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A57477 The preciousnesse of Christ unto beleevers. Or, A treatise wherein the absolute necessity, the transcendent excellency, the supereminent graces, the beauty, rarity and usefulnesse of Christ is opened and applyed. By John Robotham, preacher of the Gospel Robotham, John, fl. 1654. 1647 (1647) Wing R1733; ESTC R208474 115,896 303

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Now from this singular effect which this commendations of Christ wrought in the daughters of Jerusalem Ministers of the Gospel may learne and see what their chiefe dutie is namely to display those rich treasures of grace and that splendent shining glory which is in Christ to publish and spread before men those manifold excellencies which be in him to draw and allure them unto Christ The Ministers of the Gospel should imploy their whole force and strength this way that poore soules may be drawn to esteeme highly of Christ Who will seeke after that which he knowes not off and who will not seeke after a precious jewel O then tell people where this jewel this pearle this treasure is that they may seek search and become Merchants for to adventure all for Jesus Christ To conclude study then all his excellencies riches beauty lovelinesse offices and the nature of Christ meditate upon whole Christ and upon all the parts of him and never give over untill thou hast sweeten'd thy soule enkindl'd thy love and fixed all thy affections upon him Meditate what Christ hath done for thee what mooved him unto it and likewise how unworthy thou art and how thankfull thou art and let these meditations draw forth thy affections unto him Againe Feed upon Christs love that which wee feed upon turnes into our own nature love is fuell for it selfe love feeds upon love and the person beloved so let us upon Christs love the more wee live upon Christs love the more our love will be enflamed toward him Kisse sweetly the glorified body of our crucified Saviour with the lips of infinitely indeared and unexpressible affectionate love though the distance be great between Christ and the soule yet faith will bring them easily together Lastly Goe to the everlasting fountaine of Christs bloud let the cocke run rence thy soule as it were in the bloud of the Lambe apply it for justification and sanctification so shalt thou be free from the guilt and pollution of sinne thou doest aske but the acquittance the debt being paid in Christ FINIS A Table of those Scriptures which are occasionally cleared and briefly illustrated in the fore-going Treatise The first number directs to the Chapter the second to the Verse the third to the Page Genesis Chap. Vers Page 49. 10. 67. 49. 22. 81. 49. 24. 83. Exodus Chap. Vers Page 17. 12. 7. 23. 20 21. 132. 33. 19. 53. 33. 11. 70. Leviticus Chap. Vers Page 21. 17 18. 88. 25. 42. 106. Deuteronomie Chap. Vers Page 33. 14. 31. 1 Samuel Chap. Vers Page 1. 14. 97. 3. 1. 23. 3 21. 83. 3. 18. 180. 2 Samuel Chap. Vers Page 18. 3. 196. 22. 19. 6. 1 Kings Chap. Vers Page 10. 21. 27. 24. 2. 26. 89. 7. 21. 142. 2 Kings Chap. Vers Page 13. 21. 72. Job Chap. Vers Page 22. 2. 191. 23. 8 9 10. 182. 26. 14. 56. Psalmes Psal Vers Page 2. 8. 109. 2. 7. 8. 215. 9. 10. 163. 16. 3. 191. 16. 5 6. 17. 22. 8. 7. 40. 3. 6. 49. 27. 125. 45. 2. 57. 41. 9. 72. 61. 2. 208. 73. 25 26. 17. 22. 74. 12. 113. 116. 15. 195. 126. 6. 32. Proverbs Chap. Vers Page 6. 26. 29. 8. 11. 147. 8. 14. 73. 8. 22 23 24. 25. 17. 6. 159. 25. 25. 40. 27. 16. 236. 30. 1. 68. Ecclesiastes Chap. Vers Page 3. 14. 135. 10. 2. 28. 12. 11. 80. Canticles Chap. Vers Page 1. 2 3. 178. 1. 6. 106. 1. 13. 183. 2. 8. 61. 2. 9. 78. 3. 1 2 3. 14. 19. 3. 4. 15. 4. 16. 235. 5. 1. 162. 5. 2 3. 175. 5. 3. 176. 5 10. 9. 151. 249 8. 6. 192. 8. 6 7. 148. Isaiah Chap. Vers Page 6. 7. 58. 102. 8. 17. 181. 9. 6. 115. 11. 6. 20. 11. 12. 65. 19. 11. 195. 22. 22. 115. 26. 19. 73. 26. 8 9. 172. 28. 16. 164. 33. 14. 46. 40. 15. 17. 130. 40. 11. 97. 41. 19. 100. 43. 2. 221. 50. 10. 181. 53. 2. 164. 53. 10. 215. 53. 11. 163. 56. 6 7. 101. 60. 7. 102. 61. 1. 79. 61. 1 2 3. 139. 63. 9. 97. 65. 16. 212. 63. 9. 220. 65. 17. 223. 63. 2. 250. Jeremiah Chap. Vers Page 23. 6. 124. 30. 17. 169. 31. 3. 230. Lamentations Chap. Vers Page 3. 24. 17. Ezekiel Chap. Vers Page 9. 3. 137. 16. 6. 8. 227. 20. 46. 81. 37. 9. 236. Daniel Chap. Vers Page 2. 44. 116. 3. 25. 221. 7. 9. 150. 7. 14. 228. 9. 26. 95. 12. 4. 109. Hosea Chap. Vers Page 11. 4. 232. 14. 4. 228. 14. 7. 155. Michah Chap. V●●s Page 6. 7. 40. Hab●kkuk Chap. Ve●s Page 3. 17. 18. 177. Zechariah Chap. V●rs Page 2. 5. 221. 4. 12. 36. 9. 12. 39. 11. 13. 30. 13. 17 59. H●gg●i Chap. Vers Page 1 4. 167. Matthew Chap. Vers Page 3. 11. 237. 6. 24. 170. 10. 39. 144. 11. 27. 71. 12. 4. 87. 19. 16 17. 56. 19. 24. 30. 13. 44. 10. 23. 23. 19. 101. 26. 9. 29. 25. 5. 173. Luke Chap. Vers Page 2. 14. 33. 12. 50. 61. 15. 17. 41. John Chap. Vers Page 1. 1. 44. 1. 8. 54. 1. 14. 152. 1. 16. 37. 1●8 1. 17. 71. 93. 2. 20. 233. 3. 13. 198. 3. 34. 63. 5. 25. 74. 5. 31. 78. 6. 36. 16. 6. 44. 20. 207 8. 14. 78. 10. 8. 60. 12. 27. 63. 13. 35. 154. 14. 16. 233. 14. 26. 232. 15. 5. 144. 15. 9. 226. 16. 23. 248. 16. 26 27. 245. 17. 6. 85 17. 10. 159. 17. 19. 37. 18. 36. 109. Acts. Chap. Vers Page 7. 37. 70. 10. 12. 36. 111. 10. 43. 79. 13. 33. 216. 20. 28. 198. 25. 19. 161. Romans Chap. Vers Page 3. 26. 32. 4. 21. 8. 5. 17. 195. 8. 28. 50. 10. 18. 110. 11. 36. 129. 14. 7. 78. 1 Corinthians Chap. Vers Page 1. 7. 189. 1. 25. 29. 1. 30. 210. 3. 21 22. 158. 7. 13. 107. 200. 10. 1 2. 71. 10. 1. 46. 10. 33. 168. 12. 3. 207. 13. 12. 225. 12. 25. 6. 67. 15. 24. 117. 15. 28. 118. 2. Corinthians Chap. Vers Page 1. 20. 208. 1. 22. 239. 3. 4. 6. 4. 17. 4. 4. 4. 53. 4. 6. 54. 5. 19. 208. 5. 21. 33. 5. 15. 192. 8. 23. 156. 10. 12. 78. 13. 14. 44. Galatians Chap. Vers Page 1. 2. 77. 3. 20. 99. 3. 28. 145. 4. 4. 68. 5. 23 24. 94. Ephesians Chap. Vers Page 1. 6. 3. 1. 22. 113. 3. 18 19. 227. 4. 11. 82. 5. 27. 156. 5. 25. 230. Philippians Chap. Vers Page 2. 7. 228. 2. 20 21. 166. 2. 6 7 8. 58. 3. 8. 11. 3. 9 10. 163. 4. 9. 43. Colossians Chap. Vers Page 1. 19. 76. 1. 19. 138. 1. 24. 193. 2. 3. 76. 2. 9. 66. 2. 19. 36. 3. 10. 34. 223. 1 Thessalonians Chap. Vers Page 1. 10. 199. 2. 10. 189. 2 Thessalonians Chap. Vers Page 2. 13. 234. 1 Timothy Chap. Vers Page 1. 5. 206. 1. 17. 112. 119. 2. 6. 69. 6. 16. 126. 2 Timothy Chap. Vers Page 1. 9. 219. Titus Chap. Vers Page 1. 1. 171. 1. 2. 134. 1. 2. 215. Hebrewes Chap. Vers Page 1. 3 54. 87. 1. 4 5. 216. 2. 13. 215. 2. 17. 96. 3. 5. 71. 4. 15. 97. 4. 16. 241. 5. 14. 182. 7. 3. 87 7. 23. 88. 7. 24. 9. 7. 26. 55. 96. 7. 27. 95. 9. 6. 87. 9. 6. 26. 90. 9. 8 9. 93. 9. 9. 48 92. 9. 10. 93. 9. 12. 200. 202. 9. 14. 99. 201. 9. 27. 90. 10. 1. 91. 10. 10. 102. 10. 11. 91. 10. 19 20. 203. 10. 20. 100. 10. 22. 242. 10. 26. 91. 11. 1. 8. 11. 2. 76. 11. 6. 5. 11. 26. 12. 12. 2. 207. 12. 24. 247. 13. 5. 220. 13. 10. 94. James Chap. Vers Page 1. 18. 237. 5. 11. 98. 1 Peter Chap. Vers Page 1. 4. 222. 1. 12. 26. 1. 20. 6. 2. 6. 26. 2. 24. 87. 2. 25. 71. 3. 1 2. 155. 3. 19 20. 81. 5. 8. 244. 2 Peter Chap. Vers Page 1. 1. 205. 1. 4. 173. 1. 7. 4. 2. 22. 173. 1 John Chap. Vers Page 2. 1 2. 243. 2. 5. 192. 2. 20. 75. 3. 1. 148. 4. 19. 149. 4. 17. 192. Revelation Chap. Vers Page 3. 3. 115. 3. 7. 73. 6. 9. 102. 6. 15 16. 133. 12. 11. 31. 18. 13. 105. 19. 8. 150. 19. 11. 251. 22. 2. 145. FINIS The Printer to the Reader NOtwithstanding all our care there are some faults escaped in the Print yet I hope none will be found so great as to disturbe the sence if thou wilt but make a favourable construction of what thou shalt read
without any Light lying under shame and dishonour under the guilt of sinne and not able to deliver it selfe this cannot but make it looke out for it selfe and seeke with great importunity for a Saviour The Dove could find no rest for the soale of her foot till she returned into the Arke It is a perfect hyeroghyphick or resemblance of a wounded Spirit as Solomon calls it when it is as the blessed Redeemer was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 surrounded with sorrow and it is full of restlesse vexations fluctuating and tumbled up and downe in a whole Ocean of perplexities and feares and can see no shoare no Land no creek or haven of comfort then it must into the Arke then it uses the soliloquie of the Psalmist returne unto thy res● ô my soule then it cries out with the blessed Martyr ô none but Christ none but Christ there 's my Arke ther 's my rest there 's my refuge there I shall find reliefe and refreshment or else no where Christ will be a calme to me after a storme he will dispell and drive away all these clouds he will hold my head above water and keep me from sinking he will be light and joy and unspeakable solace after all these distempers thus the poore affl●cted soule as a prisoner of hope as the Prophet speakes Zach. 9. 12. returnes unto Christ as to its strong hold The mis●rable soule seeks for cure the whole need not the Physition saith Christ but the sick sin-sick sinners will enquire and seek after the Physition of soules The sense of misery is the primum mobile the first mover that sets us on seeking for Christ The more wee know our owne misery the more we know how to prise Christ and set a true value upon him Againe Beleevers are likewise convinced of the impotency and weaknesse of the creature in respect of any help or succour that it can afford None can by any meanes redeeme his brother nor giv● to God a ransome for him Psal 49. 7. i● not redemption from temporall death much lesse from eternall Will the Lord be pleased with thousands of Rammes saith the Prophet or with ten thousand rivers of oyle shall I give my first borne for my transgression the fruit of my body for the sinne of my soule The truth is should all the Angels in Heaven and righteous men upon Earth joyne their goodnesse together and offer it up to God as a sacrifice it would not be sufficient to expiate so much as one sinne Now when the soule is sensible of this it crieth out as Peter in another case help Lord or else I perish Solomon saith that as good newes from a farre Country so is cold water to a thirsty soule Prov. 25. 