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A96093 The beatitudes: or A discourse upon part of Christs famous Sermon on the Mount. Wherunto is added Christs various fulnesse. The preciousnesse of the soul. The souls malady and cure. The beauty of grace. The spiritual watch. The heavenly race. The sacred anchor. The trees of righteousnesse. The perfume of love. The good practitioner. By Thomas Watson, minister of the word at Stephens Walbrook in the city of London. Watson, Thomas, d. 1686. 1660 (1660) Wing W1107; Thomason E1031_1; ESTC R15025 429,795 677

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soul embroydered it is divinely inlaid and enamel'd The body is but the sheath Dan. 7.15 I was grieved in the midst of my body in the Chalde it is in the midst of my sheath The most beautiful body is but like a velvet sheath the soul is the blade of admirable mettal The soul is a sparkling Diamond set in a rig of clay 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. The soul is a vessel of honour * Macarius God himself is serv'd in this vessel The soul is the bird of Paradise that soars aloft it may be compared to the wings of the Cherubims it hath a winged swiftnesse to fly to heaven The soul is Capax beatitudinis capable of communion with God and Angels * Bern. The soul is Gods house he hath made to dwell in Heb. 3.6 The Understanding Will and Affections are the three stories in this house What pity is it that this goodly building should be let out and the Divel become Tenant in it The preciousnesse of the soul is seen in two particulars It hath 1. An intrinsecal worth 2. An estimative worth 1. The soul hath an intrinsecal worth Which appears in two things 1. Spirituality 2. Immortality 1. Spirituality The soul is a spiritual substance 'T is a saying among the Ancients our souls are tempered in the same mortar with the heavenly spirits * In eodem cratere temperatas esse animas nostras cum caelestibus Now the soul is spiritual three manner of wayes In its Essence Object Operation 1. The soul is spiritual in its Essence God breathed it in Gen. 2.7 It is a sparkle lighted by the breath of God The soul may be compared to the spirits of the wine the body to the dregs the spirits are more pure refined part of the wine such is the soul the body is more feculent the soul is the more refined sublimated part of man Mistake me not when I say the soul is spiritual and that it is a beam of God I do not mean that it is of the same substance with him as Servetus Ofiander and others have held for when it is said God breath'd into man the breath of life they erroneously thought that the soul being infused did convey into man the spirit and substance of God which opinion is absurd and sinful For if the soul should be part of the Divine Essence then it will follow that the Essence of God should be subject not only to change and passion but which is worse to sin which were blasphemy to assert so that when we say the soul is spiritual the meaning is God hath invested it with many noble endowments he hath made it a mirror of beauty and printed upon it a surpassing excellency as the Sun shining upon a Chrystal conveys its beauty not its being 2. The soul is spiritual in its object it contemplates God and heaven God is the orb and center where the soul doth fix if you could lift up a stone into the highest Region though it did break in an hundred pieces it would fall to its center God is the terminus ad quem the soul moves to him as to its rest Psal 116.7 Return to thy rest O my soul He is the Ark to which this Dove flies nothing but God can fill an heaven-born soul if the earth were turned into a globe of gold it could not fill the heart it would still cry Give Give The soul being spiritual God only can be the adequate object of it 3. The soul is spiritual in its operation it being immaterial doth not depend upon the body in its working The senses of seeing hearing and the rest of those Organs of the body cease and dye with the body because they are parts of the body and have their dependance on it but the soul as Aristotle saith hath a nature distinct from the body it moves and operates of it self though the body be dead and hath no dependance upon or coexistence with the body Thales Milesius an ancient Philosopher defines the soul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He calls the soul a self-movable it hath an intrinsecal principle of life and motion though it be separate from the body And thus you have seen the souls spirituality 2. The preciousness of the soul appears in its immortality There are some that say the soul is mortal indeed it were well for those who do not live like men if they might dye like beasts but as Julius Scaliger well observes it is impossible for any thing of a spiritual uncompounded nature to be subject to death and corruption the souls of believers are with Christ after death Phil. 1.23 Oecolampadias said to his friend who came to visit him on his death-bed Good news I shall be shortly with Christ my Lord. And the devout soul shall be ever with the Lord 1 Thes 4. ult The Heathens had some glimmerings of the souls immortality Cicero saith that the Swan was dedicated to Apollo because she sings sweetly before her death by which Hieroglyphick they intimated the joyfulness of vertuous men before their death as supposing the Elizian delights which they should alwayes enjoy after this life And we read it was a custom among the Romans that when their great men dyed they caused an Eagle to flie aloft in the Ayre signifying hereby that the soul was immortal and did not dye as the body The souls immortality may be proved by this Argument That which is not capable of killing is not capable of dying but the soul is not capable of killing our Saviour Christ proves the minor proposition that it is not capable of killing Luke 12.4 Fear not them that kill the body and after that have no more that they can do Therefore the soul not being capable of killing is not in a possibility of dying the essence of the soul is Metaphysical it hath a beginning but no end it is eternal a parte post The soul doth not wax old * Anima non senescit it lives for ever which can be said of no sublunary created glory Worldly things are as full of mutation as motion and like Jonah's Gourd have a worme eating at the root 2. The soul hath an estimative worth 1. Jesus Christ hath set an high value and estimate upon the soul he made it and he bought it therefore he best knows the price of it He did sell himself to buy the soul Zach. 11.12 They weighed for my price thirty pieces of silver Nay he was content not only to be sold but to dye this inhanceth the price of the soul it cost the blood of God Acts 20.28 1 Pet. 1.19 Ye were not redeemed with corruptible things as silver and gold but with the precious blood of Christ God must dye that the soul may live the heir of heaven was morgaged and laid to pawn for the soul of man What could Christ give more than himself what in himself dearer than his blood O precious soul that hast the image of
say the Ring heals but it is not the Ring but the stone in the Ring that doth the cure so faith saves and heals not by its own vertue but as it layes hold on Christ and fetcheth down his sacred influences into the soul 2. If Jesus Christ be a spiritual Physitian let us labour to hasten the cure of our souls Consider 1. What a little time we have to stay here and let that hasten the cure Solomon saith there is a time to be born and a time to d●e Eccles 3.2 but mentions no time of living as if that were so sho●t that it were not worth naming the body is called a vessel 1 Thes 4.4 This Vessel is filled with breath sickness broacheth it and death draws it out Oh hasten thy souls cure death is upon its swift march and if that surprizeth you suddenly there is no cure to be wrought in the grave Eccles 9.10 There is no work nor device nor wisdom in the grave whither thou goest 2. Now is properly the time of healing now is the day of grace now Christ poures out his balsomes now he sends abroad his Ministers and Spirit 2 Cor. 6.2 Now is the accepted time There were certain healing dayes wherein the King healed them that had the evil The day of grace is an healing day if we neglect the day of grace the next will be a day of wrath Rom. 2.5 Oh therefore hasten the cure of thy soul rather neglect thy food than thy cure sin will not only kill but damn To get a cure 1. Come to the healing pool of the Sanctuary the Spirit of God may on a sudden stir these waters the next Sabbath for ought thou knowest may be an healing day to thy soul 2. Pray others to pray for you when any disease is upon your body you desire the prayers of others the prayers of the Saints are pretiosa balsama precious balmes and medicines to cure sick souls 3. Is Jesus Christ a soul-physitian then let me speak to you who are in some measure healed of your damnable disease I have foure things to say 1. Break forth into thankfulness though sin be not quite cured there are still some grudgings of the disease yet the reigning power of it is taken away you are so healed that you shall not dye John 3.16 John 11.26 Those that were cured by the Brazen Serpent afterwards dyed but such as are healed by Christ shall never dye Sin may molest it shall not damn oh then what cause have you to admire and love your Physitian The Lord Jesus hath taken out the core of your disease and the curse publish your experiences Psal 66.16 I will tell you what God hath done for my soul As a man that hath been cured of an old disease how glad and thankful is he he will tell others of the medicine that cured him So say I will tell you what God hath done for my soul He hath cured me of an old disease an hard unbelieving heart a disease that hath sent millions to hell Truly we may chearfully bear any other sickness if this soul-sickness be cured Lord saith Luther strike and wound where thou wilt if sin be pardoned Oh let the high praises of God be in your mouth Psal 149.6 God expects thankfulness as a tribute he wonders men bring not their thank-offering Luk. 17.17 Were there not ten cleansed but where are the nine 2. Are you healed take heed of coming into infected company lest you take the infection the wicked are Divels to tempt to sin Lot was the worlds wonder that lived in Sodom when it was a Pest-house yet did not catch the disease 3. Take heed of relapses Men are afraid of a relapse after they are cured beware of soul-relapses Hath God softned thy heart take heed of hardning it Hath he cured thee in some measure of deadness do not relapse into a drowsie security Thou mayest have such an uproar and agony in thy conscience as may make thee go weeping to thy grave Oh take heed of falling sick again sin no more best a worse thing come unto thee John 5.14 4. Pity your friends that are sick unto death shew your piety in your pity Hast thou a childe that is well and lusty but hath a sick soul pity him pray for him David wept and fasted for his sick childe 2 Sam. 12.16 Thy childe hath the plague of the heart and Thou hast conveyed the plague to him weep and fast for thy child Hast thou a wife or husband that though they do not keep their bed yet the Lord knows they are sick they are under the raging power of sin oh let thy bowels yearn over them lift up a prayer for them the prayer of faith may save a sick soul Prayer is the best physick can be used in a desperate case you that have felt the disease of sin and the mercy of your Physitian learn to pity others 4. And lastly Is Christ a soul-physitian then let us go to Christ to cure this sick dying Nation England God knows is a sick Patient the whole head is sick the whole heart is faint Physitians call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when no part of the body is free from distemper The body Politick hath a Kakexy it is ill all over Magistracy Ministry Commonalty are diseased and those who pretended to be our Healers are Physitians of no value We have spent our money upon these Physitians but yet our sores are not healed Jer. 14.19 Why hast thou smitten us and there is no healing for us Instead of healing us those who should have been our Physitians have encreased the Nations malady by giving a toleration this is like giving strong water in a Feaver which doth more inflame the disease Ah sick England because sinful England sick of error uncleanness drunkenness so sick that we may fear our Funerals are approaching And which is the worst symptom though balm hath been poured into our wounds the precious Ordinances of God have been applied yet we are not healed a signe of bad flesh that is so ill to be cured This sin-sickness in the Land hath brought forth many direful effects division oppression blood-shed the very bowels and arteries of the Nation are almost torn asunder so that now God hath fulfilled that threatning upon us Micah 6.13 I will make thee sick with smiting thee We have made our selves sick with sinning and God had made us sick with smiting Now what remains but that we should go to the great Physitian of souls whose blood sprinkles many Nations * Isa 52.15 that he would apply some healing medicines to dying England God can with a word heal he can give repentance as well as deliverance he can put us in joynt again Let all the people of the Land lie between the Porch and the Altar saying Spare thy people O Lord Joel 3.17 Our prayers and tears may set Christ on work to heal us Psal 106.23 Therefore he said that he would
of Thievery they steal upon a people And as they come without a Call so they stay without a Blessing Jer. 23.32 I sent them not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 therefore they shall not profit this people at all And so much for the first the Preacher The Pulpit 2. The Pulpit where Christ preached 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He went up into a Mountain The Law was at first given on the Mount and here Christ expounds it on the Mount This Mount as is supposed by Hierom and others of the Learned was Mount Tabor It was a convenient place to speak in being seated above the people and in regard of the great confluence of hearers 3. The occasion 3. The occasion of Christs ascending the Mount 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seeing the multitude The people thronged to hear Christ and he would not dismiss the Congregation without a Sermon but seeing the multitude he went up Jesus Christ came from heaven as a Factor for souls he lay legend here a while preaching was his business the people could not be so desirous to hear as he was to preach he who did compassionate faint bodies Matth. 15.32 did much more pity dead souls it was his meat and drink to do his Fathers will John 4.34 And seeing the multitude he goes up into the Mount and preacheth This he did not only for the consolation of his hearers but the imitation of his Ministers Doctr. From whence observe Doctr. That Christs Ministers according to Christs pattern must embrace every opportunity of doing good to souls praying and preaching and studying must be our work 2 Tim. 4.2 Preach the Word be instant in season 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ut omnem scil arripiant concionandi occasionem out of season* Peter seeing the multitude lets down the Net and at one Draught catcheth three thousand fouls Acts 2.41 How zealously industrious have Gods Champions been in former Ages in fulfilling the work of their Ministry as we read of Chrysostom Austin Basil the great Calvin Bucer and others who for the work of Christ were nigh unto death The Reasons why the Ministers of Christ according to his pattern should be ambitiously desirous of all opportunities for soul-service are 1. Their Commission God hath intrusted them as Ambassadors 2 Cor. 5.20 Now you know an Ambassador waits for a day of Audience and as soon as a day is granted he doth faithfully and impartially deliver the mind of his Prince Thus Christs Ministers having a Commission delegated to them to negotiate for souls should be glad when there is a day of Audience that they may impart the mind and will of Christ to his people 2. Their Titles 1. Ministers are called Gods Seeds-men 1 Cor. 9.11 therefore they must upon all occasions be scattering the blessed seed of the Word The Sower must go forth and sowe yea though the seed fall upon stones as usually it doth yet we must disseminate and scatter the seed of the Word upon stony hearts because even of these stones God is able to raise up children to himself 2. Ministers are called Stars therefore they must shine by Word and Doctrine in the Firmament of the Church Thus our Lord Christ hath set them a pattern in the Text Seeing the multitude he went up into the Mountain here was a light set upon an hill the bright Morning Star shining to all that were round about Christ calls his Ministers Lux Mundi the light of the World Matth. 5.14 therefore they must be always giving forth their lustre their light must not go out till it be in the socket or till violent death as an extinguisher put it out 3. Christs Ministers must ansam arripere catch at all occasions of doing good to others in regard of the work which they are about and that is saving of souls what a precious thing is a soul * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Macar Christ takes as it were a pair of scales in his hands and he puts the world in one scale and the soul in the other and the soul out-weighs Matth. 16.26 The soul is of a noble original of a quick operation 't is a flower of eternity here in the bud in heaven fully ripe and blown The soul is one of the richest pieces of Embroidery that ever God made the understanding bespangled with light the will invested with liberty the affections like Musical Instruments tuned with the finger of the Holy Ghost The soul is Christs Partner the Angels Familiar now if the souls of men are of so noble an extract and made capable of glory oh how zealously industrious should Christs Ministers be to save these souls if Christ did spend his blood for souls well may we spend our sweat It was Austins prayer that Christ might find him at his coming aut Precantem aut Praedicantem either Praying or Preaching What a sad sight is it to see precious souls as so many Pearls and Diamonds cast into the dead Sea of Hell 4. The Ministers of Christ seeing the multitude must ascend the Mount because there are so many Emissaries of Satan who lie at the catch to subvert souls How doth the Old Serpent cast out of his mouth floods of water after the woman to drown her Revel 12.15 What floods of Heresie have been poured out in City and Country which have over-flown the banks not only of Religion but Civility Ignatius calls Error the invention of the Divel and Bernard calls it dulce venenum a sweet poyson Mens ears like Spunges have sucked in this poyson Never were the Divels Commodities more vendible in England than now a fine tongue can put off bad wares the Jesuit can silver over his lyes and dress error in truths Coat a weak brain is soon intoxicated when flattery and subtilty meet with the simple they easily become a prey The Romish Whore enticeth many to drink down the poyson of her Idolatry and filthiness because it is given in a golden Cup Revel 17.4 If all who have the plague of the head should dye it would much increase the Bill of Mortality Now if there be so many Emissaries of Satan abroad who labour to make Proselytes to the Church of Rome how doth it concern them whom God hath put into the work of the Ministry to bestir themselves and lay hold on all opportunities that by their spiritual antidotes they may convert sinners from the error of their way and save their souls from death Jam. 5. ult Ministers must not only be Pastores but Praeliatores in one hand they must hold the bread of life and feed the Flock of God in the other hand they must hold the Sword of the Spirit and fight against those errors which carry damnation in their front 5. The Ministers of Christ should wait for all opportunities of soul-service because the Preaching of the Word hath so many Remora's that hinder the progress and success of it never did Pilot meet with so many Euroclydons and cross
