee When the soule of a man doth esteem of Christ above all other things in the world when there is nothing that the soule so prizes as the Lord Jesus Christ then the soul hath him and herin lies the difference between spiritual earthly things you have an high esteem of an earthly thing and yet have it not a man may highly prize a good bargain and yet have it not but no man sets an high price upon Christ but hee that hath him spirituall things we wholly neglect untill we have them and when we have them then there oisn-thing with us comparable to them untill a man have his portion in the word of God it is but a thing of small value to him and so the Spirit of Gods grace and the blood of Christ untill a man have it it is but a light vaine thing to him yea till he have the Lord Jesus himselfe no spirituall thing is of any value with him but so soone as ever the heart begins to prize Jesus Christ as the chiefest of all the blessings that ever God bestowed upon the sonnes of men and if the soule thinke To prize Christ is to worship him that had he but his part in Christ he were the happiest man in the world in thus prizing him he worships him and in worshipping him hee hath him Now you must conceive that all worship stands in advancing another with the debasing of our selves we humble our selves that we may advance another Now if our debasement to them be such as is not compatible to a creature as when we subject our heart and spirits to them this is divine honour Now that soule that exalts the Lord Jesus Christ as the highest in his owne esteem he debases himself to the dust in his spirit before him John 1.27 It is the speech of John Baptist speaking of the Lord Jesus Christ He that commeth after me is preferred before me whose shooe latchet I am not worthy to loose This is a true worshipping of Christ when in
to be the Lords and offer themselves up to him and when God requires it of us we yeeld our selves to him and desire God to be a God to us then he is our God and we are his people by way of Covenant 2 Cor. 8.5 They gave themselves first to the Lord and then unto us by the will of God when we have bestowed our selves upon God he is not wanting to receive us to bee his people Now for further opening of this It was said this Covenant was made with God by way of sacrifice Psal 50.5.7 that was according to the sacrifice which the people of God did solemnly offer before God of which you read Exod. 24.3 to the end of the eighth ver Moses told the people the words of the Lord and the people answered with one voyce and said All the words which the Lord hath said wee will heare it and doe it They promise themselves to be an obedient people to God what ever he commands them that will they hear and that will they do And on the other side Moses tooke the blood of the sacrifice and sprinkled it upon the people and by this meanes they did passe into Covenant with God It implyes thus much when we come to make a Covenant with God we professe our selves as guilty of death and therefore look up to Christ desiring that his death might be imputed to us and we thereupon offer our selves soules and bodies to bee obedient to God to the death onely we require this back againe of God that as we give up our selves a sacrifice to him so that the Lord Jesus Christ might be imputed unto us and the blood of Christ and the life of Christ might be communicated to us his life of righteousnesse and holinesse and of eternal glory all that life that is in Christ might become ours this doth God require of them and this is to make a Covenant with God by way of sacrifice for the Burnt-offering vers 5. was a Type of Christ the Meat-offering was a Type of the peoples giving up themselves to God and this is to make a Covenant by sacrifice we confesse we deserve death but for time to come we desire to give up our selves to do and suffer his will onely we desire that the blood of Christ might be sprinkled upon our souls and that we might live in his sight Now those that have thus made a Covenant with God hee calls them his people and Saints Thus you see what it is and wherein this Covenant stands sometimes some branch of this is expressed in other Covenants God promises to Abraham that he will be a God to him that is he will not only be a good Father to him nor only a good Master or Tutour nor only a good King nor a good Phisitian but what soever is good that is in God and it is but a drop but a sparke of the well-spring of life in him all the goodnesse that is dispersed in the creature flowes from him there is goodnesse in a good Father or Magistrate or Minister or Friend but when God undertakes to bee a God to us he promises to be to us whatsoever is good in the creature a good Father a good Friend a good Phisitian whatever is good for soule and body he will bee all in all to us and that partly in his owne person and partly in so ordering matters Extent of the Covenant on Gods part that all those things wherein his goodnesse is communicated he will so dispose them that we shall see a goodnesse of God in them all we shall see the presence and goodnesse of God in all the blessings we partake in this world he will be whatsoever is needfull for us in every kind and though any meanes should faile yet God will not faile us this do we desire of God God a fountain of goodnes to his when we desire him to be our God God is an heape and fountaine of goodnesse and he undertakes so to be us Now as wee expect this from God that he would be a God to us so we desire also and offer our selves back again to God to be obedient to his will and to waite upon him for all that which he hath promised us to expect it and to waite for it And when we undertake to be obedient to him not that we promise it in our owne names and for our owne parts but in the behalfe of every soule that belongs to us as wee desire a blessing upon all that belongs to us so we offer up our selves to God and our wives and children Extent of the Covenant on our part and servants and kindred and acquaintance and all that are under our reach either by way of subordination or co-ordination so farre as in our power we may reach either by Commandement or counsell we do as much as in us lyes promise to God that we and our housholds wil serve the Lord Josh 24.15 hee and his houshold that is his children and servants and all that are bought with mony they will all serve the Lord this they offer to God as a Father in a family he and his so much as he is able will prevaile with them to keep Gods Commandements and God will be a God to them all a Father and Master a Magistrate and Minister Husband Friend and Phisitian and all and whatsoever is good thus you see how God comes to be ours by way of Covenant For further clearing of this poynt there is a three-fold Covenant Covenant three fold wherein God doth bind himselfe to his people and we back again to him according as there is among the reasonable creatures 1 The first is Between Prince and People so the high Priest made a Covenant between him and between all the people and between the King that they should be the Lords people and such a Covenant there is usually in all well governed Common-wealths unlesse the King comes in by way of Conquest and Tyranny but in well settled Common-wealths there is a Covenant and Oath between Prince and People 2 There is a Covenant between Man and Wife of which it is said Prov. 2.17 Which forsaketh the Guide of her Youth and forgetteth the Covenant of her God These are all called the Covenant of God he is a party in the Covenant ever 3 Another is an Oath or a Covenant of God to passe betweene Friend and Friend such was the Covenant between Jonathan and David 1 Sam. 20.16 Now there is a certain Covenant between God and his people in al these that look what a King requires of his People or the people of a King the very same doth God require of his people and the people of God that offers himself to be a God to his people that is a Governor a Provider for and a protector of his people to fight their Battels for them and to guide and rule them in peace and justice and the people undertake to be
that vanish away in outward rejoycing so as no life in his heart in a manner is left Peter when he had denyed his Master his heart was much oppressed within him he was pricked and wounded with anguish in his soul but there was some life in that But what was it with David after his committing of uncleannesse nine or ten months together he pleaseth himselfe in his pleasures and delights and contentments which his royalty put upon him and made Vriah drunke and did eate and drink himselfe liberally with him and in the end put him to death and that very sleightly and when he heares of it makes no matter of it but the sword devoures one as well as another and had not his pulse beating in him no warme breath comes from him but an empty flourish and outward joyallity as if he had sung all care away and all fear of God out of his heart As if there was no spirituall affection left in his heart of the estate of the whole Church of God whereas his poore servant could say unto him shall I goe home and sollace my self with my wife and children the case standing with the Church so as it doth he would not do so a word that one would have thought would have warmed a good mans heart but he was not warmed with it nor with any lively affection not any beating of his pulse to Christianity nothing stirring but a swounding of the whole man that he that had seen David in such a case and had never known him before he might have written in his forehead a man forsaken of God and void of all feare of his name had he seen him in this case Where was then Davids life all this while It was a fearefull condition and of all we read in the Scripture none so farre forsaken whose whole spirit was so farre benumbed as Davids then was and yet truly life there was stil in him I doubt not though all this while you shal see that either David prayed not all this while and that hath been the case sometimes of right godly men that have sometimes not of three yeares together made a private Prayer in their Closets have been content to come to duties in the Family cause others to perform duties but for their own parts further then a form of religion or shame or satisfying of conscience forces them they let all rest no affection at all to the duty they know God tooke no pleasure in such a soule while they lived in such a course and so would they lye many moneths and yeares and all that while not so much as lift up a private prayer to God and this is a far worse case then the other and yet even this sometimes befalls them when as sinfull lusts have so distempered the life of Christ in them there is still an habit of grace in the soule but yet scarce any life of Religion putting forth it selfe but still where warmth is removed so much life from holy duties is taken away And another answer to this poynt is that even as you see it is by the Almighty power of God that there may be fire and not heat as you see in the fiery Furnace whereinto the three Children was cast though it was made exceeding hot yet it had not power to hurt an haire of their heads nor to swinge a lap of their Garments the power of the sire was propended by the mighty power of God as there is this power in God concerning materiall fire so is there a marvellous hellish and Devillish power in sinne though not an Almighty power yet very like to an Almighty power that that which hath a mighty worke of God by the Almighty power of his grace in the hearts of the Servants of God the work of an Almighty power There is such a venemous power in sin as that it will susspend all acts of grace Power of sinne not so much as shew any act of grace in a Christian soule but the soule and all the graces in it shall lye as the body of a man in a swound not any breathing or sight or hearing or motion nothing to shew of any spirituall life that if he should continue so you would conclude he were dead only this kind of life of grace is there you shall have thus much life in him There is a kinde of unlistinesse and heavinesse of soule to act wickednesse with all that strength and power which sometimes a godly man while he was carnall did reach forth his heart and hand unto a kind of frame of spirit in a Christian when it is at the worst though it can solace it selfe very farre in sinne and goes on hardening its heart in its owne way most desperately and frowardly yet notwithstanding there was alwaies something in his heart that will not suffer his soule to breake out with all that strength of the spirit of wickednesse as it did when it was carnall and the reason of that is because of that speech Gal 5.17 there is flesh and spirit in that soule so as neither can the spirit doe what it would nor the flesh what it would take a Christian when he is most strong and he cannot so glorifie God nor so edifie his brethren as hee would by reason of the body of sinne there is alwaies in the best of a Christian something like the spots in the Moone some darknesse in it not a Christian man but when he is most lively in grace but he hath some darknesse in his best performances so when corruption is most strong and grace most feeble and weake as in the former corruption will weaken the best performances so here corruption cannot carry a Christian man to doe all that wickednesse which else he would breake forth into nor with that strength and vigour which else he would put forth in it though he doe rejoyce in his wickednesse Note this and beare it out yea out-face his very conscience and out-stare the very light of the graces of God within him and goe on pleasing himselfe in the hardnesse of his owne heart yet there is something in the bottome that keeps possession for God and makes him goe about it bunglingly it becomes him not he cannot set it forth with a grace David in his worst comes not off with full power of wickednesse which else his corrupt heart would willingly break forth into were it not for the Spirit of grace that moves slowly in such cases as these be so that still the case stands cleare how much life so much warmth and that warmth will expresse it selfe if any life be there at all So that take a survey of your owne estates by this meanes you would know whether you have Christ or no whether you have life or no If you have the life of grace there is some spirituall warmth in thy soule some heat in thy soule doe but consider then the knowledge that is within thee Is thy knowledge such
CHRIST THE Fountaine of LIFE OR Sundry Choyce SERMONS on part of the fift Chapter of the first Epistle of St. JOHN PREACHED By that Learned judicious Divine and faithfull Minister of Jesus Christ Mr. JOHN COTTON B. D now Preacher at Boston in New-England Christus Vita Via est Scriptura Christi Published according to Order LONDON Printed by Robert Ibbitson and are to be sold by George Calvert at the signe of the half Moone in Watling street neer Pauls Stump MDCLI The Contents CReatures broken Cisters without Christ Pag. 2 Men cannot redeeme themselves ibid First part of the worship of Christ viz. in the minde and judgement p. 6 To prize Christ is to worship him p. 7 Christians worship Christ in their mindes p. 8 Moses honours the reproaches of Christ ib Naturally men desire to know the worth of blessings p. 9 He that hath Christ is inquisitive to know all the vertue that is in Christ ib Two parts of the worship of Christ is in the will and affections ib Deep measure of worshipping of Christ p. 10 Christ when more truly worshipped p. 11 Sweetest frame of spirit ib Third part of worshipping of Christ p. 12 Universall obedience ib If we cannot enjoy the liberty of the Ordinances but with sin against our soules in this case the Ordinances of God are to be neglected and omitted p. 22 The life of Christianity is not a life of wisdome and graces but of faith p. 29 A third way of having Christ is by Covenant p. 31 Extent of the Covenant on Gods part p. 33 God a Fountaine of goodnesse to his servants ib Extent of the Covenant on our part p. 34 Covenant three-fold ib Covenant of Salt p. 35 A fourth way of having of Christ p. 39 Christ received as into a temple three wayes p. 40 Second way of receiving of Christ p. 44 The third way of receiving Christ ib How to know whether you have truly embraced Christ p. 45 First thing considered in having Christ as a Son p. 46 True love to Christ wherein it is p. 53 Christ united to us and we to him by a three-fold spirit p. 59 A three-fold conformity between Christ and his p. 60 The first conformity wherein it consisteth ib The second conformity p. 61. The third conformity p. 63 The second worke of the Spirits liberty p. 65 Liberty from feare of sinne ib Naturall property of a Son p. 66 Liberty from power of sinne p. 67 Freedome from sins service p. 68 A Servants care in perseverance of Christian duties brings priviledge of peace to his soule p. 69 The third signe he that hath the Sonne hath him for his Prince pag. 74 To have Christ for a Saviour requires two things p. 75 Christ a Saviour from sin as well as from distresse p. 79 An hard matter to be willing to be saved by Christ p. 80 Christ saveth as a Prince p. 81 Christ our Prince in two things p. 82 Rebellious thoughts p. 83 Christians differenced by their thoughts ib Good thoughts continue for ever p. 85 Summe of all laid downe p. 88 Three sorts of signes of Spirituall life p. 92 First cause of Spirituall life ib John the first and the thirteenth opened p. 93 The second cause of Spirituall life p. 94 That the Promises belong to every true Christian p. 95 Ground of the point p. 96 A third cause of Spirituall life p. 98 Signes of Spirituall life from the effects of it p. 101 Life of Justification ib Inward peace flowes from pardon of sin ib That every sinner as soone as his sin is pardoned hath an unconceiveable peace in his soule p. 102 Second effect of the life of Justification ib Property of Spirituall life p. 105 Love of God a signe of Spirituall life ib Life of Sanctification p. 109 Joy and griefe in the soule sanctified at once p. 110 Joy and feare p. 111 Joy in affliction p. 113 Patience without forbearance ib Meeknesse and strictnesse at once p. 114 Modesty mixed with magnanimity p. 115 Psalme the 24. the 7. verse opened p. 116 Psalme 149. verse 6. expounded p. 118 The seventh combination of graces p. 119 Diligence in worldly businesse and yet dead to the world ib Love of Enemies p. 102 Effects of Sanctification signes of spirituall life p. 127 First effect motion ib Lightnesse of spirit p. 128 What is required to a Spirituall duty p. 129 Of common gifts p. 130 Causes of deadnesse of heart p. 132 Remedies against deadnesse p. 133 Second signe of spirituall life ib John 6.35 explained p. 134 First a soule longs after Christ in the Ordinance ib Strength and sweetnesse in the Ordinance p. 135 Third particular applying of the Word p. 136 Fourth conformity to the Word in every thing ib Growth in grace p. 138 Repentance the best purge p. 140 Fourth effect of the life of Sanctification ib Fifth signe life propagates it like p. 142 Three properties of life first warmth p. 144 Knowledge warme p. 145 John 5.32 expounded ib 2. Where there is life there is breath p. 146 3. Spiritual warmth digesteth Gods Ordinances p. 148 4. Spiritual warmth heateth others ib Power of sinne p. 153 Plyablenesse of spirit p. 158 James 3.17 expounded ib So much sweetnesse so much life p. 159 Danger of being out of Christ p. 161 Jer. 13. last opened p. 162 Esa 44.11 explained p. 165 Procure Christ for our selves and others p. 172 Motives to get Christ p. 172 Meanes of having Christ p. 174 What help Johns Epistles yeelds to beleevers p. 179 The bane of Congregations that have no means of preaching p. 184 Note the miserable case of Congregations that have but bare reading p. 186. Carnal men have benefit by the Word p. 187 Three reasons or signes of grace p. 189 Knowledge what p. 190 Rome an Harlot ib Mighty power in the Scriptures preached p. 199 Reading the Word p. 200 Examination of things heard ib Repetition of the word blessed p. 201 Meditation on the Word p. 202 Property of a faithfull Minister p. 203 Faith profitable to all things p. 205 Infidell practice of Papists ib Mighty power in meditating upon the Word p. 206 Kings must read the Word of God daily p. 207 To pray according to Gods will in two things 1. Aske things lawfull 2. aske in Christs name 1. To aske in Christs name requireth humility p. 211 212 First second third fourth acts of humility p. 212 213 First second third fourth acts of faith in prayer p. 213 214 First to pray in the spirit is to pray feelingly 2. Fervently 3. Perseverance p. 218 219 Advocate what p. 228 Partiall eye Censorious eye Malicious eye wanton eye p 243 244 245 Mantle of wisdome p. 248 Mantle of of faithfulnesse ib Mantle of compassion p. 249 CHRIST the FOUNTAIN of LIFE SERMON I. 1 JOHN 5.12 He that hath the Son hath life and he that hath not the Son hath not life THese words containe the Third part of the record that God bare of
his Son to whom this eternall life is communicated and that is to all such as to whom the Son is communicated amplified by the contrary He that hath not the Son hath not life Doctrine According to or upon our having or not having of Christ depends our having or not having of life The note is of speciall weight in our Christian experience and therefore let us take so much the more care in opening of it He that findeth me which is all one with hee that hath me he hath life Prov. 8.34 but he that is estranged from me he loveth death ver 36. So that finde Christ and finde life Finde him not but be estranged from him and finde death So Eph. 2.12 In times past ye were without Christ being aliens from the Commonwealth of Israel strangers from the Covenant of promise having no hope and without God in the world and Eph. 4.18.19 There he speakes of some that were alienated from the life of God but in ver 20. Ye have not so learned Christ if so be you have been taught by him as the truth is in Jesus For further clearing of this point let me shew you first the Reasons upon which it depends and then the uses of it Creatures broken Sisterns without Christ Reason 1. For the first The first reason arises from the insufficiency of all the body of the creature to give us life without Christ Heb. 10.1.4 It is not possible that the blood of bulls and goats should cleanse the conscience from sinne They are not a valuable recompence to God for the transgressions we have done by our transgressions we had deserved death for which the death of the beasts cannot make recompence Men cannot redeem themselves And besides should we dye for our sinnes our selves our death would not free us from the punishment for we are not able to overcome death but should for ever sinke under it If there had been a Law that could have given us life then wee might have lived by it but there is no such Law as can give us spirituall life David speakes in the name of Christ Psal 22.29 It is the speech of our Saviour or of David in his name No Man can keepe alive his owne soule It is beyond the power of the creature to keep alive his own soule no not so much as naturall life Psal 49.7.9 No man can give a ransome for the soule of his brother no man is able to ransome or redeem his owne life or anothers yea which is much Adam in innocency was taught to looke for the preservation of his inocent nature out of himself for to that end did God give him the tree of life Gen. 2.9 the tree of life grows not in Adam but in the Garden Now he that was to eat of the tree called the tree of life he was taught from thence that the maintenance and continuance of that life which he then lived a life of grace and glory was not to be expected from his owne strength but from something without himselfe The tree of life was a type of the Lord Jesus Christ the second person in Trinity 1 Joh. 3.4 Now if Adam could not keep alive his own soule but by that tree how much lesse Adam falne and corrupted being now become unable to keep that Law which in innocency he might have kept But more clearly see the grounds of this insufficiency in the creature to helpe it selfe The first is taken from the preciousnesse of the price of our redemption The costlinesse of it the matter of our justification is the price of our redemption and without justification no spirituall life at all Now the price of our redemption is our justification the forme of that justification is Gods accepting of it and imputing it to us but the matter of it is the price of our redemption and that is the root of all our spirituall life the price of our redemption given to God is accepted of him and by him given to us Psal 49.8 Precious is the redemption of soules it is farre beyond the power of the creature that which may be fit matter to give to God by way of satisfaction for a soule that is very precious and this was onely the obedience of Christ to the death he by suffering death for us and rising from the dead declared himselfe mightily to be the Son of God and he by his obedience to the death offered to God the price of our redemption He gave himselfe a ransome for many And this shews that it had beene impossible for any under the Sonne of God to have given a sufficient price for our redemption neither man nor Angels could doe it but he in giving a sufficient price for us did thereby mightily declare himselfe to be the Sonne of God he onely by his death is the matter of our justification and his rising is our life the Father himselfe it could not stand with his justice to give a price for our redemption he being the person offended but the Sonne taking upon him our nature that nature which had offended God he by this meanes made atonement betweene the Father and us and in making atonement declared himselfe mightily to be the Sonne of God none but he alone was able to tender to God such a recompence as might be a satisfaction for our sins 2. And as this is ground why there is no sufficiency in the creature to give us the life of our justification so it is also taken from the root of our sanctification and consolation for they spring both from one fountaine and that is the Spirit of Gods grace John 16.7 he is the comforter that is our sanctifier and this springs in us to everlasting life Joh. 4.14 Now he that can give a spirit of sanctification and consolation is onely the Lord Jesus Christ unlesse he goe away and send the Comforter to us he never comes If you would know who it is that can give this water of life you shal read Joh. 4.10 that it is only the Lord Jesus he it is only that goes to the Father and sends his Spirit of grace into our hearts unlesse he go to heaven and send it downe from heaven to us it is not given So that he being the root of the Spirit of consolation of sanctification all this life of consolation sanctification springing from the Spirit as from a fountain and Christ being he that sets open this fountain Zac. 1.13 Therefore it is that there is an insufficiency in the creature to shed abroad such a thing as this into our hearts Act. 2 33. when he was to give a reason of the spirit of Tongues he fetches it fom the resurrection of Christ that he by his ascending into heaven did shed abroad this word which you now see and heare so that by his death he gave to God not onely the price of our redemption but prevailed with the Father to bestow upon him the Spirit to