25. So it is with a poore distressed soule when it seeth it selfe as it were in a farre Countrey farre from God farre from ●oy and farre from any deliverance in it selfe or in any other then if one bring him newes of a Saviour of a Redeemer this is welcome newes indeed this is as cold water to a thirsty soule An instance of this is seen in the Prodigall who when he came to himselfe that is when he saw what a wretched and helplesse creature he was he cast his thoughts upon his Fathers house he loathed any longer to feed upon the huskes and hogs meat of the world then he desires the bread of his Fathers hired servants Nothing but home will content him farewell feasting and revelling and all filthy pleasures that I have lived in I have gotten nothing by them but wounds and sorrowes and vexation of Spirit I will home to my Fathers house there is bread and durable cloathing there is whatsoever I can wish or desire here I starve and die there I shall live and sweetly enjoy my selfe here I want all things but there I shall lack nothing This is a lively pourtraiture of a thirsty and wearied soule flying unto Christ for ease and comfort This then is one reason why Christ is precious to Beleevers namely because they are in some measure convinced of their misery with him and of their owne impotency and utter inability to help themselves therefore Christ is precious unto them Secondly Beleevers are not onely Reas II convinced of their owne misery without Christ and of their impotency and inability to help themselves but also they see and apprehend an infinite treasure of good and happinesse that God hath treasured up in Christ and that to be joyned unto him is the onely way to obtaine these blessings Viz. the Fathers Love Pardon of sinne Manifestation of Gods face The love of God being infinite like himselfe cannot be conferred upon any creature for its owne sake the causa procuratrix or the procuring cause of this love must of necessity be infinitely meritorious now this is not found among the sonnes of men but onely in Christ the eternall Sonne of God onely in Christ who was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God-man as I may say Immanuel God with us or God in our flesh God that he might be a fit object for the infinite love of his Father and man that he might derive and bring that love to us God first loves his Sonne and then Beleivers through him It is impossible that the infinite love of the infinite God should bee drawne out but by an infinite motive and where is this motive but in the second person coe-eternall co-essentiall and co-equall with the Father were it not for his Sonne God should have no object for his love in the world Love is as fire which must have fewell to maintaine it Now let all the Creatures men and Angels be set before God yet they all with all their excellencies and lovely parts cannot deserve the least minute or tittle of his Love God loves himselfe in his Sonne and his creatures for his beloved Sonnes sake God will supply saith the Apostle all your need according to his riches in Glory by Jesus Christ Philip. 4. 9. The treasures of Gods love and riches are first in Christ and by our union with him wee come to enjoy them So Ephes 1. 6. To the praise of the glory of his grace wherein he hath made us accepted in the beloved 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in which he hath ingratiated us through that Beloved Gods love and his favour is undeserved on our parts wee finde grace in his sight through Christ Notable to this purpose is the order of the three persons which the Apostle sets Cor. the last and the last The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the Communion of the Ho-Ghost be with you all Amen You must know now that this is not a right naturall order for by order of nature the Father whom the Apostle cal's God in a personall sense as John 1. the word was with God that is with the Father I say by order of nature the Father is first of himselfe not begotten the Son is from the
cut off the race and succession of them There is a remarkable passage to this purpose In Josephus * Antiq. lib. 18. cap. 4. At that time saith he meaning when Pilate was Governour was Jesus a wise man if it be lawfull to call him a man for he was the performer of diverse admirable workes and the instructure of those who willingly entertaine the truth And he drew unto him divers Jewes and Greekes to be his followers this was Christ who being accused by the Princes of our Nation before Pilate and afterward condemned to the crosse by him yet did not those who followed him from the beginning forbeare to love him for the ignominy of his death for he appeared unto them alive the third day after according as the Divine Prophet had before testified the same and divers other wonderfull things of him And from that time forward the race of Christians who have derived their name from him hath never ceased Here you see what an honourable testimony this Jew that was no Christian gives of Christ and his Disciples so precious and desirable was hee notwithstanding his suffering notwithstanding all the shame and trouble that came upon his followers for him that they never would forsake him neither could the generations of them be rooted out of the Earth unto this day This is my beloved and this is my friend ô daughters of Jerusalem Secondly from complacency or wel-pleasednes flowes another thing in love viz. a desire of union or enjoymēt When the soule eyes a tempting or tickling object as I may say it presently covets the possession and fruition of it there is by and by a kinde of clasping or closing with it or a strong appetion of peculiarity or private Intrest Whence it is that the French Divine writeth Molinus thus of love Love saith he is that point of our spirits whereby it joyneth it selfe unto objects That which is weight in heavie things love is the very same in our soules for as weight moveth earthly bodies toward the place of their rest so love moveth our soules toward that object which promiseth rest and contentment Now Beleevers highly esteeming Christ desire nothing more then the possession and enjoyment of Christ Now Christ is enjoyed In his Ordinances In his secret and sweet appearances to the soule and in his personall presence First Christ is enjoyed in his Ordinances The Ordinance is as I said before a walke wherein Christ is wont to meet with his people a Beleever therefore doth with great delight and study put himselfe upon that way that he may enjoy Christ in it But Secondly Christ is enjoyed in his secret and sweet appearances to the soule What are all holy Ordinances but dead and heartlesse things without such revelations Job tells us of Ordinances of Heaven and Jeremiah in like manner of the Ordinances of the Sun of the Moone and of the Starres these are naturall Ordinances but to what purpose were they if this inferiour world did not partake of their light and heat and sweet influence Wee read also of politick and Judiciall Ordinances which God constituted and set in the common-wealth of Israel but to what purpose were these likewise or what benefit could an Israelite reape by them if he lived in such corrupt and lawlesse times that he could not have them administred so what are all heavenly and sacred Ordinances to a Beleever if he finde not the vertue the life and the power of them enjoying Christ in the Ordinance and finding an influence of his spirit and grace flowing in upon his soule As there is a desire in a Beleever to communicate his heart unto Christ so Christ communicates his grace unto a Beleevers heart Christ as a Fountaine sends forth his streames of comfort and joy and as a Sunne sends forth his glorious beames of grace and love into a Beleevers soule Now a Beleever doth account prayer preaching Sacraments and all other meanes of his soules welfare to be nothing unlesse the Spirit of Christ comply with them flowing in upon the soule with such heart-ravishing discoveries of his grace as no tongue can possible expresse Hence it is that a Beleever sets open the windowes of his soule desiring that Christ may shine into it with the bright and glorious beames of his grace and favour but if Christ eclipse and hid himselfe from the soule there is nothing but darknesse and complaining sorrow and mourning and no rest at all untill the mist be dispelled and the cloud blowen over and the day-starre arise in the heart againe untill Christ come and refresh the soule with new supplies of revelations The Church never left off seeking Christ untill she had found him till the King had brought her into his bed-chamber and into the banqueting-house and imparted some of his love unto her Oh how precious is that sweet and secret communion which a Beleever enjoyes with Christ ô what a delight is it to sit under Christs shadow and to enjoy him in such a way at this is Thirdly Christ is enjoyed in his personall presence at his second coming The Saints are described to be such as long and looke for Christs appearing 1 Cor. 1. 7. you come behind in no gift sai●h the Apostle waiting for the comming 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 revelation of Jesus Christ It is called the revelation of Christ because the glory and Majes●y of Christ it now hid but then his brightnesse shall appeare and be manifested for he shall come in the clouds and great glory And the Apostle saith in 1 Thess 2. 10. that Christ shall be glorified in his Saints and admired in all them that beleeve that is the Saints seeing themselves to shine as the Starres for evermore and to be made conformable to the glorious body of Christ they shall infinitely admire his grace and Mercy unto them Hence it is Beleevers wait for the consolation of the second coming of Christ as they did for the consolation of his first coming because here they receive good in promise but then they shall receive it in the fruit of the promise here they receive the first fruites of his Spirit then a full harvest of joy and blessednesse here they see Christs glory at a distance and through the lattesse but then in the luster and brightnesse of it Christ is the object of a Beleevers affections and nothing but fruition will give him satisfaction his heart is never at rest untill it come to his proper place of rest and repose agreeable to that of the Father fecisti nos Domine ad te inquietum est cor nostrum donec requiescit in te thou hast made us ô Lord for thy selfe and our heart is never at rest till it rest in thee Now whence is it that a Beleever desires to enjoy Christ in his Ordinance in that sweet and secret communion in his personall presence but from this love of union when he sees such a glorious object as Christ is