give them a Kingdom above all the Princes of the earth nay far above all heavens God thinks nothing too good for his children We many times think much of a tear a prayer or to sacrifice a sin for him but he doth not think much to bestow a Kingdom upon us How will the Saints read over the Lectures of free-grace in heaven and Trumpet forth the prayses of that God who hath crowned them with loving kindness Infer 3 3. It shews us that Christianity is no disgraceful thing Wise men measure things by the end what is the end of godliness it brings a Kingdom a mans sin brings him to shame Prov. 13.5 Rom. 6.21 What fruit had ye in those things whereof you are now ashamed but Religion brings to honour Prov. 4.8 it brings a man to a Throne a Crown it ends in glory it is the sinners folly to reproach a Saint 't is just as if Shimei had reproached David when he was going to be made King it is a Saints wisdom to contemn a reproach say as David when he danced before the Ark I will yet be more vile 2 Sam. 6.22 If to pray and hear and serve my God be to be vile I will yet be more vile This is my excellency my glory I am doing now that which will bring me to a Kingdom O think it no disgrace to be a Christian I speak it chiefly to you who are entring upon the wayes of God perhaps you may meet with such as will reproach and censure you binde their reproaches as a Crown about your head despise their censure as much as their praise remember there is a Kingdom entailed upon godlinesse Sin draws hell after it grace draws a Crown after it 4. See here that which may make the people of God Infer 4 long for death then they shall enter upon their Kingdom Indeed the wicked may fear death it will not lead them to a Kingdom but a Prison hell is the iayle where they must lie rotting for ever with the Divel and his Angels To every Christlesse person death is the King of terror but the godly may long for death it will prefer them to a Kingdom When Scipio's father had told him of that glory the soul should be invested with in a state of immortality why then saith Scipio do I tarry thus long upon the earth why do I not hasten to die * Tully in Somn. Scip. Believers are not perfectly happy till death When Croesus asked Solon who he thought happy he told him one Tellus a man that was dead a Christian at death shall be compleatly installed into his honour the anointing oyle shall be poured on him and the Crown-royal set upon his head The Thracians in their funerals used musick The Heathens as Theocritus observes had their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Funeral banquet because of that felicity which they supposed the parties deceased were entred into The Saints are now heirs of the Kingdom James 2.5 Doth not the heir desire to be crowned Truly there is enough to weane us and make us willing to be gone from hence The Saints eate ashes like bread they are here in a suffering condition Psalm 141.7 Our bones are scattered at the graves mouth as when one cutteth and cleaveth wood upon the earth When a man hewes and cuts a tree the chips flie up and down here and there a chip so here a Saint wounded there a Saint massacred our bones flie like chips up and down for thy sake are we killed all the day long Rom. 8.36 But there is a Kingdom a coming when the body is buried the soul is crowned Who would not be willing to saile in a storm if he were sure to be crowned as soone as he came at shore How is it that the godly look so gastly at the thoughts of death as if they were rather going to their execution than their Coronation though we should be willing to stay here awhile to do service yet we should with Saint Paul desire to be dissolved and be with Christ The day of a believers dissolution is the day of his inauguration SECT 5. Containing a scrutiny and tryal whether we belong to this Kingdom Use 2 BUT how shall we know that this glorions Kingdom shall be setled upon us at death Trial. 1. If God have set up his Kingdom within us Luke 17.21 The Kingdom of God is within you by the Kingdom of God there is meant the Kingdom of Grace in the heart Grace may be compared to a Kingdom it swayes the Scepter it gives out Lawes there is the Law of love Grace beats down the Divels garrisons it brings the heart into a sweet subjection to Christ Now is this Kingdom of Grace set up in thy heart Do'st thou rule over thy sins Canst thou binde those Kings in chaines * Psal 149.8 Art thou a King over thy pride passion unbelief Is the Kingdom of God within you While others aspire after earthly greatnesse and labour for a Kingdom without them do'st thou labour for a Kingdom within thee Certainly if the Kingdom of Grace be in thy heart thou shalt have the Kingdom of glory If Gods Kingdom enter into thee thou shalt enter into his Kingdom But let not that man ever think to reign in glory who lives a slave to his lusts 2. If thou art a believer thou shalt go to this blessed Kingdom James 2.5 Rich in faith heirs of the Kingdom Faith is an heroical act of the soul it makes an holy adventure on God by a promise this is the crowning grace Faith puts us into Christ and our title to the Crown comes in by Christ By Faith we are borne of God and so we become children of the blood-royal By Faith our hearts are purified Acts 15.9 and so we are made fit for a Kingdom rich in faith heirs of the Kingdom Faith paves a Causey to heaven believers die heirs to the Crown 3. He that hath a noble Kingly spirit shall go to the heavenly Kingdom set your affection on things above Col. 3.2 Dost thou live in mundo supra mundum in the world above the world The Eagle doth not catch flies she soars aloft in the aire dost thou superna anhelare pant after glory and immortality Hast thou a brave majestick spirit an heavenly ambition dost thou mind the favour of God the peace of Sion the salvation of thy soul Dost thou abhor that which is sordid and below thee Alexander would not exercise at the Olympick-games Canst thou trample upon all sublunary things Is heaven in thy eye and Christ in thy heart and the world under thy feet He who hath such a Kingly spirit that looks no lower than a Crown he shall dwell on high and have his throne mounted far above all heavens SECT 6. A serious exhortation to Christians Use 3 USE 3. Exhortation And it hath a double aspect it looks Exhort 1. towards the wicked Is there a Kingdom to be had a
a Fountain in the Garden makes it pleasant that heart is most delightful to God which hath a Fountain of sorrow running in it Mary stood at Christs feet weeping Luke 7.38 Her tears were more fragrant and odoriferous than her oyntment the incense when it is broken smells sweetest when the heart is broken for sin now our services give forth their sweetest perfume There is joy in heaven over a sinner that repenteth Luke 15.7 Whereupon St. Bernard calls tears Vinum Angelorum the wine of Angels and sure God delights much in tears else he would not keep a bottle for them Psal 56.8 One calls tears Holocaustum pingue a fat sacrifice which under the Law was most acceptable Lev. 3.3 St. Hierom calls Mourning a plank after shipwrack Chrysostom calls tears a spunge to wipe off sin tears are powerful Orators for mercy Eusebius saith there was an Altar at Athens on which they poured no other sacrifice but tears as if the Heathens thought there was no better way to pacifie their angry gods than by weeping Jacob wept and had power over the Angel Hosea 12.4 Tears melt the heart of God When a Malefactor comes weeping to the Bar this melts the Judges heart towards him When a man comes weeping in prayer and smites on his breast saying God be merciful to me a sinner this doth melt Gods heart towards him Prayer saith Hierom inclines God to shew mercy tears compel him God seals his pardons upon melting hearts tears though they are silent yet have a voice Psal 6.8 Tears wash away sinne raine melts and washeth away a ball of snow repenting tears wash away sinne That sinne saith Ambrose * Quod defendi non potest ablui potest Ambr. which cannot be defended by argument may be washed away by tears 4. The sweetnesse of tears mourning is the way to Motive 4 solid joy the sweetest wine is that which comes out of the Wine-presse of the eyes * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys the soul is never more enlarged than when it can weep Closet teares are better than Court-musick When the heart is sad weeping easeth it by giving vent the soul of a Christian is most eased when it can vent it self by holy mourning Chrysostome observes David who was the great mourner in Israel was the sweet singer in Israel Psal 43.3 my teares were my meat on which place Ambrose gives this glosse No meat so sweet as teares the teares of the penitent saith Bernard are sweeter than all worldly joy a Christian thinks himself sometimes in the suburbs of heaven when he can weep when Hannah had wept she went away and was no more sad sugar when it melts is sweetest when a Christian melts in teares now he hath the sweetest joy when the daughter of Pharaoh descended into the river she found a babe there among the flags so when we descend into the river of repenting teares we finde the babe Jesus there who shall wipe away all teares from our eyes Well therefore might Chrysostom solemnly blesse God for giving to us this Lavor of teares to wash in 5. A mourner for sinne doth not only good to himself Motive 5 but to others he helps to keep off wrath from a Land as when Abraham was going to strike the blow the Angel staid his hand Gen. 22.12 so when God is going to destroy a Nation the mourner stayes his hand teares in the childs eye sometimes move the angry father to spare the child penitential teares melt Gods heart and binde his hand Jeremy who was a weeping Prophet was a great intercessor God saith to him pray not for this people Jer. 7.16 as if the Lord had said Jeremy so powerful are thy prayers and teares that if thou prayest I cannot deny thee Si quid opus est impera as he said in Plautus teares have a mighty influence upon God sure God hath some mourners in the Land or he had destroyed us before now Motive 6 6. Holy mourning is preventing physick our mourning for sinne here will prevent mourning in hell hell is locus ejulatus a place of weeping Matth. 8.12 the damned mingle their drink with weeping God is said to hold his bottle for our teares Psal 56.8 They who will not shed a bottle full of teares shall hereafter shed rivers of teares Luke 6.25 Woe to you that laugh now for ye shall mourn You have sometimes seene sugar lying in a damp place dissolve to water all the sugred joyes of the wicked dissolve at last to the water of teares now teares will do us good now it is seasonable weeping 't is like a shower in the spring if we do not weep now it will be too late did we hear the language of the damned they are now cursing themselves that they did not weep soon enough O is it not better to have our hell here than hereafter is it not better to shed repenting tears than despairing tears he that weeps here is a blessed mourner he that weeps in hell is a cursed mourner The Physitian by letting the Patient blood prevents death by the opening a veine of godly sorrow we prevent the death of our souls Motive 7 7. There 's no other way the Gospel prescribes to blessednesse but this blessed are they that mourn This is the road that leads to the new Jerusalem There may be several wayes leading to a City some go one way some another but there 's but one way to heaven and that is by Bethlehem the house of weeping Acts 26.20 Perhaps a man may think thus If I cannot mourn for sinne I will get to heaven some other way I will go to Church I will give Almes I will lead a civil life Nay but I tell you there 's but one way to blessednesse and that is through the valley of teares if you go not this way you will misse of Paradise Luke 14.3 I tell you nay except you repent ye shall all likewise perish There are many lines leading to the Centre but the heavenly Centre hath but one line leading to it and that is a tear dropping from the eye of faith a man may have a disease in his body that twenty medicines will heale sinne is a disease of the soul which makes it sick unto death now there is but one medicine will heale and that is the medicine of repentance 8. Consider what need every Christian hath to be conversant Motive 8 in holy mourning a man may take physick when he hath no need of it many go to the Bath when they have no need 'T is rather out of curiosity than necessity But O what need is there for every one to go into the weeping bath Think what a sinner thou hast been thou hast fill'd Gods book with thy debts and what need hast thou to fill his bottle with thy tears Thou that hast lived in secret sinne God enjoyns thee this penance mourn for sinne but perhaps some may say I have no need of mourning for I have
pleasant Flowers within a little while he grows weary but it is not so in heaven there is no surfet * Ibi nec fames nec fastidium Bern. we shall never be weary of seeing God for the Divine Essence being infinite there shall be every moment new and fresh delights springing forth from God into the glorified soul the soul shall not so desire God but it shall still be full nor shall it be so full but it shall still desire so sweet will God be that the more the Saints behold God the more they will be ravished with desire and delight 7. It will be a beneficial sight it will tend to the bettering and advantaging of the soul some colours while they delight the eyes they hurt them but this intuition and vision of God shall better the soul and tend to its infinite happiness Eves looking upon the Tree of knowledge did prejudice her sight she afterwards grew blind upon it but the Saints can receive no detriment from the inspection of glory this sight will be beatifical The soul will never be in its perfection till it comes to see God this will be the crowning blessing 8. This sight of God shall be perpetuated here we see objects awhile and then our eyes grow dim and we need Spectacles but the Saints shall always behold God as there shall be no cloud upon Gods face so the Saints shall have no Mote in their eye their sight shall never grow dim but they shall be to all Eternity looking on God that beautiful and beatifical object O what a soul-ravishing sight will this be God must make us able to bear it we can no more endure a sight of glory than a sight of wrath * Sensibile forte destruit sensum but the Saints after this life shall have their capacities enlarged and they shall be qualified and made fit to receive the penetrating beams of glory 9. It will be a speedy sight There are some who deny that the soul is immediately after death admitted to the sight of God but I shall make good this Assertion that the Saints shall have an immediate transition and passage from death to glory assoon as death hath closed their eyes they shall see God if the soul be not presently after death translated to the beatifical Vision then what becomes of the soul in that juncture of time till the Resurrection 1. Doth the soul go into torment That cannot be for the soul of a believer is a member of Christs body mystical and if this soul should go to hell then something of Christ should go to hell a member of Christ might be for a time damned but that is impossible 2. Doth the soul sleep in the body as some drowsily imagine How then shall we make good sense of that Scripture 2 Cor. 5.8 We are willing rather to be absent from the body and to be present with the Lord. If the soul at death be absent from the body then it cannot sleep in the body 3. Doth the soul dye so the Lucianists held that the soul was mortal and did dye with the body but as Scaliger observes it is impossible that the soul being of a spiritual uncompounded nature should be subject to corruptibility * Luke 12. ● Such as say the soul dies I would demand of them wherein the soul of a man then differs at death from the soul of a brute By all which it appears that the soul of a believer after death goes immediatly to God Luk. 23.43 This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise That word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with me shews clearly that the Thief on the Cross was translated to heaven for there Christ was Ephes 4.10 And the other word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this day shews that the Thief on the Cross had an immediate passage from the Cross to Paradise so that the souls of believers have a speedy Vision of God after death it is but winking and they shall see God SECT 2. The sinners misery that he shall not see God Use 1 1. SEE the misery of an impure sinner he shall not be admitted to the sight of God the pure in heart only shall see God Such as live in sin whose souls are dyed black with the filth of hell they shall never come where God is they shall have an affrighting Vision of God but not a beatifical Vision they shall see the flaming Sword and the burning Lake but not the Mercy-seat God in Scripture is sometimes called a consuming fire sometimes the Father of lights the wicked shall feel the fire but not see the light Impure souls shall be covered with shame and darkness as with a Mantle and shall never see the Kings face they who would not see God in his Ordinances shall not see him in his glory SECT 3. That we should labour to be rightly qualified for this Vision Use 2 2. IS there such a blessed priviledge after this life then let me perswade all who hear me this day 1. To get into Christ We cannot come to God but by Christ we cannot see God but through Christ Moses when he was in the Rock did see God Exod. 33.32 In this blessed Rock Christ we shall see God 2. Be purified persons it is only the pure in heart who shall see God it is only a clear eye can behold a bright transparent object those only who have their hearts cleansed from sin can have this blessed sight of God sin is such a cloud as if it be not removed will for ever hinder us from seeing the Sun of righteousness Christian Hast thou upon thy heart holiness to the Lord then thou shalt see God there are many saith Saint Austin could be content to go to heaven but they are loth to take the way that leads thither they would have the glorious Vision but neglect the gracious Union There are several sorts of eyes which shall never see God the ignorant eye the unchaste eye the scornful eye the malicious eye the covetous eye if you would see God when you dye you must be purified persons while you live 1 John 3.2 3. We shall see him as he is and every man that hath this hope in him purifieth himself SECT 4. A Cordial for the pure in heart 3. LET me turn my self to the pure in heart Use 3 1. Stand amazed at this priviledge that you who are worms crept out of the dust should be admitted to the blessed sight of God to all Eternity it was Moses his prayer I beseech thee shew me thy glory Exod. 33.18 The Saints shall behold Gods glory the pure in heart shall have the same blessedness that God himself hath for what is the blessedness of God but the contemplating his own infinite beauty 2. Begin your sight of God here let the eye of your faith be still upon God Moses by faith saw him who is invisible Hebr. 11.27 Oft look upon him with believing eyes whom you hope to
Prince of the Divels Art thou ignominiously used so was Christ Mark 14.65 Some began to spit upon him Art thou betrayed by friends so was Christ Luke 22.48 Judas betrayest thou the Son of man with a kiss Is thy Estate sequestred and do the wicked cast lots for it so Christ was dealt with Matth. 27.34 They parted his garments casting lots Do we suffer unjustly so did Christ his very Judge did acquit him Luke 23.4 Then said Pilate to the chief Priests and to the people I finde no fault in this man Art thou barbarously dragged and haled away to suffering so was Christ Matth. 27.2 When they had bound him though he came to loosen them they led him away Dost thou suffer death so did Christ Luke 23.33 When they were come to Calvary there they crucified him They gave him gall and vineger to drink the one deciphering the bitterness the other the sharpness of his death Christ under-went not only the blood of the Cross but the curse of the Cross Gal. 3.13 He had an agony in his soul Matth. 26.38 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 My soul is exceeding sorrowful unto death The soul of Christ was over-cast with a cloud of Gods displeasure the Greek Church speaking of the sufferings of Christ calls them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unknown sufferings Did the Lord Jesus endure all this for us and shall not we suffer persecution for his Name say as holy Ignatius * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ignat. I am willing to dye for Christ for Christ my love was crucified Our cup is nothing to the cup which Christ drank his cup was mixed with the wrath of God and if he did bear Gods wrath for us well may we bear mans wrath for him 4. Great is the honour we bring to Christ and the Gospel by suffering it was an honour to Caesar that he had such Souldiers as were able to fight with hunger and cold and endure hardship in their marches It is an honour to Christ that he hath such listed under him as will leave all for him it proclaims him to be a good Master when his servants will wear his Livery though it be sullied with disgrace and lined with blood Pauls iron chain made the Gospel wear a golden chain Tertullian saith of the Saints in his time they took their sufferings more kindly than if they had had deliverance * Magis damnati quam absoluti gaudemus Tert. Apolog. O what a glory was this to the truth when they durst embrace it in the flame And as the Saints sufferings adorn the Gospel so they propagate it Basil saith the zeal and constancy of the Martyrs in the Primitive times made some of the Heathens to be Christianized Sanguine fundata est Ecclesia sanguine crevit The showres of blood have ever made the Church fruitful Phil. 1.13 Pauls being bound made the truth more enlarged the Gospel hath alwayes flourished in the ashes of Martyrs 5. It is that we have engaged our selves to in Baptism there we took our press-money we solemnly vowed that we would be true to Christs interest and fight it out under his Banner to the death and how often have we in the blessed Supper taken the oath of allegiance to Jesus Christ that we would be his liege servants and that death should not part us Now if when being called to it we refuse to suffer persecution for his Name Christ will bring our Baptisme as an inditement against us Christ is called the Captain of our salvation Hebr. 2.10 We have listed our selves by name under this Captain now if for fear we shall flie from our colours it is perjury in the highest degree and how shall we be able to look Christ in the face another day * Summum crede nefas c. Juvenal sat 10. That oath which is not kept inviolably shall be punished infallibly where doth the flying roule of curses light but in the house of him that sweareth falsly † * Zach. 5.4 6. Our sufferings are light 2 Cor. 4.17 This light affliction c. It is heavy to flesh and blood but it is light to faith affliction is light in a three-fold respect 1. It is light in comparison of sin he that feels sin heavy feels suffering light sin made Paul cry out O wretched man that I am Rom. 7. He doth not cry out of his iron chain but of his sin the greater noise drowns the lesser when the Sea roars the Rivers are silent he that is taken up about his sins and sees how he hath provoked God thinks the yoke of affliction light Micah 7.9 2. Affliction is light in comparison of hell what is persecution to damnation what is the fire of Martyrdom to the fire of the damned it is no more than the pricking of a pin to a deaths wound Who knoweth the power of thine anger Psal 90.11 Christ himself could not have born that anger had he not been more than a man 3. Affliction is light in comparison of glory the weight of glory makes persecution light if saith Chrysostom the torments of all the men in the world could be laid upon one man it were not worth one houres being in heaven and if persecution be light we should in a manner set light by it let us neither faint through unbelief nor fret through impatience 7. Our sufferings are short 1 Pet. 5.10 After ye have suffered awhile or as it is in the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a little our sufferings may be lasting not everlasting affliction is compared to a cup Lam. 4.21 The wicked drink of a Sea of wrath which hath no bottom it will never be emptied but it is only a cup of Martyrdom and God will say Let this cup pass away Psal 125.3 The rod of the wicked shall not rest upon the lot of the righteous the rod may be there it shall not rest Christ calls his sufferings an houre Luke 12.53 Can we not suffer one houre persecution is aspera but brevis though it hath a sting to torment yet it hath a wing to flie Isa 35.10 Sorrow shall flie away it is but awhile when the Saints shall have a Writ of ease granted them they shall weep no more suffer no more they shall be taken off the torturing wrack and laid in Christs bosome the people of God shall not alwayes be in the iron Furnace a year of Jubile will come the water of persecution like a Land-flood will soon be dried up 8. While we suffer for Christ we suffer with Christ Rom. 8.17 If we suffer with him c. Jesus Christ bears part of the suffering with us oh saith the Christian I shall never be able to hold out but remember thou sufferest with Christ he helps thee to suffer As our blessed Saviour said John 16.32 I am not alone the Father is with me So a believer may say I am not alone my Christ is with me he bears the heaviest end of the Cross 2 Cor.