this point there are three Cases in which money must be layed out or else Christ cannot be had and in refusing to lay out money we refuse life in him 1 Case First when the Lord by some speciall command requires it as was the case of the young man in the Gospel there was a speciall commandement given to him not given to every man nor to every rich man nor scarce any man in ordinary course now adayes yet then given to him and now to stick for money and rather lose eternall life then his goods in such a case as this he loseth his life in Christ and upon the same poynt or the like broke Ananias and Saphira it was the common resolution of the Church of God in that Age to sell all that they had and to give to the poore and to live after the same rate that other men did a like proportion to every man and to distribute faithfully to every man as every man had need and as the Apostle saw cause and when they come and keep back part of the price for which their possessions was sold you see how bitter a curse from the presence of the Lord fell upon them they were cut off from the Congregation of Gods people and it is much to be feared cut off from the Lord Jesus Christ and from all hope of eternall life and to stand as a terrible example to the whole Church of God to shew what a dangerous thing it is to stand upon termes with Christ and not to part with money for him they could not have fellowship with the people of God unlesse they parted with all they had and live upon the common distribution but this case is not alwayes But secondly there is another time namely when in case of persecution the market of Christ goes at so high a rate that a man cannot have Christ with any comfort in his soule or peace to his Conscience or purity of heart or life unlesse he hazzard all his estate or a good part of it In buying and selling of a precious commodity a good Chapman wil have it what ever it cost him So Christ is sometimes at an higher and sometimes at a lower rate but whatever he costs him he will have him it is spoken in commendation of the Hebrews that they suffered joyfully the spoyling of their goods Heb. 10.34 to shew you that sometimes it comes to that passe that unlesse a man be content to part with all his goods he cannot have the recompence of reward the Lord Jesus Christ to his soule and therefore the Servants of God have been content to loose all that they had and willing to resigne up all for the maintaining the integrity of their spirits and the purity of their hearts and lives in the presence of God and then let all goe they can suffer the spoyle of all joyfully 3 It is in case that by Gods providence you be cast to live in such Congregations where you cannot have the Ordinances of God but at a great charge as it is the case of many places that unlesse they be at charge for the Ministery of the Gospel it cannot be had then we must communicate freely that way then be not deceived God is not mocked for what a man sowes that shall he also reap Gal. 6.6 7 8 Where the Apostle doth encourage men at such a time as this when the Gospel cannot be had but at great charge then lay out liberally for the Gospel of Christ and he calls it A sowing to the Spirit as a man that layes out his money for an earthly commodity for a good bargaine he reapes corruption so he that sowes of the Spirit shall of the Spirit reape life everlasting When a man layes out his money unto Spirituall ends to obtaine the free passage of the Ordinances of Christ to enjoy the liberty of the Gospel he thereby sowes to the Spirit and shall of the Spirit reap life everlasting for this is the blessing promised unto it such as so sow shall of the Spirit reap life everlasting so that when a man out of a good and honest heart and an hungering desire after Gods Ordinances shall be willing to be at charge for them he hath this promise made to him and it shall be fulfilled He shall of the Spirit reap life everlasting But yet when a man hath layed out his money for this end if he then thinke his money is worthy of Christ he gets him not but this is the first way of having Christ by way of Purchase a seasonable laying out our money for him as God requires it Secondly Christ is to be purchased not so much by money as chiefly this purchase must be made by parting with all those many and strong Lusts and Corruptions and sinfull rebellions of heart by which we keep off Christ from comming into our hearts this is that which the Prophet Esay directs us to Esa 55.7 Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts c. where he tels us what we must give for Christ for sinne is neither money nor moneys worth but he makes a good bargaine that parts with his sins though he should get no Christ for his parting with them He speakes of the first and principall part of the life of a Christian man the life of his Justification that springs from pardon of sinne let a man forsake those sins and lusts that he hath been most carried captive with let a wicked man forgoe his thoughts and wayes both his secret and open sins and let him then turne to God and he will abundantly pardon then God will receive him graciously to the justification of life This is the thing that we must doe this was the point upon which sundry of them that have been hopefull for Religion have broken off from Christ and Christ from them they have forsooke him and he left them Jehu stuck upon this very point he would goe a great way but when it comes as he thinkes to hazzard his title to the Crowne then he will set up the golden Calves when he saw that all must be parted with rather then he would forgoe that without which he could not maintaine his Kingdome he would rather loose Christ then venture the losse of that 2 King 10.29.31 He regarded not to walke in all the Commandements of the Lord and then as he cut short with God in reformation and did not fulfill to walke after the Lord therefore God cut Jehu short of all the hopes of grace that ever he might have attained to vers 32. so that if we cut at a scanting with God and will part with some lusts and corruptions but not with others then will God cut you short of all your hopes of eternall life and it was upon the same termes that Herod fell short of Christ Mar. 6.10 Luk. 3.18 he had done many things according to Johns Ministry but when God would cut him short of Herodias
short Paul knew nothing wherein he had dealt unfaithfully and yet was he not thereby justified 1 Cor. 4.4 but he that justifies me is the Lord and therefore if you trust upon a gift and thereby to be justified and accepted you declare your graces to be but common and such as are but found among Hypocrites and in this the Papists have cause to groane under the burthen that lyes upon their religion they by looking for salvation and acceptance by common graces doe plainly shew that Christ profits them nothing And further as you are not to trust upon them for justification so neither are you to trust upon them for the life of your sanctification for though they be truly parts of sanctification faith hope love patience humility and every other grace of God which flowes from our fellowship with the death of Christ because these are parts of our sanctification you may looke at them as precious tallents received from God yet if you trust in these in preaching or praying or edefying your selves or families or neighbours and that in the strength of these you shall doe valiantly and bring mighty things to passe and be a fruitfull Christian you have truth of grace sound hearted saving grace and you doubt not but God will carry you an end in a comfortable Christian course if so you wil finde this to be true that you wil want Christ in the quickning and inlarging and thriving power of the life of your sanctification it cannot be but that where saving grace is there is Christ but you may have Christ and yet have but a dead Christ of him he may be so dead in your spirit that you shall cry out O what a dead heart and a dead spirit have I and yet I doubt not but Christ is in my heart true it may be thou hast received him but Christ can tell how to lye dead and to worke but little there where saving grace is layed up and therefore the life of Christ is not a life of grace but a life of faith I live not by all my zeale and humility and gifts of grace for I might have all these and make but dead work of them all How then By the faith of the Sonne of God Gal. 2.20 It is one of the chiefest points that concernes our Christian practise and therefore I pray you consider it Note this the life of Christianity is not a life of wisdome and graces but of faith if you would have Christ live in you and live so that he may shew his life in you you must then live by faith that is not only looke for your justification by faith in Christ but looke for your sanctification and consolation from Christ by faith that if you goe about any duty goe not about it in the strength of grace received preach not or pray not in the strength of your knowledge and love and zeale and humility but go about them all in faith in Jesus Christ that is by comming to him and being inwardly sensible that unlesse he put new life into us and make new worke in our soules we may have but a dead businesse of it all the graces of Gods Spirit in us but dead and herein it is wonder to see sometimes how Gods servants are straitned all for want of the life of faith in their soules if God cut short with us it is because we doe not live in Christ but in the spirit of grace and think to walke by the strength of grace received we loose by it and spend of the stock of grace and therefore remember that speech Esa 40.30 31. They that waite on the Lord shall renew their strength to shew you your duty it is a borrowed speech from young men going out to warre they goe out in the name of the Lord of Hosts as David went out against Goliah 1 Sam. 17. If we waite upon the Lord and be sensible of our owne Insufficiency and unworthinesse of doing any Christian duty and not depend upon our owne sufficiency then we shall finde God lifting us up farre beyond all our owne apprehensions and gifts God wil put a new life into us and in this case even the weakest gifts of Gods servants are sometimes much enlarged and the same Christians gifts farre more enlarged at some time above what they are at another only by waiting upon the Lord and that puts life into our duties therefore if you would finde Christ to be the life of your sanctification then you must put away all confidence in saving graces they are not able to make you bring forth any one lively fruit of Sanctification I mean in your owne estimation and you wil have little comfort in it There is in this case much difference between one Christian and another and between the same Christian and himselfe at one time and another according to his waiting on the Lord for the renewall of his strength therefore trust not in any grace if you doe you wil want it when you stand in most need of it SERMON III. 1 JOHN 5.12 He that hath the Son hath life and he that hath not the Son hath not life WE now come to speake of the third way of having Christ A third way of having Christ is by Covenant and that is by way of Covenant Esa 49.8 I will give thee for a Covenant of the people to establish the earth to cause to inherit the desolate heritages Psal 50.5 Gather my Saints together unto me those that have made a Covenant with me by Sacrifice so that would you know to whom God is a God and to whom it may be said He is my God Any of us that have made a Covenant with God by Sacrifice no man hath him unlesse by way of covenant for all these wayes though divers in explication yet all co-incident to this having of Christ And such as have made a covenant with God by Sacrifice they are his people of them it is said I am thy God vers 7. according to the tenour of the Covenant Gen. 17.7 Behold I make a Covenant with thee this day to be a God unto thee and to thy seed God becomes a God to me and to my seed by way of covenant so Deut. 29.10 to 13. both your Children of understanding and your little ones of no understanding you are all here before God this day to enter into a Covenant with him to keep his Commandements for ever you and yours enter into a Covenant with God and this is the way of having him for our God Deut. 26.17.18 This day thou hast avouched the Lord to be thy God and he hath avouched thee to be his people Junius translates the word Thou hast required by way of Covenant and he hath promised that he will be thy God in the originall it is he hath made thee to speake thou hast made God to speake this as men that make promises one to another so that when people give up themselves
of his hands upon any Tongues might have been given and Sicknesses healed he might have grown mighty in the world by that trade Act 8.18 19. And Balaam he was somewhat more upright in his desire then Simon Magus was one would thinke that he had sought after Christ for he wished not for any temporall thing in this world only that he might have a comfortable end he would feather his nest with Immortality and invest himselfe with the Robes of incorruption and such kinde of other glory as the Saints in light doe partake of but it was no more his desire then the other to desire Christ for himselfe but only a blessed end that he might be translated into immortality and glory and so might be kept from fellowship with those Devils and evil Spirits he had been acquainted with all his life long that he might not have fellowship with them when he departed hence but did not desire Christ for himselfe and therefore whatever gift he had as he had a notable spirit of Prophesie as the Spirit then came upon him speaking of the marvellous blessings reserved for Gods people yet notwithstanding he never sought Christ in any of them and therefore though he might have some glimpse of the Vision of God yet of Christ he had none whereas there is no true Christian that doth most esteeme the having of Christ but doth not only seeke Christ without respect of Loaves or Money or of a quiet Conscience in time of death but even in the very time of this life when he seekes after the Ordinances of God in this life there to live according to God and to finde pardon of sinne and peace of conscience and subduing of his lusts and strength of grace and power of godlinesse yet even in seeking the very Ordinances of God out of which these are not to be found yet in seeking of these he doth not so much seeke these or any blessing they doe afford as the finding Christ in them the story is notable and famous in 2 Sam. 15.25 26 27. When David fled from Jerusalem the Priests and Levites carried the Arke after him and when David saw them overtake him with the Arke of Gods presence in the enjoyment whereof stood the life of his life the assurance of the pardon of his sinne the assurance and presence of Gods favour strengthening of his spirit in grace and subduing his lusts yet saith he Carry it back againe to Jerusalem if I shall finde favour in the eyes of the Lord he will bring me backe againe and shew me both it and his habitation but if he thus say I have no delight in thee behold here am I let him doe to me as seemeth good to him He would not wrong himselfe nor doe the Church of God so much prejudice as to wrong God and his Sacrifice they were not to offer sacrifice elsewhere nor could they finde any solemne presence of God any where but there there were they all to meet and it was the place where God had put his name and he considering that he could not have the Arke with him but Gods Name should be dishonoured and the Church of God would finde much prejudice with the losse of Gods Arke and therefore rather then God should be dishonoured and the people discouraged and prejudiced by the want of it he would send it back againe and is content to loose outward blessings his care was not so much about outward things his chiefest care was if he might have had his wish that he might all his time dwell in the house of the Lord Psal 23.4 and oh that he might be but a doore-keeper in this house rather then to rest in the tabernacle of wickednesse but yet when he could not have this great blessing but with dishonour to God and prejudice to the Church of God he rather layes downe the comfort that he might have from Gods Ordinances and the help he might have from them and those helps were very great as pardon of sinne and peace of conscience growth in grace subduing of lusts and establishment of his heart in assurance of his election and vocation yet he is content to let them all goe that he might have what he hath without sinne to himselfe and dishonour to God or wrong to the Church and this is a notable sign of a mans integrity and uprightnesse of heart he would not have any thing whereby God might have dishonour he would not have the Ordinances with the Churches losse but rather sit out and shift for himselfe as wel as he could and would adventure the losse of them all rather then he wil stand to contend for them with the losse of Christ himselfe And this kinde of frame of spirit was in Moses he intreates God that he would not destroy the Israelites in the Wildernesse least his name should be dishonoured but rather blot his name out of the Booke of Life then cut them all off Exod. 32.32 Such is the uprightnesse of the frame of the heart of a Childe of God that he desires not Spirituall blessings singly for himselfe not for the peace of his owne Conscience nor for the subduing of his lusts nor for the strengthening of his grace further then may stand with the glory of God and above all things else he seekes the honour of God the comming of his Kingdome and the doing of his will and if these concur not in his way he would rather loose them then dishonour Christ by having of them he hath a singlenesse of heart in seeking spirituall blessings he seekes them not for his owne ends as you see in Davids desire Psal 63.1 2 3. My soule thirsteth for thee my flesh longeth for thee to see thy power and thy glory as I have seene thee in the Sanctuary because thy loving kindnesse is better then life therefore my lips shall praise thee He desires not there the injoyment of the presence of God or the subduing of his lusts that he might live at more ease and have more comfort though that be a lawfull end but he would see the power of Christ more magnified in him he would see a mighty increase of the grace of God in him not that he might be more excellent then his neighbours more eminent in gifts and so be better then others or so esteemed but he desires that all his lusts may be swallowed up and that the life of Christ might more mightily over-rule and over-sway him and dwell mightily in him that he might not live after his owne wil nor to himselfe nor would he live by the graces of the Spirit in him but the life that he would live is by the faith of the Son of God Gal. 2.20 that Christ and his life in him might worke all his workes in him and for him and in that at any time he desires death it is not that he might be freed from evil and misery but that hee might be dissolved and be with Christ
Phil. 1.23 Though the other be a lawfull desire but chiefly his desire is that he might see Christ whom from his first conversion he hath most loved and in whom he hath lived all his life and now to be wholly possessed of him and wholly acted and swayed by him not that he might have his heart filled with joy but that he might be with Christ not only as chiefest of ten thousand persons but as the chiefest of ten thousands benefits of God that should God give us pardon of sinne his Word and Sacrament and victory over all our lusts strength of every grace of God and everlasting life and therewith fellowship with all the blessed Saints and Angels yet to us Christ is the chiefest of them all none greater then the gift of Christ and this is the sincerity of a Christians soule he desires more any benefit for Christs sake then Christ for any of his benefits sake for he whose heart is set upon Christ more then upon the pardon of sinne or salvation that soule hath Christ and life in him he that hath Christ in his eye and heart above all blessings he indeed is a true Christian and hath Christ Reas Christ must so be had and we must so receive him as God gives him now God gives us first Christ in all his Ordinances and then in Christ all other things all benefits in and through Christ Act. 8.35 We preach to you Jesus we offer you him all lusts layed aside all sinfull corruptions put away whatever separates between God and us that being done away We now offer you Christ and in Christ plentious redemption but if we be without Christ we are without true life As in the Sacrament first you have the body and blood of Christ set before you Matth. 26.26 and then sealed up and confirmed to you in the Sacrament and together with that justification and further degrees of the sanctifying spirit and further pledges of everlasting life and glory No benefit but it s conveyed through him Christ first and then the benefit It is true Herod received joy but Foelix trembling and Jehu zeale but none of these received Christ they received the huske but wanted Christ they had the shell but not the marrow and kernell within they received the benefit but Christ they did not receive and for want of him they had no life at all Simon Magus hee beleeved Acts 8.13 but he had no lively faith because he would receive the benefit but Christ he minded not to receive Unlesse the heart be knit to Christ and the soule more seek Christ then pardon of sinne or subduing of lusts he hath no life in truth he that hath the Son he hath life not so he that hath the gifts and benefits of the son But Christ first and in having Christ we have all Christ must be received as God gives him we must acknowledge there is no life in any grace but in Christ Hos 14.8 On me is your fruit found and without me can you do nothing John 15.5 Now then carry this truth home with you and gather from hence a true estimate of your own estates whether you may judge of your selves as living or dead Christians Upon our having or not having of Christ depends our having or not having of life How will you know whether you have life or no you say you have Christ how know you that Whether is your hearts more set upon Christ then the gifts of Christ Whether do you labour more for gifts or for Christ himselfe And if you finde this that in the truth of your hearts you come not to the Ordinances but to find your beloved there not out of unclean and wanton spirits but to seeke him whom your soule most desires whose favour and countenance you would rather behold then to hear the voyce of a pleasant singer and you are not satisfied with any thing unlesse you find him then shal you find life in so coming to the Ordinances Can. 3.1 2 3. By night in my bed I sought him whom my soule loved c. The bed was the Temple wherein God did reveale himselfe in his Ordinances and disperse himselfe to his people in the bed of his love Shee came to the Temple not to seek any of the Preists and Levites there She goes indeed to the Watch-men and makes her moane and complaint to them that she could not finde Christ in his Ordinances and she durst not rest upon their opinions but saith have you not seen him whom my soul loveth can you tel me any newes or give me any intelligence of my beloved Saviour Thus she inquires of the Watch-men And from them she goes to the Daughters of Jerusalem to her Christian friends and chargeth them to tell him that she is sick of love Now if thus to desire him is to find Christ then there is no more to be doubted of in such a case as this But the heart thus seeking him in his Ordinances and the affections gon after him there more then after any of his benefits then in truth we have the Sonne he could not have our hearts if we first had not him And therefore it is a strong evidence we have him because our hearts are set upon him We search for nothing so much as for him This is part of the meaning of that place in Psal 73.25 Whom have I in heaven but thee or in earth in comparison of thee he desires nothing more then him neither peace of conscience nor joy in the Holy ghost nor any thing so cheifly and principally as God but if wee have a longing affection after pardon of sinne and peace of conscience and assurance of salvation after subduing of lusts and growth in grace these be blessed desires and usually upright and sincere but there may be hypocrisie even in these very desires and in using the meanes to attaine these for sometimes by this meanes we seek Christ and him in his Ordinances not so much for himself as for the benefits we have by him which is a spirit of harlotry As in a woman that it may bee hath a strong affection to match with such a man but it is but that hee might pay her debts and that she might be well provided for for the world and that he might be availe and a protector to her these be lawfull ends to aime at but if it be only and cheifly for these ends it is not true conjugal affection for if another man could do this for her as well as he she could make choyce of another as well as of him and she desires him not for his but for her own ends And just so it is alike in this case If a man desire the Lord Jesus Christ to this end that he may have his sinne pardoned and be furnished with grace though these be spirituall ends yet so much as wee prize the benefit above Christ so much are we halting in the truth of our affection to him If
a woman in true conjugall affection looke at no more but at the very bare man True love to Christ wherein it is if there be true love in her towards him she is content to have him though she have nothing else but his person so if our hearts be truly set upon Christ we are content to have him though wee should never see good day with him though wee should never see peace of conscience with him though no comfort of grace in him yet would the soule say that is truely affected to Christ give me Christ and I have enough who or what is there besides Christ What is there Why there is variety of excellent graces But whom have I in earth but thee As if ye should put all other things in comparison against or with Christ they are nothing to him then surely you have Christ But how much will this discord from the fellowship of Christ the Sonnes and Daughters of men who when they see the costlinesse of the wayes of Christ they will neither seeke after Christ nor his benefits But as for pardon of sin as it passeth all understanding so it passeth their desires And for peace of conscience they hope they have a good conscience or if not they doe not search to know it and as for the graces of the spirit and subduing of lusts they have a good hope and beleive as well as the best And for the Kingdome of glory they hope if God grant them mercy they shall come to heaven at the last These men are far from having the Lord Jesus and life in him they are so far off from seeking the Sonne as that they do not so much as seek those mercies and benefits which in Christ are conveyed to their soules they neither have him nor none of his They say to the Almighty depart from us for we desire not the knowledg of thy law Job 21.14 of such God saith They would have none of me Psal 81.11 not only have him but none of him that is nothing that was his not any saving benefit of his the world we would have but none of those choyce and heavenly blessings of Christ no pardon of sin no peace of conscience no care of Christianity or faithfull Ministery no feare of God nor keeping of his Commandements deare hearts for us how shall we ever conceive that ever we should have life in Christ when we doe not so much as desire the very benefits of Christ which yet a man may desire and loose all too and when a man hath not so much as an affection to the things of Christ it is very dangerous But secondly when a man is in this case that there is a desire in a man after the benefits of Christ more then after Christ himselfe all this while you want that sincerity upon which Christ wil give us a comfortable meeting and speake peace to our soules we are not yet come to that condition as in which he wil say My wel-beloved thou art all faire and there is no spot in thee he yet sees not a true conjugall affection in us towards him so as that though we should never finde grace nor glory by him yet he is the chiefe desire of our soules Suppose a woman should see a man that hath a desire after her but he chiefly aimes at her estate to provide for himselfe and looks no further wonder not if she should say to him You seek not me but mine she may wel rid her hands of him in such a case and truly so is the case here between us the Lord Jesus so long as he findes that we come to him and seek and pray and wrastle and what would we have Oh pardon of sinne and peace of conscience and power of grace to be but as other Christians are that we could pray and beleeve as they doe and finde such comfort as they have and this is the thing that the soule is chiefly set upon now all this while that we come thus to Christ we must not think that Christ is to blame if he tarry a little longer then we expect for we may seek him and not finde him because we seeke not so much him as his benefits and the rich treasures of grace and mercy and peace that are layed up in him without measure the greatest part of the world doe not love their soules nor the Lord Jesus so wel as to love him for his grace and goodnesse sake but yet among better men there is a world of selfe love many a man would have his sinne pardoned because he would have his conscience at quiet we may thanke our selves for such affections as these not but that such affections may spring from the grace of God for men by nature never dreame of such things as these be but yet though such affections may spring from the grace of God yet you shall ever finde such soules to detaine the grace of God in unrighteousnesse and out of selfe love use them all to their owne ends and looke not that God may be glorified in and by them nor that his wil be done but oh that the soule might have peace and that sinne might be pardoned and there it rests When our desires is chiefly set upon spirituall gifts if wee loose much comfort and fellowship with Christ that else we might have had we must not marvell at it for our desires are set not chiefly upon Christ but upon the things of Christ our desire is not after the person but after the goods and benefits of Christ Observe the Apostles expression Rom. 8.32 He hath given us his owne Sonne he doth not say he that hath given us peace and pardon of sinne will not he give all other things also Or wil not he give us Christ He reasons not from Christs benefits to Christ but thus he reasons He that hath given us his owne Sonne will with his Sonne and after his Sonne give us all other things At the second hand comes in all these benefits of pardon of sinne and strength of grace and power against our lusts c. these things come in as attendants upon the former and therefore if God give us first to looke at Christ that in him we have life of justification and sanctification and consolation eternall glory peace and grace and all then we have him and life in him else we may have the outward comforts but stand long enough at Christs Bed-chamber doore before he let us in Let it therefore be a word of direction and exhortation to every soul that desires to have that truth of life and peace and grace wrought in his heart that wil never dye have you respect chiefly to the Lord Jesus Christ and long and seeke more after him then after all Spirituall blessings and much more above all worldly blessings If you shall therefore refuse Christ because you thinke he is but a melancholly person you wil never have him if you stand upon