to say sporting greatly a metaphor or simile taken from little ones which sport and play before their Parents Christ must needs be precious being thus highly esteemed of the Father And to this head of Argumentation wee may adde the great and high account that the most excellent of all Gods Creation the holy Angels have of him they all worship him and adore him Hebr. 1. 6. yea they doe exceeding earnestly desire to stoope downe and pry into the great mystery of our Redemption by Christ as the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Peter 1. 12. doe import where the Apostle alludes to the manner of the Cherubims looking downe into the Mercy-seate this is the study yea this is the delight and recreation of the elect Angels to looke into the severall scopes of our salvation by Jesus Christ to behold the whole frame and fabrick of it to observe all the parts of it from the beginning to the end and the glorious attributes of God his wisdome his power his Justice his Mercy all shining and glittering in it like bright Starres in the firmament this I say is their worke yea this is their festivity and past-time Then let the profane ones of the world thinke what they will of Christ let them slight him and scorne him and cast him at their heeles as they doe let them trample upon his bloud and passion as their wicked manner is making it a common and worthlesse thing let them despise those high and celestiall Mysteries of his Mediatorship wee need not care for their thoughts it is enough for us that God the Father hath honoured and exalted him that the holy Angels doe venerate and worship him yea and all the Saints doe magnifie him and count him very precious the opinion that one of the least of these hath of Christ is more to be regarded then the Judgement of the wisest and most judicious worldlings that are The Preacher saith that a wise mans heart is at his right hand but a fooles at his left Eccles 10. 2. what is the meaning of this Wee know that naturally every mans heart is placed on the left side therefore surely that sentence aimeth at something higher then Nature doubtlesse then Heavenly things are figured by the right hand and Earthly by the left The first is the choyce of the Saints they are therefore those wise ones whose heart is at their right hand the other is the delight of Heathenish and carnall people they then are the fooles whose heart is on their left hand and here is the true reason why the men of this world doe despise Christ their heart is a left-handed heart as I may say they favour and rellish nothing but earthly things and therefore Christ and the glorious things of the Gospel are lightly set by such wisedome is too high for fooles as Solomon saith they cannot attaine unto it Even the Heathen Philosophers as wise as they were could not reach it they were so farre from embracing it that they counted it very foolishnesse and be it so saith the Apostle for he doth after a sort gratifie them yet the foolishnesse of God is wiser then men and the weaknesse of God is stronger then men It skils not then what the men of the world doe thinke of Christ but what esteeme God and his holy Angels and the Saints illuminated and enlightned by the Spirit of God have of him if they count him precious this is an Argument irrefragable and a proofe beyond all exception that he is so indeed Thirdly the great and excessive price Illustration III that is given for a thing doth likewise render it very precious Precious things have their denomination from this Argument The oyle wherewith Mary anoynted Christ was called precious in this respect this oyntment might have been fold for much and given to the poore Thus also the life of a man is said to be precious Proverb 6. 26. because he will part with one thing after another till all begone to save it as wee see in the Egyptians who parted first with their mony after that with their cattell and last of all with their Lands and all to buy bread to save their precious lives Now this also doth set forth the preciousnesse of Christ but who shall value him Who shall set the price upon him not men of corrupt minds not people of depraved affections for they will set too low a rate upon him Judas sold him and the High-Priests bought him for 30. pieces of silver a goodly price saith Christ that I was prised at of them Zach. 11. 13. Magnificum pretium as Junius renders it a very worthy price I promise you ironically spoken meaning nothing lesse and yet he was no lesse then the eternall Jehovah that was so prised Jehovah said unto me cast it unto the potter a goodly price that I was prised at of them But they did thus to fulfill the good Counsell and purpose of God for others that would esteeme more highly of him There be them in the world that doe enhaunse the price of Christ and value him at the highest rate though some will not part with a beastly lust for him though like hogs they count the base wash and figge to be farre sweeter yet there be others that know well the worth of him there be others that are willing to forsake all for him we have forsaken all saith Peter and have followed thee Matth. 19. 27. The Merchant of whom you heard before sold all to buy the preclous pearle he valued it above all things in the world and was willing to leave all for it The holy Martyrs thought not their very lives and their heart-bloud too deare for Christ so it is said that they loved not their lives unto the death Revel 12. 11. that is they despised their lives in comparison of Christ they exposed their bodies to horrible and painfull deaths their temporall estates to the spoyle and their persons to all manner of shame and contempt for the cause of Christ they thought nothing too hot for him A soule that by Faith hath sense of the worth of Christ will willingly give all for him will goe away rejoycing and will thinke his pennie-worth to be very good Fourthly the usefulnesse and profitablenesse Illustration IV of a thing makes it also to be precious in this sense are the fruits of the Earth called precious as we reade Deut. 33. 14. there the precious fruits put forth by those heavenly luminaries the Sunne and Moone are a part of Josephs blessing and precious they were because very usefull and serviceable to the life of man and the influence of those heavenly bodies by a course which God had constituted and set in Nature made them the more usefull and therefore the more precious So also are the afflicted and persecuted Saints said to beare precious seed Psal 126. 6. because their sufferings shall profit them much in the end such seed shall
God present in the flesh to every faithfull and beleeving soule was likewise Vcal Almighty able for all things so that by these two names the faithfull are assured of their Justification Sanctification and eternall Salvation through the presence and power of God and this doubtlesse is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a great Mystery Furthermore Christ as man was our Sacrifice and expiation he was our 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the price of our Redemption 1 Tim. 2. 6. though I confesse that this price had its worth from the union of the two natures Againe Christ as man was conceived of the Holy-Ghost Christ as man is ascended into Heaven Christ as man sits at the right hand of God Now all these things and much more that might be brought doe speake Christ a very precious and excellent person and that even according to his manhood Secondly consider Christ as Mediatour and there also he shines forth most gloriously and appeares to be the most peerelesse and precious thing in the world In the Mediatorship of Christ wee are to consider his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or his three-fold Holy Office of Prophecie Priesthood Kingdome Christ is a Prophet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in way of eminency and excellency above all other Prophets he was the Head of them all and that in these respects First of all other Prophets were but Types and shadowes of this great Prophet even Moses himselfe was but a figure of him a Prophet shall the Lord your God raise up unto you of your Brethren like unto mee saith Moses Acts 7. 37. those words like unto me doe plainly shew that Moses was at the best but an Image and a shadow of Christ Moses fasted forty dayes before the giving of the Law on Mount Sin●i so did Christ before he began to preach the Gospel God did more clearly and perspicuously manifest himselfe unto Moses then unto other men it is said that he spake unto him face to face as a man speaketh to his friend Exod. 33. 11. so did the Eternall Father more openly reveale himselfe unto Christ then unto any creature no man knoweth the Father save the sonne and he to whomsoever the Sonne will reveale him Matth. 11. 27. Moses became a Shepheard in the Land of Midian so is Christ the Shepheard and overseer of our soules 1 Peter 2. 25. Moses was faithfull in all Gods house and so was Christ but yet in a farre more excellent manner then Moses as the Apostle declares Heb. 3. Moses was faithfull as a servant Christ as a sonne over his owne house Moses was himselfe a part of that house but Christ was the builder of it Moses under God did institute Sacraments 1 Cor. 10. 