while you let out the bad blood have a care to preserve the heart-blood while you purge out the ill humours do not destroy the spirits while you are taking away the snuffs do not eclipse the lights of Gods Sanctuary it is a work fit for a Julian to suppress the Orthodox Ministry and open the Temple of the Idol The Romans sacked the City of Corinth and raz'd it down to the ground for some incivility offered to their Ambassador God will avenge the affronts offered to his Ministers Psa 105.15 Oh take heed of this if souls be of such infinite value how precious should their liberties be whose very design and negotiation is to save souls 1 Tim. 4.16 Jude 23. 1. If the soul be so precious take heed of abusing Use 2 your souls Exhort Socrates exhorted young men that they should look their faces in a glass and if they saw they Branch 1 were fair Caverent ne quid ea pulchritudine indignum committerent they should have a care to do nothing unworthy of their beauty Christians God hath given you souls that sparkle with divine beauty oh do nothing unworthy of these souls do not abuse them There are foure sorts of Persons that abuse their souls 1. They that degrade their souls 1. That set the world above their souls who pant after the dust of the earth Amos 2.7 As if a mans house were on fire and he should take care to preserve the lumber but let his childe be burnt in the fire 2. That make their souls Lackies to their bodies The body is but the brutish part the soul is the angelical the soul is the Queen-regent who is adorned with the jewels of knowledge and sways the Scepter of liberty oh what pity is it that this excellent soul should be made a vassal and be put to grinde in the Mill when the body in the mean time sits in a Chair of State Solomon complains of an evil under the Sun Eccles 10.7 I have seen servants upon horses and Princes walking as servants upon the earth Is it not an evil under the Sun to see the body riding in pomp and triumph and the soul of man that royal and heaven-born thing as a Lacky walking on foot 2. They abuse their souls that sell their souls 1. The covetous person sells his soul for money as it is said of the Lawyer he hath linguam venalem a tongue that will be sold for a Fee so the covetous man hath animam venalem a soul that is to be set to sale for money Achan did sell his soul for a wedge of gold Judas did sell his soul for silver Judas sold cheap penny-worths for thirty pieces he did sell Christ who was more worth than heaven and his own soul which was more worth than a world how many have damn'd their souls for money 1 Tim. 6.9 10. It is observed that the Eagles quills or feathers mixed with Hens feathers will in time consume them such is the world to the soul if you mix these earthly things with your souls and let them lie too near you they will in time consume and undo your souls 2. The ambitious person sells his soul for honour as Alexander the sixth did sell his soul to the Divel for a Popedom and what is honour but res imaginaria a Torch lighted by the breath of people with the least puff of censure blown out Miserum est alienae incumbere famae How many souls have been blown to hell with the winde of popular applause 3. The voluptuous person sells his soul for pleasure Heliogabalus drowned himself in sweet water so many drown their souls in the sweet perfumed waters of pleasure Plato calls pleasure the bait that catcheth souls Ea capiuntur ut pisces hamo Pleasure is a silken halter a flattering Divel it kills with embracing 3. They abuse their souls that poyson their souls error is a sweet poyson Ignatius calls it the invention of the Divel * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ignat. Epist 2. ad Trallianos A man may as well damn his soul by error as vice and may assoon go to hell for a drunken opinion as for a drunken life 4. They abuse their souls that starve their souls these are they that say they are above Ordinances but sure we shall not be above Ordinances till we are above sin The Apostle saith that in the blessed Sacrament we are to remember the Lords death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 till he come 1 Cor. 11.26 That is untill Christ comes to judgement How then can any omit Sacraments without a contempt and affront offered to Christ himself if Sant Paul and the Apostles those Gyants in grace needed the Lords Supper to confirme and corroborate them much more do we need such holy Ordinances who have but an infant-faith but Satan likes these fasting dayes he would have men fast from Ordinances if the body be kept from food it cannot live long Branch 2 2. If the soul be so precious a thing take heed you do not lose your souls consider what a loss it is as appears in two things 1. It is a foolish loss to lose the soul Thou fool this night thy soul shall be required of thee Luk. 12.20 It is a foolish loss to lose the soul in a three-fold respect 1. Because there is a possibility of saving the soul we have time to work in we have light to work by we have the Spirit offering us help The soul is like a ship laden with jewels the Spirit is a gale of winde to blow if we would but loosen anchor from sin we might arrive at the Port of happiness 2. It is a foolish loss because we lose the soul for things of no value worldly things are infinitely below the soul they are non entia Prov. 23.5 Wilt thou set thine eyes on that which is not The world is but a bewitchery these things glister in our eyes but at death we shall say we have set our eyes on that which is not He that thinks to finde happiness here is like Ixion that hug'd the cloud instead of Juno and like Apollo that embraced the Laurel Tree instead of Daphne Now to lose the soul for such poor inconsiderable things is a foolish loss 't is as if one should throw a Diamond at a Pair-tree he loseth his Diamond 3. It is a foolish loss for a man to lose his soul because he himself hath an hand in it is it not folly to give ones self poyson a sinner hath his hands embrued in the blood of his own soul Perditio tua ex te thy destruction is of thy self Hosea 13.9 They lay wait for their own blood Prov. 1.18 The foolish sinner nourisheth those lusts that kill his soul the Tree breeds the worm and the worm eats the Tree were it not folly for a Garrison to open to the enemy that besiegeth it the sinner opens to those lusts which war against his soul 1 Pet. 2.11 this
Judges 11.35 Alas my daughter thou hast brought me very low so may the soul say Alas my sin thou hast brought me very low thou hast brought me almost to the gates of death 3. Sickness doth eclipse the beauty of the body This I ground on that Scripture Psal 39.11 When thou with rebukes dost correct man thou makest his beauty to consume away like a Moth. The Moth consumes the beauty of the cloth so a fit of sickness consumes the beauty of the body Thus sin is a soul-sickness it hath eclipsed the glory and splendor of the soul it hath turned ruddiness into paleness that beauty of grace which once sparkled as gold now it may be said How is this gold become dim † * Lam. 4.1 That soul which once had an orient brightness in it it was more ruddy than Rubies its polishing was of Saphyr the understanding be spangled with knowledge the will crowned with liberty the affections like so many Seraphims burning in love to God now the glory is departed Sin hath turned beauty into deformity as some faces by sickness are so disfigured and look so ghastly they can hardly be known So the soul of man is by sin so sadly Metamorphiz'd having lost the image of God that it can hardly be known Joel 2.31 The Sun shall be turned into darkness Sin hath turned that Sun of beauty which shined in the soul into a Cimmerian darkness and where grace is begun to be wrought yet the souls beauty is not quite recovered but is like the Sun under a cloud 4. Sickness takes away the taste a sick man doth not taste that sweetness in his meat so the sinner by reason of soul-sickness hath lost his taste to spiritual things The Word of God is pabulum animae it is bread to strengthen wine to comfort but the sinner tastes no sweetness in the Word A childe of God who is spiritualized by grace tastes a savouriness in Ordinances the promise drops as an honey-comb Psal 19.10 but a natural man is sick and his taste is gone since the tasting of the forbidden Tree he hath lost his taste 5. Sickness takes away the comfort of life a sick person hath no joy of any thing his life is a burden to him So the sin-sick soul is void of all true comfort and his laughter is but the pleasing dream of a sick man he hath no true title to comfort his sin is not pardoned he may be in hell before night for any thing he knows 6. Sickness ushers in death it is the prologue to death sickness is as it were the cutting of the Tree and death is the falling of the Tree so this disease of sin if not cured in time brings the second death 2. What the diseases of the soul are Adam by breaking the box of original righteousness hath filled the soul full of diseases the body is not subject to so many diseases as the soul I cannot reckon them all up Psal 19.12 Who can understand his errors * Psal 40.12 Only I shall name some of the worst of these diseases Pride is the tympany of the soul lust is the feaver error the gangrene unbelief the plague of the heart hypocrisie the scurvy hardness of heart the stone anger the phrenzy malice the Wolf in the breast covetousness the dropsie spiritual sloth the green sickness apostasie the epilepsie here are eleven soul-diseases and when they come to the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the full heigth they are dangerous and most frequently prove mortal 3. The third thing to be demonstrated is that sin is the worst sickness To have a body full of plague sores is sad but to have the soul which is the more noble part spotted with sin and full of the Tokens is far worse as appears 1. The body may be diseased and the conscience quiet Isa 33.24 The Inhabitant of the Land shall not say I am sick He should scarce feel his sickness because sin was pardoned but when the soul is sick of any reigning lust the conscience is troubled Isa 57. ult There is no peace to the wicked saith my God When Spira had abjured his former faith he was put IN LITTLE EASE his conscience burned as hell and no spiritual physick that Divines did apply could ever allay that inflammation 2. A man may have bodily diseases yet God may love him Asa was diseased in his feet 2 Kings 15.23 He had the Gout yet a Favourite with God Gods hand may go out against a man yet his heart may be towards him diseases are the Arrows which God shoots pestilence is called Gods Arrow Psal 91.5 This Arrow as Gregory Nazianzene saith may be shot from the hand of an indulgent father But soul-diseases are symptoms of Gods anger as he is an holy God he cannot but hate sin he beholds the proud afar off Psal 138.6 God hates a sinner for his plague-sores Zach. 11.8 My soul loathed them 3. Sickness at worst doth but separate from the society of friends but this disease of sin if not cured separates from the society of God and Angels The Leper was to be shut out of the Camp this leprosie of sin without the interposition of mercy shuts men out of the Camp of heaven Rev. 21.8 This is the misery of them that dye in their sins they are allowed neither friend nor Physitian to come at them they are excluded Gods presence for ever in whose presence is fulness of joy Use 1 1. See into what a sad condition sin hath brought us it hath made us desperately sick Inform. nay we dye away in Branch 1 our sickness till we are fetch'd again with the water of life O how many sick bed-rid souls are there in the world sick of pride sick of lust sin hath turned our Houses and Churches into Hospitals they are full of sick persons What Davids enemies said reproachfully of him is true of every natural man Psal 41.8 An evil disease cleaveth fast unto him He hath the plague of the heart 1 Kings 8. And even those who are regenerate are cured but in part they have some grudgings of the disease some ebullitions and stirrings of corruption nay sometimes this Kings Evil breaks forth to the scandal of Religion and from this sin-sickness ariseth all other diseases * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys de poen hom 5. Plague Gout Stone Feaver 1 Cor. 11.29 30. He that eateth and drinketh unworthily eateth and drinketh damnation to himself for this cause many are weak and sickly among you Branch 2 2. If sin be a soul-sickness then how foolish are they that hide their sins it is folly to hide a disease * Insipientium malus pudor ulcera celat Job 31.33 40. If I covered my transgression as Adam by hiding my iniquity in my bosome let thistles grow instead of wheat c. The wicked take more care to have sin covered than cured if they can but sin in private and not be suspected they
never thinks he hath fully healed us till he hath drawn his own beautiful image upon us Cant. 2.13 Arise my fair one fair with justification fair with sanctification Christ doth not only heal but adorn he is called the Sun of righteousness Mal. 4.2 Not only because of the healing under his wings but because of those Rayes of beauty which he puts upon the soul Rev. 12.1 12. And lastly Christ is the most bountiful Physitian Other Patients do enrich their Physitians but here the Physitian doth enrich the Patient Christ prefers all his Patients he doth not only cure them but crown them Rev. 2.10 Christ doth not only raise from the bed but to the Throne he gives the sick man not only health but heaven 1 Good Newes this day there is balm in Gilead Use 1 there is a Physitian to heal sin-sick souls the Angels that fell had no Physiti●● sent to them we have there are but few in the world to whom Christ is revealed they that have the gold of the Indies want the blood of the Lamb but the Sun of righteousness is risen in our Hemisphere with healing in his wings If a man were poysoned what a comfort would it be to him to hear that there were an herb in the Garden could heal him if he had a gangrene in his body and were given over by all his friends how glad would he be to hear of a Chyrurgion that could cure him O sinner thou art full of peccant humours thou hast a gangren'd soul but there is a Physitian that can recover thee There is hope in Israel concerning this though there be an old Serpent to sting us with his tentations yet there is a Brazen Serpent to heal us with his blood Use 2 2. If Christ be a Physitian then let us make use of this Physitian for our diseased souls Luke 4.40 When the Sun was setting all they that had any sick with divers diseases brought them unto him and he laid his hands on every of them and healed them You that have neglected a Physitian all this while now when the Sun of the Gospel and the Sun of your life is even setting bring your sick souls to Christ to be cured Christ complains that though men are sick even to death yet they will not come or send to the Physitian John 5.40 Ye will not come to me that ye might have life In bodily diseases the Physitian is the first that is sent to in soul-diseases the Physitian is the last that is sent to But here there are many sad Objections that poor souls make against themselves why they do not come to Christ their Physitian Object 1 Obj●ction 1. Alas I am discouraged to go to Christ to cure me because of my unworthiness just like the Centurion who sent to Christ about his sick servant Luke 7.6 Lord trouble not thy self for I am not worthy that thy thou shouldest enter under my roof Christ was coming to heal his servant but the Centurion would have slaved off Christ from coming 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I am not worthy So saith many a trembling soul Christ is a Physitian but who am I that Christ should come under my roof or heal me I am unworthy of mercy as Mephibosheth said to King David 2 Sam. 9.8 What is thy servant that thou shouldest look upon such a dead Dog as I am Now to such as have their hearts broken with a sense of their unworthiness and are discouraged from coming to Christ to heal them let me say these five things by way of reply 1. Who did Christ shed his blood for but such as are unworthy 1 Tim. 1.15 Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners Christ came into the world as into an Hospital among a company of lame bed-rid souls 2. Though we are not legally worthy we may be evangelically it is part of our worthiness to see our unworthiness Isa 41.14 Fear not thou worme Jacob. Thou mayst be a worme in thy own eye yet a Dove in Gods eye 3. Though we are unworthy yet Christ is worthy we do not deserve a cure but Christ hath merited mercy for us he hath store of blood to supply our want of tears 4. Who was ever yet saved because he was worthy What man could ever plead this title Lord Jesus heal me because I am worthy What worthiness was there in Paul before his conversion what worthiness was there in Mary Magdalen out of whom seven Divels were cast but free-grace did pity and heal them God doth not find us worthy but makes us worthy 5. If we will never come to Christ to be healed till we are worthy we must never come and let me tell you this talking of worthiness savours of pride we would have something of our own had we such preparations and self-excellencies then we think Christ would accept of us and we might come and be healed this is to see our Physitian oh let not the sense of unworthiness discourage * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 go to Christ to be healed Arise he calleth thee Mark 10.49 Object 2 2. Objection But I fear I am not within Christs Commission I am not of the number of those that shall be saved and then though Christ be a Physitian I shall not be healed Answ 1 Answ 1. We must take heed of drawing desperate conclusions against our selves 't is high presumption for us to make our selves wiser than the Angels All the Angels in heaven are not able to resolve this question Who are elected and who are reprobated Answ 2 2. Thou that sayest thou art not within Christs Commission read over Christs Commission see who he comes to heal Luke 4.18 He hath sent me to heal the broken-hearted Hath God touched thy heart with remorse dost thou lay to heart thy Gospel-unkindnesses dost thou weep more out of love to Christ than fear of hell then thou art a broken-hearted sinner and art within Christs Commission a bleeding Christ will heal a broken heart Object 3 3. Objection But my sins are so many that sure I shall never be healed I am sick of many diseases at once Answ Answ Thou hast the more need of a Physitian one would think that was a strange speech of Peter to Christ Luke 5.8 Depart from me for I am a sinful man O Lord rather Lord come near to me Is it a good Argument to say to a Physitian I am diseased therefore depart from me No therefore come and heal me Our sins should serve to humble us not to beat us from Christ I tell you if we had no diseases Christ would have no work to do in the world Object 4 4. Objection But my disease is inflamed and grown to a Paroxysme my sin is greatly heightned Answ Answ The playster of Christs blood is broader than thy sore 1 John 1.7 The blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin The blood of the Lamb takes away the poyson of the Serpent all diseases are alike