Heaven and wil acquaint his deare Christian friends with it and say I am troubled with such thoughts of malice and pride and vanity that I know not in the world what to doe they lye downe with me and they rise up with me and therefore intreat their help and as they looke to Christian friends so wil they especially call to the Prince of their salvation to save them from their vaine thoughts and much more from these wicked speeches from these things they are most carefull to be delivered and therefore they stand not devising Plots against their Prince but he wil tell him that such wicked rebellious thoughts devise mischiefe against him and therefore he craves helpe against them so did David in the like case Psal 139.33 Search me and know my heart and see if there be any way of wickednesse in me As if he had sent to heaven for a privy search he would not have any one thought within him but he would that God should know it and therefore desires that God would try and search and know his thoughts he was not like them of whom you read Esa 29.15 That digge deepe to hide their counsells from the Lord but a child of God would have God to be well acquainted with his thoughts see if there be any way of wickednesse in me any wicked thought or vain affection in my heart I have laboured to find and to cast them out what I can but there may be many more that I know not but search and try thou me and lead me in the way that I shall goe Good thoughts are of everlasting use Good thoughts continue ever and of everlasting durance and they will continue to everlasting life Gods wayes are everlasting wayes lead mee in the way everlasting thus a man hath every thought brought into subjection though evill thoughts may come rushing in yet he will not give them entertainment but complaines of them to Christ and such a man hath the Lord Jesus for his Prince for hee is not a Prince that onely Governs the outward man as earthly Princes do who can take no hold of what we think but God takes notice of our thoughts And you may apply what I say of thoughts to words and actions and so make use of it to all There be many men that never think good thought but le ts wicked thoughts rest in them can be wanton and uncleane c. what ever it be that makes a thorow-fare in the heart let it there lodge let it come and go as it will and that is part of the meaning of the high-way-side ground it keeps and is a thorow-fare to all beasts to all sorts of Travailers to Theeves and Robbers takes no notice of them lets them come and goe and stay as they list then we have not Christ for our Governour we do not put the Government of our thoughts and actions upon his shoulders and are not in subjection to him but casts his cords from us Psalm 2.3 and say we will not have this man to reigne over us Lu. 19.22 what is not our thoughts free and are not our tongues our owne Psalm 12.4 David takes them for Atheists that say their tongues are their owne He prayes that God would keepe his lips Psalm 119. onely Gods people would have all that is in them bowed to the obedience of Gods will Some men there be that will not have God to rule over them so marvellous is the prophainnesse of our hearts while we are carnal that we that should be servants to God we are not ashamed to make him a Servant to us we were never subjet to any man nor doe we mean so to bee Pharoah-like Who is the Lord I know not who he is Notable is that you read Esa 43.34 besides that I had no service from you thou hast made me to serve with or under thy sins see the desperate spirits of the hearts of the sinful sons of men they draw in God to serve them and he complains that he is pressed under their sins as a Cart is pressed under sheaves men load the patience of God and lay upon him one bundell of wickednesse after another they lay so much wickednesse upon him till the patience of God will beare no longer as long as ever hee will beare and suffer us to live in this world we will load him with sheaves upon sheaves load the very majesty of God and his long sufferance and make use of his Providence many times to serve our owne lusts we will do that which is wicked in Godssight because we can doe it and because God hath given us means to do it we can maintain our pride and covetousnesse and God gives us these gifts and these liberties and we will make God to serve with them and here is a double service put upon God First we load his patience and forbearance by our continuance in sin but besides that we abuse the very gifts of God as our wealth and good parts of nature and our common graces And by your leave the very saving graces of Gods spirit wee will not stick to abuse them against God And is not this much rebellion that we should make God to serve such a wearisome service he is provoked every day and weary to suffer us in a sinfull course one day to an end but when day after day and year after yeare we lay load upon Gods patience and if he will suffer us long so he may and if we do set God at liberty from his drudgery it must be at the last gaspe and he shall be our Ruler then if hee will Wonder not therefore if sometime God say Rebellion is as the sinne of witch-craft 1 Sam. 15.23 And that is in a double respect First As you see a Witch gives her soule to the Devill that she may have her mind fulfilled for her life time so a Rebell deales with the devill to have his owne lusts fulfilled he makes a Covenant with Hell and with the Devill he is at an agreement he knowes he doth wickedly but to serve his owne turne hee is content to doe it But secondly As a Witch will have the Devill to wait upon her so at last she will wait upon the Devill so it is in this case The Devill must serve a Witch all her life time and she will serve the Devill at her death Far more monstruous is this wickednesse in this kind we will have God to serve us all our life time and when death comes wee will doe God this favour wee will serve him then As a Witch deales with the Devill so do we with God he shal supply our occasions and we will make use of his bounty to serve our selves but at last gaspe God shall rule us to doe him all the service we can and give him all good words there is great and plenteous mercy to be found in him and now we will doe him all the honour we can And will
streame of our hearts that unfainedly we would be made whole not a member in our bodies but we would have it healed we would not have an uncleane lust in our soules but we would be perfectly made whole would we be saved from all our sins then we have him for our Saviour and there is not a sin in us but we shall be healed of it and this is life to looke to Christ for universall salvation And so consider have you Christ for a Prince Are your hearts willing to subject every thought unto him you say you are somewhat unwilling to it but doth not the Apostle say Every thought must be brought into subjection to the Gospel of Christ into captivity and were it not better to be free and voluntary It is true Gods people know that when they were first brought on to God they were carried captive and drawne Ioh. 6.44 but afterwards they finde the service of Christ to be perfect freedome and therefore how lookest thou at thy thoughts for I principally take notice of them Art thou not willing that a vaine thought should lodge within thee thoughts of pride and of revenge come into thy heart but what entertainment dost thou give them Doth Satan when he comes finde thy house fit for his purpose If thou give these Guests such entertainment then thou hast not Christ for thy Prince but if they come like stubborne Rebels into thy house and they disturbe thee and thou call to thy friends to help thee and thou cryest out to thy Prince in Heaven for a privie search to be made to finde them out and would not have any one wicked thought to rest in thy heart then thou hast Christ for thy Prince but if thou givest them willing entertainment and lodgest them next thy heart and fattest and feedest thy selfe in such thoughts of wrath and lust and huggs them in thy bosome then thy heart stands in rebellion against God if these rebellious lusts be thy friendly companions then God is not at peace with thee but if thou beest burthened with them as Souldiers come into the houses of men that live in the Palatinate and they are forced to entertaine them but if thou wouldest cast them out then thou hast Christ for thy Prince but if you refuse his government and your thoughts are your owne and you wil have God to serve your turne and you burthen his patience with one wicked course after another and you make use of Gods patience to the sinfull provocation of his wrath and you deale with God as Witches doe with the Devil he shall serve you now and you will serve him when you dye Consider what sacrifice you offer to God any thing is good enough for God and the wayes of his grace is a burthen to you then you have him not for your Prince Now in the name and fear of God consider what hath been said every one take his portion and the Lord give you a good understanding in all things SERMON VII 1 JOHN 5.12 He that hath the Son hath life and he that hath not the Son hath not life WE now come to a third head of Signes by which it may appeare whether we have Christ or no and that is from the third word in the Text which is Life for it is an Argument of like strength and value to argue the one from the other He that hath the Sonne hath life and he that hath life he hath the Sonne and therefore now at this time to open to you some signes or markes by which it may appear to us whether we have life or no that Spirituall Life here spoken of to wit the life of righteousnesse in our Justification and of Sanctification of comfort and consolation and of eternall glory And the signes of Life are of three sorts Three sorts of signes of Spirituall life either you may discerne the life of Gods Grace by the causes of it or by the effects of it or by the qualities and properties of it as we call them First 1 Signe for the Causes the Holy Ghost usually sets forth the causes of our Spirituall life and if we finde these causes to have been the work of that life which we conceive our soules to be endued with we may from thence argue the truth of our Spirituall life and from thence the truth of our fellowship with Christ For the first First cause of Spirituall life The first cause of our Spirituall life is the holy and gracious will of God Iam. 1.18 Of his owne will begat he us It is that therefore to this life by which we are begotten for all generation is unto life it is of his own wil that we are begotten to this life And the Apostle John sets it forth Joh. 1.13 opend by the removeall and deniall of all other causes John 1.13 We are borne not of flesh nor of blood nor of the will of man but of God Not of bloods Not of godly parents for men may have godly Parents and yet themselves degenerate and therefore it is not to be ascribed to parentage it is not from the parentage but from the Covenant and from Gods will in the Covenant that begets a child of God nor is it of the will of the flesh that is of corrupt nature nor of the will of man nor of the best paines that they can take though they take much paines for us yet all may be in vaine so as that unlesse God set in with Christian friends and with the blood and Covenant of our Ancestors we shall not be brought on to live a spirituall life in Gods sight It is that which God himselfe speakes of in Ezek. 16.6 When wee were yet in our blood yet God said to us live When we were in our blood like an infant gaspeing for naturall life and ready to perish even then when none could helpe us then God said to us live and then we lived in his sight And therefore in a word you may take this for an evident signe of the true life of grace where ever you find the worke of grace wrought in any soule you shall find the heart speaking of it as the worke of Gods owne hand Take you a man in the estate of nature and he will say God be thanked he had alwayes a good mind and his parents would never say no lesse of him but he was alwayes a toward and hopefull child he thanks God and thus a man will speake that is onely well nurtured he will say it is a worke that was ever in him and he ever thought so of himselfe But now take another man that is indeed borne to a new life and hath this life in him that springs from Christ he will tell you as Paul was wont to say Gal. 1.15 16. When it pleased God to separate me from my mothers wombe and called me by his grace There you shal as in a pattern discern what the maner of the
expression of a living soul is he doth not say it was wrought when he had a good mind to hear such a man or to take such a course so it may be will flesh and blood say but when you come to an heart that indeed lives in God sight he expresseth himself thus but when it pleased God it was done I for my part ran cleane another way I never had a desire after God I had indeed a kind of forme and shew and could comply my selfe to my Governours and Neighbours that I might be flattered and incouraged by them and I should never have taken better course of my selfe but when it pleased God to call me by his grace there is the life of a Christian he fetches his life from the highest heavens It pleased God to call me by his grace and to reveale his Sonne in me when it pleased him to shew me the estate of my soule and the sinfull rebellion of my heart and when he revealed Christ not so much to me as in me he was revealed to him in Act. 9. in the first vision and worke upon him but when he revealed Christ in me then he went that way the Holy ghost led him Thus you shal easily discerne it plainly though it be hidden in the pleasure of God yet it will shew it selfe evidently in the expression of a Christian man when he comes to speake of the life of his spirituall estate they never attribute it to good inclination nor to the good instructions of others but they say when it pleased God thus and thus to reveal himself in me when he shewed me my selfe when God laid about to find which way to hemme me in then it pleased God to do it and since then I have lived A second cause of my spiritual life is The second cause of spiritual life The Word of God the word of Promise for so the Apostle tells you Not all that are of Abraham are the seed and children of Abraham but the children of the Promise are counted for the spirituall seed That seed which is elected of God and chosen to everlasting life that is the seed of Promise That is such as are begotten of some promise of God or other Every Isaack is a Sonne of the promise And least you should thinke it peculiar to Isaack alone the Apostle opens it sweetly in Gal. 4.28 As a thing common with Isaack to all the people of God it is a like Priviledge given to the Galathians and to all others that were born of God We brethren are children of the Promise it was not peculiar to Isaack alone to be borne of the Promise and yet of the Promise he was borne in a kind of peculiar manner for before he was born God gave Isaack to Sarah by promise and by vertue of that promise was he borne even a naturall life Now so farre indeed it was a speciall peculiar Prerogative to Isaack and Jacob but the Apostle would from thence gather that the spiritual birth of us all is by a word of promise All of us one and other is born by a word of Providence but if we speak of our spiritual birth then we brethren are children of the Promise So that you shall observe this to be an holy truth of God That every child of God is borne of the promise of God So that then hast thou a new birth and dost thou live a new life Tel me then what promise was it that did beget thee to God that begat thee to this new life What Word of God was it by which thou wast begotten it is a general speech that in Ro. 10.17 Faith commeth by hearing and by the doctrine of faith preached Gal. 3.5 that is the Gospell of faith so that this is the point There is some promise which being reported to the soule in the ministery of the Word is laid hold upon by the hearts of Gods people the same Word of promise working that faith in the heart by which the soule cleaves to such a promise Then doe but consider if thou beest borne of God what cause was there of thy birth wa st thou born of that Word of God or of thine own conceite or of the good opinion of Christians or is there some Word of God which thou hast placed thy confidence in and upon which thou hast been reformed and since that day to this God hath turned thy heart and way to another course and given thee to live in his sight It is true it may be many a good soule cannot readily tell you Note this what promise did first bring them on to God but though thou canst not alwayes tell yet a word of promise it was and ordinarily a word of Promise which the word preached did apply to thy soule and caused thy heart to reach forth and to lay hold upon it but though thou beest not always able to reckon up the first Promises yet this I say And marke it there is no Christian soule but hath some promises of God on which his heart is stayed upon and by which his life is nourished which argues it was bred of those promises of which it is now fed though a man be not alwayes able to tell what promise it was sometimes a word of reproofe or of counsell may sink deep into a man when God sets it wel on and may make a deep impression in the heart of a man And may so turne about the course of their lives as that thereby they may reforme all common and outward and knowne soule sinnes which before was ever cause and matter of reproofe but that is not so safe a worke of Christ not such a strong evidence of our spirituall life when such a word of reproofe or counsell hath set us in such a course and we have thereupon refrained gaming and breaking of the Sabbath and vain fashions this is well but it is not so safe a signe of our new birth for this may befal even an hypocrite he may be so convinced by a word of grace and wise counsell as may strongly turne the streame of his course another way and yet bee without any life and power of godlinesse only the word of promise is able to work grace and life in the heart of a man For the Ground of the Point is this Ground of the point we cannot have a spirit of life wrought in us by the workes of the Law nor by the words of the Law Gal. 3.5 He that ministereth to you in the spirit and worketh miracles doth hee it by the workes of the Law As if he should say did ye ever receive the grace of Christ by the workes of the Law or by the counsell of the Law or by the commandements of the Law or by the reproofes reached forth from the Law he excludes it as impossible and as no wayes able to doe it vers 21. And therefore he doth ever lead us unto some word of the Gospel to some promise
of grace for the ground of all our spiritual life as if ever we would be able to say we are begotten to a new Inheritance we must be able and are able to say we have some word of Promise which hath wrought this in our soules which hath bowed us to looke to Christ and to cleave to him for strength and increase and groweth in grace For it is true indeed The Workes of the Law may indeed cut us off from some bad wayes but when it hath don so it leaves us there leaves us in an estate wherein we would not give offence and would not displease men that are grave and wise And this we may reach unto without respect to the glory of God or any inward regard of his holy feare but when as we are quickned to live by vertue of some Promise then the love of God constraineth us to live to obedience and good ends then our respects can reach heavenly and spiritual ends And therefore observe this as of necessary use for any man that as he would be loath to be deceived in a counterfeit peece of money so much more let him be carefull in the main points of his everlasting estate on this depends our having or not having of life And therefore it behooves us to bee sure that we be not disappointed in this great mystery of godlinesse and consider seriously upon what your hopes and confidence was bred and whence it was grounded Quest You will say But is it not ordinary that the Word of the Law doth humble and cast downe the heart and spirit before God and cut them off from all confidence in the flesh before they come to lay hold of the promise of grace in Christ Answ True it is so indeed That ordinarily some word of the Law some word of conviction prevailes with the heart and makes him in sence of sinne say to his Christian friends what shall I doe to be saved this is true but yet this is not it that makes him a new man in Gods sight it may reach to the reformation of his outward man and to the alteration of sundry of his former courses which no meanes else could have reclaimed but yet this makes him not live a spiritual life until he be not onely humbled by the Law but in some measure brought on to look after the promise of grace in Christ and to long after them and to say and desire oh that I had but my part in this or that promise what a mercy of God would that be to me could I but lay hold upon them but thereupon the soule of a Christian doth stand poring and plodding and wistly gazeing upon them till in the end the very sight of a promise hath so seasoned us with a spirit of faith that we begin not only to long after that promise but to cleave to it and in time come to receive it into our hearts and come to imbrace it to rejoyce in it to acknowledge it and finde our happinesse and life and comfort to bee wrapped up in it A third cause of our spiritual life A third cause of Spirituall life Is the Spirit of grace that which is borne of the spirit is spirit whatever is borne of the flesh and no more is but carnall but that which is borne of the spirit is spirit Joh. 3.6 there is a shedding abroad the spirit of Gods grace in the heart of man that makes him of another spirit he is not the same man that he was before his spirit was changed his inclination and disposition is changed For Spirit is nothing else but the inclination and disposition the habit of it the spirit of wisdome is an habit or inclination to Wisdome the Spirit of grace is an habit of Grace the Spirit of prayer is an inclination or an habit of Prayer they are severall words but all meane the same thing Be renewed in the spirit of your mindes that is bee renewed in the inclination and disposition of your minde Epb. 4.23 And not only be renewed in the mind or judgement or understanding of a man but there must be a renewall of the whole soule of a man the disposition and inclination of the whole must be changed and altered Caleb and Ioshua was of another spirit they could judge of things otherwise then other men could doe other men not renewed in the spirit of their mind have no alteration but the truly regenerate they see a great change they never saw the danger of their sinnes before nor ever before judged themselves for their sinnes but now their spirit and soule and affection is changed and now a spirit of feare and love and care and every affection is altered now a man is turned quite off from earthly things so farre as they hinder him in the enjoyment of his Spirituall life and now we are set upon the things of God so as that he that is borne of God to a Spirituall life is become a new Creature and old things are past away 2 Cor. 5.17 He hath a new mind and a new heart new affections new Language and new employments that he was never wont to doe before now he can read Gods Word and conferre with Gods people about the things of God and can instruct others and fashion himselfe to a new mould and all upon the renewall of the spirit of his minde so that if you see that God hath put another spirit into you then ever you had before so as not only this or that part but the whole man is changed and put into another frame that though there be still a taste of the Old man yet the frame both of the body and soule is of another mould and all things are become new in some measure then you live a new life indeed else it is not a perfect change though this and that alteration bee wrought in you By these causes you may clearly discerne whether God hath given you a new life or no consider it therefore I beseech you how doe you now finde your hearts apt to speak when you speak of that estate you are in Are you in your Closets wont to say That time was when you have been thus and thus led in the vanitie of your minde and the hardnesse of your heart and custome of sinne but when it pleased God who called you by his grace when it pleased God then it tooke place you had been in good company before and had used many meanes but never any thing would worke but when it pleased God then it wrought and from that day to this it hath been so and so with me It is a good signe to you if withall you can recall that such or such a word of promise it pleased God to pitch your soules upon you have long looked and waited for salvation but in the end it pleased God to wrap up your soules in life by such a promise and if you can call to minde that such a promise
your soules did cleave unto then are you indeed borne to a Spirituall life because you are right bred bred of a Promise and of the holy will and pleasure of God but if you finde your selves to be of another frame and you are bowed to walke with God and to reforme your course of life by outward bounds this is not so safe but if your whole man universally be bowed to a godly holy frame and all things are become new new friends new affections new desires if you finde such an universall change then you are right bred Christians and indeed no Christians are right bred but such Christians but if you make a great stirre about the great Reformation that is wrought in you and it is from the good inclination and disposition you have alwaies had you ever had a good minde and in the end you thanke God you have reformed such and such evils as you have been blamed for time was when you could have freely played at Cards and Dice but since then you see the vanity of it Note this and you take better courses and doe now consort your selves with wel ordered and stayed company you had alwaies a good minde to be better but you could not doe it suddenly and so in the conclusion your reformation is but a good inclination or disposition of your minde and if you see that much good hath been wrought upon you by the counsell of such and such friends and by the good example of such and such wise and discreet friends and if you find that there is some strange change in your carriage your course of life is much altered you are not so light and wanton as you were but you take a farre more grave and wise and stayed course and to much better purpose both for Church and Common-wealth wherein you live now I say if you shall goe on and looke for that Spirituall life which only springs from Christ Jesus and wil lead on to eternall glory and therefore rests not in any reformation of your selves till you finde there be such an inward and whole change wrought in you which the heart is wont to speake of to the praise of Gods grace it was Gods will else it could never have been wrought and you could not speak of it till now and you never rest satisfied in such a change as a word of reproofe or counsell that hath wrought such a change or reformation in you that stayed in the outward man or in some affections till you found your hearts to sanctifie the name of Gods grace in the acknowledgement of the word of Promise and of the Spirit of grace making you new that you may bee able to say that in very deed you have Christ and with Christ life and that life which will never decay but wil hold to all eternity And therefore now to speake something of the signes of the life of our Justification Therefore a second sort of signes Signes of spirituall life from the effects of it is taken from the effects of Spirituall life you see what is the causes of it as the good pleasure of God the word of promise and the Spirit of grace these be the first sort of signes Now a second sort of signes is from the effects and fruits of life and herein take notice of some fruits of your life of Justification Life of Justification it is a principall part of our Spirituall life to have our sins forgiven Blessed is the man whose iniquity is pardoned and to whom the Lord imputeth no sinne Psal 32.1 2. And therefore it is that forgivenesse of sinne is called justification then God accounts us righteous and this is called Justification of life Rom. 5.18 because in the pardon of our sins is our life As when a Malefactor by the Law is condemned he is by the Law a dead man and if his Pardon come his pardon is his life and it is so indeed So is it in this case the pardon of our sins is the very life of our soules and if God give us to finde that life there is no feare of the life of our Sanctification or Consolation c. The first effect then that flowes from the pardon of our sins is some inward peace of Conscience Inward peace flowes from pardon of sins some inward refreshment and satisfaction yeelded to the heart that it could never attaine to before for sinne may be pardoned in the sight of God and yet that pardon is not manifested and declared to my soule untill God vouchsafe me some measure of peace and a manifestation of the free pardon of my sins I can have little rest it is a notable saying Rom. 5.1 Being justified by faith we have peace with God through Jesus Christ A man justified is one that hath his sins pardoned for what was it that all our life time before made us afraid of Gods displeasure and we had much disquietnesse about our estates Oh the sinne of our soules that we had committed all our life long the sinne committed many a day agoe that now lay heavie upon our soules and the want of pardon lay as heavie as our sins but now if God come and say Thy sins are pardoned then followes a sweete tranquility of peace in the soule A matter that Philosophers have talked of to quiet the minde to lull men asleep and with applying remedies did stupisie for a while and take off the heavie burthen or the sence of the burthen rather then the burthen it selfe but so soone as ever God pardons sinne there is shed abroad a spirit of peace in our soules and sometimes in that unspeakable measure as that it passeth the understanding of a man to conceive Note this Phil. 4.7 But I doe not so conceive that every Christian as soone as ever his sinne is first pardoned hath such an unconceiveable peace in his soule but he findes a great deale of ease sometimes as if you had thrown a Milstone from off his body notable is that expression in Esa 32.17 The work of righteousnesse shall be peace and the effect of righteousnesse quietnesse and assurance for ever He speakes of that righteousnesse whereby we stand righteous before God and the imputation of Christs righteousnesse to our soules The worke of righteousnesse shall be peace from this worke and effect you may gather what the causes of it is blessed are such it is quietnesse and assurance for ever Not that there is an everlasting sence of that peace for the sence of it is sometimes obscured for want of watchfulnesse and want of experience in the wayes of godlinesse and sometimes through the buffetings of Sathan or desertions from the hand of God and so many times our peace may be over-clouded and the sence of it taken away but the worke of righteousnesse is peace if sinne be pardoned peace will follow upon it and the fruit of this righteousnesse is quietnesse and assurance for ever the heart