1 2. It is said that the Fathers p●ssed under the cloud and through the Sea and were all baptised unto Moses in the cloud and in the Sea marke that phrase unto Moses they were baptised unto him as unto the type or deputy of Christ for Baptisme is a Sacrament of the New Testament and properly of Christ's Institution Moses also instituted the Passeover so did Christ the Lords Supper As the Law was exhibited by Moses so was the Gospel which brings grace and truth free Redemption and the accomplishment of all types unto Beleevers exhibited by Christ Job 1. 17. Thus you see that Moses that egregious and eximious Prophet was no more then a shadow of Christ And the like may be said of all the rest of the Prophets it were no hard matter to shew how they did all of them in one thing or other resemble Christ just as the lively picture of a man doth his person as Enoch and Elijah in their Translations resembled the ascention of Christ Noah by his righteousnesse saving all the rest that went into the Arke with him shadowed Christ who by his perfect obedience saves all true Beleevers Concerning the Prophet David it is said that even those which sate at his Table rose up against him Psal 41. 9. so did Judas against Christ who dipt with him in the platter David also was a man after Gods owne heart so was Christ without the least flawe or failing and what an evident type of Christ was the Prophet Elisha when a dead body rose againe being cast into his grave and touching bis bones a Kings 13. 21. This was not done by any Native or inherent vertue of the Prophet but by that accident to foreinstruct the faithfull concerning the vertue of Christs flesh which rising from the dead should likewise raise up our perished bodies according to that Esa 26. 19. thy dead men shall live together with my dead body shall they arise awake and sing yee that dwell in the dust for thy dew is as the dew of herbes and the Earth shall cast out the dead Againe Jonah lying three dayes and three nights in the belly of a fish was a signe of Christ lying so long in the grave The Prophets were all of them types and resemblances of Christ even John the Baptist then whom there arose not a greater Prophet of all those that are borne of women even he I say was but Christs harbinger or fore-runner Now then as substances doe farre excell shadowes and Kings their Ante-ambulos or harbingers so doth Christ farre excell all Prophets they all of them were but shadowes and fore-runners to him Secondly other Prophets could speak only to the ears of men but Christ spake and still speaks to the heart he hath the Key of David he openeth and no man shutteth he shutteth and no manopeneth Rev. 3. 7. it is a similitude taken from them that keep the Keys of a City or Castle without which they can neither be opened nor shut no more can any open the heart or breake in upon the Spirit beside Christ he alone is able to open the eyes of the mind and to convince the Conscience by the secret kindly and powerfull working of his owne Spirit Other Prophets can preach wisdome unto men but Christ can preach them wise other Prophets can warne men by telling them of their sinnes and denouncing the Judgements of God but Christ can reclaime them and turne them from their sinnes the dead heare the voyce of the Sonne of God and live Joh. 5. 25. and hence it is said that he taught as one having Authority and not as the Scribes it came coldly and driely from them but full of paresie and boldnesse full of conviction and raeproofe full of the evident demonstration of the Spirit and of power as the Apostle speakes in this manner came the word from Christ Thirdly other Prophets were instrumentall to search out the mind of God and they did it by way of act onely the Divine will being revealed and discovered unto them but the mind of God was in Christ habitually and radically the fountaine and roote the source and principall cause of Christ's Prophecie was in himselfe Before all time Christ had the honour to sit in the seat of most
Apostle Galat. 3. 20. so did Christ indifferently partake of both natures Godhead and Manhood that so he might be fit to stand in the gap between his Father and us We must beleeve therefore that whole Christ offred up himselfe unto God even the Manhood as well as the Godhead did offer it selfe Christ is a Priest according to both natures And whereas it is said that hee offred himselfe through the eternall Spirit without spot unto God Heb. 9. 14. that doth not put the manhood from its share in priesthood but onely it shewes how the Sacrifice came to be without spot or blemish namely by the hypostaticall union of the two natures the eternall Spirit that is the Godhead of Christ assuming the flesh into one person with it selfe Secondly Christ was the Tabernacle or Temple most properly according to his God-head for he saith himselfe in the Gospel that the Gold of the Temple is sanctified by the Temple it selfe so is the manhood sanctified and made noble by the God-head Neverthelesse in some respects his humane body was the Temple also Destroy this Temple saith he and I will build it againe in three dayes he speakes it of his body which is called a Temple not onely because the holy Spirit dwelt in it after a singular and peculiar way conceiving it at the first and sanctifying it perfectly but also because in the offring of it up God found in it an acceptable sacrifice and smelt in it a sweet favour as in a Temple But yet further to this purpose the flesh of Christ is called a vaile Heb. 10. 20. in which the Apostle alludes to the opertory or vaile in the Tabernacle of old and in the Temple by which alone there was entrance into the holiest place of all so by the vaile of his flesh rent and torne upon the Crosse hath Christ opened a new and a living way for us to passe to God and to Heaven Thus is he the Tabernacle or Temple according to both natures too Thirdly Christ is the Altar most properly according to his Divinity for he saith himselfe that the Altar doth sanctifie the Gift Matth. 23. 19. And thus doth the God-head like an Altar sanctifie the Manhood as a gift or sacrifice making it of infinite merit and and worth with God the Father the Altar ought to be of greater dignity then the oblation But now although the God-head of Christ alone be the sanctifying and dignifying thing in respect of the offering of himselfe that is of his flesh unto God yet in respect of his presenting us blamelesse and a sacrifice as it were without spot and blemish unto his father so whole Christ God and man in one person is the sanctifying Altar that makes us accepted with God The Scripture it selfe speaketh thus Isaiah 56. 6 7. God promiseth that he will bring even the sonnes of the stranger that is the Gentiles to his holy Mountaine and make them joyfull in his house of Prayer and their burnt offrings and their sacrifices shall be accepted upon his Altar for saith he mine house shall be called an house of Prayer for all people in which place by the Altar we are to understand whole Christ God and man the blessed Mediatour upon whom as upon an Altar all Nations promiscuously both Jewes and Gentils were an offering acceptable to God And a like place there is in Isaiah 60. 7. All the flocks of Kedar shall be gathered together unto thee the Rammes of Nebaioth shall minister unto thee they shall come up with acceptance on mine Altar and I will glorifie the house of my glory Here also whole Christ is the Altar that makes the Gentiles to be as I may say a sacrifice of a sweet-smelling savour unto God To this also tends that in Isaiah 6. 7. where a coale from the Altar touching the Prophets lips his iniquity is taken away and his sinne purged now what is it that taketh away iniquity but the Lamb what is it that purgeth sinne but the bloud of Christ although I grant as before that if wee respect the offring of himselfe the body and bloud of Christ was most properly the sacrifice I will adde a few words more touching this matter out of Mr. Brightman upon Revel 6. 9. he saith that the soules under the Altar are most eminently the Martyrs whose salvation is placed onely in the death of Christ under which those holy Champions lying hid as under a Buckler they might safely and without terrour appeare before God now it is true that this death of Christ in respect of himselfe was the sacrifice but to the Martyrs and to all the Saints it is together with his God-head as an Altar under which and not under their own perpessions and suffrings as any whit meritorious they lie safe and secure Lastly Christ according to his manhood is most properly the sacrifice Heb. 10. 10. yet for as much as whole Christ presents himselfe now in the sight of God for us wee are to judge that whole Christ God and man was after a sort the oblation or offring and hence the bloud thereof is said to be the bloud of God Acts 20 28. Neverthelesse though in respect of us who are reconciled justifyed sanctifyed and eternally saved thereby whole Christ is offred up yet let us be wise unto sobriety Let us as I may say give unto Caesar the things that are Caesars and unto God the things that are Gods that is let us give unto each nature of Christ it s owne properties and offices both his Deity and his humanity did distinctly act their parts his humanity by suffring the punishment due to us and by fulfilling all righteousnesse and his Deity by conferring upon those suffering infinite and saving vertue The humane soule and flesh of Christ was the holocausto or whole burnt-offring rosted it the fire of his Fathers wrath his God head was the Temple in which and the Altar upon which this sacrifice was offred and lastly Christ both God and man was the Priest most willingly and cheerefully officiating in this service Thus I have shewed you that Chrisunlike unto all other Priests was himself both the Priest and the Sacrifice and the Temple and the Altar all in one person and in some respects also all according to both natures so that wel may he be called wonderfull as we read of him Isaiah 9. 6. and well also may the Apostle say that the Mystery of Godlinesse is without controversie a great Mistery Now then to conclude this discourse of Christs Priesthood if he were a Priest alone an everlasting Priest a Priest offering but once and yet sufficiently for ever the substance and verity of all those Priests which went before him gone into heaven which never any did as Priests but he onely not needing to offer for himselfe but onely for us a most mercifull and pitifull high Priest and lastly sacrifice Temple Altar and Priest all in one if Christ I say be such an high Priest then