with and the son breaks the father is not bound to set him up again God gave Adam a stock of grace to begin the world with Adam did break and make all his children Banquerupts God is not tyed to give him grace again 2. God may justly deny his grace to every wicked man because he is a despiser of grace he tramples this pearle under foot Prov. 1.7 Is God bound to give grace to them that despise it If a Kings pardon be rejected once he is not bound to tender it any more but I shall not launch forth any further into this 4. The cogency and necessity of grace it is most needful because it fits us for communion with God 2 Cor. 6.14 What communion hath light with darkness God can no more converse with an ungracious soul than a King can converse with a Swine it is by grace that we keep a constant intercourse with heaven 1. Let me with the greatest zeal and earnestness perswade Use 1 all who have souls to save Exhort to endeavour after grace this is the Unum Necessarium grace will be desirable at death it is as useful now and more seasonable to look after Prov. 4.7 With all thy getting get understanding Alexander being presented with a rich Cabinet of King Darius he reserved it to put Homers works in as being of great value The heart is a spiritual Cabinet into which the jewel of grace should be put we should desire grace above other things above the gifts of the Spirit nay above the comforts of the Spirit Comfort is sweet but grace is better than comfort bread is better than honey we may go to heaven without comfort not without grace it is grace makes us blessed in life and death I shall shew you twelve rare Excellencies in grace I shall set this fair Virgin of grace before you hoping that you will be tempted to fall in love with it Excellency 1 1. Grace hath a soul-quickning excellency in it Hebr. 10.38 The just shall live by faith Men void of grace are dead they have breath yet want life they are walking ghosts Eph. 2.1 The life of sin is the death of the soul * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A sinner hath all the signs of one that is dead he hath no pulse the affections are the pulse of the soul his pulse doth not beat after God he hath no sense Eph. 4.19 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who being past feeling Dead things have no beauty there 's no beauty in a dead flower dead things are not capable of priviledge the dead heir is not crowned but grace is the vital artery of the soul it doth not only irradiate but animate therefore it is called lumen vitae the light of life John 8.12 And believers are said to have their grave-cloaths pulled off and to be alive from the dead Rom. 6.13 By grace the soul is grafted into Christ the true Vine John 15.5 and is made not only living but lively 1 ●et 1.3 Grace puts forth a Divine Energy into the soul 2. Grace hath a soul-enriching excellency 1 Cor. 1. Excellency 2 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ye are enriched in all knowledge As the Sun enricheth the world with its golden beams so doth knowledge bespangle and enrich the mind * Vera divitiae non opes sunt sed virtutes Bern. Faith is an enriching grace Jam. 2.5 Rich in faith plus fulget fides quam aurum faith brings Christs riches into the soul it intitles to the promises the promises are full of heavenly riches Justification Adoption Glory Faith is the key that unlocks this Cabinet of the promises and empties out their treasure into the soul The riches of grace excell all other riches the merchandize of it is better than the merchandize of silver Prov. 3.14 1. These riches make a man wise wisdom is the best possession * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Menand other riches cannot make one wise A man may ditescere delirare he may have a full purse and an empty brain Many a rich heir though he lives till he be of age yet he never comes to years of discretion But these riches of grace have power to make a man wise Psal 111.10 The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom The Saints are compared to wise Virgins Matth. 25. Grace makes a man wise to know Satans 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his devices and subtilties 2 Cor. 2.11 It makes him wise to salvation 2 Tim. 3.15 Grace gives the Serpents eye in the Doves head 2. These spiritual riches sanctifie other riches Riches without grace are hurtful they are not divitiae but insidiae they are golden snares they are the bellows of pride the fuel of lust they set open hell gates for men * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Menand they are unblest blessings but grace sanctifies our riches it corrects the poyson it takes away the curse it makes them beneficial to us riches shall be Certificates of Gods love wings to lift us up to Paradise Thus grace by a Divine Chymistry extracts heaven out of earth and gives us not only the venison but the blessing 3. Grace satisfies other riches cannot Eccles 5.10 Riches can no more fill the heart than a Triangle can fill a Circle but grace fills up every chink and hiatus of the soul it dilates the heart it ravisheth the affections with joy Rom. 15.13 which joy as Chrysostom saith is a foretaste of heaven Excellency 3 3. Grace hath a soul-adorning excellency it puts a beauty and lustre upon a person 1 Pet. 3.4 5. Whose adorning let it not be that outward adorning of plating the hair and of wearing of gold but let it be the hidden man of the heart even the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit which is in the sight of God of great price for after this manner in the old time the holy women also who trusted in God adorned themselves If a man hath Plate and Jewels Cloth of Gold Hangings of Arras these adorn the house not the man the glory of a man is grace * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chaysost Prov. 4.9 She shall give to thine head an ornament of grace The graces are a Chain of pearle that adorns Christs Bride the heart inlaid and enamel'd with grace is like the Kings daughter all glorious within * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theodoret. Psal 45.13 A gracious soul is the image of God curiously drawn with the Pensil of the Holy Ghost an heart beautified with grace is the Angels joy Luke 15.7 and is Gods lesser heaven Isa 57.15 Eph. 3.17 Reason doth not so far exceed sense as grace doth reason grace changeth corruption into perfection nothing so graceth a man as grace doth grace is the purest complexion of the soul for it makes it like God Grace is the flower of delight which Christ loves to smell to grace is to the soul as the eye to the body as the Sun to the
Bernard saith Fragrare unguentis optimis Christ will give them a new name he will call them his friends his Spouse the apple of his eye their names shall flourish with honour and give forth their perfume as the wine of Lebanon 3. Christ as a Judge will appear to crown his people when body and soul shall be reunited and perfected in glory Christ will take his people into his sweet and everlasting embraces he will lay them in his bosome he will set them upon his Throne he will fill them with the Inebriating wine of his love to all eternity And thus you see what is the Saints hope namely the glorious appearing of Christ when he shall appear as a Judge to acquit vindicate crown them Use 1 1. See here the misery of a wicked man who hath all his hope in this life Informat he makes the wedge of gold his hope he casts his Anchor downwards he can have no hope of Christs appearing he fears Christs appearing he doth not hope for it he is like a Prisoner that fears the Judges coming to the Bench. Christs appearing will be a dismal appearing to him when Christ shall appear where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear 1 Pet. 4.18 a wicked man is like a Mariner at Sea that hath no Anchor like a man in a storm that hath no shelter where is his hope when he shall come to die It is with a sinner as it was with the old world when the flood came the waters did arise higher and higher by degrees First the waters came to the Valleys but they encouraged themseves in the Hills then the waters came to the Mountains I but there might be some Trees upon the Hills and they would climb up to them then the waters prevailed and rose to the top of the Trees now they had nothing to trust to all hopes of being saved were gone So it is with a sinner if one comfort be taken away he hath another left if a Relation be gone he hath an estate left if one Crutch be broken yet he hath another to lean upon I but sickness comes and he sees he must die and appear before his Judge now he hath no hope he dies despairing he must lie for ever in the boyling furnace of Gods wrath * In inferno nulla est redemptio qui illic damnatuus demersus fuerit ulterius non exibit Aug. in Serm. ad Erem In cava Lethaeas dolia portat aquas 2. Put your selves upon the tryal Have you this blessed hope of Christs appearing and of your appearing with him in glory come almost to any man and you Use 2 shall hear him say he hopes to be saved well then Trial. let every soul put it self upon the tryal I shall show you four differences between a sound Hope and a sandy Hope 1. True hope is quickning it sets a man a working for heaven * Addit conatum quendam elevationem animi Aquinas it is called a lively hope 1 Pet. 1.3 it puts life into a man hope is a Spur to duty a Whetstone to industry Hope of victory makes the Souldier fight hope of gain makes the Merchant runthrough the several Zones Divine hope is as Wind to the Sails as Wheeles to the Chariot it makes a Christian active in Religion he runs the wayes of Gods Commandements * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Macar Hope is circa arduum it cuts away through the Rock it wrastles with difficulties it despiseth dangers it marcheth in the face of death True hope never gives over till it hath the thing hoped for He who hath Divine hope will have Christ though it be in a Furnance he will profess the truth though the next word Christiani ad Leones The Romans as Tertullian observes would endure all kind of hardship they would fight with cold and hunger and run any hazard for hope at last to be Consul which was saith Tertullian unius anni gaudium volaticum honour but for a year Oh then what pains will he take who hath hopes of heaven where he shall be Crowned with a Garland of glory for ever doth that man say his hope is in God who stands all the day idle Prov. 19.24 there is a faint velleity in Hypocrites they would be saved but sit still and do nothing their hope is not a a lively hope but a dead hope 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 True hope is in the soul like fire which is an active Element it is ever sparkling or flaming 2. True hope is purifying 1 Joh. 3.3 He that hath this hope in him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 purifying himself Hope is in the soul as lightning is in the Aire it clears the Air he who hath hope in Christ sets himself against all sin both in purpose and practice he is a consecrated person there is engraven upon his heart Holiness to the Lord hope is a Virgin-grace it lives in the soul tanquam scintillatio in fomite tanquam ramus in radice * O quam multi cum vanaspe descendunt ad inferos Aug. St. Bernard compares holiness to the Root and hope to the Branch true hope flourisheth upon the root of holiness now then try your hope by this Scripture Touchstone The hypocrite saith he hath hope but is he a purified person what an unclean person and hope to go to heaven nothings enters there which defileth Rev. 21.27 what a drunkard and hope to be saved dost thou think to go reeling to heaven what an Apostate and yet hope to be saved as if there were any going to heaven backward * O quam multi cum vanaspe descendunt ad inferos Aug. The wicked man is not sure of happiness but secure 3. A true hope is a good hope 2 Thes 2.16 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Who hath given us good hope through grace A wicked mans hope is as far from being good as his heart the Hebrew word for hope 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies both confidence and folly it is fitly applyed to a wicked mans hope his confidence is folly the hope of a godly man is compared to an Anchor Hebr. 6.19 the hope of a wicked man to a Spiders Web Job 8.14 And the sinners hope is fitly resembled to a Spiders Web three wayes 1. The Spiders Web hath no foundation such is the hope of the wicked it is a pleasing thing but it hath nothing to rest upon A godly mans hope is built upon a double Basis 1. The Word of God Psal 130.5 In his word do I hope The Word saith Let the sinner forsake his way and the Lord will abundantly pardon The Word saith Hereby we know that Christ abideth in us by the Spirit which he hath given us 1 Joh. 3.8 Now a child of God finding these qualifications wrought in him he builds his hope for heaven upon them In his Word do I hope 2. The hope of a godly man is built upon experiences Rom. 5.4
there is hope Repentance unravels sin and makes sin not to be but hardness of heart binds guilt fast upon the soul it seals a man under wrath it is not the hainousness of sin but hardness of heart that damns this makes the sin against the Holy Ghost uncapable of mercy because the sinner that hath committed it is uncapable of Repentance CHAP. VII Containing a sharp Reprehension Use 1 Use 1 THIS Doctrine draws up a Charge against several sorts Reproof Branch 1 1. Those that think themselves good Christians yet have not learned this Art of holy Mourning Luther calls Mourning Bara herba a rare herb Men have tears to shed for other things but have none to spare for their sins there are many Murmurers but few Mourners most are like the stony ground which wanted moisture Matth. 13. We have many cry out of hard times but are not sensible of hard hearts hot and dry is the worst temper of the body sure I am to be hot in sin and to be so dry as to have no tears is the worst temper of the soul How many are like Gideons dry Fleece and like the Mountains of Gilboa there is no dew upon them Did Christ bleed for sin and canst not thou weep if Gods bottle be not filled with tears his Vial will be filled with wrath We have many sinners in Sion but few mourners in Sion It is with most people as with a man on the top of a Mast the Winds blow and the Waves beat and the ship is in danger of shipwrack and he is fast asleep so when the Waves of sin have even covered men and the stormy wind of Gods Wrath blows and is ready to blow them into hell yet they are asleep in security 2. It reproves them who instead of weeping for sin Branch 2 spend their dayes in mirth and jollity instead of Mourners we have Ranters they take the Timbrel and Harp they spend their dayes in wealth Job 21.13 Vitam agunt Sybariticam * Luther they do not lugere animo but indulgere genio they live Epicures and dye Atheists St. James bids us turn our laughter to Mourning Jam. 4.9 But they turn their Mourning to laughter Sampson was brought forth to make the Philistines sport Judg. 16.26 The jovial sinner doth make the Divel sport it is a saying of Theophylact It is one of the worst sights to see a sinner go laughing to hell How unseasonable is it to take the Harp and Viol when God is taking the Sword Ezek. 21.9 10. A sword a sword is sharpned and also furbished should we then make mirth this is a sin that enrageth God Isa 22.12 13. In that day did the Lord of Hosts call to weeping and to mourning and behold joy and gladness slaying Oxen and killing sheep eating flesh and drinking wine and it was revealed in mine ears by the Lord of Hosts Surely this iniquity shall not be purged from you till you dye saith the Lord God of Hosts That is this your sin shall not be done away by any expiatory sacrifice but vengeance shall pursue you for ever 3. It reproves those who instead of mourning for sin Branch 3 rejoyce in sin Prov. 2.14 2 Thess 2.12 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Who take pleasure in iniquity Wicked men are worse in this sense than the damned in hell for I dare say they take little pleasure in their sins there are some so impudently profane that they will make themselves and others merry with their sins sin is a soul-sickness Luke 5.31 Will a man make merry with his disease ah wretch did Christ bleed for sin and dost thou laugh at sin is that thy mirthwhich grieves the Spirit * Tantis in malis laetari diesque jocis choreis consumere nonne est eos imitari qui phrenesi laborant qui dum carnes proprias laccrant ridem Isid Clar. is it a time for a man to break jests when he is upon the Scaffold and his head is to be stricken off thou that laughest at sin now the time is coming when God will laugh at thy calamity Prov. 1.26 Branch 4 4. It reproves those that cry down mourning for sin they are like the Philistines who stopped the Wells Gen. 26.15 These would stop the Wells of godly sorrow Antimonians say this is a legal Doctrine but Christ here preacheth it Blessed are they that mourn and the Apostles preached it Mark 6.11 And they went out and preached that men should repent Holy ingenuity will put us upon mourning for sin he that hath the heart of a child cannot but weep for his unkindness against God Mourning for sin is the very fruit and product of the Spirit of grace Zach. 12.10 Such as cry down Repentance cry down the Spirit of grace mourning for sin is the only way to keep off wrath from us such as with Sampson would break this Pillar go about to pull down the vengeance of God upon the Land To all such I say as Peter to Simon Magus Acts 8.22 Repent therefore of this thy wickedness and pray God if perhaps the thought of thy heart may be forgiven thee O sinner Repent that thou hast cryed down Repentance CHAP. VIII Motives to holy mourning 2. LET me exhort Christians to holy Mourning Use 2 Exhort I now perswade such a Mourning as will prepare the soul for blessedness Oh that our hearts were spiritual limbicks distilling the water of holy tears Christs Doves weep Ezek. 7.16 They that escape shall be like Doves of the Vallies all of them mourning every one for his iniquity There are several Divine Motives to holy Mourning 1. Tears cannot be put to a better use if you weep Motive 1 for outward losses you lose your tears 't is like a showre upon a Rock which doth no good but tears for sin are blessed tears Blessed are they that mourn These poyson our corruptions salt-water kills the worms the brinish water of repenting tears will help to kill that worm of sin which would gnaw the conscience 2. Gospel-Mourning is an evidence of grace Zach. Motive 2 12.10 I will poure upon the house of David and the Inhabitants of Jerusalem the Spirit of grace and they shall mourn c. The Holy Ghost descended on Christ like a Dove Matth. 3. The Dove is a weeping creature where there is a Dove-like weeping it is a good sign the Spirit of God hath descended there weeping for sin is a sign of the new birth assoon as the child is born it weeps Exod. 2.3 And behold the babe wept To weep kindly for sin is a good sign we are born of God Mourning shews an heart of flesh Ezek. 36.26 A stone will not melt when the heart is in a melting frame it is a sign the heart of stone is taken away Motive 3 3. The preciousness of tears 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tears dropping from a mournful penitent eye are like the water dropping from the Roses very sweet and precious to God