former offence but he can put no new principle into him but Gods Pardons doth convey life into the soule and it hath this worke in it when the soule sees that all its sins are done away and those sins many and great as many and great sins are forgiven him so is his love great and manifold and this is of the same nature of the love there spoken of she was a wicked women and very notorious for uncleannesse for so said the people vers 38 39. Surely if this man were a Prophet he would know what manner of woman this was for she is a sinner And when they say A sinner they meane not such a sinner as other men and women ordinarily be but such a sinner as was a notorious wicked woman and therefore a shame for him that profest himselfe to be a Prophet to come so neare her she begins to wash and to kisse his feet and to wipe them with the haire of her head and to annoint him with precious oyntment Now saith Christ to Simon the Pharisee and he was none of the worst of them neither for Christ seemes to imply that he had some sins forgiven him I have something to say unto thee Simon there was a Creditor had two Debtors the one owed five hundred pence the other fifty and when they had nothing to pay he franckly forgave them both tell me therefore which of them will love him most Why saith he I suppose him to whom he forgave most And Jesus said thou hast rightly judged since I entred into thy house thou gavest me no water for my feet c. wherefore I say unto thee her sinnes which are many are forgiven her for she loved much Shee shewed wonderfull much love she sate behind him weeping when she though she had not been so much seen not presuming to come into his presence Now therefore her sins which are many are forgiven her You may see it plainly because she loveth so much and thou that hast shewed lesse love thou hast lesse forgiven thee but they that have many sins forgiven them they have much And therefore if a mans sins be forgiven him and God give him peace in the pardon of them according to the measure and multitude of his sins such is the measure and variety of his love the greatnesse of his love to God and as God hath forgiven him many sins so hee gives God manifold measures of love he loves God greatly the very feet of God the lowest and poorest members of the Body of Christ He is content to stoop to the meanest office of love to Christ or to any of his servants any thing wherein love may be shewed to Christ or his Members he is content to stoop to it According to what is thy forgivenesse such is thy love And because no man hath so little forgiven him but if any thing be forgiven him at all he knows that little is so much and so great as would indeed have plunged him into the neathermost Hel and therefore no true Christian is conceited of the smalnesse of his sins but he thinkes it a very great matter to have any one sinne forgiven him but he knowes if God had cast him out of his sight for any one of them just had his Judgements been and if at any time his love decay he renewes it by repentance of that sinne for which before God had vouchsafed him pardon And thus you see a six-fold signe of our spiritual life three from the causes and three from the effects and the latter the three effects chiefly concerne the life of our Justification And therefore doe but apply it home to your soules Application because the whole discourse is but an application and an use of the point but I pray you consider what you have heard and lay it to heart and draw neare now into the closet of your spirits that you may discerne what God hath done for you Did you yet ever see any peace of Conscience you say I never had a troubled unquiet Conscience all my dayes but to you I only say thus much your peace hath neither a good root nor will it bring forth any good fruit not well rooted for I pray you whence came it did it come from any word of Gods Promise or any worke of the Spirit of grace or from thy Selfe love or is it not as benumbed peace and if so then it is not wel rooted And truly it hath and wil have as bad fruits for if thou sayest thy sins are pardoned then what care hast thou to keep that peace and to preserve it Doth not a sin befall thee but it is an annoyance to thy spirituall life and thou canst not rest till thou beest shut of it and cannot be satisfied till thou beest wholly discharged of it it is wel but if thou findest that thou canst live quietly in knowne sins and thy soule is never troubled about them this is then but a barren and false-hearted peace and will deceive thee and in the midst of this peace thou mayest sinke into Hell unlesse God heale this distempered peace in thee and if God have given thee such a peace what love doest thou then return to God Where is that great and manifold love thou gives to God If this love be wanting and thy care to preserve it be wanting If thy peace be groundlesse and fruitlesse then spirituall life is wanting but if God have been pleased and thine own heart can find it so and bear witnesse to thy soule that God hath pardoned thy sinnes then that peace which is in thy soul will refresh thee Hast thou ever found such a peace in thy soul as hath been unspeakable and full of glory and thou hast been sweetly quieted when many troubles have been about thee and hast thou found comfort from hence in any of the Ordinances of God And dost thou find that though that peace then gotten be in a great measure lost and decayed yet thou hast as great a care as may be to preserve it and to maintain it and to renew and to recover it again by repentance and art careful to preserve thy selfe spotlesse before the world And dost thou find that according as God hath been mercifull to thee so thy love is great and manifold thou canst never love God so much as he hath done thee thou canst never answer the thousand part of his love and mercy shewed to thee And then no service of God or office so meane that he calls thee to but to the utmost of thy indeavor art willing to spend and be spent for God then it is an evident argument that justification is conveyed to thy soule for God hath given thee peace and hath given thee an heart to love him back again SERMON VIII 1 JOHN 5.12 He that hath the Son hath life and he that hath not the Son hath not life THe causes of this life you have heard and some of the effects of it
also The life of Justification you heard hath these three effects or fruits in the heart Peace Quietnesse and Assurance for ever Care to keepe our conscience pacified in some measure carefull to maintaine that peace we have had so much ado to get And also love of God according to the abundance of sin that hath been pardoned to us We are now speaking of the effects of life and now to speake of the effects of the life of our sanctification Life of Sanctification Hee that hath the Son hath life not only in the pardon of his sin but he hath likewise the graces of Gods spirit which are the life of sanctification A frame of grace wrought in the soule which is the life of holinesse Now because Sanctification is found partly in the heart and partly in the life Let me now shew you some such effects of spirituall life as are found in the heart of a Christian And breathe forth themselves in his life by those habits and gifts which are principally within And the sum of what I shall now say is thus much There are certaine variety of the graces of God in themselves so different and opposite As that in nature they are seldome compatible to one person at one and the same time or least of all to be found in one and the same businesse And yet are found where ever the heart of a man is sanctified by the Spirit of grace where you have the life of sanctification in a Christian you shall finde variety of graces in them some of them of such diversity and opposition one to another that in nature the like temper is not to be found in one person at the same time and in the same businesse They are certaine kind of conjugations or companions of grace so fitted and joyned together in the heart of a man as that nature is not able to compact such sanctified affections unto such uses upon any occasion much lesse able to bring them forth upon any occasion they are so different in themselves to name some of them in particular First if you looke at the grace of God as it workes in the heart Ioy and griefe in the soule sanctified at once and exercises it selfe in the conversion of a sinner you shall finde that when the soule discernes any life of grace in its heart that sin is now pardoned and God is pleased to frame it anew and to give it a new life at that time the heart is taken up with these two contrary effects it is both inlarged with no small measure of joy that ever God should redeeme him from such a desperate condition as his soul lay in and yet withall full of grief of heart that ever he should have so much displeased that God that hath done so much for him and so plaine as that you shall evidently discerne the voyce of your own joy from the voyce of your owne griefe I know not better how to instance in it then to fetch a resemblance from the returne of the Children of Israel from captivity to Ierusalem read Psal 126.2 3 4. When God turned the captivity of his people this was their affection then was their mouth filled with laughter and their tongue with singing c. Now the same people that so rejoyce to see themselves redeemed by the Arme of the Lord when they doe rejoyce to see themselves set at liberty from the captivity they doe at the same time as sadly grieve and weepe to consider the unkindnesse they have put upon God and their unworthinesse of such a mercy from him as you may read Jer. 50. 4 5. speaking of the same people and of the same time their return from the captivity and he tels you They shall come going and weeping shall they goe and seek the Lord God and aske the way to Zion with their faces thitherward If the Psalmist speakes of it he saith they were out of and beyond themselves for joy as in a comfortable dreame the newes seemed to be too good to be true and they rejoyced with exceeding great joy and if the Prophet Jeremy speake of the very same people and the same time and the very same action he tells you They goe to Jerusalem weeping they goe to seek the Lord and aske the way to Zion they rejoyce at the greatnesse of the mercy and weep in sence of their unworthinesse of it And truly this kinde of combination shall you finde stirring in every soule that is converted to God when the pardon of its sin is sealed to its heart it breeds a certaine kind of inward joy and comfort in the Lord that hath thus graciously pardoned their iniquity and yet more abundantly mourning for the evils it hath so displeased God with nor is there any mourning so deeply woundeth the soule as that which ariseth from the sight of Christ crucified then the soule mournes full bitterly Zach. 12.10 He wil mourne exceedingly to thinke that he should deale so unworthily against that God that hath all this while had such wonderfull thoughts of peace towards him This is the first combination of graces that is found in the soule after sinne is pardoned and the heart restored to a new life for wee spake before of prizing Christ in our judgements by certaine preparative graces but now we speak of that kind of life of sanctification which puts forth it selfe after some sence of our justification this life of the mixture of joy and mourning beares witnesse to our life of sanctification Secondly in the worshipping of God in those duties of the life of sanctification 2. Joy and feare you shall finde another combination of mixed affections the like of which are not and cannot be found in nature and that is joy and feare according to Psal 2.11 Serve the Lord with feare and rejoyce with trembling A Christian man when he is in a good frame and the life of grace most stirres in his spirit he never comes to an holy duty but with some holy fear and trembling before God before whom he then stands and yet there is no duties he goes about with more comfort and joy then those when his heart is not dead It is true a dead hearted Christian comes to good duties like a Beare to a stake while they are in such a temper if they can shun duties they wil but take the heart of a Christian when it is alive and then they are a willing people Psal 110.3 they come with some inward gladnesse of heart it is the joy of their spirits to heare of an opportunity when they may heare the Word and pray or performe any duty acceptable to God but how when their hearts are most joyful and they goe about duties most willingly yet then most awfully for take you a Christian when he comes unwillingly his heart is not much affected with feare and trembling but then he is most awfull when his heart is in the best frame towards holy duties these
the sword of the Spirit whereby Kings are bound in chaines and Lords in Iron bonds and such honour have all the Saints he would have all the Saints of God to invest themselves with this honour that they might speake of such glorious excellent things as their words might be like to a two-edged sword to cut asunder the hearts of great Princes to bring Kings and great Lords in chaines of horrour and anguish of soule and conscience such chaines as out of which there is no redemption but by the high words of the Saints by the high promises of God to speake peace to the soules of Princes but let the high threatnings of God be in their mouthes the high Commandements of God in their mouthes and those wil binde Kings in chaines and Lords in fetters of Iron and then let the high promises of God the spirituall promises of grace be in their mouthes to set Princes at liberty and to teach their Senatours wisedome A strange kind of combination in the Spirit of grace wrought in such hearts they can call upon their hearts to be lifted up to the high things of God nothing then too great for them to exercise themselves in no Mercies nor Judgements too great no not the unsearchable counsell of God the depths of the Mysteries of God nothing is too high for them it will be prying and looking into the secret counsells of God and yet both together with most modesty when the soule is most lifted up in the wayes of God yet at the same time he lookes at himselfe as nothing and yet notwithstanding so far forth as God will be pleased to reveale it to him hee will bee searching into the deepe things of God and yet all this will hee doe with a very modest spirit Thus you have seene six combinations severally of the gracious affections that are not to bee found in nature no not set upon civill objects much lesse upon spirituall but upon civill objects they cannot be so combined together Seventhly The seventh combination of graces there is another combination of vertues strangely mixed in every lively holy Christian And that is Diligence in wordly businesses and yet deadnesse to the world such a mystery as none can read but they that know it For a man to rise early and goe to bed late and eate the bread of carefullnesse not a sinfull but a provident care Diligence in worldly busines and yet dead to the world and to avoid idlenesse cannot indure to spend any idle time takes all opportunities to be doing something early and late and looseth no opportunity go any way and bestir himselfe for profit this will he doe most diligently in his calling And yet bee a man dead-hearted to the world the diligent hand maketh rich Prov. 10.4 and you read of the godly woman that she riseth while it is yet night Prov. 31.27 And of this ye read Prov. 15.13 and 18 19.27 Now if this be a thing which is so common in the mouth of the holy ghost and you see was the practice of the greatest women then upon the earth the greatest Princes in those times the more gracious the more diligent and laborious in their callings you see it will well stand with the life of grace very diligent in worldly businesse And yet notwithstanding the very same souls that are most ful of the worlds businesses the more diligent they be in their callings yet the same persons are directed to be dead with Christ Col. 3.1 2 3. Set not your affections upon things below but on things that are above for we are dead with Christ Meaning dead to all these earthly things and all the comforts here below they are not our life but our life is hid with Christ in God and therefore to this world are we dead And Paul therefore so speakes of it Gal. 6.14 The world is crucified to me and I unto the world the very same men that are so crucified to the world yet the spirits of those men though their affections be in heaven yet their labours are in the earth Phil. 3.20 Our conversation is in heaven but our imployments is here upon the earth diligently taking paines in our callings ever very busie in outward imployments Observe the Ante learne her wayes and be wise Prov. 6. be busie like Antes morning and evening early and late and labour diligently with their hands and with their wits and which way soever as may be the best improvement of a mans tallent it must be imployed to the best advantage and yet when a man hath laboured thus busily yet his heart and mind and affections are above he goes about all his businesse in obedience to Gods Commandement and he intends the glory of God and he thereby sets himselfe and his houshold at more liberty for the service of God in their places and so though hee labour most diligently in his calling yet his heart is not set upon these things he can tell what to doe with his estate when he hath got it Say not therefore when you see two men labouring very diligently and busily in the world say not here is a couple of worldlings for two men may do the same businesse and have the same successe and yet a marvellous difference between them the heart of the one may be dead to these things he looks at them as they be indeed but crums that fall from the childrens table he lookes not at them as his cheifest good but the bread of life the spirituall food of his soule that is the thing which he cheifly labours after another man places his happinesse and felicity in them and makes them his cheifest good and so there is a manifest difference between them So then you see seven combinations of graces that are in the life of holinesse and all of singular use in this kind Eightly the last vertue is a single one and that is love of enemyes Love of Enemies I say unto you love your enemies Matth. 5.44 that you may be the children of your heavenly Father Love your enemies This very grace whereby we doe love our enemyes it hath a contrary worke to nature for naturally this we shall finde to be the frame of our hearts towards our enemies we are cold and undisposed to doe any good office unto them very hard and cold and frozen towards them Those who are our enemies we take no pleasure in them but now in such a case as this the love of a Christian will come and warme the heart and thaw this cold frostinesse that is in our soules whereas before a man was cold toward his Enemies his heart now begins to reflect upon him in pitty and compassion and instead of hardnesse his heart now melts and is made soft within him to see what ill measures it could have put upon its enemies But on the contrary side the same hatred in a man that is towards his enemyes it makes a man of an hot
distemper with boyling in heat of wrath against his enemies he is all upon it to doe him any harme his heart is full of hot and bitter wrath so as that love which was as heat and fire to thaw and warme cold and hard hearts when it comes to the fire of wrath it is as it were cold water and allayes that heat and bitternesse and harshnesse which else our hearts are subject to This is the nature of love as it is the nature of water to coole hot distempers and as it is the nature of fire to thaw and soften hard frozen spirits so though it be but as one intire grace Yet in the act it puts forth a kind of variety of worke whereby one would thinke it did crosse it selfe but it doth not but doth all by the life of Christ thus you see what the effects of the life of sanctification is in the heart of a man after that God hath begun to roote the life of justification in us and hee discernes that God hath wrought a change in him and then these severall graces though in themselves and worke one opposite to another yet in a Christian heart they can meet and joyne together And therefore now doe but lay this to heart he that hath the Sonne hath life Will a Christian say how shal I know that I have that life in having of which I may know I have Christ Why do but consider with thine owne soule not now of the life of thy justification but hast thou found that ever God did fill thy heart with joy so as thy soule hath said the Lord hath done great things for my soule whereof he hath made me to rejoyce and hast thou found that when thou hast most rejoyced in the wonderfull mercy of God then hath thy heart most melted before the Lord thy God And thou hast been ashamed and confounded within thy selfe and never open thy mouth against God any more Doest thou see that the more God reveales Christ to thee who was crucified for thy sake the more bitterly thou moanest for thy wickednesse then it is a strong evidence of life and peace in thy soule were it not the mighty power of the life of Christ in thee thou couldest have had neither of both these graces much lesse combined together to worke the same thing at one and the same time if therefore God hath helped you to looke at the great mercy of God with joy and yet with shame and bitter mourning that ever thou shouldest dishonour such a God certainly God hath vouchsafed thee life and such a life as in which thou shalt live You shall have many a soule that is marvellously comforted in hearing the word rejoyce exceedingly in what they heare and goe home and say such a word was good and very comfortable and never man spake like that man and he never thought before that there was so much to be found in the word as now he conceives there is But now if this were the joy of Gods Elect if it were such a joy as would not vanish away like lightning in the aire a flash of joy it would sinke downe into the heart and leave so much the more deeper impression mourning by how much the more it hath had joy I grant that sometimes the joy of Gods owne servants may soone vanish away but it was never knowne that the joy of a living Christian did so soone vanish and depart away but that when it did most abound in the heart it did cause inward mourning and if not weeping yet an affection of greife and sorrow of soule that ever we have so displeased God the more God hath been mercifull to us the more are we shamed of ourselves inwardly grieve for our shamelesse carriages If therefore you only finde joy in hearing that may deceive you it is not the shortnesse of the continuance that argues the unsoundnesse of the joy but the want of this combination that will argue the falshood of it if God yoake not spirituall joy with spirituall mourning then suspect your joy for it doth not accompany salvation unto life And in very deed this you shall find to be true the joy of living soules in Christ though that oftentimes bee soon gone yet it leaves this spirit of mourning which keeps possession for it and that many times for a long time and you may read your comfort in the sorrow that it hath left behind for there is as much cause of comfort in this sorrow as in the joy when you had it when you see your soules can mourne unfeignedly for that you see so good a God to such a wretch this very comfortable sorrow that is left in thy heart is an undoubted pledge that it is not a vanishing joy the power and work of it lasts long and wil abide in the soule for ever a man will in such a case mourne for his sin while he lives If you have therefore found your joy mixed with sorrow it is right else it is but a fading hypocriticall and false joy Againe further how doe you finde your heart affected with the duties of Gods worship Doe you come to duties marvellous unwillingly that if you could avoyd it you would not keep such duties in your house and if it must needs be you put it upon any body rather then upon your selfe you may be a living Christian but your heart is in a dead frame at that time and if it be alwayes so with you you never did truly live but if you finde your spirits at least your hearts comming on most willingly to Christian duties that you performe them like Free-will offerings not free so as without warrant from Gods Word but free in respect of grace Doe but observe thus much it may be you may come off freely before God because hee hath given you spirituall gifts and you can quit your selves well in the performance of them and that makes you come the more boldly but consider if the more willingly you come to Christian duties the more trembling your heart goes about them the more the soule is prepared the more it feares before the Lord and the more lowly the spirit is and awfull in the sight of God if a man can serve the Lord with joy and trembling together then the service you perform to God is heavenly and spirituall and lively and such as in which you live they come from a living heart and the sacrifice is lively and acceptable and argues you have life and therein you have Christ the God of peace but if a man have only feare in a duty but no joy or joy but no feare his heart is not in a good frame we must bring a better frame of heart before God then so before we can say that we have the life of sanctification Againe for another signe How doe you finde your selves in your tribulations are they altogether matter of burden and wearinesse to your hearts Have you no