certainly we must needs grant him even by this argument to be very precious and excellent Thirdly Consider Christ as a King and in this also his glory his dignitie and his excellency shines forth most eminently Christ is a King above all other Kings and that in these respects First of all his Kingdome is a spirituall Kingdome he rules over the soules and consciences of men other Kings may subject the bodies and the estates of such as are under them but not their consciences Indeed there hath been usurpation in this kinde but never tolerated and allowed by Christ One and the chiefest of all Babylons merchandize are the soules of men Revel 18. 13. by her curses excommunications pardons purgatory and the like inventions shee hath made merchandize of the soules and domineer'd over the consciences of men Episcopacy in all places more or lesse hath trodden in the same path let the Reformists of these times have a care that nothing be obtruded and thrust upon tender consciences which they cannot beare the heart the soule and the conscience is properly the subject of Christs Kingdome neither will he endure the subjection thereof to any other then himselfe domination and lordship over the soule is a part of his glory which he will not give to another The Church speaks it with indignation that her own mothers sonnes such as seemed to be of her numbers and corporation being inflamed with rage against her made her the keeper of other vines and to neglect her own that is they forced her to serve in part their phansies and pleasures * Mr. Dudley Fenner in his exposition upon the place printed at Middelburgh 1587. while shee abated of her diligence in doing those duties which God required of her Cant. 1. 6. God challengeth the persons of the Israelites as his own servants neither must they be sold as bondmen because he brought them forth out of the land of Egypt Levit. 25. 42. Now the like reason doth the Apostle give why wee should not subject our hearts and consciences to the ordinances of men in matters of religion yee are bought with a price saith he be not yee the servants of men 1 Cor. 7 23. that is doe not mancipate and enslave your consciences to any humane devise in matters meerely spirituall Christ alone is the King and Lord of our spirits his Kingdome is spirituall his Lawes are spirituall his people are spirituall he rules in the Kingdomes of men and meddles in their secular affaires all in order to his own spirituall Kingdome Heathenish people have been tamed and civiliz'd that way might be made for their embracing of the Gospel All the warres of the Nations all their policies and governments all their risings and decayings all the great works that ever were done in the world have tended by degrees at least to the advancement of Christs spirituall Kingdome Christ hath still made them his prudentialls to bring about his own ends The Assyrian first subdued the Nations after him the Babylonian then the Persian and the Grecian followed him but the Roman went farther then them all and when God had thus shaken the earth and the Kingdomes of the world then it was high time for Christ the desire of all Nations to come and the Gospel to be more clearly preached then before I speake this to shew how that Christ mingles himselfe even in worldly agitations and affaires that thereby he may further and set forward his own spirituall Kingdome and it should teach us to rule and steere our course in such things not carnally and grossly as the Heathen doe but spiritually as Christ doth his Kingdome i● a spirituall Kingdome so he tells Pilate My kingdome saith he is not of this world Joh. 18. 36. that is saith Mr. Luther he reigneth not according to the flesh and the world but he ruleth and sanctifieth in spirituall and heavenly things as righteousnesse truth wisdome peace salvation not as though all things of this world and even of Hell it selfe were not also in subjection unto him otherwise how could he p●eserve us and defend us from them all but because his Kingdome doth not consist either in them or of them Christs Kingdome is in heavenly spirituall things as in binding and loosing of the conscience captivating the affections and subduing the heart in obedience to himselfe and so bringing us by degrees unto glory There be them that tell us of a Monarchicall Kingdome of Christ whereby he shall in proper person reigne a thousand yeares upon the earth before the end and consummation of the world which if it be a truth yet I leave the opinion thereof to be scan'd and disputed of by the judicious Truth and falshood are brought to light by travaile industry and disputation Many shall run to and fro and knowledge shall be increased Dan. 12. 4. Secondly the Kingdome of Christ according to his Mediatorship is a universall Kingdome First Universall it is in respect of all Nations There was given him dominion and glory and a Kingdome that all people and Nations and languages should serve him Dan. 7. 14. The heathen are bis inheritance and the ends of the earth his possession The Monarchs of the world have Psa 2. 8. stretched their Empiers farre Nebuchadnezzars Kingdome in Strabo reached as farre as Spain as Mr. Broughton delivers out of that Author The Persians pierced farther Alexander farther then they and the Romans farther then them all but none of all these subdued the whole habitable as Christ hath done his subjects have been and are to be gathered from the foure winds all over the universe The Apostle speaking of the preachers of the Gospel saith That their sound went into all the earth their words unto the ends of the world Rom. 10. 18. Secondly Christs Kingdome is universall in respect of all sorts ranckes and conditions of men Noahs Arke was a shadow of the Church Now as into that Arke came creatures of every kindes so into the Church which is the Kingdome of Christ are received people of all ages sexes professions and conditions whatsoever if their conditions be such as thwart the laws and ordinances of that Kingdome they are laid downe they are changed in the very act of their reception This Kingdome doth not refuse any that will submit to it but all sorts of people may come and be accepted This is elegantly set forth by the Prophet Esa 41. 19. where God promiseth to plant in the Wildernesse the Cedar the Sitath tree the Myrtle the Oyle-tree the Firre-tree the Pine and the Box-tree together This also is signified by the Net cast into the Sea which gathereth fish of Mat. 13. 47 48. every kinde and so also of every kinde are reserved as good this net is an embleme of the Gospel preached called the kingdome of heaven because it doth forme promove and advance that Kingdome The fish of every sort which the net catches doe declare that people
with unspeakable delight his riches his love his goodnesse his greatnesse his power and all that is his is mine I have interest in all those transcendent graces of his his mercy his truth his promises they are all mine Now this must needs render Christ very precious when he is not onely in himselfe whatsoever is excellent and desirable but also the Saints may justly challenge and claime him for their own I come now to the application of the Vse 1 Point And first of all it shews us the reason why the most in the world doe despise Christ and care not for him namely because they have no faith they are infidells and unbeleevers and therefore they set light by him Christ is very precious but it is onely to Beleevers worldlings have no faith and therefore Christ seemes a despicable and worthlesse thing to them Now that they have no faith this appeares First by their ignorance Most have not so much as the theory or doctrinall knowledge of Christ they are like Festus who tould Agrippa that Pauls adversaries had questions against him concerning one Jesus Act. 25. 19. So let these be asked and they can answer nothing truly nothing rationally nothing punctually of Christ Christ is to them as Logicians speake an Individuum vagum quidam homo a certain man one Jesus but they for their part know little of him onely they have a wilde hope that if he be good for any thing they shall have a share in it as well as others and therefore Jesus Christ have mercy on us is a frequent and high point of their devotion they have it by tradition to receive Christ but what he is and how made ours they know not Others there be that have pretty store of knowledge they can reason and discourse of Christ distinctly and satisfactorily but they have no experimentall knowledge of him they have not fel● the work of his Spirit upon their hearts they have not tasted how gracious th● Lord is they may perhaps have a flashi●● relish and light tast of him such as their is of whom the Apostle speaks Heb. 6 4 5. Temporary gusts apprehension● of Christs sweetnesse causing joy for ●● while but they doe not sit downe with Christ at his Table to eate even to saturation as I may say and to make a full meale of his spirituall dainties the heavenly Manna the marrow of fatnesse neither have they drunke abundantly as the charge is Cantic 5. 1. of wine on the lees well refined out of Christs wine-cellar In a word they have not a thorough and saving experience of Christ though their braines have some print of him yet their hearts are strangers to him and therefore they have no faith They that know Christs name will put their trust in him Psal 9. 10. But these know it not they know not the power they know not the vertue they know not the worth of Christ neither doe they know their owne misery without him And what faith can there be where there is no knowledge Knowledge is so necessary to breed and beget faith that sometimes it includes faith and faith beares the name of it as Esa 53. 