promise should not be fulfilled 3. God will fill the hungry soul because he himself hath excited and stirred up this hunger he plants holy desires in us and will not he satisfie those desires which he himself hath wrought in us as in case of prayer when God prepares the heart to pray he prepares his ear to hear Psal 17.10 So in case of spiritual hunger when God prepares the heart to hunger he will prepare his hand to fill it is not rational to imagine that God should deny to satisfie that hunger which he himself hath caused Nature doth nothing in vain Should the Lord inflame the desire after righteousness and not fill it he might seem to do something in vain 4. God will fill the hungry from those sweet Relations he stands unto them they are his children we cannot deny our children when they are hungry we will rather spare it from our selves Luke 11.13 When he that is born of God shall come and say Father I hunger give me Christ Father I thirst refresh me with the living streams of thy Spirit can God deny Doth God hear the Raven when it cries and will he not hear the righteous when they cry when the Earth opens its mouth and thirsts God doth satisfie it Psal 65.9 10. Doth the Lord satisfie the thirsty Earth with showres and will he not satisfie the thirsty soul with grace 5. God will satisfie the hungry because the hungry soul is most thankful for mercy when the restless desire hath been drawn out after God and God fills it how thankful is a Christian The Lord loves to bestow his mercy where he may have most praise we delight to give to them that are thankful Musitians love to play where there is the best sound God loves to bestow his mercies where he may hear of them again The hungry soul sets the Crown of praise upon the head of free-grace Psal 50.23 Who so offereth praise glorifies me 3. How God fills the hungry soul Answ There is a three fold filling 1. With Grace 2. With Peace 3. With Bliss 1. God fills the hungry soul with Grace Grace is filling because sutable to the soul Stephen full of the Holy Ghost Acts 7.55 This fulness of Grace is in respect of parts not of degrees There is something of every Grace though not perfection in any Grace 2. God fills the hungry soul with peace Rom. 15.13 The God of hope fill you with joy and peace this flows from Christ Israel had honey out of the Rock this honey of peace comes out of the Rock Christ John 16. ult that in me ye might have peace So filling is this peace that it sets the soul a longing after heaven this Cluster of Grapes quickens the appetite and pursuit after the full Crop 3. God fills the hungry soul with bliss Glory is a filling thing Psal 17. ult When I awake I shall be satisfied with thy image When a Christian awakes out of the sleep of death then he shall be satisfied having the glorious beams of Gods image shining upon him then shall the soul be filled brim-full the glory of heaven is so sweet that the soul shall still thirst yet so infinite that it shall be filled Qui te Christe bibent dulci torrente refecti Non sitient ultra sed tamen sitient Use What an Encouragement is this to hunger after righteousness such shall be filled Use God chargeth us to fill the hungry Isa 58.10 He blames those who do not fill the hungry Isa 32.6 And do we think he will be slack in that which he blames us for not doing Oh come with hungrings after Christ and be assured of satisfaction God keeps open house for hungry sinners he invites his Guests and bids them come without money Isa 55.1 2. Gods Nature inclines him and his Promise obligeth him to fill the hungry Consider Why did Christ receive the Spirit without measure John 3.34 It was not for himself he was infinitely full before but he was filled with the holy unction for this end that he might distill his grace upon the hungry soul Art thou ignorant Christ was filled with wisdom that he might teach thee Art thou polluted Christ was filled with grace that he might cleanse thee Shall not the soul then come to Christ who was filled on purpose to fill the hungry we love to knock at a rich mans door in our Fathers house there is bread enough come with desire and you shall go away with comfort you shall have the vertues of Christs blood the influences of his Spirit the communications of his love Here are two Objections made against this Object 1 1. The carnal mans Objection I have saith he hungred after righteousness yet am not filled Answ 1 Answ 1. Thou sayst thou hungerest and art not satisfied perhaps God is not satisfied with thy hunger thou hast opened thy mouth wide * Psal 81.10 but hast not opened thine ear * Psal 40.9 When God hath called thee to Family-prayer and mortification of sin thou hast like the deaf Adder stopped thine ear against God Zach. 7.11 No wonder then thou hast not that comfortable filling as thou desirest though thou hast opened thy mouth yet thou hast stopped thine ear the child that will not hear his parent is made to do pennance by fasting 2. Perhaps thou thirstest as much after a tentation as after righteousness At a Sacrament thou seemest to be inflamed with desire after Christ but the next tentation that comes either to drunkenness or lasciviousness thou fallest in and closest with the tentation Satan doth but becken to thee and thou comest thou openest faster to the Tempter than to Christ and dost thou wonder thou art not filled with the fat things of Gods house 3. Perhaps thou hungerest more after the world than after righteousness The young man in the Gospel would have Christ but the world lay nearer his heart than Christ hypocrites pant more after the dust of the Earth * Amos 2.7 than the water of life Israel had no Manna while their Dough lasted such as feed immoderately upon the Dough of earthly things must not think to be fill'd with Manna from heaven if your money be your god never look to receive another God in the Sacrament 2. The godly mans Objection I have had unfeigned Object 2 desires after God but are not filled Answ 1. Thou mayst have a filling of grace Answ 1 though not of comfort if God doth not fill thee with gladness yet with goodness Psal 107.11 Look into thy heart and see the distillations of the Spirit the dew may fall though the honey-comb doth not drop 2. Wait a while and thou shalt be filled the Gospel is a spiritual Banquet it feasts the soul with grace and comfort none eat of this Banquet but such as wait at the Table Isa 25.6 9. In this Mountain shall the Lord of Hosts make unto all people a Feast of fat things a Feast of wines on
the Lees well refined and it shall be said in that day Lo this is our God we have waited for him we will be glad and rejoyce in his salvation Spiritual mercies are not only worth desiring but waiting for 3. If God should not fill his people to satisfaction here yet they shall be filled in heaven the Vessels of their desires shall be filled as those water-pots Joh. 2. up to the brim MATTH 5.7 Blessed are the merciful for they shall obtain mercy CHAP. XV. Containing a Discourse of mercifulness THese Verses like the stairs of Solomons Temple cause our Ascent to the Holy of holies We are now mounting up a step higher 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Blessed are the merciful c. There was never more need to preach of mercifulness than in these unmerciful times wherein we live It is reported in the life of Chrysostom that he did much preach on this subject of mercifulness and for his much pressing Christians to mercy he was called of many 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Almes-preacher or the Preacher for mercy our times need many Chrysostoms Blessed are the merciful Mercy stands both in the Van and Rear of the Text in the beginning of the Text it stands as a Duty in the end of the Text it stands as a Reward The Hebrew word for godly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies merciful the more godly the more merciful the Doctrine I shall gather out of the words which will comprehend and draw in the whole is this That the merciful man is a blessed man Doctr. As there is a curse hangs over the head of the unmerciful man Psal 109.6 7 8 9 c. Let Satan stand at his right hand when he shall be judged let him be condemned and let his prayer become sin let his children be fatherless and his wife a widow let his children be continually vagabonds and beg let the Extortioner catch all that he hath and let the stranger spoil his labour let there be none to extend mercy to him let his posterity be cut off and in the generation following let their name be blotted out let the iniquity of his fathers be remembred with the Lord and let not the sin of his mother be blotted out Why what is this crime Ver. 16. Because he remembred not to shew mercy c. See what a long Vial full of the plagues of God is poured out upon the unmerciful man So by the Rule of contraries the blessings of the Almighty do crown and encompass the merciful man 2 Sam. 22.26 Psal 37.26 Psal 41.1 The merciful man is a blessed man For the illustrating this I shall shew 1. What is meant by mercifulness 2. The several kinds of mercy 1. What is meant by mercifulness I answer 1. Quid misericordia it is a melting disposition whereby we lay to heart the miseries of others and are ready on all occasions to be instrumental for their good Quest 1. How do mercy and love differ Answ In some things they agree in some things they differ like waters that may have two different spring-heads but meet in the stream Love and mercy differ thus Love is more extensive the Diocess that Love walks and visits in is larger Mercy properly respects them that are miserable Love is of a larger consideration Love is like a friend that visits them that are well Mercy is like a Physitian that visits only them that are sick Again Love acts more out of affection Mercy acts out of a principle of conscience Mercy lends its help to another Love gives its heart to another Thus they differ but Love and Mercy agree in this they are both ready to do good Offices both of them have soundings of bowels and healing under their wings Quest 2. Whence doth mercy spring Answ It s spring-head riseth higher than nature Mercy taken in its full latitude proceeds from a work of grace in the heart naturally we are far enough from mercy the sinner is a bramble not a Fig-tree yielding sweet fruit 'T is the Character and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of a natural man unmerciful Rom. 1.31 A wicked man like Jehoram hath his bowels fallen out * 2 Chr 21.19 Therefore he is compared to an Adamant Zach. 7.11 because his heart melts not in mercy Before conversion the sinner is compared to a Wolf for his savageness to a Lyon for his fierceness * Isa 11.6 to a Bee for his sting Psal 118.12 to an Adder for his poyson Psal 140.3 By nature we do not send forth oyle but poyson not the oyle of mercifulness but the poyson of maliciousness Besides that inbred unmercifulness which is in us there is something infused too by Satan the Prince of the aire works in men Eph. 2.2 He is a fierce Spirit therefore called the red Dragon Revel 12.3 And if he possesseth men no wonder if they are implacable and without mercy what mercy can be expected from hell so that if the heart be tuned into mercifulness it is from the change that grace hath made † * Col. 3.12 When the Sun shines then the ice melts when the Sun of righteousness once shines with beams of grace upon the soul now it melts in mercy and tenderness thou must first be a new man before a merciful man thou canst not help a member of Christ till first thou thy self art a member 2. The several kinds of mercy 2. Quotuplex misericordia or how many wayes a man may be said to be merciful Mercy is a Fountain that runs in five streams we must be merciful to the 1. Souls of others 2. Names of others 3. Estates of others 4. Offences of others 5. Wants of others SECT I. Shewing that mercy is to be extended to the soules of others 1. WE must be merciful to the souls of others this is Spiritualis Eleemosyna a spiritual Almes Indeed soul-mercy is the chief the soul is the most precious thing it is a vessel of honour 't is a bud of eternity 't is a sparkle lighted by the breath of God 't is a rich Diamond set in a Ring of clay the soul hath the blood of God to redeem it the image of God to beautifie it it being therefore of so high a descent sprung from the Ancient of dayes that mercy which is shewn to the soul must needs be the greatest This soul-mercy to others stands in four things 1. In pitying them If I weep saith Austin for that body from which the soul is departed how should I weep for that soul from which God is departed Had we seen that man in the Gospel cutting himself with stones and fetching blood of himself it would have moved our pity Mark 5.5 To see a sinner stabbing himself and having his hands imbrued in his own blood should cause relentings in our bowels our eye should affect our heart God was angry with Edom because he did cast off all pity Amos 1.11 2. Soul-mercy is in advising and exhorting sinners
Tell them in what a sad condition they are in the gall of bitterness Shew them their danger they tread upon the banks of the bottomless pit if death gives them a jog they tumble in and we must dip our words in honey use all the mildness we can 2 Tim. 2.25 In meekness instructing c. Fire melts oyntment mollifies words of love may melt hard hearts into Repentance this is soul-mercy God made a Law Exod. 23.5 that whosoever did see his enemies Ass lying under a burden he should help him On which words saith Chrysostom We will help a Beast that is fallen under a burden and shall we not extend relief to those who are fallen under a worse burden of sin 3. Soul-mercy is in reproving refractory sinners there is a cruel mercy when we see men go on in sin and we let them alone and there is a merciful cruelty when we are sharp against mens sins and will not let them go to hell quietly Lev. 19.17 Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thy heart thou shalt in any wise rebuke thy neighbour and not suffer sin upon him Fond pity is no better than cruelty Titus 1.13 Rebuke them sharply 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cuttingly the Chyrurgion cuts and lanceth the flesh but it is in order to a cure they are healing wounds so by a cutting reproof when we lance mens consciences and let out the blood of sin we exercise spiritual Chyrurgery this is shewing mercy Jude 23. Others save with fear pulling them out of the fire If a man were in the fire though you did hurt him a little in pulling him out he would be thankful and take it as a kindnesse Some men when we tell them of sin say O this is bitternesse no it is shewing mercy If a mans house were on fire and another should see it and not tell him of it for fear of waking him were not this cruelty when we see others sleeping the sleep of death and the fire of Gods wrath ready to burn about their ears and we are silent is not this to be accessory to their death 4. Soul-mercy is in praying for others This is like physick used in a desperate case and oft it recovers the sick patient James 5.16 The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man avails much as it cures the sick body so the sin-sick soul There is a story of one who gave his soul to the Divel who was given in to the prayers of Luther When Eutychus fell down from an high loft and was taken up dead Paul fell on him * Affectus vehementia Beza that is he did effectually pray over him and he prayed him alive Acts 20.9 11. By sin the soul is fallen from an high loft viz. a state of innocency now fervent prayer oft-times fetcheth life in such a dead soul Use 1. See what a blessed work the work of the Ministry Use 1 is The preaching of the Word is nothing but shewing mercy to souls This is a mighty and glorious engine in the hand of the Lord of Hosts for the beating down of the Divels strong-holds The Ministry of the Word doth not only bring light with it but eye-salve anointing the eyes to see that light It is a sin-killing and a soul-quickning Ordinance it is the power of God to salvation What enemies are they to their own souls that oppugne the Ministry They say the people that live under the line curse the Sun and are glad when the sun sets because of its burning heat Foolish sinners curse the Sun-rising of the Ministry and are offended at the light of it because it comes near their sins and scorcheth their consciences though in the end it saves their souls Use 2 Use 2. It reproves them that have no mercy to souls Reproof 1. Evil Magistrates 2. Evil Ministers 1. Evil Magistrates who either take away the Key of knowledge * Luke 11.52 or give a Toleration to wickednesse suffering men to sinne by a Licence The meaning of Toleration is this if men will to hell none shall stop them Is not nature enough poyson'd Do not men sin fast enough but must they have such political engines as scrue them up higher in wickednesse Must they have such favourable gales from the breath of great ones as serve to carry them full sail to the Divel This is far from soul-mercy * Meminerit princeps non solum quantum sibi commissum sed quatenus permissum fit Cicero What an heavy reckoning will these Statists have in the day of the Lord 2. Evil Ministers 1. Such as have no bowels to the souls of their people They do not pity them pray for them they seek not them but theirs they preach not for love but lucre their care is more for Tythes than souls How can they be called spiritual fathers who are without bowels These are mercenarii not ministri 2. Such as feed not the souls of their people with solid truths When Christ sent out his Apostles he gave them their Text and tells them what they must preach Matth. 10.7 Preach saying the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand Upon which place saith Luther the Ministers of Christ must preach quae ad regnum coelorum conducant Things that pertaine to the Kingdom of God pardon of sin sanctification living by faith ne aliter ex ecclesiâ faciant politiam They are unmerciful to souls who instead of breaking the bread of life fill their peoples heads with very speculations and notions who rather tickle the fancy than touch the conscience and give precious souls rather musick than food 3. Such as darken knowledge with words and preach so as if they were speaking in an unknown tongue Some Ministers love to soar aloft like the Eagle and flie above their peoples capacities endeavouring rather to be admired than understood They are like some crabbed Authors which cannot be read without a Comment Indeed God calls his Ministers Ambassadors 2 Cor. 5.20 but they must not be like those Out-landish Ambassadors that cannot be understood without an Interpreter 'T is unmercifulnesse to souls to preach so as not to be understood Ministers should be Stars to give light not clouds to obscure the truth Saint Paul was learned yet plain Clearnesse and perspicuity is the grace of speech 'T is cruelty to souls when we go about to make easie things hard This many are guilty of in our age who go into the Pulpit only to tie knots and think it their glory to amuse the people this savours more of pride than mercifulnesse 4. Such as see others going on in sin but do not tell them of it When men declare their sin as Sodom it is the Ministers duty to lift up his voice like a trumpet and shew the house of Jacob their sin Isa 58.1 Zeal in the Ministry is as proper as fire on the Altar he who lets another sin and holds his peace is a man-slayer That Sentinel deserves death who sees the enemy