joy in them Have you many afflictions in inward or in outward man and no comfort in them It is an uncomfortable signe to you the life of sanctification is not so shed abroad in your hearts that you may gather you have life but if you finde that in the multitude of your thoughts within you Gods comforts delight your soule Psal 94.19 20. In the midst of sorrow you finde some comfort if your life in Christ makes your saddest times joyfull and comfortable to you and so in outward afflictions though afflictions may seeme to be grievous yet waite a while and you shall see the more weight and burthen that lyes upon thee and the more thy afflictions for Christ hath abounded so hath thy consolation abounded much more 2 Cor. 1.6 Againe observe your carriage with men it is good to be patient when you meet with evill doers 2 Tim. 2. last yet notwithstanding not so patiently as to beare with them in every thing that is evil to allow them in any sin no if God give you place and opportunity shew some kinde of zeal to cleanse them from their evils and this may well stand with your patience be patient in things that concerne your selfe but beare not with them that are evil in their evil deeds Againe doe but observe the frame of your spirit in the things that you suffer Are you meeke and gentle and flexible that is a good vertue but how are you in the things of God Are you stiffe and unmoveable there 1 Cor. 15. last that though they may perswade you very farre in any reasonable thing concerning man Note but in things concerning God you will not baite any thing of the peace of your Conscience for any mans pleasure are you unmoveable in such a case both these together doe very well stedfast and yet soone perswaded such an heart as is thus mixed and knowes how to temper and frame his spirit according to God he is a living soule and hath life and Christ the Prince of life Againe thou art a modest Creature and thinkest meanly of thy selfe and art weaned from this world it is a vertue but how is it coupled for God couples every grace with another grace that they may poyse one another as Christ sent out his Disciples by two and two together so all the graces of the Spirit joyne one with another they ballance one another that he may not be too high on the one side nor too low on the other but that all things may be carried according to God and therefore thou art modest it is well but hast thou withall an high and a lofty spirit that if it be heavenly matters thou art to be exercised in they cannot be too high for thee Let a man tell thee of State matters comming before Princes and tell thee of nobility thou art ashamed and knowest not how to set about such things as those be but tell thee of an inheritance in the Kingdome of glory and the making it sure to thee in a way of Gods grace Tell thee of pardon of sinne and of the Spirit of grace and the riches of the precious promises of God and thy heart can looke at these highly then thou art of a magnanimous spirit then is thy modesty in outward things well coupled but he whose spirit is most lofty should be most humble couple them together and they well suit one another when they goe hand in hand righteousnesse and peace goe together modesty and magnanimity humility and courage goe together they make an amiable set of grace where-ever they are so coupled if it be of things concerning thy selfe thou hast not an heart to stand out against any man of place but he may bow thee round about but if they wrong thee so farre as Gods honour is interested in the thing thou canst then stand upon thy lawfull rights and if therein thou be impeached thou canst come off with this thou art not inferiour to the chiefe Apostles and yet art nothing nor art able to doe any thing Againe looke at thy worldly businesse art thou diligent in thy Calling it is well and you say Cursed is he that doth the worke of the Lord negligently and the work of his Calling is the worke of the Lord. But how stands thy heart affected in the midst of thy businesse Is thy heart dead to the world goe not about it with a worldly heart goe not about it for profit sake but because God sets thee about it And you are more free to the service of God and to doe more good this is the life of sanctification And lastly if God give us hearts so abundant in love that it both thawes our cold and stiffe hearts towards our poore Brethren and also puts a watery temper to coole the wilde-fire of our wrath towards our enemies it is a mighty power of the Spirit of grace to turne it selfe so many wayes for the right ordering and framing of a Christian in the course of his sanctification these be comfortable signes of our life of sanctification SERMON IX 1 JOHN 5.12 He that hath the Son hath life and he that hath not the Son hath not life NOw we come to speake of such effects of the life of Sanctification Effects of Sanctification signes of spiritual life as shew themselves in the lives of Christians by observing of which in our selves we may know we have Christ and life in him Now these effects are suitable to the effects of naturall life and they are principally five The first is motion 1 Effect motion when a creature is able to move it self unto the duties of its place it is an effect of naturall life when it is able to move it selfe in its place then it is said to live such or such a life if you see a Creature stirres and moves not further then by the help of another then you say it lives not but if it stirre of it selfe then you say it lives Nor is it strait way alive if it move unlesse it be in its place for you see earthly things will move downward if they be upward and light things will move upward but these are out of their places they are rather moved then themselves doe move when they are out of their place and it is not so much from a power of moving but rather an affection to rest then a power to move themselves And further suppose they should move themselves meet it is they should move themselves to such actions as argues as argue this and that life which they expresse suppose a Tree moves it selfe and nourish it selfe and grow and that in its place yet it doth not move it selfe to see nor heare and beasts that doe move themselves to see and heare yet they cannot move themselves to acts of Reason and men that can move to acts of Reason yet cannot move themselves to any spirituall duty and work of grace so that that motion which argues the life
of the soule is a power to move it selfe and in its place unto spirituall duties that is the true nature of the life of sanctification doe you therefore see a creature no further moving it selfe then according to its lightnesse You shall sometimes have men to move themselves out of their levity come to an eminent duty in the pride of their natures Note and will lift themselves up to some duties but this is not out of an inward principle but out of the lightnesse of their spirits desire to be above Lightness of spirit will move them to this and that duty and rather move from hence then from any inward principle of grace and so sometimes creatures out of their heavinesse and basenesse of minde will be doing spirituall duties but as the one doth them to be seen of men and performe the meere letter of the duty and in the pride of his heart not out of any inward affection to such duties so there be others that for profit sake will move themselves basely unto spirituall duties as Christ said of his Hearers they followed him for loaves Joh. 6.26 so that it is one thing to move to such or such a businesse or to be stirring about such duties out of an inward affection to the duty and inclination of heart and love of such a worke and another thing to be carried to such workes out of an inward levity of nature or because by such duties a man may excell others and goe beyond his neighbours and it is one thing to be acting and stirring in spirituall duties out of an inward love to them and another to performe them out of a base respect to the profit and pleasure that may be found in them in outward peace and rest as sometimes the case so stands that if a man doe betake himselfe to spirituall duties he shall perhaps finde the more favour in the eyes of men and to please authority if it take the better side and so from an heavie basenesse of their hearts to such regards they will have respect unto spirituall duties but these doe not move but as heavie things move downward and light things upward a stone will move downward and fire upward Absolom had a marvellous strong affection to be doing 2 Sam. 15.4 he tels them every man should have justice if he was but made King in the Land so all Israel desired after him but Absolom was now out of his place but as soone as ever he got into the place hee desired the first thing he intended was to cut off his Fathers life an act of the greatest rebellion that ever could be done so that men out of their places are apt to be stirring and moving but it is but either from the basenesse or lightnesse of their hearts Note this O that I were but in my Masters place saith a servant I would have duties performed in such time and place and when they come to be in place and might order and command their families then they grow as bad as their Masters and it may be worse but this are we apt to doe when we are out of our places apt to be moving but it s not true life because only that which moves in its place that only lives and yet further A thing may move in its place and yet move from some kind of outward respects as a Watch or a Clock it moves but it is from the weight that lyes and hangs upon it and so it is rather a violent motion then a naturall So is it many times with men the weight of the Law or the weight of the authority of Governours doth so carry them an end in those waies they walke in that they goe through with it and yet it is but from an outward principle from some outward weights that hangs upon them but yet suppose men should be doing in their places as Jehu was he was mighty in his place and was very much against Baal and destroyed the house of Ahab and his children and his friends but yet notwithstanding though this was all in his calling he had a speciall Calling given him of God to that end What required to a spirituall duty but though you should performe duties in your places as a tree though it move in its place upward yet it puts not forth so many a man may doe good duties in his place and yet be wanting in the graciousnesse and spirituality of them Now to make a duty spirituall requires not only that it should be for the better a good worke but that it should be wrought First in sence of our owne insufficiency without Christ and yet so as that by and from Christ we are able to doe it Secondly that we have some respect to the Word of God for our warrant Thirdly that in all we doe we have respect to the glory of God in all our performances I live by the faith of the Son of God Gal. 2.20 The just shall live by his owne faith As if he should say he no further puts forth a worke of spirituall life further then he denies his owne ability so farre hee lives by his faith and depends upon Christ for supply in every duty he goes about whether he pray preach or receive Sacraments or be diligent in his Calling or in his carriage towards any that stand in relation to him so farre as we are sensible of our owne failings and therefore doe depend upon him for strength these are not such as come from common graces Common gifts but doe accompany sanctification to life It is true if men be invested with common gifts they may be acted and moved to many duties in their places and put out very sweet affections to the duty and yet doe it rather out of the power of their owne strength and rather for their owne glory and applause then from any dependance upon Christ so that spirituall life hath the Lord Jesus for its root and the Word for its warrant and for its rule to walke by Psal 119.6 Then shall I never be ashamed when I have respect unto all thy Commandements All such actions will be accpptable to God and serviceable to men and also aime at the glory of God for the end that is their last end and all such other ends as are sub-ordinate unto that the building up of Gods Kingdome Zach. 7.5 6 7. When ye did eate did ye it unto me saith the Lord nay did ye not doe it to your selves Hos 7.14 They have not cryed unto me with their heart when they howled upon their beds Did you desire in your prayers to bring in any service to God to tend to his honour and glory And did you debase your owne soules before him that you might finde help from him Or did you not this to your selves or for your owne deliverance and redemption and freedome from such bondage and other miseries that lay upon you so that if God see men goe
about such duties meerly for themselves they are wanting of this spirituall life So then doe but lay these things together doe you finde a man that is desirous to be doing good duties but is it to please others or is it out of the bonds of authority that lyes upon him Doe you see them have affection to duties but out of their place and calling or in their calling they doe such duties but rather out of their own strength then from the strength of Christ and not out of a conscionable respect to all the Commandements of God or if it be from outward principles and to wrong ends the glory of God not sought after nor tending to the building up themselves nor others in grace all these are such as men may be carried to doe from outward respects they may doe something that one would thinke would argue life but all the duties they doe by their owne strength is like a Spider that weaves a webbe out of her owne bowels we follow not the rule of the Word exactly but are ever wheeling about to our owne ends and to those respects that concerne our selves rather then to the glory of God and the Churches good it is true no man that hath common graces men that have gifts of preaching and gifts of praying may love to act and move them or any other zealous gift but yet notwithstanding you shal finde this to be true that till the heart be sanctified by the life of Christ we ever detaine all the graces of God in unrighteousnesse as the Romans and Gentiles did detaine the truth of God in unrighteousnesse Rom. 1.18 So we by a spirit of ypocrisie detaine all the graces of God in unrighteousnesse and in Hypocrisie whereas God hath given us every grace and the manifestation thereof to edifie himselfe and to glorifie God withall We wonderfully magnifie our selves withall and make our selves goodly in the eyes of men we are full of our selves and thinke we have this and that in us that will serve our turne and reach our owne ends this is not a life of grace but is indeed a dead worke all that we doe and therefore rest not in any such kinde of life and motion But if you finde an inward inclination of soule to Spirituall duties and to those duties in speciall that are pertinent to your place and if they be not within the compasse of your calling you dare not reach unto them and in your calling you do them not out of desire to be seen of men but you are doing good duties out of a sence of your owne inability to reach any duty in your calling much lesse of Gods service and in them all you observe every commandement of God and the ends you aime at are singly that God may be glorifyed and that God may see you and not man that good may be done by you in your places in Church and Family and Commonwealth and that thereby others might be brought on to God and his Kingdome increased this very motion and inclination of your hearts is an argument that you have a stirring spirit to spiritual duties and this is spirituall life in Christ And therefore by how much the more God shall give you an heart to bee doing your works and duties in this order so much the more comfort you shal gather to your souls that undoubtedly Christ hath shed abroad his spirit in you by which you are able to doe that which else you could not have reached unto Quest You say unto me may not a good Christian man have his heart so dead that he is unfit to pray or preach or to instruct his Family or for the duties of his calling fit and good for nothing And is a soule in such a case as this altogether void of spirituall life and sanctification is there not sometimes a kind of a coath come upon a Christian that so benumbs his spirit that he performes no duties at all but if he might have his owne mind he would not pray at all nor receive Sacraments Is not this sometimes the case of Christian and will you say that such an one is a dead soule because he is altogether listlesse and dead-hearted to move to any spirituall duty Answ It is true there may fall such a deadnesse upon the heart of Christian men that they are both unable and unwilling to any spiritual duty Which commonly God leaves his servants unto when he hath found them acting and moving in their own strength and upon their detaining of the graces of God in unrighteousnesse Causes of deadnes of heart and diverting them rather to their own praise in the world then the edifying of the people of God or the glorifying of his own name when God sees we are much of our selves and thinke we can doe much by the strength of grace we have received then God is wont to leave us cold and dead so as we know not in the world what to doe nor are we willing to do any thing The very presence of a duty and the thoughts of it is an horror to such soules in such cases we have been too busie in our own strength and too mighty in the grace we have received and rather aimed at our selves then at him and then no marvaile if God leave us to a world of deadnesse But when God hath thus by this meanes let us see that all our life is in him and that we are dead hearted further then we have life from him then God is wont not to faile but to help us thus farre at the least to looke with a wist and a sad eye upon the forlornnes of our estates and to cry out of our selves O what dead hearted Creatures and dull spirited things are we and bemoane our selves as Paul did Rom. 7.18 I see that in me that is in my flesh Remedies against deadnesse dwels no good thing Sometimes I have a minde to doe good duties but I finde that I have no strength to performe Paul comes to Macedonia and he had an open doore a faire calling to preach but he had no heart to it because he found not Titus his brother there Now when this is the case of a Christian man that he is strait and dead hearted he groanes under the burthen of it and he lookes at it with sad countenance and sees he is not well but is ready to complaine of it now this sence and complaint of deadnesse and using the best meanes to raise himselfe up out of this deadnesse this is an action of Spirituall life It is an act of Spirituall life for a man to be sensible of his owne deadnesse which in time workes the soule of a Christian to a more constant dependance upon Christ for life and makes him more observeable of the Word and more ingenuous and sincere in looking at the glory of God and the Churches good more then his owne and by how much the more we come to this passe and
the more we have respect to the Word as our daily rule so much the more All our stirrings in our callings is a motion of Spirituall life and argues the life of sanctification shed abroad in our hearts Secondly another action of life is feeding 2 Signe of spirituall life the creature that feeds it selfe is able to live Joh. 6 35. explained Iohn 6.35 Except you eate my Flesh and drinke my Blood you have no life in you He doth not speake of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper there for it was not then instituted but yet it is true of that as wel as of any other Ordinance of God the Body and Blood of Christ fed upon in Word and Sacrament and Christian communion in hearing and reading the Word and if Christ had ordained more Ordinances then he hath yet when he hath had ordained any Spirituall Ordinance the feeding upon Christ in that Ordinance had been an argument of Spirituall life Except yee eate his flesh and drinke his blood yee have no life in you This is an argument of Spirituall life when a man in every duty that he takes in hand and is sensible in them all in some measure though not alwayes easie to be discerned at first but if in every duty of Christianity that you performe and in every Ordinance of God you feed upon Christ then you have life in Christ so that let a man observe it You heare the Word and you receive Sacraments and you partake in Christian company Doe you eate the flesh of Christ there and drinke his blood there If so then it is well when you heare the Word is the Blood of Christ or is the flesh of Christ there or is either of both there to feed upon Or in prayer or in any other duty that you take in hand doe you feed upon Christ in it If you feed upon him there you have life and he that feeds not lives not if a man forbeare his meat he cannot long subsist It is true a man may live for a while and finde no rellish in any thing but in time he must finde relish in them else he cannot be preserved Quest But how shall I know that I doe feed upon Christ in every Ordinance Ans 1. A soule longs after Christ in Ordinance First Whether doe you finde an inward longing desire in your souls after the Lord Jesus Christ in the duties you goe about Doe you come with a desire to finde Christ in his Ordinance hungring and thirsting and not satisfied unlesse you finde Christ that is the nature of hungring and thirsting and so is the case here This desire and thirst is such an unquenchable desire as that without Christ it is by no meanes satisfied doe you therefore finde an inward longing to find and meet with the Lord Jesus in the Word that you read or heare in the Sacraments that you receive and such a longing desire as that if you finde not Christ there you goe away poore and dead and finding your hearts unsatisfied is an evident signe of life for you came to an Ordinance and desired to finde Christ there and there he was not what then Cant. 3.1 2 3. to the bed of the Ordinances the Church goes to seek and to finde Christ by night I sought him that was in a time of calamity that she could plainly discerne she found him not and she sought him in every other Ordinance but found him not or sign of life she hungers and sought out after him but could not finde him and when she missed him was not satisfied If a man come to an Ordinance and find nothing there Note this and yet when he is gone he is satisfied he is well enough that soule hath either no life at all or life in a swound or cold without stirring and motion there is not an hungering desire after him when you can come and goe away unsatisfied and yet be well contented too Secondly feeding hath another worke Strength and sweetnesse in the ordinance the former is but a preparation or supposition of feeding but a man also then feeds when he findes some sweetnesse and rellish in the meat that he eates that doth ever accompany feeding and is a signe that a man doth feed the stomach doth well affect the meat it feeds on have you then found some sweet rellish in the Ordinances the Gospell is a sweet savour to them that are saved 2 Cor. 2.15 16. and as for savour to smell so as a sweet savour to the taste doe you therefore finde some kinde of sweetnesse a spirituall sweetnesse in the Word you heare or read or Sacraments you receive or prayers that you make Are they such a comfort or sweetnesse to you that you finde in this or that promise or commandement or doctrin any word of life Do you finde strength and sweetnesse in it It is an evident signe of life because you finde sweetnesse in it it s a signe of health to rellish a sweetnesse in our meat for a sick man it may be eates and drinkes but he findes no sweetnesse in it and that is a part of his complaint that he cannot relish his meat and it is true it may be a man that hath some life in him feels no relish no savour in any Ordinance but then he sees he is sicke and he complaines of it to God but yet notwithstanding if a man doe finde sweetnesse and relish there it is an evident argument not of life only but of health and such as will maintaine spiritual life but if a man find no sweetnesse in it he cannot live for were there life it would finde sweetnesse Thirdly 3. Particular applying of the Word in all feeding there is a taking of the meate downe and not spitting it out but we receive it downe and there it lyes in our stomachs and we chew upon it and there it rests but if we cast it up againe then we feed not it is an ill signe when we cast it away as soone as we receive it If Gods Word abide with us and in us that we doe not reject it but hide it in our hearts that so we might not sinne against God Psal 119.11 and receive it by a wise applying of it to our owne soules receive it into the inward man and apply our selves to every duty commanded us so farre as concernes our callings and our estates and takes notice of every threatning that we had need looke to it so farre as we might sinne against God if we thus take the Word of God downe into our hearts and make it our owne case and therefore keepe it within our selves and give up our selves in some measure to be bowed by it and hide it in our hearts and lets it sit next our hearts then truly we doe feed upon it and it secretly conveyes strength into us though sometimes we lesse discerne it Fourthly 4. Conformity to the Word in everything all
feeding containes in it a conversion of the meat into the thing nourished so as that which we feed upon it becomes our selves it is all one with our selves in time it is so digested and turned into our nature that every part hath sucked in its owne nourishment every part hath received something of that which was inwardly received This hath been anciently observed this is somewhat more then receiving Christ by faith for when we apply every word to our selves and make Christ ours that is receiving him to be ours yet it is a further worke to be conformable to the Lord Jesus Christ in every thing to be confirmed and established in the Promises and to be quickned by them to be terrified by threatnings and to stand in awe of every word of God and to be bowed to an inward subjection to Christ day by day by the word we receive this is a further mighty worke of grace If therefore hee be a Christian that by the Word and Ordinances he receives he is fashioned and made conformable to Christ meek and righteous and lowly and holy as he is and willing to do any good Office for the Church of God and goe up and down doing good and needs no further motion this way but as Christ moves him it is a signe that he feeds upon Christ Christ is turned into his nature or which is more his nature is rather turned into the nature of Christ the nourishment being so strong makes us become such as he is in this world Now when we are conformable to the Lord Jesus Christ by the Ordinances that we partake in it is an evident sign that we there feed upon him And therefore try your selves by this signe of sanctification if you live you feed on Christ and except you so doe you have no life in you so then consider do I feed upon the flesh of Christ and drinke his blood and do I finde a spirituall appetite to the Lord Jesus raised up in my soule and do I find any spiritual refreshment and strength by that which I do partake in and that which I so find sweetnesse in I apply it to my own estate and convey it into the inward part of my heart that I may be able to drink it up as my lot and portion And do I by this strength of grace grow like to Christ and do I more adorn the Gospell of Christ this is an evident signe you live for you feed upon spirituall food which is an argument of spiritual life no man can feed upon spirituall food but he that lives and such a life as hee lives in Christ Let a man come to the Word without an appetite to it and when he comes find no nourishment nor refreshment in it and applyes nothing as is said to him but let such and such looke to it he never hears profitably that doth not particularly apply that which he heares and if he apply it he rather stormes at it it is an evident argument that such a man hath no life in him at all Not that you should here look at the naturall body and blood of Christ for that were a Canaball eating and drinking That which the Church of Rome puts upon the Church of God at this day but our Saviour tells you the meaning of this place It is the spirit that quickeneth the flesh profiteth nothing had a company of Roman Souldiers fallen upon Christ and either out of wrath against him or love to themselves had pulled him in peeces and eaten him goblet by goblet it had profitted them nothing had men eaten the reall body of Christ and drunk up his blood and joyned with others in so doing and left none of him al this had profited them nothing nay it profits nothing for the Capernites aske the question How can this man give us his flesh to eat it is an hard saying they thought it incredible v. 5.2 they would think it a savage bruitishnesse to fal upon him in that manner and therefore our Saviour so confesseth that it is no part of his meaning that they should eate and drinke his reall body and blood but hee meanes the breathing of the spirit in the Ordinances if you can rellish Note this and feed upon that and grow to be such as Christ was in this world that was the meate and drinke of his soule if you grow humble and meek and be transformed into the spirit of Christ if you see your spirits conformable to the will of Christ it is a signe of the life of holinesse in your soules which God hath given you through Christ A third effect of the life of sanctification 3 Signe is growth for that which lives growes till it come to its full perfection so in all naturall Growth in grace vegitative or sensitive life if it live it growes till it come to its full maturity when it comes to its full vigour and strength it may decay and stand at a stay but a Christians life never comes to that till it come to the life of glory to the full measure of the stature of Christ In this life we cannot come to that but therefore it is that we grow to the end of our dayes and then are forthwith translated to immortallity ye desire the sincere milk of the word that ye may grow thereby 1 Pet. 2.2 and 2 Pet. 3.18 grow in grace and God hath given us Ministers to teach and instruct us till we all grow to be perfect in Christ Jesus Eph. 4.11 12 13. Col. 2.19 Increase with the increasings of God with divine and inlarged and spirituall increasing so doth the body of Christ grow and all the members of it they grow in grace and in the knowledge of the Lord Jesus Christ So that this is a third effect of life if a man can find his heart to grow Quest But doth not many a Christian stand at a stay and sometimes grow backward and fall from their first love fall from the fruitfullnesse and goodnesse and rootednesse in Christ though not wholly cut off yet falling from the firmenesse in grace and the power of grace and from fruitfullnesse and the abundance of the worke of righteousnesse Answ It is true many a soule doth so for a while but if so bee that God doe give a Christian man not to grow we must not say therefore he doth not live not but that a man for a time may be weake as a living man in sicknesse may be very weake his spirit faile and his strength faile and his worke and imployment fails him and he can do nothing neither eate nor drink no not so much as leane upon a staffe but may lye bed-rid but yet such a man feeles a sensible distemper of his body and he ceaseth not to use the best means he can and so in the end he comes to grow and recovers his first love againe in some measure some also there are that by sinfull lusts waste instead of