11. By his knowledge shall my righteous servant justifie many and againe Not having mine own righteousnesse saith the Apostle which is of the Law but that which is through the faith of Christ the righteousnesse which is of God by faith that I may know him and the power of his resurrection Phil. 3. 9 10. That is one token then that men have no faith because they have no knowledge Secondly It appeares by their stumbling at Christ Christ is a stone of stumbling and a rocke of offence to the disobedi●nt as the Apostle saith and disobedient ones are opposed to beleevers unbeliefe is the greatest disobedience in the world 't is to make God a liar and it is the mother and damme of all other disobedience because men beleeve not therefore they are so vicious so prophane so ungodly and so disobedient as they are and therefore it is that Christ seemes so vile and so base to them as he doth therefore it is that they are offended with him and stumble at him overmuch hast makes a man to stumble now the Prophet saith that he which beleeveth shall not make hast Esa 28. 16. Had the Jewes beleeved they had never stumbled at Christ his poverty and depressed condition had never been any scandall to them but they not beleeving looked for a Saviour and a Messias that should come in the riches in the glory in the pompe and magnificence of an earthly Monarch which whe● it failed they were ●ffended and said Wee will not have this man to reigne over us The Prophet E●●y brings forth carnall people speaking thus of Christ He hath no forme nor comelinesse and whe● we● shall see him there is no beauty that ●● should desire him Chap. 53. 2. This is no● meant of the bodily visage and countenance of Christ but of the strict lawes of his Kingdome and of the hard terms upon which he offers himselfe he tells men that if they will be his followers and will have him for a Saviour then they must deny themselves renounce their own wills take up his Crosse suffer mocks and reproaches bonds and imprisonment be hated and persecuted in the world and resist even to bloud and losse of life if need be These are the termes conditions upon which Christ offers himselfe and these are very unsavory most cannot relish them they will not downe Christ is very offensive being so tendred without forme without comelinesse without beauty a most nauseous and loathsome object Now where it is thus it is evident that men have no faith a man will not rest or relye upon that which he hath no good conceit of Thirdly It appeares to be so also when men doe not improve Christ True faith is a growing thing and makes all other graces to grow it is not idle and lazie but active and advancing and still pressing forward What is ground if not goodded and manured What is a Ship if not rigged and sent to Sea What is a trade if not driven and made use of So what is Christ if not working not acting not improved in us What is his incarnation death resurrection intercession if wee receive no vertue or vigorous impresse no accession or augmentation from them the businesse of Christ in a soule is not a matter of words and names as Gallio thought but it is a work of the highest and greatest concernment that can be the aimes of it are above all created excellencies and therefore where it is true and not fained it is ever in agitation ever girding forward to the marke ever building ever running ever growing if not so it is manifest that men haw no faith and if they have no faith it is no wonder that they should despise Christ Fourthly When a man is carelesse and regardlesse of the things of Christ this
soule is to thy Name and to the remembrance of thee With my s●ule have I desired thee in the night yea with my spirit within mee will I seeke thee early Esa 26. 8 9. Now I must tell you that it was faith which caused such love-sicknesse in the Spouse such panting and thirsting in David and such soule-desires such incessant seeking of Christ in those godly ones that wee reade of Give me children or else I dye said Rachell so certainly nothing can quiet and content the minde of a Beleever but union and communion with Christ It argues then a dead darke a hopelesse a faithlesse condition when the soule can goe whole moneths and yeares pleasing it selfe with rattles and toys as I may say and never labour for sweet intercourse or commerce with Christ at the very best here can be no better then a divided esteeme of Christ which is nothing worth When the heart is divided between Christ and the world there is alwaies a disproportion the world hath most and Christ least yea even then when Christ seemes to have most yet it is but occasionall dangers feares the ficke bed a spirit of bondage stings of conscience and the like may perhaps make Christ most relishable for a spirt but when the fit or storme is over and God gives respit then the heart is hardened like Pharaohs and there is a returning with the dogge 2 Pet. 2. 22. to his vemit and with the washed Sow to wallowing againe in the mire It is possible for a man to esteeme of Christ meerely for ease he would be freed from anguish but not from sinne he would be eased of the burden of sinne I meane those horrors and terrors and wounds and affrightments which it workes he would be delivered from paine and the hell of sinne but he cares not to be purged from the impurity and filthinesse of it Now where Christ is welcome and accepted onely for such an end as this truely he counts himselfe to be but little set by such an esteeme of Christ is but an occasionall esteeme of him a divided esteeme a disproportionable esteeme which he doth nothing esteeme of and it declares a soule quite destitute of faith and Christ cannot be precious where there is no faith Secondly Here is discover'd to us a Vse 2 fit object whereupon to spend the marrow of our best affections wee should labour to place all our sweet affections that are to be exercised upon good as love joy and delight upon this love-deserving object Christ It is pittie wee should lose so much of our affections as wee doe upon worldly things when we suffer a pure streame to run through a dirty channell our affections to run after the things of the world wee doe but lose our affections and they become unprofitable unto us I confesse that the love of Christ is not alike in all the Saints some are more and some lesse intensive in their love to Christ Wee all know that in the naturall body there is not so much strength in a finger as there is in the arme so in the mysticall body of Christ the members have not all of them the like measures and abilities of grace And it is possible also to sleepe spiritually while the heart that is to say the life and inmost affection of the soule is waking I sleepe saith the Spouse but my heart waketh Cant. 5. 2. The meaning is that shee was somewhat secure and kept not that watch against the pleasures of this life and the baits of this world as shee should doe and yet her heart was upright still So the wise Virgins slumbred and slept as well as the foolish Mat. 25. 5. And yet they had oyle in their Lamps and were ready to go in with the bridegroome The spirit may be willing when the flesh is weake as our Saviour saith Neverthelesse it were to be wished that every childe of God had heavenly affections in him at the height and like an arrow drawn up to the head And wee must take heed that our pusility and dwarfishnesse in them do not flow from a vicious and adulterate love love of the world love of ease love of any thing more then Christ Many of Gods deare ones are not without some tincture of this they have as it were fits of it sometimes as we may see by those excuses which the Spouse makes when Christ did knock at the doore of her heart for entrance I have put off my coat saith shee how shall I put it on I have washed my feet how shall I defile them Cant. 5. 3. 'T is a Metaphor taken from those that are gone to bed and are loath to rise for any mans pleasure and the meaning may be this that shee had now shaken off many feares and troubles shee was free from persecution delivered from many afflictions and miseries formerly endured shee had now thrown off these things as one going to bed doth his garments shee had washt them off as in the Eastern Countries travailers were wont to wash off the soile of their feet when they went to their rest and shee was now in the bed of fleshly ease and worldly contentment loath to disrest her selfe loath to rise and to be pincht with cold againe loath to set her feet into the dirt of former sufferings though in her heart shee preferr'd Christ above all yet so sweet were those earthly accommodations that shee would rather forbeare intercourse with him for a while then lose her share in them Thus it was with her but this was a naughty temper and cost her deare to be purg'd of it The true and healthfull temper of the soule is when Christ is a joy to us even in the absence and want of all other things when wee can say with the Prophet Although the fig-tree shall not blossom neither shall fruite be in the vines the labour of the olive shall faile and the fields shall yeeld no meat the flocke shall be cut off from the fold and there shall be no herd in the stalls yet I will rejoyce in the Lord I will joy in the God of my salvation Habac. 3. 17 18. Thirdly This may discover unto us what singular effects the excellency of Christ have upon the hearts of Beleevers and how eminently their affections are drawn out toward him Wee may judge of our esteeme by our affections and chiefly by the affection of love Love is the height of our esteeme and there are in it these three acts or effects viz. 1. Complacency or well-pleasednesse 2. Desire of union or enjoyment 3. Benevolence or good will First Complacency or well-pleasednesse being referred to Christ is an affection whereby wee doe approve and like of all that is in him resting in his goodnesse as in the most lovely and desireable object in the world Thy love is better then wine saith the Church because of the savour of thy good ointments thy Name is as ointment powred forth