approaching and gives not warning Ezek. 3 20. 5. Such as poyson souls with Error how dangerous is the leprosie of the head a Frenzy is worse than a Fever what shall we say to such Ministers as give poyson to their people in a golden cup are not these unmerciful others there are unworthy the name of Ministers itineraries the Divels journey men who ride up and down and with Satan compasse the earth to devour souls it would pity ones heart to see poor unstable creatures misled by rude and illiterate men who diet the people with blasphemy and non-sence and make them fitter for Bed-lam than the New Jerusalem all these are unmerciful to souls Let me beseech all that fear God to shew soul-mercy Strengthen the weak reduce the wandring raise up them that are fallen James 5.20 He which converteth the sinner from the error of his way shall save a soul from death SECT 2. Shewing that Christians must be tender of one anothers names 2. WE must be merciful to the names of others A good name is one of the greatest blessings upon earth no chaine of Pearl doth so adorn as this it being so we ought to be very tender of names They are to be accounted in an high degree unmerciful who make no conscience of taking away the good names of their brethren Their throats are open Sepulchres to bury the fame and renown of men Rom. 3.13 'T is a great cruelty to murder a man in his name Cant. 5.7 The keepers of the wall took away my vaile from me some Expositors interpret it of her honour and fame which did cover her as a beautiful vail The ground of this unmercifulnesse to names is 1. Pride Pride is such a thing as cannot endure to be out-shined it loves not to see it self exceeded in parts and eminency therefore will behead another in his good name that he may appear something lower The proud man will be pulling down of others in their reputation and so by their Eclipse he thinks he shall shine the brighter the breath of a proud man causeth a blast or mildew upon fame 2. Envy 1 Pet. 2.1 An envious man maligns the dignity of another therefore seeks to mischief him in his name Religion teacheth us to rejoyce in the esteem and same of others Rom. 1.8 I thank my God for you all that your faith is spoken of throughout the whole world 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is divulged with fame A good report is a credit to Religion Heb. 11.4 If persons professing godliness have not a good name Religion will have no very good name but envy consulting with the Divel lays a Train and fetches fire from hell to blow up the good name of another Quest How many wayes may we be unmerciful to the names of others Quest Answ Divers ways 1. By misreporting them a sin Answ 1 forbidden Exod. 23.1 Thou shalt not raise a false report Eminency is commonly blasted by flander Psal 64.3 Their tongues are as arrows shot out The tongue of a slanderer shoots out words to wound the fame of another and make it bleed to death The Saints of God in all Ages have met with unmerciful men who have fathered things upon them that they have not been guilty of Surius the Jesuite reported of Luther that he learned his Divinity of the Divel and that he dyed drunk but Melancthon who wrote his life affirms that he dyed in a most pious holy manner and made a most excellent prayer before his death It was Davids complaint Psal 35.11 They laid to my charge things which I knew not The Greek word for Divel signifies slanderer 1 Tim. 3.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not slanderers in the Greek it is not Divels Some think it is no great matter to defame and traduce another but know this is to act the part of a Devil O how many unmerciful men are there who indeed go for Christians but play the Divel in venting their lyes and calumnies wicked men in Scripture are called Dogs Psal 22.16 Slanderers are not like those Dogs which licked Lazarus his soars to heal them but like the Dogs which are Jezebel they rend and tear the precious names of men Valentinian the Emperour did decree Capitali sententiae subjugandum that he who was openly convicted of this crime of slander should dye for it And Pope Gregory did decree that such a person should be excommunicate and not have the Communion given him I think it was a just Decree Answ 2 2. We are unmerciful to the names of others when we receive a slander and then report what we hear Lev. 19.16 Thou shalt not go up and down as a Tale-bearer among thy people A good man doth not evil to his Neighbour nor taketh up a reproach against his Neighbour Psal 15.3 We must not only not raise a false report but not take it up To divulge a report before we speak with the party and know the truth of it is unmercifulness and cannot acquit itself of sin The same word in the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to raise a slander signifies to receive it Exod. 23.1 The receiver is even as bad as the Thief it is well if none of us have in this sense received stollen goods when others have stollen away the good names of their Brethren have not we received these stollen goods there would not be so many to broach false rumors but that they see this liquor pleaseth other mens tast Answ 3 3. We deal unmercifully with the names of others when we diminish from their just worth and dignity when we make more of their infirmities and less of their vertues Jam. 4.11 Speak not evil one of another I have read a story of one Idor an Abbot that he was never heard to speak evil of any man Saint Austin could not endure that any should eclipse and lessen the fame of others therefore wrote those two Verses upon his Table Quisquis amat dictis absentum rodere famam Hanc mensam vetitam noverit esse sibi Whosoever loves anothers name to blast This Table is not for him let him fast Wicked men are still paring off the credit of their Neighbours and they make thick parings they pare off all that is good nothing is left but the Kore something that may tend to their disparagement Unmerciful men know how to boile a Quart to a Pint they have a Divellish Art so to extenuate and lessen the merit of others that it is even boiled away to nothing Some though they have not the power of Creation yet they have the power of Annihilation They can sooner annihilate the good which is in others than imitate it 4. We are unmerciful to the names of others when we know them to be calumniated yet do not vindicate Answ 4 them A man may sometimes as well wrong another by silence as slander he who is merciful to his brother is an Advocate to plead in his behalf when he is injuriously traduced
up as it did Korah and Dathan These are Divels covered over with flesh they have damnation written on their foreheads Lucian who in the time of the Emperor Trajan had professed Religion afterwards became so profane as to make a mock at the Christians and by his jeeres and taunts went about to rend Religion at last he himself was rent asunder and devoured by dogs When the scab of the Leper did appear he was to be shut out of the Camp Levit. 13.9 Those who flout at Religion if God give them not repentance are sure to be shut out of the Camp of heaven SECT 4. Shewing the signes of a pure heart Signs of a pure heart I Shall next shew you the signs of a pure heart 1. A sincere heart is a pure heart Psal 32.2 In whose spirit there is no guile There are four Characters of a sincere-hearted Christian 1. A sincere heart serves God with the whole heart First He serves God with the heart The Hypocrite doth but make a shew of obedience Jer. 12.2 Thou art near in their mouth and far from their reins there may be a fair complexion when the Lungs and Vitals are rotten The Hypocrite is fair to look on he hath a devout eye but a hollow heart but he who is sincere his inside is his best side In the Law God would have the inwards offered up Levit. 4.11 A good Christian gives God the inwards when he prays his heart prays 1 Sam. 1.13 Hannah prayed in her heart In his Thanksgivings the heart is the chief instrument of praise Psal 111.1 Then is the sweetest musick when we make melody in our hearts to the Lord Col. 3.16 Secondly The sincere Christian serves God with the whole heart Psal 119.2 Hypocrites have a double heart Psal 12.2 An heart for God and an heart for sin Hos 10.2 Their heart is divided God loves a broken heart but not a divided heart an upright heart is a whole heart the full straine and torrent of the affections runs out after God a sincere heart follows God fully Num. 14.24 2. A sincere heart is willing to come under a trial Psal 139.23 Search me O God and try me That mettal is to be suspected which men are afraid to bring to the Touch-stone a sound heart likes the Touch-stone of the Word he is for a searching Ministry Hypocrites are veritatis lucifugae * Tertul. they flie from that light which would discover sin they hate that Physick of the Word which meeting with their ill humours begins to make them sick and trouble their conscience A gracious soul loves that preaching best which makes an Heart-Anatomy 3ly A sincere heart dares not act in the least against his conscience he is the most magnanimous yet the most pusillanimous he is bold in suffering Prov. 28.1 but fearful of sin Gen. 39.9 He dares not get an estate by sinful shifts or rise upon the ruines of another Jacob got his fathers blessing by fraud but that is not the way to get Gods blessing Fourthly a sincere heart is a suspitious heart The Hypocrite suspects others and hath charitable thoughts of himself the sincere Christian hath charitable thoughts of others and suspects himself he calls himself often to account O my soul hast thou any Evidences for Heaven are they not to seek when they should be to shew Is there no flaw in thy Evidences thou mayest mistake common grace for saving Weeds in the Corn-fields look like flowres The foolish Virgins Lamps looked as if they had oyle in them O my soul is it not so with thee The sincere soul being ever jealous playes the Critick upon himself and doth so traverse things in the Court of conscience as if he were presently to be cited to Gods Bar. This is to be pure in heart 2. A pure heart breaths after purity If God should stretch out the golden Scepter and say to him Ask and it shall be given thee to half the Kingdom he would say Lord a pure heart let my heart have this inscription Holiness to the Lord let my heart be thy Temple and do thou dwell in it Lord what should I do in heaven with this unholy heart what converse could I have with God or Angels A gracious soul is so in love with purity that he prizeth a pure heart above all blessings 1. Above riches he knows he may be cloathed in purple and fine linnen and yet go to hell * Divitiae sunt in sinistra Domini Bern. he is content to be poor so he may be pure he knows heart-purity is a special Certificate of Gods love the pure in heart shall see God 2. Above gifts gifts do not at all set us off in Gods eye a pure heart is the jewel Matth. 15.28 O woman great is thy faith It was not her Rhetorical language Christ was taken with but her faith Hypocrites have had rare gifts Saul had the spirit of Prophesie Judas no doubt could make an Elegant Oration Hypocrites have come into Gods Church loaden with Egyptian gold videl Humane learning There may be Illumination without Sanctification A small Diamond is better than a great deal of brass A little grace excels the most flourishing parts Now if the out-goings of thy soul are after holiness thou desirest rather a pure heart than an eloquent tongue thou hast the oyle of the Spirit poured on thee and thou shalt be crowned with a sight of God 3. A pure heart abhors all sin A man may forbear and forsake sin yet not have a pure heart 1. He may forbear sin as one may hold his breath while he dives under water and then take breath again And a man may forbear sin 1. For want of occasion The Gun-powder makes no noise till the fire be put to it the Clock stands still till the Weights are put on Let a tentation come which is like the hanging on of the Weights and the heart goes as fast in sin as ever 2. He may forbear sin formidine poenae for fear A man forbears a Dish he loves for fear it should bring his disease upon him of the stone or gout There is a conflict in a sinner between the passion of desire and fear Desire spurs him on to sin but fear as a Curben-bit checks him nor is it the crookedness of the Serpent he fears but the sting of the Serpent 3. He may forbear sin out of a design he hath a plot in hand and his sin might spoile his plot Some rich heir would flie out in excess but he carries it fair to prevent a cutting off the Entail How good was Joash while Jehoiada the Priest lived Prudence as well as Conscience may restraine from sin 2. A man may forsake sin yet not have a pure heart it is a great matter I confess to forsake sin so dear is sin to men that they will part with the fruit of their body for the sin of their souls † * Micah 6.7 Sin is the Dalilah
see with glorified eyes Psal 25. Mine eyes are ever towards the Lord while others are looking towards the Earth as if they would fetch all their comforts thence let us look up to heaven there is the best prospect the sight of God by faith would let in much joy to the soul 1 Pet. 1.8 Though now ye see him not yet believing ye rejoyce with joy unspeakable 3. Let this be as Cordial-water to revive the pure in heart Be comforted with this you shall shortly see God The godly have many sights here that they would not see they see a body of death they see the Sword unsheath'd they see Rebellion wearing the Mask of Religion they see the white Divel these sights occasion sorrow but there is a blessed sight a coming they shall see God and in him are all sparkling beauties and ravishing joyes to be found 4. Be not discouraged at sufferings all the hurt affliction and death can do is to give you a sight of God as he said to his Fellow-Martyr One half houre in glory will make us forget our pain the Sun arising all the dark shadows of the night flie away When the pleasant beams of Gods countenance shall begin to shine upon the soul in heaven then sorrows and s●fferings shall be no more the dark shadows of the night shall flie away the thoughts of this beatifical Vision should carry a Christian full sail with joy through the waters of affliction this made Job so willing to embrace death Job 19.25 26. I know that my Redeemer liveth and though worms devoure this body yet in my flesh shall I see God MATTH 5.9 Blessed are the Peace-makers c. CHAP. XVIII Concerning Peaceableness THIS is the seventh step of the golden Ladder which leads to blessedness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The name of peace is sweet and the work of peace is a blessed work Blessed are the Peace-makers Observe the Connexion the Scripture links these two together Pureness of heart and peaceableness of spirit Jam. 3.17 The wisdom from above is first pure then peaceable Hebr. 12.14 Follow peace and holiness and here Christ joyns them together Pure in heart and Peace-makers as if there could be no purity where there is not a study of peace that Religion is suspitious which is full of Faction and Discord In the words there are three parts 1. A Duty implied viz. peaceable-mindedness 2. A Duty expressed to be Peace-makers 3. A Title of honour bestowed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They shall be called the children of God 1. The Duty implied peaceable-mindedness for before men can make peace among others they must be of peaceable spirits themselves before they can be promoters of peace they must be lovers of peace Doctr. 1 Doctr. 1. That Christians must be peaceable-minded this peaceableness of spirit is the beauty of a Saint 't is a jewel of great price 1 Pet. 3.4 The ornament of a quiet spirit which is in the sight of God of great price The Saints are Christs sheep John 10.27 the sheep is a peaceable creature they are Christs Doves Cant. 2.14 therefore they must be sine felle without gall it becomes not Christians to be Ishmaels but Solomons Though they must be Lyons for courage yet Lambs for peaceableness God was not in the Earth-quake nor in the fire but in the still small voyce 1 Kings 19.12 God is not in the rough fiery spirit but in the peaceable spirit There is a four-fold peace that we must study and cherish 1. An Oeconomical peace peace in Families it is called vinculum pacis the bond of peace Eph. 4.3 Without this all drops in pieces peace is a girdle that tyes together members in a Family it is a golden Clasp that knits them together that they do not fall in pieces we should endeavour that our houses should be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 houses of peace 'T is not fairness of Rooms makes an house pleasant but peaceableness of dispositions there can be no comfortableness in our dwellings till peace be entertained as an inmate into our houses 2. There is a Parochial peace when there is a sweet harmony a tuning and chiming together of affections in a Parish When all draw one way and as the Apostle saith are perfectly joyned together in the same mind 1 Cor. 1.10 One jarring string brings all the Musick out of tune one bad Member in a Parish endangers the whole 1 Thes 5.13 Be at peace among your selves 'T is little comfort to have our houses joyned together if our hearts be asunder a Geometrical union will do little good without a Moral 3. There is a Political peace peace in City and Countrey this is the fairest flower of a Princes Crown 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 peace is the best blessing of a Nation It is well with Bees when there is a noise but it is best with Christians when as in the building of the Temple there is no noise of Hammer heard Peace brings plenty along with it How many Miles would some go on pilgrimage to purchase this peace therefore the Greeks made peace to be the Nurse of Pluto the God of wealth Political plants thrive best in the Sunshine of peace Psal 147.14 He maketh peace in thy borders and filleth thee with the finest of the wheat Omnia pace vigent The Ancients made the Harp the Emblem of peace How sweet would the sounding of this Harp be after the roaring of the Canon Pacem te poscimus omnes All should study to promote this Political peace the godly man when he dyes enters into peace Isa 57.2 But while he lives peace must enter into him 4. There is an Ecclesiastical peace a Church-peace When there is unity and verity in the Church of God never doth Religion flourish more then when her children spread themselves as Olive-plants round about her Table Unity in Faith and Discipline is a mercy we cannot prize enough this is that which God hath promised Jer. 32.39 and which we should pursue Zach. 8.19 Saint Ambrose saith of Theodosius the Emperour that when he lay sick he took more care for the Churches peace than for his own recovery The Reasons why we should be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 peaceable-minded are two 1. We are called to peace 1 Cor. 7.15 God never call'd any man to division that is a reason why we should not be given to strife because we have no call for it but God hath called us to peace 2. It is the nature of grace to change the heart and make it peaceable By nature we are of a fierce cruel disposition when God cursed the ground for mans sake the curse was that it should bring forth thorns and thistles Gen. 3.18 The heart of man naturally lies under this curse it brings forth nothing but the Thistles of strife and contention but when grace comes into the heart it makes it peaceable it infuseth a sweet loving disposition it smooths and polisheth the most knotty piece it files