growing as a theefe in a candle wasts it but if there be a theefe in the heart a lurking lust in the soule a living soule is not well till it be removed by some good means or other that so it may recover it selfe It is sometimes the case of a Christian as David speakes Psal 39. ult Oh spare a little that I may recover any strength so a Christian man if he find himselfe in a decay that he is dead and heartlesse in every spirituall performance oh then spare a little that I may recover my strength Now hee is afraid to dye in such a case but hee would now have some time that he may recover his first love and his first fruits and that his faith might not vanish away in ashes and smoak if he see that his spirit decayes he considers then whence he is fallen Rev. 2.4.5 and repents and doth his first workes This is the nature of repentance it purges out Repentance the best purge it purges out the noysome humours that brought the body into languish and decay Repentance is the cheifest purge and so then wee doe our first workes and attain to our first love and grow more at the last then at the first Rev. 2.19 and therefore this is to be considered of a Christian man is a growing man if not always in the bulke which is easie to bee discerned as to grow in strength and rootednesse c. yet surely he growes to more sweetnesse of spirit An Apple is sometimes grown to full growth upon a tree yet grows not sweet till a good time after but in time it will So a Christian though it may be he shall never get more knowledg then he hath or more ability but though the case so stand Simile that you are like to grow no further yet you may grow to more sweetnesse and mellownesse to more love to your brethren and be more ready to deny your selves of that arrogancy of spirit and pride he is now addicted to And so a Christian growes in sweetnesse and growes in rootednesse of spirit and sees his more want of Christ and gets faster hold on Christ And though he cannot grow more tall in his outward expression nor more painful yet in these two no Christian that growes but if he be living ahd healthful he growes in firmenesse and rootednesse in Christ and in great dependance upon him from day to day in his wayes And he growes in more sweetnesse aymes more at Gods glory and is more in love to his brethren and more denys himselfe in his own matters And if he grow not here he is either no living Christian in truth or no healthfull Christian and if a man see this and not bewaile his not growing in these he hath no life at all in him a man that growes harsh and unsavoury and doth not take a course to repent of it it s a thousand to one there is no life at all in him but if a man grow though but in amiablenesse and selfe-denial and more firmly in Christ and more assured of Gods grace and mercy and more depend upon Christ for what he doth and can do nothing without Christ and he knowes it by experience that unlesse a man so grow there is no life in him Fourthly 4. Effect of the life of Sanctification another effect of the life of sanctification is this life is such a thing as hath an expulsive power to expell and drive out of the body that which is noysome and hurtfull to it and will cast and sweat it out Nature cannot endure to be clogged with superfluity out it must one way or other Nature will ease it selfe it cannot long subsist paine and sicknesse is grievous and painfull to Nature if any thing trouble the stomach or the body out it must by vomit or purge it cannot stay if the man be living so if grace be but living in the soule there is an expulsive power in the soule that will purge away that which is contrary to it it cannot endure superfluity but away it must goe there it cannot stay nothing will he keep but that which is convenient for him A Christian looke whatsoever it be that a Christian findes superfluous and findes contrary to the life of Christ in his soule either too much or contrary to his spirit that he abandons it more or lesse by degrees measure after measure and time after time so the Apostle exhorts Jam. 1.21 Lay apart all filthinesse and superfluity of naughtinesse c. If there be any thing which is superfluous or filthy away with it let it not rest there and if it be for no good purpose let it have no rest in thee There is many parts of knowledge that is not contrary to the life of sanctification but are more then we shall have use of in our callings and though they may be such things as others may make use of yet they are superfluous when they are of no use to us in our callings then put them away unlesse they be of use either for necessity or expediency then nature will cast them away especially if they be naughty things they are more then superfluous then they are noysome and hurtfull and therefore a Christian man principally casts away that which is noysome and corrupt both doubting and presumption is contrary to the life of faith and therefore must be cast out cast out all feares and all selfe confidence Perfect love casteth out feare 1 Joh. 4.18 Faith strives against feare and love strives against malice and patience strives against frowardnesse modesty against pride and so every of God wonder to see how it will by the degrees either sweat them out or else set themselves by some serious duties of humiliation and so cleanse themselves from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit 2 Cor. 7.1 that he may grow to perfect holinesse in the feare of God He is weary of it and that life of grace casts out all the life of sinne he lookes at the life of this world as something in it that is good yet so much of the world as he sees he cannot well manage but with cumberance to the Spirit of grace he layes it aside and meddles not with it he studies no more then to use in a practicall life he would live as David in Sauls Armour when he sees it troubles him he layes it aside So shall you finde it with a Christian these things are unprofitable for him keepe them out of your soules least they prove a snare to you and whatever is superfluity cast it out and whatever distracts you and clogs you with cares out with it whatever is a burden to the life of grace cast out all such things Fifthly 5 Signe life propagates its like The last act of the life of sanctification is the begetting of the like and propagating according to their kinde it is the nature both of Spirituall and Naturall life it propagates its kinde
though at the first it may be weake yet it growes to that temper by which it may propagate and the life of grace is most strong in this regard it no sooner moves and feeds or growes in any measure or begins to expell any ill matter but it will have a minde to be fruitfull begetting its kinde and that is above naturall life a Christian is most apt and ready to draw on others to be like himselfe As soone as ever the woman of Samaria saw that Jesus was indeed the Messiah and found true sweetnesse in him the very same houre she runs into the Towne and tells her neighbours Come see a man that hath told me all that ever I did Joh. 4.29 Is not he the Christ and when they came and saw it they said We beleeve not because of thy Word but because we have heard him our selves and we know that this is indeed the Christ This is the proper nature of true life as soone as they are truly begotten they beget others of their owne kinde not but that sometimes a Christian soule hides himselfe long before he be well setled but when he truly discernes that he lives and is conscious to himselfe that God will be gracious to his soule then he desires to propagate the like grace unto others Joh. 1.41 to 46. when one had found Christ they call others to come and see Psal 51.10 Then shall I teach transgressors thy wayes and sinners shall be converted to thee to shew you that if God will but worke a cleane heart in David and renew a right spirit within him and his broken bones may be recovered and if God shall be pleased to establish him with his free spirit and he may be once againe assured of the pardon his sins then will he teach others the wayes of God if he be once converted himselfe he will draw on as many others as he can Thus you have five signes of spirituall life SERMON X. 1 JOHN 5.12 He that hath the Son hath life and he that hath not the Son hath not life WE are now in the next place to see how we may discerne life by the properties and adjuncts of it you heard before of the effects of life now of the properties and qualities of this life by discerning of which we may know that we have life There be three properties or qualities of life Three properties of life 1. Warmth First where ever there is life there is some warmth 2 King 9.34 when the Prophet had laine upon the childe and had done so seven times at length the breath of the childe began to wax warme a signe that life was a restoring and thereby the Prophet discerned that life began to returne into the body of the childe because warmth returned and so is the presence of the Spirit of grace and the union of it with the soule and body of a man it makes a man fervent and warme Fervent in spirit Rom. 12.11 and therefore it is that it is resembled unto fire Matth. 3.11 The Holy Ghost shall come downe upon you as it were with fiery tongues and shall warme and heate you with whatever duties God shall call you to 1 Thes 5.19 Quench not the Spirit now quenching belongs to fire a signe therefore that the spirit is of a fervent nature so farre forth as it is capable of any quenching and destroying by the Sons of men and 2 Tim. 1.6 Stirre up the gifts of grace in you as if yee stirred up the embers of the fire so stirre up and kindle the gifts of God which is in you blow them up into a kindling flame so that all these things expresse thus much That since the Spirit of life which is in Christ Jesus and from him communicated to his Members is a spirit of heat therefore wheresoever there is warmth there is life if no warmth nor heat there is no life and as our spirits begin to wax warme so we grow to life in Christianity Notable is that expression in Luke 24.22 Did not our hearts burne within us while he talked with us of the Scriptures to shew you that there is a power in the Word to convey such a measure of the Spirit of grace to the Hearers as that their hearts begin to glow within them and to convey some heat and warmth into them when the Word is powerfully applyed to the soule For the further opening of this point you shall see it in some things principally which are ever found in some measure in the spirits of Christian men that have any life in Christ First that which is wonderfull and is indeed no where found but in them their very knowledge is warme Knowledge warme which in all other men is cold knowledge is but an empty speculation brings forth no great matter of heat but in a Christian his knowledge is full of heat Zeale must be according to knowledge knowledge is no knowledge without zeal and zeale is but a wilde-fire without knowledge Rom. 10.2 So if Christians have a knowledge of God but no zeale there is no saving life in that knowledge it is not the knowledge of Gods people Notable is that speech of our Saviour Joh. 5.35 speaking of John He was a burning and a shining light not only a shining light to give cleare instruction in the knowledge of the Messiah and the true meaning of the Law but withall a burning light Joh. 5.3 expounde● so as that he had a notable power when Hypocrites came before him to burne them up Mat. 3.12 And so where ever he came he did not only shew them what they should doe what shall we Publicans doe and what shal we Souldiers doe Luk. 3.3 to 15. but he did burne up not only those who were professed enemies to the wayes of grace but all those that he found in Hypocrisie he burnt them all up where ever he came and if he did not finde out their lusts he would kindle a fire in them he warmed Herod in such sort as that he was constrained to doe many things according to Johns Ministery Mark 6. and so shall you finde it in all the Servants of God that according to their life if there be true life there is true burning though sometimes their burning is not so strong as their life yet there is heat and fervency of spirit mixed with their knowledge that if they know the Will of God they are inflamed and their knowledge of Christ will not suffer them to be barren and unfruitfull 2 Pet. 3.18 So that the knowledge which a Christian man hath is such as by which he will doe what he ought to doe if he see sinne in his brother he will not suffer it to lye there Levit. 19.17 If he see any thing amisse in his brother that he sees not in himselfe he will be helpfull to him where the Spirit of grace is lively they will not suffer their brethren to rest in sinne much lesse
themselves and therefore this is the warmth of this knowledge it both burnes up their owne lusts like chaffe and all the sinfull distempers that we see in the lives and wayes of our Brethren this is one part of the heat of a Christian soule that his knowledge is a warme knowledge Look what he knowes he thinkes he must doe whereas another man knowes many things but he doth them not but a Christian if he know it to be the Will of God he must doe it And that is the reason why Gods servants are many times counted very busie as indeed the fire is ever very busily working no creature in the house so busie as the fire is and so the knowledge of Gods people makes them to be so busie in doing and therein they expresse the life of Christ Secondly 2. Where there is life there is breath where ever is true life there is this warmth a warmth in their breath both in the Naturall and Spirituall body in this Naturall body while we live it is warme and so long as we live we breath more or lesse it is but for a little time if at all breath be intercepted it may be in some suddaine fits but ordinarily if it tarry long it is a signe of death but if there be life there is breathing and that breathing is warme some warme breath comes from him that is alive And truely so shall you finde it in your spirituall life If there be any true life in the heart of a Christian soule there is alwayes some kind of warm breathing there is some measures of warmth in his prayers the prayers of an hypocrite ir alwayes but lip-labour and accordingly lust labor the words vanish away in the aire but there is ever more or lesse some kind of warmth-in the prayers of Gods servants according to what the Apostle speakes Rom. 8.26 even then when we know not what to pray for nor how to pray as we ought then the spirit helpes our infirmities that when we sometimes cannot bring out a word to God the heart is ful sometimes of anguish and discouragement in respect of inward desertions or temptations and outward afflictions but yet though in such a case we be not able to tel what to pray for yet there is ever in a Christian soule something that makes him seeke to God and the very sighs of such a soule come from ome warmeth of spirit within him The scalding sighs and deep groanes of the soule they come from a spirit of life and warmth in Christ Jesus Therefore though it be true there be many cold prayers that Gods servants do put up yet there is some kind of sighs and groans that springs from them which argues some heat and life in them And so is it As they breath thus to God-ward so doe they breath one to another so that if they speake of the things of God they speake not of God and his Word lightly and wantonly or loosely as those that have no affection to them but if they speak of the Word of God of his threatnings promises or of any of his commandements or any of the workes of his providence they speake not of them coldly as those that took no pleasure in them but if they speake of any of the things of God they speake with some reverence and desire after them and settling a confirmation in them they have love to the word and rejoyce in it and stand in awe and in feare of it and they exercise their hearts and wits about it when at any time they speak of the things of God so that there is some kind of warmth in the expression of a Chirstian in some savoury affection whereby he esteemes of the things of God above what is found in an hypocrite Thirdly Spiritual warmth digesteth Gods Ordinances There is a certaine kind of warmth by which the soule doth not only affect the Ordinances of God but by which it doth in some measure digest them there is no living man wanting some such measure of heat as makes him able to digest some kind of dyet though not alwayes strong meate especially if he be in any measure of health and that is no small measure of heate Psal 119.20 the very longing desire it alwayes hath to Gods Judgements was it that even made his soule to breake within him and so to pant after Gods Word and his presence in his Ordinances Psalm 42.1 there was a kind of panting and longing and eager desire after God by which it comes to passe that the soule of a Christian closes with God in his Ordinances and turnes them into nourishment within himselfe and so is more strongly and inwardly bent towards God in the ways of his grace whereas a dead spirit is flat and hath no affection to the word no affection to Gods presence no list to the things of this nature Fourthly things that are warm put them together and they are the more warm 4. Spiritual warmth heateth others but put cold clogs and peeces of wood together and they are never a whit the warmer but if you take but two or three of them things that are well kindled and they will set all a fire that comes nigh them though ready before to goe out for want of supply if you lay two or three warme brands together they will kindle one another And truly so it is among Christians take you a Christian that hath this spirituall warmth in him though almost benumbed for want of good company and good conference and breathing forth of Gods spirit and grace in the soule Yet if he meet with two or three like himselfe they presntly begin to kindle one another And the breath of such Christians is like bellows to blow up sparkes savoury and sweet expressions of their hearts and edifie themselves by their mutuall fellowship one with another Yea and sometimes they grow so warme by this means as that they are fit to admonish one another to exhort and to comfort and if need require to rebuke one another as occasion serves 1 Pet. 4.8 Have fervent love one to another above all things have fervent love among your selves this is a speciall thing love among Christians by which love they so kindle one another to such deep respects to God and the wayes of his grace and so burne one out of another much sinfull folly and frailety which will be in them that are so loose one to another and raiseth them up to that power of godlinesse which sometimes they had grown up unto and now almost lost for want of often joyning together for by so doing they do what they can to put out the fire when Satan means to put out the light and life of Religion out of both Church and Commonwealth hee layes one Christian in one corner and another in another that they shall when they list go to bed and sleep and then a lazy spirit shall come upon them and so they
lye till they be dead in trespasses and sins But above all things have fervent love among your selves forsake not the fellowship you have one with another as the manner of some is Heb. 10.25 26. Love covereth a multitude of sins So as that though there was much evill in Christians before yet their very lying together doth burn out all that superfluity of naughty stuffe that hangs about the servants of God 1 Pet. 1.22 see that ye love one another with a pure heart and fervency of spirit This warmth in Christians it is found in these foure things And thus you see the properties of this life Quest You say but if this were always found in Christian men how comes it to passe then that the servants of God do many times finde their hearts so cold in their prayers and appetite so little to the word and so unprofitable under it How should a man heare so much and profit so little if a man aid digest the word and is it not a common complaint of Christians how much they hear and how little they profit Yea and will not some Christians say he profits nothing at all no not any thing And is it so many times that Christians come together and they are little edification one to another very little profit sit together and talke of matters that little edifie but rather corrupt the spirits one of another how is it then that you say where ever there is life there is heat so such as makes them more lively in Christian duties And it might be objected that Luke 24.32 Did not our hearts burn within us c. A sign that till he came to them and came into conference with them and did rub them up they were very cold hearted and dull spirited and went on their way with much darknesse of soule without life and strength of soule until he came to put life into their spirits Answ It is true many times Gods servants are very cold and benumbed and a cold spirit growes upon them exceedingly so as that they scarce feele any life breathing in their knowledge or prayers or appetites to the Word or love to their Brethren little warmth in any of these partly through want of supplying the life of Gods grace with fit nourishment whereby the heart should grow warme As naturall fire if it be not supplyed with new fewell it will goe out and partly sometimes by pouring cold water upon it which is as much as in us lyes to dampe the fire And we doe power cold water upon this life of grace when we admit of any sinfull lusts in our soules those do marvellously eate out all that life and heate of spirit that sometimes we had in our hearts and sometimes by an excessive use of worldly things which without a very spiritual mind doth clog the soule as much as if you should throw cold water upon a fire it will damp it very much so is this case men sometimes walke in worldly businesses with worldly affections and sometimes give leave to distempered lusts and sometimes neglect to put any fewell to the fire of grace but as soone as ever they find the heart well warmed with some good Sermon or a good Prayer or Conference or the like they thinke this fire wil never goe out and so they begin to neglect it and so either the fire goes quit out or else is so damped as that you can discerne no life no savour or power of Religion there And therefore such a thing may befall Gods servants they may grow dul hearted one way or other as you have heard But yet thus much let me say though this sometimes do befal the spirits of Gods people yet even then when they want burning and chafeing and stirring up there is something in them that argues some life and where is some life there is some heat so much life as there is so much heat is there so much as you take away of your Christian heat so much life you take away And therefore for these two Disciples that went to Emaius It is said when they were talking one with another they were talking of Jesus Christ and upon all the things that befell him in his passion And said Christ to them ver 17. What manner of communication is this and what is the matter that you are thus sad what was it that made them sad was it not an affection of griefe for all the evills done to their Saviour that was life of grace and some heate there was in them that their spirits should be so troubled to see their Elders and Princes and all the people to cry out so bitterly against the Lord Jesus Christ and not to leave him till they had crucified him there was some sad expression came from them upon that occasion And so though it left the outward man sad yet there was something in the heart though full of doubting through unbeleife what this Christ was and what this would come to we hoped this was he that should redeem Israel c. then Christ began to put a little warmth into them by saying ought not Christ to suffer these things v. 24 25. and so he opens to them the Scriptures spoken of himselfe and these words put new life into them and did blow up the spirit and heat of that decaying life which was overwhelmed with griefe and care their hearts was heated yet So that take you a Christian man when he is even in the most disordered framelook how much he hath lost of his spiritual heat so much of his true life if he have left to be warm so much life hath he lost and if his warmth be smoothered his life is smoothered for the present And even as life will shew it selfe in the very sad face of the heart and dejection of spirit that they fall into and sometimes in the deepe sighs and groans of the heart which in such a case it sometimes will breake forth into So a Christian soule when his heate is most damped there is a sad face in his spirit that he discerns all is not well with him his spirit is benumbed his heart in his own thoughts is frozen within him It is a burden to him and a matter of sadnesse to his spirit and therefore hee doth expresse himselfe sometimes with many sad and deep sighs and groanes about his forlorne and lost estate and yet sometimes you shall have his heart even then when his heart is most cold which is worse then the former for you shall sometimes have a Christian soule not onely not affected with sadnesse 〈◊〉 this when his life is smothered within him but vanish away in much empty carnall delights and contentments and rejoycing in those comforts which have no life at all in them A Christian man that hath his life so deaded may come not onely to have nothing left but sadnesse of heart to behold it but hee may loose his sadnesse too and even
as lets thee alone and only puffes thee up and makes thee to thinke goodly of thy selfe if that be all the worke of thy knowledge thou art a dead-hearted Christian if it cause thee to vanish away in empty contemplation and thou therefore talkest that thou mayest let others see thou hast knowledge as well as others and if it be dead and cold and empty and vanish away in empty notion and speculation and dead conference then thy knowledge is barren in goodnesse and that is an argument of no life in thy soule but if there be any truth of life in thy soule thy knowledge is warme and lively thy knowledge that is in thee hath some zeale and that sets an edge upon it and makes it serviceable to God and thy brethren I know not better how to expresse it then from Revel 1.14 15. in the description of our blessed Saviour His eyes were as a flame of fire It is true the eye is lightsome but it doth not burne they are not hot but the eyes of Christ is as a flaming heat and the meaning is Christ is described just according to the state of the Church to whom Iohn was to write as he had feet of brasse when he writes to a Church that though burned in the fire yet the more you burne it the lesse it wasts and the more pure it is and by degrees the more bright so where he speakes to a Church in persecution and it is not consumed then Christ hath feet like brasse but if he write to a Church of Thyatira a Church of a warme spirit then thus faith he that hath eyes like a flame of fire Revel 2.9 meaning the knowledge that that Church had which was full of zeale as wel as of light and according to the measure of its knowledge so it grew more in grace and therefore the workes were more at the last then at the first As their knowledge growes so growes their zeal so that if thou hast that life in Christ which accompanies salvation thy eyes are like a flame of fire full of burning light as well as brightsome knowledge Is thy knowledge such as suffers thee to sit downe barren and though thou knowest that thou oughtest to doe this and that yet thou doest it not then there is no heate and warmth in thy knowledge but if there be true life and warmth in thy spirit thy knowledge stirres thee up to be doing and stirres up others to be doing also and thy knowledge will not suffer thee to let them alone just as Peter and Iohn sometimes said to the high Priests We cannot but speake that which we know and have seene and heard Acts 4.18 19 20. And therefore though they threatned them is perrill of life to speake no more in Christs name yet say they that which we know to be the Truth of God that we must needs speake as Ieremie speakes chap. 20. I could not forbeare The light that was in him was a glowing and warme heate and the Word of God in him was as a mighty fire and it will not suffer him to rest and he must also stir up others So then examine whether there be any heate in thy knowledge if thy knowledge be not according to zeale it will but aggravate thy condemnation Againe examine thy breath whether doest thou breath or no Doest thou smell a good savour in Gods Word when thou doest read or heare it And doest thou smell a sweet savour in the conference of Christian men or doth it stinke in thy nostrils if it be sweet to thee it is well Doest thou pray to God with some kinde of panting after him and thy spirit is fit to faint within thee and thou canst sit downe and bemoane thy selfe to God that thou hast so lost thy selfe then there is breath in thee or canst thou bring out a word to edifie thy brethren it is well but if there be no breath in thee it is an evident signe thou art dead or at least in a deep sleep if thou hast no ability to pray and can relish no ordinance of God and have no kinde of aptnesse to edifie another then either there is no life in thee or else it is much benumbed and therefore either no life or none that is extant in thee And so how dost thou find thy warm affections stand to the Word hast thou a stomach to the Word And hast thou not so much profit by it as to see thou doest not profit and art ashamed of it but if not there is no life in thee And if thou lovest to be disjoyned from thy brethren you are never better then when you are falling off and sitting loose from your brethren if you love to be asunder there is no life in you no life of Religion there for Religion desires to preserve it selfe and love is a principall worke of Religion above all things have fervent love among your selves A man had rather cover a multitude of wicked practises then loose the fervency of his love one towards another And if therefore the Devill throw brands among you and you fal asunder one Christian hangs here and another there in the end while you lye so a sunder the fire goes out and men may bid one another good night and then may you all take your pleasure in sin the truth is then all the life of Religion goes out and every businesse in the Family drawes away and so rests till all the life be lost And therefore if you see men are willing to sit loose and fall off one from another then there is an end of the life and power of godlinesse a bidding of Religion good night And no more profit to be had while such distempers of soule doth last But if you see that men come together as in that ancient famous Vision Ezek. 37. every bone finds out his fellow and joynes with him and then there was a noise and a shaking if you see bones gather bone to his bone then at the next prophecying flesh will come and sinewes and the next prophesie will breath life into them so if men begin to annex themselves one unto another as living brands If one begin to seek out another and to draw together and to lye close together if bone begin to gather to his bone then there is hope of an Host of armed men to stand up for God in good ways then there wil be life and strength and power of godlinesse else make account of it that in very truth there is no life no power of Religion where there is no relishing no closing one with another if therefore you see men closing together and warming one another in the wayes of Gods grace and there is some sence of your owne unprofitablenesse under the Word and if you can digest it turne it into edification of your selfe and others then there is true life in you and having life you have Christ and in him you have life in