must needs be precious which hath such precious props and pillars to uphold it God Christ and a sure word of promise all the wisdome and power of the Father and the Sonne and the Spirit all that they can doe to establish and confirme their own word and that is more then enough Lastly The preciousnesse of faith appeares from the nature from the effects and workings of it The nature of it is piously to know and to affect the things of God to cleave unto God in Christ to rest upon him for the obtaining of the promises Faith joynes us to God who is our life in whom the lives of our soules are bound up as Jacobs life was bound up in his darling Benjamins Faith filleth the soule with solace unspeakable with peace passing all understanding and with joy everlasting As bloud is in the veines dispersing it selfe into all parts of the body so giving life and heate and continuall nourishment thereunto such is faith in the soule it works upon all the affections it diffuseth and sheddeth abroad in our hearts the love of God in Christ it attracts and draws our spirits to delight in nothing more then in Christ it entertaineth the soule with feasts of fatted things and of wines refined it leadeth it into the wine-cellar it invites us unto those apples and fl●ggons of pleasure which Christ hath prepared it sweetens the crosse it makes us to rejoyce in tribulation and that with joy unspeakable and glorious it workes in us a childe-like confidence toward God whereby wee approach boldly to him crying Abba Father it carrieth the soule up to heaven and giveth ravishing sights of God and Christ and the joys of eternitie it brings us into communion with God whereby we have most intimate and familiar conference with him it brings us into his bed-chamber into his galleries of love In a word it enlightens justifies sanctifies and saves us for ever because it lays hold on Jesus Christ who is made 1 Cor. 1. 30. unto us of God wisdome and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption as the Apostle saith O how precious is faith that hath such wonderfull vertues and operations as these how precious also are those graces that flow from it as love and the feare of God and humilitie and patience and the like But above all the rest how precious is Jesus Christ and how highly to be esteemed of who hath bestowed upon us such precious such royall and such rich gifts as these Thirdly Consider likewise the promises Mot. of Christ these are also exceeding great and precious as they be called 2 Pet. 1. 4. Whereby are given unto us exceeding great and precious promises saith the Apostle I confesse that by promises he meanes the effect of the promises or the things themselves that are promised which are of no small value and worth and therfore the promises themselves are of no little weight and moment This will easily appeare if wee consider The nature of the promiser The antiquity of the promises And the precious things which they containe First God who hath promised is by nature wise and powerfull true and unchangeable God is infinitely wise he hath a profound reach his counsells are very deepe even his foolishnesse is wiser then men as the Apostle saith and he knows wayes beyond our imagination and capacity how to bring about his owne ends and to accomplish his promises He is also almighty to effect and bring to passe his designes he can doe above all that wee can either aske or thinke And againe he is true and cannot lie and therefore he is called the God of Amen by the Prophet Esa 65. 16. And lastly he is unchangeable he cannot repent there is no variablenesse or shadow of turning with him all these are the fulera the props and supporters of the promises on which they stand firme and sure and cannot fall to the ground The saying is Pollicitis dives quilibet esse potest Every man can be rich in his promises even a beggar may be as rich as a King in promises but all the question and doubt is about the performance of them Among men it is frequently thus they are facile and forward in making of promises but they are ignorant of the meanes how to fulfill them or if they know the way yet they want power and abilitie or if they be both knowing and able yet they want a will they have a heart and a heart as the Scripture speakes they pretend what they never intend The children of men are deceitfull upon the ballances or lastly though they know how to be as good as their word though they can doe it yea though for the present they doe really intend what they promise yet Multa cadunt inter ealicem supremaque labra many things fall out between the pot and the lip as the proverb is they are fickle and inconstant well instructed how to play fast and loose unstable as water like Reuben and so their promises prove to be nothing worth perhaps the fault may be in their intellect and understanding though they be wise to day yet after a while they may grow sots and fooles and so know not how to steere their course and to wheele about their purposes or perchance the default is in their hands though they be in possibility of performing their promises to day yet to morrow their armes may be cut off and they are left shiftlesse or if not so yet it may be worse the fault may lie in their affections they may be honest now and after a while dishonest and so say and unsay promise and change their mindes Thus it is with men oftentimes but with God it is not so he knows how to performe his promises he is able to make them good and he is most true and faithfull in all his pro●essions yea he is ever wise ever powerfull ever true ever the same never altred or changed in the lest measure how precious then and sweet are his promises and how lovely also ought Christ to be by whom we enjoy them Thus much of the nature of the Promiser Secondly Consider the antiquity of the promises The maine and chiefe promise of God is that which concerneth eternall life and this was made at the beginning of the world unto Adam when God said that the seed of the woman should breake the Serpents head yea it was made before the world began Tit. 1. 2. In hope of eternall life saith the Apostle which God that cannot lie promised before the world began Here by the way we learne that the promise being before all time it must needs be absolute and without all condition But let that passe The question is to whom that so ancient a promise was made when there was yet no world nor any men created to receive it to whom did God make it I answer that it was made to him that even then was ordained to be our head and M●diatour even the Lord
Travailers in the Wildernesse who by surrounding themselves with a fire did thereby fray away the wilde beasts and kept them off from annoying them now such a defence will Christ be unto his Saints he will be with them in most deadly dangers When they passe through the water and when they walke through the fire Esa 43. 2. Fire and water are two most devouring elements good servants but bad masters as we say and therefore here they are put for all other perilous and dangerous kindes Christ will save and deliver his people from them all Wee reade Dan. 3. 25. that the three Children were cast into the fiery furnace But what said the Tyrant I see foure saith he and the fourth is like the Sonne of God and in all probabilitie it was so it being usuall under the old Testament for Christ upon some weightie occasions to appeare in humane shape Thus Christ will be with his people in the furnace of affliction and either he will provide that it shall not be over-heate or else he will worke a miracle to restraine the power of the flames he will both preserve them in and deliver them out of trouble he will so sanctifie affliction that it shall prove a very blessing and mercy to them Secondly Great also and precious are the promises which appertaine unto spirituall grace The Apostle saith That by them we partake of the divine or godly nature 2 Pet. 1. 4. He doth not meane it of the essence or substance of God as some of the Heathen conceited affirming man to be aurae divinae particula a little piece of the divine Spirit Thus did the Platonicks dreame and also the Manichees and Priscillianists not so I say for the essence of God is incommunicable but wee are to understand it of the graces of the Spirit whereby the image of God is stampt againe and restored in man therefore the Apostle doth not call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is the essentiall nature of God but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the godly nature as if he had expressed it in one word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sainthood or a nature approaching to Gods resembling and like unto Gods So that Beleevers through Christ have in their soules a lively image and representation of the perfections of the vertues and of the life of God according to that of the Apostle Colos 3. 10. And have put on the new man which is renewed in knowledge after the image of him that created him he puts knowledge which is the incipient part of regeneration for the whole including under that both holinesse and righteousnesse And answering to this is that precious promise Esa 65. 