lax general faith When we believe the truth of all that is revealed in the holy Scriptures this is not the faith which doth priviledge us in sonship the Divels believe all the Articles in the Creed 'T is not the bare knowledge of a medicine or believing the Soveraign vertue of it will cure one that is ill This general faith so much cryed up by some will not save this a man may have and yet not love God He may believe that God will come to judge the quick and the dead and hate him as the prisoner believeth the Judges coming to the Assizes and abhors the thoughts of him Take heed of resting in a general faith you may have this and be no better than Divels 2. There is a special faith fides quâ creditur when we do not only believe the report we hear of Christ but rest upon him embrace him taking hold of the horns of this Altar resolving there to abide In the body there are venae sugentes sucking veins which draw the meat into the stomack and concoct it there So faith is the sucking veine which draws Christ into the heart and applies him there This is the filiating faith by this we are made the children of God and wherever this faith is it is not like physick in a dead mans mouth but is exceeding operative it obligeth to duty it works by love Gal. 5.6 2. Why Faith makes us children why not as well other graces Repentance Love c Answ 1. Because Faith is instituted of God and honoured to this work of making us children Gods institution gives Faith its value and validity it is the Kings stamp makes the Coyne passe currant if he would put his stamp upon brass or leather it would go as currant as silver The great God hath authorized and put the stamp of his institution upon Faith and that makes it pass for currant and gives it a priviledge above all the graces to make us children 2. Faith makes us children as it is the vital principle Hab. 2.4 The just shall live by faith All Gods children are living none of them are still-born now by faith we live As the heart is the primum vivens the fountain of life in the body so Faith is the fountain of life in the soul 3. Faith makes us children as it is the uniting grace it knits us to Christ the other graces cannot do this by faith we are one with Christ and so we are akin to God being united to the Natural Son we become adopted sons The Kindred comes in by Faith God is the Father of Christ Faith makes us Christs Brethren * Hebr. 2.11 and so God comes to be our Father SECT 4. Setting forth the signs of Gods children 4. THE fourth particular to be discussed is To shew the signs of Gods children it concerns us to know whose children we are * Aut filii Dei aut filii Diaboli Aug. Austin saith All mankind are divided into two Ranks either they are the children of God or the children of the Divel † 1. The first sign of our heavenly son-ship is tenderness of heart 2 Chron. 34.27 Because thy heart was tender A child-like heart is a render heart he who before had a flinty hath now a fleshy heart A tender heart is like melting wax to God he may set what seal he will upon it this tenderness of heart shews it self three wayes 1. A tender heart grieves for sin a child weeps for offending his father Peter shewed a tender heart when Christ looked upon him and he remembred his sin he wept as a childe Clemens Alexandrinus saith he never heard a Cock crow but he wept * Da mihi Domine in hoc exilio lachrymarum fontem quem super omnem d●litiarum copiam ●surio Aug. l. de contrit cord And some learned Writers tell us that by much weeping there seemed to be as it were Channels made in his blessed face The least hair makes the eye weep the least sin makes the heart smite Davids heart smote him when he cut off the Lap of King Sauls garment What would it have done if he had cut off his head 2. A tender heart melts under mercy Though when God thunders by affliction the rain of tears doth fall from a gracious eye yet the heart is never so kindly dissolved as under the Sun-beams of Gods mercy see how Davids heart was melted with Gods kindness 2 Sam. 7.18 Who am I O Lord God and what is my house that thou hast brought me hitherto there was a gracious thaw upon his heart So saith a childe of God Lord who am I a piece of dust and sin kneaded together that the orient beams of free-grace should shine upon me Who am I that thou shouldest pity me when I lay in my blood and spread the golden wings of mercy over me The soul is overcome with Gods goodness the tears drop the love flames mercy hath a melting influence upon the soul 3. A tender heart trembles under Gods threatnings Psalm 119.120 My flesh trembleth for fear of thee 2 Chron. 34.27 Because thy heart was tender and thou didst humble thy self before God when thou heardst his words against this place and didst rend thy clothes c. If the father be angry the child trembles When Ministers denounce the menaces and threats of God against sin tender souls sit in a trembling posture this frame of heart God delights in Isa 66.2 To this man will I look even to him that trembleth at my word a wicked man like the Leviathan is made without fear Job 41.33 He neither believes the Promises nor dreads the Threatnings let judgement be denounced against sin he laughs at the shaking of a spear he thinks either that God is ignorant and doth not see or impotent and cannot punish the mountains quake before the Lord the hills melt the rocks are thrown down by him Nahum 1.5 But the hearts of sinners are more obdurate than the rocks an hardned sinner like Nebuchadnezzar hath the heart of a beast given to him Dan. 4.16 a child-like heart is a tender heart the stone is taken away 2. The second signe of son-ship is Assimilation Col. 3.10 Ye have put on the new man which is renewed af-the image of him that created him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the child resembles the father Gods children are like their heavenly Father they bear his very image and impresse wicked men say they are the children of God but there is too great a dissimilitude and unlikenesse the Jews brag'd they were Abrahams children but Christ disproves them by this argument because they were not like him John 8.40 Ye seek to kill me a man that have told you the truth which I have heard of God this did not Abraham You Abrahams children and go about to kill me Abraham would not have murdered an innocent you are more like Satan than Abraham ver 44. ye are of your father the Divel Such as are
is mine The natural man who remains still in the old Family hath nothing to do with these promises he may read over the promises as one may read over another mans Will or Inventory but hath no right to them the promises are like a Garden of flowers paled in and enclosed which no stranger may gather only the children of the Family Ishmael was the son of the bond-woman he had no right to the Family Cast out the bond-woman and her son as Sarah once said to Abraham Gen. 21.10 So the unbeliever is not adopted he is none of the houshold and God will say at the day of judgement Cast out this son of the bond-woman into utter darkness where is weeping and gnashing of teeth Privi ∣ ledge 10 10. If we are children then we shall have our Fathers blessing Isa 61.9 They are the seed which the Lord hath blessed We read that Isaac blessed his son Jacob Gen. 27.28 God give thee of the dew of heaven which was not only a prayer for Jacob but a Prophesie of that happiness and blessing which should come upon him and his posterity * Luther Thus every adopted child hath his heavenly Fathers benediction there is a special blessing distill'd into all that he possesseth Exod. 23.25 Psal 29.11 The Lord will bless his people with peace He will not only give them peace but they shall have it with a blessing the wicked have the things they enjoy with Gods leave but the adopted have them with Gods love the wicked have them by Providence the Saints by Promise Isaac had but one blessing to bestow Gen. 27.38 Hast thou but one blessing my father But God hath more blessings than one for his children he blesseth them in their souls bodies names estate posterity he blesseth them with the upper-springs and the nether-springs he multiplies to bless them and his blessing cannot be reversed as Isaac said concerning Jacob I have blessed him yea and he shall be blessed Gen. 27.33 so God blesseth his children and they shall be blessed 11. If we are children then all things that Privi ∣ ledge 11 fall out shall turn to our good Rom. 8.28 All things work together for good to them that love God 1. Good things 2. Evil things 1. Good things work for good to Gods children 1. Mercies shall do them good 1. The mercies of God shall soften them Davids heart was overcome with Gods mercy 2 Sam. 7.18 Who am I and what is my house c I who was of a mean Family I who held the Shepherds staffe that now I should hold the Royal Scepter Nay Thou hast spoken of thy servants house for a great while to come Thou hast made a promise that my children shall sit upon the Throne yea that the blessed Messiah shall come of my Line and Race and is this the manner of man O Lord God! as if he had said Do men shew such kindness undeserved See how this good mans heart was dissolved and softned by mercy the flint is soonest broken upon a soft pillow 2. Mercies make the children of God more fruitful the ground beats the better crop for the cost that is laid upon it God gives his children health and they spend and are spent for Christ he gives them Estates and they honour the Lord with their substance the backs and bellies of the poor are the Field where they sowe the precious seeds of their charity a childe of God makes his Estate a golden Clasp to binde his heart faster to God a foot-stool to raise him up higher towards heaven 2. Ordinances shall work for good to Gods children 1. The Word preached shall do them good 't is a savour of life 't is a Lamp to their feet and a Lavor to their hearts the Word preached is Vehiculum salutis a Chariot of salvation 't is an ingrafting and a transforming word it is verbum cum unctione it not only brings a light with it but eye-salve anointing their eyes to see that light the preaching of the Word is the Lattice where Christ looks forth and shews himself to his Saints this golden pipe of the Sanctuary conveys the water of life To the wicked the Word preached works for evil even the Word of life becomes a savour of death the same cause may have divers nay contrary effects * Eadem causa varios habet effectus the Sun dissolves the yce but hardens the clay To the unregenerate and profane the Word is not humbling but hardning Jesus Christ the best of Preachers was to some a Rock of offence the Jewes sucked death from his sweet lips 't is sad that the breast should kill any the wicked suck poyson from that breast of Ordinances where the children of God suck milk and are nourished unto salvation 2. The Sacrament works for good to the children of God in the Word preached the Saints hear Christs voyce in the Sacrament they have his kiss The Lords Supper is to the Saints a Feast of fat things it is an healing and a sealing Ordinance in this Charger or rather Chalice a bleeding Saviour is brought in to revive drooping spirits The Sacrament hath glorious effects in the hearts of Gods children it quickens their affections strengthens their faith mortifies their sin revives their hopes encreaseth their joy it gives a prelibation and fore-taste of heaven 2. Evil things work for good to Gods children Psal 112.4 Unto the upright ariseth light in darkness 1. Poverty works for good to Gods children it starves their lusts it enricheth their graces James 2.5 Poor in the world rich in faith Poverty sends to prayer when God hath clipped his childrens wings by poverty they flie swiftest to the Throne of Grace 2. Sickness works for their good it shall bring the body of death into a consumption 2 Cor. 4.16 Though our outward man perish yet the inward man is renewed day by day like those two Laurels at Rome when the one did wither the other did flourish when the body withers the soul of a Christian doth flourish How oft have we seen a lively faith in a languishing body Hezekiah was better on his sick bed than upon his Throne when he was upon his sick bed he humbles himself and weeps when he was on his Throne he grew proud Isa 39.2 Gods children recover by sickness in this sense out of weakness they are made strong Heb. 11.34 3. Reproach works for good to Gods children it encreaseth their grace and their glory 1. Disgrace encreaseth their grace the Husbandman by dunging his ground makes the soile more rich and fertil God lets the wicked dung his people with reproaches and calumnies that their hearts may be a richer soile for grace to grow in 2. Reproach encreaseth their glory he that unjustly takes from a Saints credit shall adde to his Crown the Sun shines brighter after an Eclipse the more a childe of God is eclipsed by reproaches the brighter he shall shine in the Kingdom of
heaven 4. Persecution to Gods children works for good the godly may be compared to that Plant which Greg. Naz. speaks of It lives by dying and grows by cutting * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Naz. The zeal and love of the Saints is blown up by sufferings their joy flourisheth Tertullian saith the Primitive Christians rejoyced more in their persecutions than in their deliverance 5. Death works for good to the children of God it is like the whirle-wind to the Prophet Eliah which blew off his mantle but carried him up to heaven so death to a childe of God is like a boysterous whirle-wind which blows off the mantle of his flesh for the body is but the mantle the soul is wrapped in but it carries up the soul to God this is the glorious priviledge of the sons of God every thing that falls out shall do them good the children of God when they come to heaven as Chrysostom speaks shall bless God for all cross Providences Privi ∣ ledge 12 12. And lastly If we are children we shall never finally perish John 5.24 John 10.28 Those who are adopted are out of the power of damnation Rom. 8.1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Will a father condemn his own son God will never disinherit any of his children fathers may disinherit for some fault Reuben for incest lost the Prerogative of his birth-right Gen. 49.4 What is the reason Parents disinherit their children surely this because they can make them no better they cannot make them fit for the inheritance but when we are bad our heavenly Father knows how to make us better he can make us fit to inherit Col. 1.12 Giving thanks to the Father who hath made us meet for the inheritance Therefore it being in his power to make us better and to work in us an idoneity and meetness for the inheritance certainly he will never finally disinherit Because this is so sweet a priviledge and the life of a Christians comfort lies in it therefore I shall clear it by Arguments that the children of God cannot finally perish the entail of hell and damnation is cut off not but that the best of Gods children have that guilt which deserves hell but Christ is the friend at Court which hath beg'd their pardon therefore the vis damnatoria the damning power of sin is taken away which I prove thus 1. The children of God cannot finally perish because Arg. 1 Gods justice is satisfied for their sins the blood of Christ is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the price paid not only meritoriously but efficaciously for all them that believe this being the blood of God justice is fully satisfied and meddles not to condemn those for whom this blood was shed and to whom it is applied Jesus Christ was a Sponsor he stood bound for every childe of God as a Surety he said to justice Have patience with them and I will pay thee all so that the believer cannot be liable to wrath God will not require the debt twice both of the Surety and the Debtor Rom. 3.24 25 26. God is not only merciful in pardoning his children but righteous 1 John 1.9 He is just to forgive it is an act of Gods equity and justice to spare the sinner when he hath been satisfied in the Surety 2. A damnatory sentence cannot pass upon the children Arg. 2 of God because they are so Gods children as withal they are Christs Spouse Cant. 4.11 There is a marriage-union between Christ and the Saints every child of God is a part of Christ he is Christ Mystical Now shall a member of Christ perish A child of God cannot perish but Christ must perish Jesus Christ who is the husband is the Judge and will he condemn his own Spouse Arg. 3 3. Every child of God is transformed into the likeness of Christ he hath the same spirit the same judgement the same will he is a lively picture of Christ as Christ bears the Saints names upon his breast so they bear his image upon their hearts Gal. 4.19 Will Christ suffer his own image to be destroyed Theodosius counted them Traytors who defaced his image Christ will not let his image in believers be defaced and rent he will not endure to see his own picture take fire the Sea hath not only stinking carrion but jewels thrown into it but none of Gods jewels shall ever be thrown into the dead Sea of hell Arg. 4 4. If Gods children could be capable of final perishing then pardon of sin were no priviledge the Scripture saith Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven Psal 32.1 But what blessedness were there in having sin forgiven if afterwards a final and damnatory sentence should pass upon the heirs of promise What were a man the better for the Kings pardon if he were condemned after he were pardoned Arg. 5 5. If the children of God should be finally disinherited then the Scripture could not be fulfilled which tells us of glorious rewards Psal 58.11 Doubtless there is a reward for the righteous God sweetens his commands with promises he ties duty and reward together As in the body the veins carry the blood and the arteries carry the spirits so one part of the Word carries duty in it and another part of the Word carries reward now if the adopted of God should eternally miscarry what reward were there for the righteous and Moses did indiscreetly in looking to the recompence of reward Hebr. 11.26 And so by consequence there would be a door opened to despair By all which it appears that the children of God cannot be disinherited or reprobated if they should lose happiness Christ should lose his purchase and should dye in vain Thus we have seen the glorious priviledges of the children of God What an encouragement is here to Religion how may this tempt men to turn godly Can the world viey with a childe of God Can the world give such priviledges as these as Saul said 1 Sam. 22.7 Will the son of Jesse give every one of you Field and Vineyards and make you all Captains of thousands Can the world do that for you as God doth for his children Can it give you pardon of sin or eternal life Are not the gleanings of Ephraim better than the Vintage of Abjezer● Is not godliness gain What is there in sin that men should love it the work of sin is drudgery and the wages death They who see more in sin than in the priviledges of Adoption let them go on and have their ears boared to the Divels service CHAP. XX. Containing several Vses drawn from the Proposition Use 1 Reproof Use 1 HERE is a bill of Inditement against those who declare to the world they are not the children of God all profane persons these have damnation written upon their fore-head 1. Scoffers at Religion it were blasphemy to call these the children of God Will a true childe jeer at his fathers picture 2.