aboundance There are two properties more of life Where there is any life there is some kind of plyablenesse Pliablenes of spirit whereas dead carcasses are cold and stiffe and unsavoury though never so sweet before this is a certain truth the more you keep a dead corps above ground the more it stinkes and is unsavoury It shoots out at length and you may sooner breake him then bend him any way but while he is alive you may bend him which way you will now therefore consider thus much if there be any truth of grace in you you are gentle and easie to be intreated Jam. 3.17 but if not Jam. 3.17 expounded then you are of a stiffe spirit inflexible and implacable for to be gentle and easie is the true nature of life but if not then have you lost your life then either you never had life or else it is a swound and so evapoured that there is no bending or bowing of it but they are fit to be buryed as a dead carcasse Quest What is this plyablenesse and easinesse to be entreated and on the contrary this stiffenesse Answ There is Foure things in easinesse to bee intreated First Easie to be pleased 1 Pet. 3.18 any thing that you doe about them is pleasing to them that is poynt of gentlenesse and a gracious man in whom is the life and power of godlinesse he is easie to be pleased If you go about any thing with any tollerable indeavour to give him content he is not hard to be pleased and if not easie to please there is little grace or dangerous to be none at all if you have much a do to bow or bend them to comply with them that asketh and thing of them there is a dead heart in such a spirit Secondly A man that is easie to be intreated and gentle if he be offended he is easie to be intreated Rom. 1.31 It is a signe a man is of a reprobate sence when hee is implacable and stiffe when life is gone a man is stiffe not easie to be intreated Thirdly If so be that hee have offended another man he is easie to yeeld and to acknowledge that he is in a wrong Eccles 10.4 There is in a living Christian an aptnesse to yeeld when he is in a wrong If a man be in a wrong and will not see his errour will not see the evil hee hath done in Gods sight his stiffenesse is a signe of his dead-heartednesse So much stiffenesse here so much deadnesse in his heart and so much nearnesse to the chambers of death For a living Christian if he have offended he is willing to yeeld and will acknowledge himselfe a failer and promise amendment Fourthly He is willing to deny himselfe of his owne right even upon equall easie termes to prevent an offence that may grow and he stands upon equall termes least an offence should arise he yeelds and denies himselfe 1 Thes 2.6 7. So Abraham yeelded to Lot though he had not offended him yet hee condiscended to his inferiour and if any Lot shal be the chooser Gen. 13.8 This gentlenesse of spirit argues life of Christ in the holy servants of God Abraham was not stiffe but gentle and easie to be pleased when he was offended Now therefore art thou easie to be pleased easily intreated to passe by a wrong And if thou hast offended another thou wilt acknowledge it and art easily willing to deny thy selfe to prevent offence then thou art not stiffe but art living Christian but if men be stiffe in spirit hard to be pleased and froward no man can give him content as Naballs servants said of him And of we have offended hard to be intreated and will by no meanes see it or acknowledge it and by no meanes yeeld but turne our selves to endlesse devices and if we stand upon our owne ends and wee will have our owne to the utmost farthing and why should we bend then truly we are cold and little power and life breathing in us The last property of life is this So much sweetness so much life The body while it is alive is sweet and savoury but so soon as ever it begins to smell it must be buryed it cannot be kept above ground every living Christian is a sweet savour to God a Cor. 2.13 and Col. 4.4 5 6. Let your speech be savoury seasoned as with salt And the Apostle saith let no unsavoury or corrupt communication proceed out of your mouthes How then doe you finde your owne spirits doe you breath savoury and sweet and doth your conference yeeld edification and is it all wel-pleasing to God what ever you doe doth it savour wel in the nostrils of God and your brethren If the dutys you perform be so it is signe you are living in Gods sight But if your speeches be prophane conference unsavoury and carnal so much as we loose our sweetnesse so much we loose our life when a Christian carries himselfe serviceably and amiably then we live and in having life we have Christ SERMON XI 1 JOHN 5.12 He that hath the Son hath life and he that hath not the Son hath not life HAving handled an Use of Tryal of life and this depends upon our having of Christ We come now to another Use from this Doctrine Vse 2 It is to teach us the dangerous and uncomfortable estate of every such soule as hath not Christ for the Text saith he that hath not the Sonne hath not life No life in us if there bee no Christ in us Danger of being out of Christ this is that which Apostle speaks often to that we are dead in trespasses and in sins Eph. 2.1 5. This is the of estate of them all so farre as we are without Christ we are without life no Christ no life It is with the sons of men in this kinde that I may so speake as it was with the Souldiers 2 Kings 19.35 they were all dead corps truly that is the case of us all by nature every soule of us as long as we live in the world without Christ so many men so many dead corps so many unsavoury carcasses And indeede all that worke of life which you have heard opened it is no spiritual motion no feeding upon Christ no growing in grace no expelling of noysome lusts no care nor indeavour to beget others to an estate of grace in any men that are dead no motion at all to any spiritual good Heb. 9.14 al our works the best works we doe in an estate of nature they are all of them but dead workes And so are we to any spiritual motion As the Apostle tels you we none of us doe good and which is worse wee can doe no good yea and stil which is worse wee would doe no good if we could this is the estate of us all by nature The Lord looked downe from heaven to see if any of them did good but they are altogether become unprofitable not one doth
motions of Gods spirit and cannot indure that any Ordinance should bring us nearer to Christ Act. 7.51 Yee have always resisted the holy ghost expelled the blessed of God that if the holy ghost but dart any good councel into their hearts they cannot indure to hear it nor entertain any motion of it but grieve and vex the holy Spirit of God and they are not well till they quench it 1 Thess 5.19 Esa 5.3 we are alive to nothing but to run away from God alive to sinne alive to doe evill but to doe well we have no understanding Jer. 4.22 Apt to purge and cleanse our selves from all good things but wholly undisposed to doe any thing that is well this is the true estate of us all Look at us as we are by nature all of us without Christ cannot put forth one act of spirituall life not one good motion to be found in such a condition And in the first place for begetting any unto grace we rather doe the quite contrary we addict our selves to beget men to become the children of Hell worse then our selves Matth. 23.15 two-fold more the children of Hell and because that may be more proper to corrupt teachers Jeremy speakes it of all the sonnes of nature and those especially that had lived a while under the meanes and were not thereby brought on to an estate of grace those whom God had kindled some fire in their hearts and whom he would have brought on to grace even these They are all grievously revolted walking with slanders they are brasse and Iron they are all corrupters Jer. 6.28 He doth not say they are all corrupted but all corrupters that is such as are not only naught themselves but they corrupt others also they make others worse for their sakes No man that sets his face to God-ward but if he come among them he is the worse for them every man is kept off the more from goodnesse by their meanes they doe not love that men should be too forward or too precise nor to keep such a puleing nor such a praying we are all by nature corrupters Gen. 6.11 All flesh had corrupted their way even every man had done it every one is the worse for us that hath to doe with us if we see but any good disposition in them to be comming on in the waies of grace we doe as much as in us lyes to quench and damp and smother them and never rest by our good wills till we make them as ill as our selves and harden their hearts from Gods feare this is the true carriage of all those who are out of Christ He that hath not the Son he hath no life no motion of spirituall life no growing up in Christ no purging out of sinfull uncleannesse and therefore now to apply this conceive thus much First It applyes it selfe against the Church of Rome Application first who maintaine that men in the state of nature have free will to lay hold upon Christ and they conceive it is upon very faire termes but I would only demand of you this question Whether when they doe lay hold on Christ as they conceive whether they have him or they have him not they will say They have not Christ till they have received him for what hast thou that thou hast not received 1 Cor. 4.7 And till they have received him how shall they lay hold upon him and if not receive him they are dead men and when a man is dead what can he have by any benefit that is offered him Offer him never so largely and he can receive no benefit by it and if that any doe lay hold upon Christ were they not living when they so layed hold upon him so that when they doe lay hold upon Christ whether is it an action of life or no If not how shall they lay hold on Christ and without Christ no life A man in the state of nature neither doth good nor can he doe any good nor is he willing to doe good and therefore well doth the Apostle say It is God that workes in you both the will and the deed Phil. 2.12 13. Any thing that we doe that is good is wholly from the grace of Christ and this is just against the Papists Secondly It serves to teach us all to bemoane our owne estates or the estates of any of ours that we yet see in the gall of bitternesse lying in an estate of nature is it thy selfe or thy father or mother or thy children or servants whatever he be be he never so good a natured man if he be yet without Christ there is no life in him I say looke upon him as thy dead friend If thou didst look upon thy father and mother or children and see them lye dead before thee thou wouldest mourne bitterly for them you know what is said Zach. 12.10 As a man mournes for his first borne if our first borne or any that is neare to us dye we mourne bitterly for them and refuse to be comforted as was the case of Rachels mourning for her children and would not be comforted because they were not Matth. 2.18 they were all dead and therefore caused a bitter mourning it was the wounding and rending of her soule And may not this be the case of many a fruitfull mother many children and yet all of them dead in Gods sight not a soule living in the sight of God And is it not a farre more bitter death to be dead in sinne then to be dead in the body when it is a living soule in Gods sight then blessed are the dead that dye in the Lord for even so saith the Spirit that never spake words of falshood Revel 14.13 I say therefore if that our children live to God and have the life of grace in their hearts there is no danger of their death then thy children shall come againe to thy hearing at the resurrection of the just and thou shalt imbrace them with comfort and fill thy soule with unspeakable joy and fulnesse of glory if they dye in the favour and grace of God they shall rise to glory but if they be spiritually dead no goodnesse in the world in them no spirituall life at all no life of righteousnesse or holinesse which are the first fruits of the Spirit and of glory in this world then weep for these children and those friends that husband or wife or brother or sister weep for every soule that is in an estate of sinne and death they are as so many dead Corps you may sometimes see a whole house-full of dead creatures not one of them living to God not one of thy acquaintance not one of all thy brothers and sisters weep and mourne bitterly for them that are thus wounded with sinne and bleed deadly and gaspe for their last breath and it may be shall never finde grace from God in this world their present condition is fearefull and mourne thou for them in a godly manner that
thou mayest be the more earnest with God in that behalfe and never leave till thou hast got some grace from Christ for them and in so doing you shall finde that he that gave you children will give them life and he that gave you brethren and sisters and friends and acquaintance he will put some life into them and it shall doe you good at the heart as in vers 16. of this chapter Let him aske and he shall give him life The promise is marvellous sweet and strong you may handle the matter so that as you have instrumentally given them naturall life you may procure them spirituall life they came out of your loynes dead in sinne and they will grow in sinne more and more more unsavoury and more unprofitable and worldly and proud and wanton this is their naturall condition well if they be so borne then weep over them and mourne bitterly for them You would mourne for a childe if still-borne much more if you see it dying and giving up the ghost and lying in extreame and bitter paine how much more for that soule that hath no grace nothing at all in them in regard of which you can say this is a pledge to me of Jesus Christ in them you know what a bitter mourning fell out in Exod. 12.30 A great cry was heard in Aegypt and they all rose up at midnight What was the matter Why this was it There was not an house wherein there was not one dead and upon this occasion they rose up at midnight and filled their streets with bitter cryes and what then thinke you would they have done if in every family there had been but one alive all dead but himselfe neither one nor other sometimes old and sometimes young all gone save only one to mourne for all the rest and this is sometimes the case of many a soule he may rise every morning and see not a soule in his family of which he can say this is not a dead corps if there were but one dead soule it might cause thee to mourne and that greatly just occasion to mourne bitterly if there be but one in thy house that comes not on to the wayes of grace and salvation this is it that God calls us to sadly to consider of it bitterly to bemoane it and to pray heartily for such poore soules to God that he would be pleased to shew mercy to them all that you might have some living companions some that might be wrapt up in life and peace and bring them within the covenant of grace and life and salvation if you have but the bowels of friends if but the bowels of Christian men take to heart your owne and others miserable condition if they be dead and without Christ Vse 3. To teach us all that if so be that we or any of ours be yet without Christ Procure Christ for our selves and others let it exhort us not to give rest to our eyes nor slumber to our eye-lids till we have procured Christ for our selves and ours that we may procure life for our selves and others What is it for a man to have a good wife or a good husband or beautifull children What if he had rich kindred and acquaintance What if he had all the world and have not Christ he hath no life had we all the friends we have and as much comfort as we could wish and want Christ it were poore empty comfort and therefore labour above all things to get Christ For motives hereunto Motives to get Christ First it is taken from the sweetnesse of life Skin for skin and all that a man hath will he give for his life Job 2.4 and what is a life without grace What is the naturall life without a spirituall This naturall life is worth the giving and parting with for a spirituall What shall a man give in recompence for his soule Matth. 16.26 You know what Christ said of Judas and the same reason holds true in every man that wants life in Christ Matth. 26.24 It had been good for that man he had never been borne so may we say of all our soules it had been good for us we had never been borne if we dye without grace we shall then have our portion with hypocrites and unbeleevers and therefore let spirituall life be more sweet to you then naturall Secondly consider if you have Christ you have life and that in abundance and you have all the blessings of God of all lives it is the most comfortable 2 Cor. 1.20 If you have Christ you have all the promises For in him they are yea and in him Amen and they shall all be ratified and confirmed and establisht to you and all the blessings of God are thine Esa 1.3 He hath blest you with all spirituall blessings in Christ Jesus all blessings both spirituall and temporall too all the blessings of this and another life 1 Tim. 4.8 1 Cor. 3. last All is yours all the ordinances of God is yours and all the world is yours not a creature in the world but is at your service yea your enemies is for your good and service Esau was Jacobs Servant even then when he cals him Lord and therefore make account of this if you have Christ make account of this you have all things and therefore read the Promises and gather them up and lay them up as a treasure all things are yours all the blessings you read or heare of they are all some way or other for your benefit and I want but faith to see and discerne it and an heart to acknowledge it if I doe feele it and therefore if you want righteousnesse or peace or goods or friends or any blessing in this world or for another if you have Christ you have all that his is He that hath given us his owne Son will not he with him give us all things also Rom. 8.32 So that there is a double motive that every soule might be stirred up to looke after Christ and this is the season stay not till to morrow and though the morrow be a Sabbath a blessed day yet you know not what this day may bring forth some of us may fall sick or dye this night or not fit to profit by to morrowes meanes as it is this day and therefore while the day of grace lasts take hold of Christ Object But what shall I doe to get him how may I come to have him you said we cannot reach Christ by nature and though we could we will not Are not exhortations then in vaine Answ No they are not in vaine for though in nature we are neither willing nor able to looke after Christ but looke at him as a vaine refuse commodity we would have lands and goods but no Christ and therefore what must we doe 1 Though we be of that naturall sinfull distemper that we would have all things but Christ and let him goe yet while we are thus speaking to you God
many times conveys such a spirit of grace into us as gives us power to receive Christ what power had the Cripple to stand much lesse to walke Act. 3.6 7. he had no power to walke and it had been a vaine speech to him if there had not been a power in it to convey strength into him by his breath and the Lord Jesus working in it which did convey such strength into him as that presently he did walke And truly so is it with the Servants of God those that shal be saved we speake not in vaine to them the word that we speake conveyes spirit and life into them then they begin to receive life in him and are glad that they may finde Christ and for other men it leaves them without excuse if they do not use the meanes God appoints them to use And the means God prescribes to us are these Means of having Christ First as ever thou wouldest have Christ labour wisely to ponder upon and consider how dead thou art without Christ for thou shalt never find life by Christ unlesse thou find thy selfe lost without him Luke 10.10 Christ came to seek and to save that which was lost If thou seest thy self lost Christ will seek thee up be fully satisfied of this in thy judgement and mind that unlesse thou hast Christ thou hast no life and therefore mourn and pray The whole need not the Physitian but them that are sicke Matth. 9.12 13. See thy selfe a sinner and a perishing creature unlesse Christ seeke thee up Secondly Take this meanes as ever you desire to have life in Christ if thou knowest any sin by thy selfe thou art much to blame in thy selfe if thou dost not by any meanes wash thy hands of it Note this cleanse thy selfe from it There are many sins which a man lives in which he might avoid by very common gifts which would he renounce God would not be wantng to lead him on to further grace John 3.18 19. This is condemnation that light is come into the world and men love darkenesse rather then light 2 Cor. 6.17 18. touch no unclean thing meddle not with vain company and have nothing to doe with the unfruitfull workes of darkenesse and then I wil be a father to you and you shall be my Sons and Daughters if wee would but abhor that which we know to be nought God promiseth to receive us And it is the same that you read Esay 1.16 17 18. to shew you that if men do begin to learn to be better if they cease to doe evill and learn to do well if they acknowledge their sins in the sight of God God wil so sprinkle the blood of Christ upon them as that their great sins shal be forgiven them and upon the same termes men might feed upon the paschal Lamb Exo. 12.15 they must put all leaven out of their houses purge out therefore the old leaven and ye shall become a new lumpe 1 Cor. 5.7 8. purge out the old and ye shall be new creatures in Christ purge out the leaven of maliciousnesse and wickednesse and whatever is sinfull before God away with it touch no uncleane thing and Esa 55.7 Let the wicked forsake his wickednesse and the unrighteous his thoughts and then I am a God ready to pardon I will forgive all your iniquities Thirdly Seeke the Lord while he may be found call upon him while he is nigh Esa 55.7 8. Seeke him and your soule shall live God is abundantly ready to pardon c. How shall I seeke him no man hath a desire to seeke but that which he hath a desire to finde and therefore hunger and thirst after him as it is in the first verse of that Chapter desire nothing so much as thy part in Christ and besides endeavour to finde him in the meanes vers 3. Heare and your soules shall live hearken diligently to the Word of God It is a notable promise that in Prov. 8.34 Blessed is the man that heareth me watching daily at the posts of my gates for he that findeth me findeth life Consider there is no man that heares Christ but hee findes him and if he finde him he shall have life by him And therefore how much cause have men to straighten themselves a little in their worldly businesse to heare daily for who so findeth me findeth life and he that hears me findes me Heare therefore diligently and your soules shall live Shake off all drowsinesse of flesh and spirit and be desirous to receive Christ in his Word that is spoken to you and so seeke him in calling upon him ver 7 8. Call upon him while he is nigh And when is he nigh Every day if you stay longer then the present day you have no further opportunity offered you call upon God now and wrastle with him in your prayers that that which you have heard may be life and the length of your dayes Vse 4. To teach every soule that hath already found Christ and yet complaines thou hast a dead heart and a dull minde an heavie spirit heavie affections nothing lively cannot expell thy corruptions cannot beget others to God and art not active in spirituall workes then if thou finde a want or decay of life then seeke for Christ againe labour for more Christ and thou shalt have more life rest not in having a good measure of grace for thou wilt finde a world of deadnesse and weaknesse in beginnings of grace but as thou wouldest have any further measures of life so looke for further measures of Christ for Christ dispenseth himselfe to us in measure by little and little and use the same meanes to increase him as thou didst to get him at the first see thy selfe lost without him and thirst after him and heare diligently and call earnestly upon him for more strength use Christ and have Christ use grace and have grace grow up in the use of him and thou shalt grow up in the possession of him and therefore as you have received Christ so walke in him Col. 2.7 8. As if that were the way to get more rooting in Christ labour to live by faith and walke to the glory of Christ and by the rules of Christ and by that meanes you will be more built up rooted and established in him Vse 5. Of comfort to every soule that hath any part in Christ thou hast life in him and that in abundance and favour with God having him thou hast life Prov. 8.34 35. They that hate me love death if you seek not Christ you seeke death and mischiefe and destruction to your owne soules and yours vers last and therefore as you desire to finde Christ seeke him and having found him rejoyce in him that God hath given you to finde him and then walke as those that desire for ever to have him as not to change your portion by any meanes If you have Christ you have enough and if you sit loose to Christ for the enjoyment