17. where the Lord saith That he will make new heavens and a new earth This is meant of the spirituall excellency of the Church in regard both of doctrine of discipline and of life and therefore it holds forth a promise concerning the renewing of the soule by the Spirit of the Lord where doctrine is sound discipline wholesome and life holy there are new Heavens and a new earth as I may say and there the soule is become a new creature by the sanctifying Spirit of God Lastly great and precious also are the promises appertaining to eternall glory they containe in them that heavenly inheritance of the Saints in Light where they shall have blessed communion with God with Christ with the Holy Spirit with elect Angels and with one another for ever where they shall have the quintessence of all good things the sweetnesse of all Mercy and consolation where they shall have the splendour and bright rayes of everlasting honour where after this life and this life is but a bubble a smoake a wind a shadow they shall have that unutterable immortall Crowne of glory set upon their heads which Christ hath promised in a word where they shall have totum quod volunt nihil quod nolunt all that they would have and nothing that they would not have Hence it is that the Gospel which holdeth forth the promise of these things is termed glorious and the ministration thereof likewise glorious And therefore as the Apostle makes the comparison between the Law and the Gospel if the ministration of death and condemnation be glorious saith he how shall not the ministration of the Spirit and of righteousnesse be rather glorious so may I say if the glory of Christ be so splendent and shining so attractive and alluring even in the promise and expectation of it what then will it be in the full fruition and enjoyment thereof if so excellent and surpassing at a distance and through the lattice as I may say what will it be in the neerest touch and vision thereof when wee shall come our selves to participate of that glory Now wee see but in a glasse darkely saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 13. 12. that is here wee see God but as we see our owne Image in a glasse and not the very face it selfe here wee see him by a kinde of reflection and at second hand as I may say in the Ordinances in the creatures and such like dimme representations which at the farthest are in some sense aenigmaticall full of intricacy and obscurity But then wee shall see God face to face and then we shall know him as we our selves are knowne by him that is to say perfectly I meane with such a perfection as a glorified creature is capable of Thus have I shewed unto you what excellent and precious things are contained in the Promises for our soules and for our bodies for this life and for the life to come for ever ô then how much more precious and excellent how much more to be desired and longed for is Jesus Christ by whom so manifold and unspeakeable blessings are conveyed unto us Fourthly Christ hath bestowed up-Beleevers Mot 4 precious love and precious it is because Infinite Gracious Liberall Everlasting First the love of Christ unto his Saints is infinite and unmeasurable it is beyond all imagination or conception As the Father hath loved me so have I loved you saith Christ Joh. 15. 9. Now who can understand with what love the Father hath embraced his Sonne who can dive into the bottomelesse depth of that tender affection which the infinite God beareth unto Christ no more can wee define and fully set forth what the love of Christ unto his Saints is The Apostle indeed would have the Ephesians able to comprehend with all Saints the breadth and length the depth and height of the love of God in Christ but yet for all that hee concludes that it passeth knowledge Ephes 3. 18. 19. Secondly Christs love is a gracious love That which the Lord speakes by his Prophet concerning Jerusalem may fitly be applyed to all his people When I passed by thee and saw thee polluted or troden under foot as the word signifieth in thine owne bloud I said unto thee live That is as we use to apply it spiritually when we
bring forth weighty sheaves of joy at the last Now then to come to the point that we drive at in this manner doth the Scripture hold forth Christ as precious he is very precious because he is very usefull he is usefull for many things yea for all things but especially for these two viz. Justification Sanctification First Christ is usefull for Justification he is the onely mine pit of this treasure the golden and precious veines of it runne along in him onely That he might be just which beleeveth in Jesus saith the Apostle Rom. 3. 26 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is of the Faith of J●sus that is which seeke not Justification by their owne righteousnesse viz. by the works of the Law but by Christ alone and hence we are said to be made the righteousnesse of God in him 2 Cor. 5. 21. marke I pray The Apostle doth disertly and emphatically adde the clause 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in him that he may take away all conceit of inherence in us and establish the Doctrine of imputation as Christ is made sinne in us by imputation so wee are made righteousnesse in him by the same way St. Augustines place which Beza cites is a most full commentary God the Father saith he made him to be sinne who knew no sinne that we might be the righteousnesse of God not our owne and in him that is in Christ not in our selves And being thus justified we are so righteous as if we were righteousnesse it selfe It is Christ alone that can administer life and righteousnesse it is he alone that bindes up the broken-hearted opens the prison dores proclaimes Liberty to Captives and the acceptacle yeare of the Lord or the Lords yeare of good will the Quire of the heavenly host sang good will towards men when this accepted and welcome yeare was come Luke 2. 14. This was Christs worke the Law was too weake for it that could kill but not make aalive Christ alone bare the whole weight of his Fathers wrath made reconciliation for iniquity and brought in everlasting righteousnesse none but he was of use for this and therefore he must needs be precious Secondly he is likewise usefull for Sanctification that Spirit alone which Christ sends forth is of power and ability to instill and breath grace into us and so make us meet vessels for the heavenly masters use It is Christ that stamps afresh the impression of Gods Image defaced and decayed in our soules it is he that restores the life of God in man lost by sinne by the blessed influxe and droppings of his grace we come to put on the new man which is renewed in knowledge after the Image of him that created him as the Apostle speakes Coloss 3. 10. he uses a Metaphor of putting on taken from garments to shew that those new qualities of the soule are a●i●●ed as Venu●t and beautifull ornaments to our nature the substance of the soule is not changed as some have foolishly dream't but onely it puts on new properties and affections new powers and abilities and this benefit wee derive from Christ The parts of Sanctification are mortification a dying unto sinne and vivification a living unto righteousnesse now both these come by vertue of our implantation inserting or ingraffing into Christ the first when wee are implanted into his death and the second is a fruit of his resurrection Christ reviving his members could not lie dead a living head and dead members were a Monster never seen in nature Neverthelesse observe this that though wee are sanctified by the death and resurrection of Christ yet his death is the Primum mobile as I may say that strikes the first stroke that is the meritorious and exemptory cause of our sanctification and hence is that saying of the Apostle Rom. 6. 5. If we have been planted together in the likenesse of his death wee shall be also in the likenesse of his resurrection this is an elegant metaphor representing unto us that as plants engraffed doe receive moysture juyce and nourishment from the stock whereby they sprout out budde and beare fruit so wee being as it were inserted into Christ doe receive vigour and life from him whereby we walke in the Spirit and become spirituall holy gracious and active in all good workes Christ is the Olive tree that standeth before the Ruler of the whole Earth and emptieth it selfe by the pipes and conduits of his word into the golden Candlesticks of his Church Zach. 4. ●ight and grace in the Ministration of holy Ordinances flow from him he is the head and seate of spirituall influence from which the whole mysticall body receives breath life and motion this is the Apostles simile Coloss 2. 19. He makes there Christ to be the Head and the Church the body knit together by certaine joynts and ligaments as wee see it is in nature and by this meanes it hath convenient nourishment ministred to all parts whereby it increaseth with the increase of God that is with mighty and most blessed increasings Christ hath goodnesse enough for himselfe and for all his Members he is a Fountaine never drie and the Philosophers property of good agrees to him most of all Bonum est sui communicativum that which is good spares no● but communicates it selfe this is most true of Christ his grace is diffusive like water of which the Naturalist saith that it is difficultly contained within its owne bounds but easily within the bounds of some other thing Christ is that sunne of righteousnesse that compasseth the whole world enlightning warming and cherishing every one of his elect with his beames of his fulnesse we all receive and grace for grace saith the Apostle John 1. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is abundant grace or graces sutable to his owne The first day of union a Beleever enjoyes this participation of grace Union is the ground of Communion Wee must remember also that Christ did sanctifie himselfe to the end that we might be sanctified for their sakes I sanctifie my selfe that they also might be sanctified through the Truth saith Christ Joh. 17. 19. Christ is the principall cause of our Sanctification wee are sanctified vertually by his sanctifying of himselfe he being set apart and separated from sinners such as are by his Spirit and by faith knit to him must needs be also separated from the world to walke with God in holinesse of life and conversation Thus much of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 demonstrating and declaring how Christ is precious I come now to the third thing which is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shewing why it is so There be many reasons and causes why Beleevers doe esteeme so highly of Christ as they doe First beleivers are in some measure Reason I convinced of their most miserable and wretched condition without him and also of the impotency of the creature in respect of any help and deliverance in that condition First when the soule findes it selfe in darknesse