of the Son of God and to know eternall life only now to speake of it so farre as it is pertinent to this place Doct. 2. Such as doe beleeve on the name of the Lord Jesus Christ by these Epistles of John may know that they have everlasting life Reason 1 So it is in the text Why by these Epistles First because John in this Epistle doth set before you where eternall life is to be had as the verse before the text he in sundry places sets forth the Lord Jesus Christ as the life which we are to receive from the Father he shewes where it is to be had and where forgivenesse of sinne is to be had and by whom we have propitiation chap. 2.7 Reason 2 Secondly These Epistles sets before us and gives us certaine meanes whereby we may obtaine eternall life as first If we confesse our sins he is faithfull and just to forgive us our sins 1 Joh. 1.9 that is one means and secondly he cals upon us to looke unto him as our Advocate and propitiation Reas 3 Thirdly He doth likewise give you certaine signes by observing of which you may know Signes of grace whether you have the Lord Jesus Christ or not This for one sign If we say we have no sin we make God a lyar and vers last If we keep his Commandements we know that we know him If God give us a conscionable care to keep his Commandements we know that we know him And some other signes as Chap. 3.3 if God give us hearts to purge and cleanse our selves from all such sins as hang about us and if God give us hearts to love the brethren c. these and many more such signes of grace he gives us in this Epistle Vse 1. If God having thus written and given us these Epistles then first it will be a just refutation of that Popish Doctrine that thinke it impossible for a man to know that he is in an estate of grace If John did write these Epistles for this end that we might know we have eternall life then sure we may know it else Iohn failes of his end and for Iohn to be disappointed were lesse matter but the Holy Ghost himself for Iohn being the Pen-man of the Holy Ghost the holy end he aymes at not being attainable is to put a defiance upon the Almighty and therefore the knowledge that we have eternall life may be attained and whereas they tell us we may have a conjecturall knowledge but no certaine knowledge but to say we have a knowledge and yet but conjecturall is as much as to eate up a mans words he had formerly said for a conjecturall knowledge is no knowledge at all Knowledge what Knowledge is the judgement or discerning a man hath of a certaine thing If a man aske you whether he know if such a man have possession of such a place and he say first yes and afterwards saith he conjectures so his knowledge is no knowledge it is a false intelligence If you aske a man if he knowes whether such a man have such a portion of such a value and he say he hath he conjectures so it is no knowledge but if he know it then he speakes of a certainty And therefore if the holy Ghost say We may know it then surely we may have more then a conjecturall knowledge even a certaine knowledge of our happy estates and were there no more Arguments in the world to discourage a man from Popery this were sufficient even this very doctrine of doubting and conjecturall assurance of a mans eternall estate which leaves a mans Conscience destitute of any peace Consider therefore Rome an Harlot that the Church of Rome is an Harlot and brings up strange children when she doth not teach her children to know God to be their Father it argues she is no lawfull spouse of Christ but doe but hope such an one is your Father but count it presumption to say you know it That Church that traines not up her Children to know God to be their Father is a false Church and a signe that the Church of Rome hath mixed her selfe with so many Idols and abominations that shee cannot teach the children of her Church to know that they are the sons and children of God but condemnes them to the death if they dare presume to say that God is their Father Vse 2. May refute that opinion of the Papists that will not suffer the common people to heare this Scripture take notice here how injurious they are to the faith of Gods people and to the knowledge of their chiefest comfort to debar them of the knowledge and meanes of their salvation take away these Scriptures and take away the principall meanes of the knowledge of our salvation Vse 3. To teach such as are in any doubtfull temptation at any time about their first estate and condition who are not able to apply with comfort assuredly their grounded knowledge that Christ and eternall life is theirs It may teach them among other Scriptures to be diligent in inquiring into this Epistle the Holy Ghost saith it was the maine scope of his writing unto all those that trust upon the name of Christ that they might know their blessednesse to lye upon him and those that did not certainely know they had found him he writes to them to look after Christ to long for him and to desire after him Doest thou then desire not only to beleeve eternall salvation belongs to thee but to know it for to know is something more then to beleeve A man may beleeve a thing and upon good ground he may looke for salvation there and waite for it and desire that he may be more assured of it but to know that thou hast eternall life and the certainty of it that God hath sealed it up to thy soule and conscience of which thou needest doubt no more this is a far more greater blessing then to beleeve in Christ though by beleeving we have eternall life and therefore if thou so beleeve in him as to looke for salvation in him and not elsewhere though as yet thou beest doubtfull of thy estate yet thou mayest learne much by reading these Scriptures read them againe and againe and leave not reading and searching into them till thou finde even from this Epistle ground of assurance Vse 4. May serve to teach the Children of God to know when you have made a good use of reading these Scriptures you read much and often and you thinke when you have done you have done God good service An usuall vanity among Christians if they have prayed in the morning and read a peece of a Chapter they thinke they are better blest all the day after for it and wee are unquiet all that day when we have not had time to read and pray but if that be done we thinke we have quit our selves well but a man may read and never consider what he hath gotten by it
pour out our souls to God in any spirituall affection then we know we have this unction the Holy Ghost came and opened our mouthes and healed our lips and made us pray affectionately and feelingly and that is a great light to the hearing of our petitions for a prayer well made is never ill heard and therefore you know what is said Psalm 10.17 Thou preparest the heart to pray and thou hast heard the desire of the poor How shall a poor Christian know that his desire is heard Why thou hast prepared the heart to pray If God prepare our hearts then he will cause his eare to heare these alwaies accompany one another That is something that this unction doth it works in all our hearts to pray according to Gods will and to pray in the name of Christ and so satisfies us Secondly This Spirit of God that we receive from the holy one it is also a spirit of faith that inwardly perswades us that God hath indeed heard us and that he will doe for us whatsoever we desire and will sometimes evidently beare witnesse of it to the heart of a man Ma● 11.24 What thing soever ye desire when ye pray beleeve that ye shall receive them and ye shall have them We must beleeve that what we have said to God he will certainly doe it and the spirit of faith will come and say to the heart God in heaven saith Amen to it he gives out a f●at let it be done Psal 6.8 David was in a grievous affliction both in bodily affliction and spirituall desertion as in the beginning of the Psalme He cryed out day and night God had forsaken him and his soule was sore vexed but thou O Lord how long c. And now away from me all ye mine enemies for the Lord hath heard my petition and he will accept me so that even while he is in bitter complaints and grievous mourning while he is yet speaking this unction comes and reveales to him Gods acceptance of him and therefore now he encourages himselfe and casts a defiance upon all the troubles of his soule he lookes at them all as vanishing away like snow before the Sun and now he comforts himselfe therein And this oftentimes and usuall when the soule makes use of Gods Ordinances and Priviledges which himselfe hath granted that surely God hath heard our requests he never refuseth to grant that prayer which he stands to heare for this purpose is that you read of the good woman Hannah 1 Sam. 1.15 to 18. Ely suspected she was in some distemper but saith she I have poured out my soule before the Lord. She prayed feelingly and fervently and faithfully not words but her soule before the Lord she had prayed with her whole heart and her soule did raise up it selfe heaven-ward the strength of her desire was set upon that and he then said The Lord give thee favour in his eyes and grant thy request which was as if this answer had come from heaven for God doth reveale himself in his Ordinances She looked at him as the high Priest and so a Type of the Messiah and she tooke it as a voyce from heaven and the text saith She went home and looked no more sad God hath set it on and spoken comfort to her heart so as that her faith was established she saw the voyce of God in it and went home resolved upon it and takes such encouragement to her selfe from thence as to feare no more in that kinde When Gods spirit gives us to pray affectionately and to beleeve confidently then we know we have our petitions we are perswaded of it But besides this cofident perswasion this followes there is another worke of faith and that is a constant wrastling against all discouragements that falls between our requests and the accomplishment of our petitions Famous is that story of the woman of Syrophenicia Matth. 15. from 23. to 29 you know the manifold discouragements she met with she prayes and at first God gives her no audience answers her not a word she prayes againe and then he gives her a deniall to grant her any such request and tells her plainly It is not sutable to his calling and therefore he may not apply himselfe unto her yet she is not discouraged with this which is very much but she followes him still and though yet reproached and called a dogge yet she is not discouraged but out of the word of reproach gathers some hope of comfort if she be a dogge why then let her have that which belongs to doggs let her have but the crums that fall from the childrens table Shee is not discouraged with all the difficulties that lay in her way nothing shall cut her off from importunity and when he could forbeare no longer he then tells her O woman great is thy faith be it unto thee even as thou wilt To shew you that if the Holy Ghost doe but give a Christian soule so much resolution and confidence as not to give over praying till God be pleased to give over answering It is a good signe this spirit of faith will certainly prevaile at length All things are possible to them that beleeve and not only possible but certaine Thirdly There is a third worke of this Spirit and that is this it workes as it is a spirit of hope and that moves a man to waite upon God that though God should tarry long and he should pray heartily for such and such requests to be granted in such a case as this our spirits would be sad and uncomfortable and give over and be ready to say Wherefore should I waite on the Lord any longer as that prophane Prince said 1 King 6. last having been long prest with Famine he in the end burst forth with this This evill is of the Lord why should we waite on him any longer our foolish hearts soone grow impatient and we cannot dance after attendance upon God and therefore in this case though flesh and bloud be short winded and soone weary yet the truth is this unction when it workes in us a spirit of hope it still waites upon God it sets it selfe to waite upon him and is very well contented to stay Gods leisure though he should tarry very long Psal 62.1 Psal 130.4 5. and 2 last he sets both morning and evening watch for him and he is well contented to waite for him and Psal 123.1 2 3. Our eyes waite upon the Lord our God so that when God gives us a spirit of waiting then doth he certainly seale up unto us the granting of our petitions for when a man attends at the Court for an answer upon his petition if the King bid him attend it is a good signe he meanes to grant him his request else he would have rejected it but a wise Prince if he see a man come in good sort and desire a reasonable request of him that such a thing is according to his Princely will and he bids
Arts and Sciences whence is their knowledge but from their observation of many experiences Phisitians know it and they therefore set it downe in their bookes they know it is so Things that we gather from sence and experience we are said to have the knowledge of now this experience doth not only give us confidence but knowledge for by the unction that we have received we doe know the love of God that passeth knowledge Christ dwelling in our hearts by faith we come to know the love of God towards us Eph. 3.17.19 There is not any thing that concernes the love of God towards us but the Spirit of God dwelling in our hearts by faith it comes to passe that we are able to comprehend the height and depth length and breadth of the love of God towards us This Spirit of God in our hearts gives us sensible experience and knowledge of Gods love to us of his attonement and grace to us our Consciences that had hels in them before all such darksome evils are now vanisht and scattered and we know that sensibly we had power given us to pray and to beleeve that our prayers are granted and can wait upon God and feare God and make conscience of obeying his will Now this Spirit of prayer that discovers these things plainly to our inward man the sence and experience of it makes a Christian able to know what God hath done for him and makes him able to beleeve what God hath promised him and thus now when we aske any thing according to Gods will he doth not only say It is well said but he takes a course to answer our requests we have certaine grounds to move us in what we aske and the ends of our requests are right Now God considers not alwaies so much the letter of our prayers as the grounds and ends of them the scope we ayme at and God will so accordingly answer us Vse 1. Let it be first a ground of encouragement to every Christian soule that beleeves in the name of Jesus Christ trust not in your owne good parts and good gifts if any such things increase set not your hearts upon them trust not in any worldly blessing but beleeve on the name of Christ And therefore that you may beleeve humble your soules before him in regard of your sins and pray heartily in the faith of Christ And why so The ground is in the text you shall not only be confident and assured of your salvation which is a great mercy of God to my soule and a greater then all the whole Church of Rome would grant they may goe to Rome and from thence to Jerusalem and from one place to another to have sought for pardon of sin and yet not so much comfort promised them that after all this they shall finde it but in the end to Purgatory they must goe and that is as ill as Hell fire say they save only in durance and this is all the helpe they have they might whip and scourge themselves and give all their goods away to the poore and themselves goe in sackcloth and ashes all their dayes and when all comes to all they must not be sure of any mercy or favour from God which to beleeve would be Hereticall presumption but they must notwithstanding all this rest in Hell fire till the day of Judgement unlesse they will be at cost to purchase freedome from it and which is strange though they would not suffer them to beleeve a release by Christs pardon yet upon the Popes pardon they might have hope and so they take more pains for an uncertainty then we for certainty and knowledge but you shall not only attaine certainty of salvation but certainty of the granting of all your requests no peace to the peace of a Beleever and therefore lay aside all your confidence in the world but be confident in the name of the Lord Jesus and be certaine of Gods favour and goodnesse to you in him and then here is such blessings as will keep a mans heart warme in the worst houres Vse 2. To teach such as beleeve on the name of the Lord Jesus how you may come to be confident and certaine of the hearing and granting your petitions How may wee come to that Hast thou good evidence to thy soule of thy Adoption that God is thy Father then meditate well upon this point that Christ is thy Advocate to make intercession and Attonement for thee in case thou hast displeased thy heavenly Father These two things will much prevaile they be strong helps to a weake faith and then consider what unction thou hast received and look up to God that he would give thee a spirit of prayer to pray feelingly and fervently and humbly before him and then labour for a spirit of faith which if God give thee so much faith as to perswade thee thy requests are heard and to wrastle against discouragements and that the spirit of faith doth worke in thee grace to hope and waite upon God and withall an holy feare of his name and obedience to walke obediently in doing his will and patiently to suffer his will under his hand and observe how the Spirit speakes evidently in this and that kinde and it will be a notable means to helpe thee to grow confident and certaine that all thy prayers are heard Now many a Christian soule falls short of this he considers not the Attonement of Christ in his prayer but many times thus stands the case with them there is much desolutenesse in their lives and loosenesse and fearlesnesse in their hearts before God rejoyce not with trembling God sees his Servants loose in their obedience and when disobedient they seek not to Christ for Attonement whence it is that many times they are so full of doubts Vse 3. Of much consolation to all those that beleeve on the name of the Lord Jesus and make use of these blessed meanes this is our confidence that whatsoever petitions we aske he heareth us and we know it See how comfortable a Christians estate is he growes certaine not only of his owne salvation but he is certaine of the hearing and granting of all his petitions if he can but pray well he makes account all is well let his distresses be what they will be SERMON XVI 1 JOHN 5.16 17. If any man see his brother sinne a sinne which is not unto death he shall aske and he shall give him life for them that sinne not unto death There is a sinne unto death I doe not say that he shall pray for it THese words containe a third motive to encourage us unto that duty which is the maine scope of this Epistle to wit to beleeve on the name of the Sonne of God whereto the Apostle exhorts us vers 13. and propounds first this motive to wit A blessed confidence of the hearing of all our petitions Secondly a certaine knowledge verified that he not only heares but grants our desires Now he
our brethren and enemies beast would require it if we finde them out of the way or fallen downe under their burthen and you see God requires this love to our selves that we should make some use to our selves of our brethrens fall As first if you see a brother sinne whatever sinne it be learne we to feare God and that is true Christian affection to be first affected with an holy feare of your owne weaknesse we should be jealous of the sinfull frame of our owne hearts that doubtlesse of themselves are as apt to start aside as any of our brethrens be the want of this as you heard Ieremiah reproved in Iudah and this Paul required of the Romans Be not high minded but feare and what priviledges hath the Church of Rome above others the Apostle knew that the Church of Rome had not received an impossibility of errour in his time he made account in his time if that Israel which was the naturall branch were cut off then be not thou high minded but feare for if they be cut off why maist not thou First therefore lay we our hands upon our owne hearts and see if there be not the like folly in me the same roote of unbeleefe in me or if I be not led to the same am not I led to as great or a greater evill then theirs is This use should we make to our selves Againe we should labour to make benefit to our selves by it looke at your brethren in this case with such an eye as may stirre you up the more to pitty them if they be gone out of the way call him back againe if he lye under his burthen lift him up or if his estate and condition be such as that you can by no meanes have opportunity to speake to him or if you should happily your labour would be in vaine and if you should faile here and cannot reach him yet whether he will or no you may power out your soules to God in his behalfe and so may you doe him good we ought so to doe and not to faile therein and that will be of speciall use to helpe us this way to heare of the sinnes and falls of our brethren is much but to see them is more to see such heavie burthens lye upon his soule that he is not able to subsist in such a case as this there will be a speciall compassion kindled in the heart of a living Christian for living Christians are loving Christians so farre as living so farre loving for the whole life of Christianity is but faith towards God and love towards our brethren Object But say you you would not have us to shut our eyes upon the failings of our brethren but to see and observe them but doth not the Holy Ghost say Love covereth a multitude of sinnes as if we should smother them neither meddle nor make with them Answ But yet though love cover a multitude of sins yet how doth it cover them First with a mantle of wisdome then with a mantle of faithfulnesse and then a mantle of compassion A mantle of wisdome when a man so covers it as not to skin it over Mantle of wisdome but to cover it so effectually as that it may be covered from the eyes of God and man Iam. 5.19 20. this is a wise covering of a multitude of sinnes when a man takes a course not only to cover them from the eyes of men but principally from the Conscience of the sinner himselfe as that in time he be not over-pressed with them and then when he is least able to beare them and so endanger wholly to over-whelme him for let a man goe on in sinne he goes on from day to day and thinkes himselfe fish whole and yet it is neither covered from Gods eye nor from the Conscience of such a soule and in the end it cannot but see it and then so bitterly bewaile it that it is much to be feared he will be quite over-whelmed with it And therefore this a man must have principall respect unto principally to cover his sinne from Gods eye and that it may likewise be so covered as not to be smothered and dawbed but cover it with an healing Plaister so as that in time it may be rooted out that no sprig of such a sinne may remaine there not a mantle of flattery but healing such as whereby they may be carefull to take a course that such evils may be covered with some corrisive Plaister Secondly Mantle of faithfulnesse with a mantle of faithfulnesse not to discover the sinnes of others further then will be of necessity for the healing of them If a man be fallen under his burthen or under his beast and he is not able himselfe to helpe him up he must then call them that are of strength and may be of use to helpe a man in such a case so that if in this case if a mans integrity of heart tells him that he aymes at no more in making knowne his brethrens failings but to helpe his brother out of those falls Prov. 11.13 When a man reveales a matter no further then to gather helpe to restore him it is well but because there is a snare in that a man had need be wary for a man may reveale it with derision and scorne and then though a man should speake it to them that are able to helpe him it would be a sinne to him as you may read Gen. 9.22 23 Noah being drunk and his nakednesse discovered Cam comming and seeing his father thus naked he in a deriding manner goes forth and tells his other two brethren when as he might himself have covered his nakednesse but he doth it not but goes forth and acquaints them and they do what they can to cover it they goe backward and drawes a garment upon him And when he awoke he by a spirit of prophesie knowing what was done he said cursed be Cam for ever and he made him a servant to both his brethren when it was in his power to have covered him but did not but made a jest of it to his brethren he was accursed for it but because they in a modest reverent manner did cover him a blessing fell upon them to this day To shew you that God requires this faithfulnesse in us in this case If we be able to doe it our selves we must not discover it but doe it our selves and let it go no further but if the burthen be too great that he cannot lift it up it is too weighty a matter for him then he may call in those that are able to help him in such a work so as that he do not speak by way of derision but rather with trouble of mind to see him thus foiled Thirdly So also a mantle of compassion Mantle of compassion so as that if so be that a mans brother be brought at length to see his failing and to acknowledge it and shall expresse himselfe that it repents
see that we doe not pray for them when we forget to remember them before the Lord this is ill taken God is displeased when there is none to stand in the gap in such a case as this Esa 59.15 16. God doth not afflict willingly and yet if he be stirred up he must destroy them if there be none to stand in the gap you then provoke the wrath of the Lord and this displeaseth him much and God may justly leave us to the like sinne for which we are not humbled in others Reas 5. Tak●●●●om the blessing that befalls Gods Servants when we doe so as was upon Job in chap. 42.8 9. when Iob begins to pray for his friends then God turned the captivity of Iob he had long time laine under many vexations wofull calamities but when he begins to pray for his friends that had sinned then the Lord turned his captivity and so it is expresly said Esa 57.18 19. I will restore comfort unto him and to his mourners To shew you that God will restore comfort to us if we lament the falls of others and mourne over them in that condition We shall have comfort in their comfort because we did mourne in their griefe If Gods people can mourne with their brethren in sinne and misery God will restore comfort to them and to their mourners Before we make use of this point come we to the next Doct. 3. A faithfull Christian praying for his brethren faln into any sin shall obtaine peace and pardon and grace for him It is said so in the text If any man that is any man that beleeves in Jesus Christ he shall aske and he shall give him life So that you see here is the promise made to such the promise is that upon asking he shall give life to his sinfull brother Who shall give him life Interpreters take it both wayes and both agreeable to the text and the Analogie of faith for whether he that prayes be as an Instrument or God it is all one for it must be God that doth it and he that prayes is an Instrument he procures to his sinning brother great favour from God Life that is the life of Iustification and of Sanctification consolation and comfort to his soule notwithstanding his sinne the promise is evident he shall prevaile with God to bestow life upon his brother This you shall see evident from Scripture Deut. 9.25 26. I fell downe before the Lord forty dayes and forty nights c. and thereupon the Lord did shew mercy and pardoned their sin Iob prayed for his friends and the Lord said he would accept him Job 42.8 9. And so our Saviour he prayed for his crucifiers And it is generally thought that the powerfull prevalency of Peters Sermon in converting three thousand soules at once did especially spring from our Saviours prayer and the efficacy of it Act. 2.37 And Stephen he prayed for his persecutors and Paul was one of them that had an hand in his death Act. 7.6 And yet ere long God answered Stephens prayer in converting Saul so that let a man a beleeving Christian pray for his sinning brother and he shall give him life Reas 1. It is taken from the pleasure that God takes to knit the Members of the Body of his Son together and no better means to joyne us together and so fitly to make us useful Members one to another then this those members of the body that are most weak should be most helped this way 1 Cor. 12 21 22. Every member should be of some use one to another and it doth better compact the body together God did not say to Iobs friends Goe you and pray for your selves but Goe to my servant Job and he shall pray for you He would have them beholden to Iob of whom they had spoken the thing that was not right else God would not accept them Reas 2. It is taken from the Intercession of Christ who performes that office for every member of his body This honour have all his Saints though they doe not merit this by their prayers yet there is this efficacy in their prayers not of merit but of grace to prevaile with the Father in their brethrens behalfe Rom. 8.34 Intercession is such a part and kinde of prayer as a man makes for other men to procure favour from God to them to be Mediators for them to pray for others in the name and mediation of Jesus Christ and that for his sake they may be accepted God will then heare us for Christs sake in the behalfe of our brethren Vse 1. It may be a ground of much encouragement to every Christian man to wrastle earnestly with God in the behalfe of his brethren when you see them sinne a sinne that is not unto death be it a mans wicked covetousnesse and such as a man is froward in it and wil by no meanes be admonished and goe on resolutely in it yet in this case God expects and requires we should mourne for him Esay 57.17 18. and therefore neglect not to pray for your brethren in this case First it will displease God if you pray not for them is it nothing to you to passe by and to see such a man lye in sinne assure your self of this Gods heart will fit loose towards you if your hearts sit loose to your brethren and therefore neglect not to pray for them Secondly if you pray for them you shall have comfort restored to them and to your selves with them and though for the present you might seeme to procure hurt to your selves and no good to them yet pray and pray heartily and use the best meanes you can and you will surely finde the comfort and benefit of it may not this be a notable encouragement to you this way that God should be pleased to make thee an Instrument of life to thy brother when he is a dead man in Gods sight a dead man will be stiffe and cold and putrifie and yet even such a man if thou prayest for him thou shalt give him life to his soule Object You say But doth not many a man pray for his brethren and yet is not heard and accepted did not Abraham pray for Ishmael And what think you of Samuels prayer for Saul and yet saith God How long wilt thou mourn for Saul 1 Sam. 17.6 I have cast him off mourne no more for him so that sometimes a man may pray for his brethren and that earnestly and yet his prayers fall to the ground in vaine Answ First it would be considered whether a man be a brother or no Abraham did not pray for one that was already gracious that did belong to the election of grace and the text doth not reach to such a brother but I understand it of such as are either called or belong to the election Secondly Suppose you doe not know whether he belong to the election of grace or no it may be you pray for them whom you have not used other means to heal them I doubt not but David prayed for Absalom and Adonijah but not using other meanes his prayers are rejected these are not prayers of faith when other good means are not used Thirdly It s possible that a man may pray without faith and without fervency Jam. 5.15 and such requests should be faithfull and fervent and God requires you should come before him and submit your selves to him and acknowledge your owne unworthinesse to aske such a blessing and yet in the name of Christ you presse God with it and you must walke close with God in a course of Christianity else your prayers are to no purpose and to waite on God through Christ for a gracious acceptance and God will recompence your prayers and labour of love in due time FINIS