for incest * Te●tul Apol. Psal 35.11 They laid to my charge things that I knew not Let us take heed of becoming persecutors Some think there is no persecution but fire and sword yes there is the persecution of the tongue there are many of these persecutors now adayes who by a Divellish Chymistry can turn gold into dung the precious names of Gods Saints into reproach and disgrace There have been many punished for clipping of Coyne of how much sorer punishment shall they be thought worthy who clip the names of Gods people to make them weigh lighter SECT 3. Declaring the causes of persecution 3. WHY there must be persecution I answer for two Reasons 1. In regard of God 1. His Decree 2. His Design 1. Gods Decree 1 Thes 3.3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We are appointed thereunto Whoever brings the suffering God sends it God did bid Shimei curse Shimeie's tongue was the Arrow but it was God that did shoot it 2. Gods Design God hath a twofold design in the persecutions of his children 1. Trial Dan. 12.10 Many shall be tryed Persecution is the touch-stone of sincerity it discovers true Saints from hypocrites unsound hearts pretend fair in prosperity but in a time of persecution fall away Mat. 13.20 21. Hypocrites cannot sail in stormy weather they will follow Christ to Mount Olivet but not to Mount Calvary like green Timber they shrink in the scorching Sun of persecution if trouble ariseth hypocrites will rather make Demas his choice than Moses his choice they will prefer thirty pieces of silver before Christ God will have persecutions in the world to make a discovery of men suffering times are sifting times Job 23.10 When I am tried I shall come forth as gold Job had a Furnace-faith a Christian of the right breed who is born of God whatever he loseth will hold fast his integrity Job 2.3 Christs true Disciples will follow him upon the water 2. Purity God lets his children be in the Furnace that they may be partakers of his holiness Hebr. 12.10 The Cross is physick it purgeth out pride impatience love of the world God washeth his people in bloody waters to get out their spots and make them look white Dan. 12.10 I am black but comely Cant. 1.5 The torrid zone of persecution made the Spouses skin black but her soul fair see how differently afflictions work upon the wicked and godly they make the one worse the other better Take a cloth that is rotten if you scowre and rub it it frets and tears but if you scowre a piece of Plate it looks brighter When afflictions are upon the wicked they fret against God and tear themselves in impatience but when the godly are scowred by these they look brighter 2. There will be persecutions in regard of the enemies of the Church these Vultures prey upon Gods Turtles The Church hath two sorts of enemies 1. Open enemies the wicked hate the godly there is enmity between the seed of the woman and the serpent Gen. 3.15 As in nature there is an antypathy between the Vine and the Bay-tree * Vitis laurum non am●t neque ejus odorem si prope crescat enecat the Elephant and the Dragon Vultures have an an antipathy against sweet smells so in the wicked there is an antipathy against the people of God they hate the sweet perfumes of their graces it is true the Saints have their infirmities but the wicked do not hate them for these but for their holiness and from this hatred ariseth open violence the Thief hates the light therefore would blow it out 2. Secret enemies who pretend friendship but secretly raise persecutions against the godly such are hypocrites and hereticks Saint Paul calls them false Brethren 1 Cor. 11.26 The Church complains that her own sons had vexed her Cant. 1.6 That is those who had been bred up in her bosome and pretended Religion and sympathy these false friends vexed her the Churches enemies are them of her own house such as are open pretenders but secret opposers of the faith are ever worst A wen seems to be a part of the body but is indeed an enemy to it it doth disfigure and endanger it they are the vilest and basest of men who hang forth Christs colours yet fight against him SECT 4. Shewing that the keenest edge of persecution is turned against the Ministers 4. THE fourth particular is That the chief persecutions are raised against the Ministers our Lord Christ turns himself directly to the Apostles whom he was ready to commissionate and send abroad to preach Blessed are ye when men shall persecute you Ver. 11. So persecuted they the Prophets before you Ver. 12. Take my Brethren the Prophets for an example of suffering affliction Jam. 5.10 No sooner is any man a Minister but he is a piece of a Martyr The Ministers of Christ are his chosen Vessels now as the best Vessel of gold and silver passeth through the fire so Gods chosen Vessels pass often through the fire of persecution All times are not like the silver Age wherein Constantine lived he was an honourer of the Ministry he would not sit down in the Council of Nice till the Bishops who were convened there did come and beseech him he would say if he saw an infirmity in the Clergy suâ Purpurâ velaret he would cover it with his own Purple Robe Ministers must not alwayes look for such shines of the Princes favour they must expect an Alarum Peter a famous Preacher who knew how to cast the Net on the right side of the ship at one Sermon he converted three thousand souls yet neither the Divinity of his Doctrine nor the Sanctity of his life could exempt him from persecution John 21.18 When thou shalt be old another shall gird thee and carry thee whether thou wouldest not it alludes to hi● suffering death for Christ he was saith Eusebius bound with chains and afterwards crucified at Hierusalem with his head downwards Saint Paul a holy man who is steeled with courage fired with zeal assoon as he entred into the Ministry bonds and persecutions did abide him Acts 9.15 16. He was made up of sufferings 2 Tim. 4.6 I am ready to be offered up he alludes to the drink-offerings wherein the wine or blood used in Sacrifice was poured out thereby intimating by what manner of death he should glorifie God not by being sacrificed in the fire but by pouring out his blood which was when he was beheaded and that it might seem no strange thing for Gods Ministers to be under the heat and rage of persecution Stephen puts the question Acts 7.52 Which of the Prophets have not your fathers persecuted Ignatius was torn with wild beasts Cyprian Polycarp Martyr'd † * Praedicare nihil aliud est quam derivare in se furorem mundi Luther Maximinus the Emperour as Eusebius relates gave charge to his Officers to put none to death but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the
pure conscience A good conscience will abide the fiery trial this made the Martyrs flames beds of Roses good conscience * Murus abaeneus esto Nil conscire sibi is a wall of brass with the Leviathan it laughs at the shaking of a Spear Job 41.29 Let one be in Prison good conscience is a Bird can sing in this Cage Austin calls it the Paradise of a good conscience 5. Make the Scripture familiar to you Psal 119.50 The Scripture well digested by meditation will fit for suffering The Scripture is a Christians Palladium his Magazine and Fort-royal it may be compar'd to the Tower of David on which there hang a thousand Bucklers Cant. 4.3 From these brests of Scripture divine strength flows into the soul Col. 3.16 Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly Hierom speaks of one who by frequent studying the Scripture made his breast bibliothecam Christi the Library of Christ The blessed Scripture as it is an honycomb for comfort so an armory for strength first the Martyrs hearts did burn within them by reading the Scripture † * Luke 24.32 and then their bodies were fit to burn The Scripture armes a Christian both against tentation and persecution 1. Against Tentation Christ himself when he was tempted by the Divel ran to Scripture for armour it is written Three times he wounds the old Serpent with this sword Hierom saith of Saint Paul he could never have gone through so many tentations but for his Scripture-armour Christian art thou tempted go to Scripture gather a stone hence to sling in the face of a Goliah-temptation art thou tempted to pride read that Scripture 1 Pet. 5.5 God resisteth the proud art thou tempted to lust read James 1.15 when lust hath conceived it bringeth forth sin and sin when it is finished bringeth forth death 2. Against persecution When the flesh draws back the Scripture will recruit us it will put armour upon us and courage into us Rev. 2.10 Fear none of those things which thou shalt suffer behold the Divel shall cast some of you into prison that ye may be tried and you shall have tribulation ten dayes be thou faithful unto death and I will give thee a Crown of life O saith the Christian I am afraid to suffer Feare none of those things thou shalt suffer But why should I suffer I love God and is not this sufficient nay but God will try your love it is that ye may be tried Gods gold is best tried in the Furnace But this persecution is so long No it is but for ten dayes it may be lasting but not everlasting What are ten dayes put in the ballance with eternity But what am I the better if I suffer what comes of it I will saith God give thee a Crown of life Though thy body be Martyr'd thy soul shall be Crown'd But I shall faint when trials come My grace shall be sufficient 2 Cor. 12.9 The weak Christian hath Omnipotency to under-prop it 6. Get a suffering frame of heart Quest What is that Quest Answ A self-denying frame Answ Matth. 16.24 If any man will come after me let him deny himself and take up the Cross Self-denial is the foundation of godliness and if this be not well laid the whole building will fall If there be any lust in our souls which we cannot deny it will turn at length either to scandal or apostasie Self-denial is the thread which must run along through the whole work of Religion the self-denying Christian will be the suffering Christian let him deny himself and take up his Cross For the further Explication of this I shall do two things 1. Shew what is meant by this word deny 2. What is meant by self 1. What is meant by deny the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to deny signifies to lay aside to put off to annihilate ones self Beza renders it abdicet seipsum let him renounce himself 2. What is meant by self Self is taken four wayes 1. Worldly self 2. Relative self 3. Natural self 4. Carnal self 1. A man must deny worldly self that is his estate Matth. 19.27 Behold we have forsaken all and followed thee The gold of Ophir must be denied for the pearle of price Let their money perish with them said that noble Marquess of Vico who esteem all the gold and silver in the world worth one houres communion with Christ 2. A man must deny RELATIVE SELF his dearest Relations if God calls if our nearest alliance father or mother stand in our way and would hinder us from doing our duty we must either leap over them or tread upon them Luke 14.26 If any man come to me and hate not father and mother and wife and children c. he cannot be my Disciple Relations must not weigh heavier than Christ 3. A man must deny natural self he must be willing to become a sacrifice and make Christs Crown flourish though it be in his ashes Luk. 14.26 Rev. 12.11 They loved not their lives unto the death Jesus Christ was dearer to them than their own heart-blood 4. A man must deny carnal self this I take to be the chief sense of the Text. 1. He must deny self-ease the flesh cries out for ease it is loth to put its neck under Christs yoke or stretch it self upon the Cross the flesh cries out there is a Lyon in the way Prov. 22.13 We must deny our self-ease they that lean on the soft pillow of sloath will hardly take up the Cross 2 Tim. 2.3 Thou as a good Souldier of Christ endure hardness We must force a way to heaven through sweat and blood Caesars Souldiers did fight with hunger and cold 2. A man must deny self-opinion every man by nature hath an high opinion of himself he is drunk with spiritual pride and a proud man is unfit for suffering he thinks himself too good to suffer What saith he I that am of such a noble descent such high parts such repute and credit in the world shall I suffer a proud man disdains the Cross oh deny self-opinion how did Christ come to suffer He humbled himself and became obedient unto death Phil. 2.8 Let the Plumes of pride fall 3. A man must deny self-confidence Peters confidence undid him Matth. 26.33 34. Though all men shall be offended because of thee yet will I never be offended though I should dye with thee yet will I not deny thee How did this man presume upon his own strength as if he had more grace than all the Apostles besides his denying Christ was for want of denying himself oh deny thy own strength Sampsons strength was in his locks a Christians strength lies in Christ he who trusts to himself shall be left to himself he who goes out in his own strength comes off to his own shame 4. A man must deny self-wisdom † * Renunciet proprio ingenio Beza We read of the wisdom of the flesh 2 Cor. 1.12 Self-wisdom is carnal
ashes an unbeliever is like Reuben unstable as water he shall not excel Gen. 49.4 A believer is like Joseph who though the Archers shot at him his Bowe abode in strength Cast a believer upon the waters of affliction he can follow Christ upon the water and not sink cast him into the fire his zeal burns hotter than the flame cast him into prison he is enlarged in spirit Paul and Silas had their prison-songs Psal 91.13 Thou shalt tread upon the Lyon and the Adder A Christian arm'd with faith as a coat of Male can tread upon those persecutions which are fierce as the Lyon and sting as the Adder get faith Quest Quest But how comes faith to be such Armour of proof Answ Answ Six manner of wayes 1. Faith unites the soul to Christ and that blessed head sends forth spirits into the members Phil. 4.13 I can do all things through Christ c. Faith is a grace lives all upon the borrow as when we want water we go to the Well and fetch it when we want gold we go to the Mine so faith goes to Christ and fetcheth his strength into the soul whereby it is enabled both to do and suffer hence it is faith is such a wonder-working grace 2. Faith works in the heart a contempt of the world faith gives a true map of the world Eccles 2.11 Faith shews the world in its night-dress having all its jewels pul'd off faith makes the world appear in an Eclipse the believer sees more Eclipses than the Astronomer faith shews the soul better things than the world it gives a sight of Christ and glory it gives a prospect of heaven as the Mariner in a dark night climbs up to the top of the Mast and cries out stellam video I see a star so faith climbs up above sense and reason into heaven and sees Christ that bright morning star and the soul having once viewed his superlative excellencies becomes crucified to the world oh saith the Christian shall not I suffer the loss of all these things that I may enjoy Jesus Christ 3. Faith gets strength from the promise faith lives in a promise take the fish out of the water and it dies take faith out of a promise and it cannot live the promises are breasts of consolation the childe by sucking the breast gets strength so doth faith by sucking the breast of a promise When a Garrison is besieged and is ready almost to yield to the enemy Auxiliary forces are sent in to relieve it so when faith begins to be weak and is ready to faint in the day of battel then the promises muster their forces together and all come in for faiths relief and now it is able to hold out in the fiery trial 4. Faith gives the soul a right notion of suffering faith draws the true picture of sufferings what is suffering saith faith it is but the suffering of the body that body which must shortly by the course of nature drop into the dust Persecution can but take away my life an Ague or Feaver may do as much now faith giving the soul a right notion of sufferings and taking as it were a just measure of them enables a Christian to prostrate his life at the feet of Christ 5. Faith reconciles providences and promises as it was in Saint Pauls voyage providence did seem to be against him there was a cross winde did arise called Euroclydon Acts 27.14 but God had given him a promise that he would save his life and the lives of all that sailed with him in the Ship Ver. 24. therefore when the winde blew never so contrary Paul believed it would at least blow him to the Haven so when sense saith Here is a cross providence sufferings come I shall be undone then saith faith all things shall work for good to them that love God Rom. 8.28 This providence though bloody shall fulfill the promise affliction shall work for my good it shall heal my corruption and save my soul Thus faith making the winde and tyde go together the winde of a providence with the tyde of the promise enables a Christian to suffer persecution 6. Faith picks sweetness out of the Cross faith shews the soul God reconciled and sin pardoned and then how sweet is every suffering The Bee gathers the sweetest honey from the bitterest herb Saepe tulit lassis succus amarus opem So faith from the sharpest trials gathers the sweetest comforts faith looks upon suffering as Gods love token Afflictions saith Nazianzene are sharp arrows but they are shot from the hand of a loving Father faith can taste honey at the end of the rod faith fetches joy out of suffering John 16.20 Faith gets an honey-comb in the belly of the Lyon it finds a jewel under the cross and thus you see how faith comes to be such Armour of proof above all taking the shield of faith a believer having cast his Anchor in heaven cannot sink in the waters of persecution 2. Suffering grace is love get hearts fired with love to the Lord Jesus love is a grace both active and passive 1. Love is active it layes a Law of constraint upon the soul 2 Cor. 5.14 The love of Christ constrains me love is the wing of the soul that sets it a flying and the weight of the soul that sets it a going love never thinks it can do enough for Christ as he who loves the world never thinks he can take pains enough for it love is never weary it is not tired unless with its own slowness 2. Love is passive it enables to suffer a man that loves his friend will suffer any thing for him rather than he shall be wronged The Curtii laid down their lives for the Romans because they loved them love made our dear Lord suffer for us per vulnera viscera as the Pelican out of her love to her young ones when they are bitten with Serpents feeds them with her own blood to recover them again so when we had been bitten by the old Serpent that Christ might recover us he did feed us with his own blood Jacobs love to Rachel made him almost hazard his life for her Many waters cannot quench love Cant. 8.7 No not the waters of persecution love is strong as death Cant. 8.6 Death makes it way through the greatest oppositions so love will make its way to Christ through the Prison and the Furnace But all pretend love to Christ how shall we know that we have such a love to him as will make us suffer 1. True love is amor amicitiae a love of friendship which is genuine and ingenuous when we love Christ for himself there is a mercenary and meretricious love when we love divine objects propter aliud for something else a man may love the Queen of truth for the jewel at her ear because she brings preferment a man may love Christ for his head of gold * Cant. 5.11 because he enricheth with glory
but true love is when we love Christ for his loveliness namely that infinite and superlative beauty which shines in him † * Jesus propter Jesum Aug. as a man loves sweet wine for its self 2. True love is amor desiderii a love of desire when we desire to be united to Christ as the fountain of happiness love desires union the soul that loves Christ is ambitious of death because this dissolution tends to union Death slips one knot and tyes another 3. True love is amor benevolentiae a love of benevolence when so far as we are able we endeavour to lift up Christs name in the world as the wise men brought him gold and franckincense Mat. 2.11 so we bring him our tribute of service and are willing that he should rise though it be by our fall In short that love which is kindled from heaven makes us give Christ the preheminence of our affection Cant. 8.2 I would cause thee to drink of spiced wine and the juyce of my Pomgranates If the Spouse hath a cup which is more juycy and spiced Christ shall drink off that indeed we can never love Christ too much we may love gold in the excess but not Christ the Angels do not love Christ to his worth Now when love is boyled up to this heighth it will enable us to suffer love is strong as death the Martyrs first burned in love and then in fire 3. The third suffering grace is patience * Ga●●et patientia duris Lucan patience is a grace made and cut out for suffering * Sine ferro flamma Martyres esse possumus fine patientia non possumus patience is a sweet submission to the will of God whereby we are content to bear any thing that he is pleased to lay upon us Patience makes a Christian invincible it is like the Anvil that bears all stroaks We cannot be men without patience passion doth unman a man it puts him beside the use of reason we cannot be Martyrs without patience patience makes us endure James 5.10 We read Rev. 13.2 of a beast like unto a Leopard and his feet were as the feet of a Bear and the Dragon gave him his power c. This Beast is to be understood of the Antichristian power Antichrist may be compared to a Leopard for subtilty and fierceness and on his head was the name of blaspheming ver 1. which agrees with that description of the man of sin 2 Thes 2.4 He sitteth in the Temple of God shewing himself that he is God and the Dragon gave him power Ver. 2. that is the Divel and it was given to him to make war with the Saints Rev. 13.7 Well how come the Saints to bear the heat of this fiery trial Ver. 10. Here is the patience of the Saints patience overcomes by suffering A Christian without patience is like a Souldier without arms faith keeps the heart up from sinking patience keeps the heart down from murmuring patience is not provoked by injuries it is sensible but not peevish patience looks to the end of sufferings this is the Motto Deus dabit his queque finem As the Watchman waits for the dawning of the morning so the patient Christian suffers and waits till the day of glory begins to dawn upon him faith saith God will come and patience saith I will stay his leasure these are those suffering graces which are a Christians Armour of proof 8. Treasure up suffering promises the promises are faiths bladders to keep it from sinking they are the breast-milk a Christian lives on in time of sufferings they are honey at the end of the Rod hoard up promises 1. God hath made promises of direction that he will give us a Spirit of wisdom in that houre teaching us what to say Luke 21.15 I will give you a mouth and wisdom which all your adversaries shall not be able to gain-say nor resist You shall not need study God will put an answer into your mouth this many of Gods sufferers can set their seal to the Lord hath on a sudden darted such words into their mouths as their enemies could easier censure than contradict 2. God hath made promises of protection Acts 18.9 No man shall set on thee to hurt thee How safe was Paul when he had Omnipotency it self to screen off danger and Luke 1.18 There shall not an hair of your head perish Persecutors are Lyons but chained Lyons 3. God hath made promises of his special presence with his Saints in suffering Psal 91.15 I will be with him in trouble If we have such a friend to visit us in prison we shall do well enough though we change our place we shall not change our Keeper I will be with him God will hold our head and heart when we are fainting What if we have more afflictions than others if we have more of Gods company Gods honour is dear to him it would not be for his honour to bring his children into sufferings and leave them there he will be with them to animate and support them yea when new troubles arise Job 5.19 He shall be with thee in six troubles 4. The Lord hath made promises of deliverance Psal 91.15 I will deliver him and honour him God will open a back-door for his people to escape out of sufferings 1 Cor. 10.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He will with the tentation make a way to escape Thus he did to Peter Acts 12.10 Peters prayers had opened heaven and Gods Angel opens the prison God can either prevent a snare or break it Psal 68.20 To God the Lord belong the issues from death He who can strengthen our faith can break our fetters the Lord sometimes makes the enemies instruments of breaking those snares which themselves have laid Esther 8.8 5. In case of Martyrdom God hath made promises of consolation John 16.22 Your sorrow shall be turned into joy there is the water turned into wine Acts 23.11 Be of good chear Paul In time of persecution God broacheth the wine of consolation cordials are kept for fainting Philip Lantgrave of Hesse professed se divinas Martyrum consolationes sensisse Stephen saw the heavens opened Acts 7.56 Glover that blessed Martyr cryed out at the stake in an holy rapture He is come he is come meaning the Comforter 6. Promises of compensation God will abundantly recompence all our sufferings in this life an hundred fold and in the world to come life everlasting Matth. 19.29 This Austin calls the best and greatest usury our losses for Christ are gainful Matth. 10.39 He that loseth his life for my sake shall finde it These suffering promises should we treasure up and by holy meditation suck sweetness and strength out of them 9. Set before your eyes suffering examples look upon others as patterns to imitate Jam. 5.16 Take my Brethren the Prophets 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for an example of suffering affliction Examples have more influence upon us than precepts the one instruct the
yoake 8. Gospel-commands are finite therefore not grievous Christ will not alwayes be laying his commands upon us Christ will shortly take off the yoak from our neck and set a Crown upon our head There is time coming when we shall not only be free from our sins but our duties too prayer and fasting are irksome to the flesh in heaven there will be no need of prayer or repentance duties shall cease there indeed in heaven the Saints shall love God but love is no burden God will shine forth in his beauty and to fall in love with beauty is not grievous In heaven the Saints shall praise God but their praising of him shall be so sweetned with delight that it will not be a duty any more but part of their reward 'T is the Angels heaven to praise God This then makes Christs commands not grievous though they are spiritual yet temporary 't is but awhile and duties shall be no more The Saints shall not so much be under commands as embraces wait but a while and you shall put off your armour and end your weary marches thus we have seen that Christs commands considered in themselves are not grievous 2. Let us consider Christs commands comparatively 2. Comparatively and we shall see they are not grievous let us make a four-fold comparison Compare Gospel-commands 1. With the severity of the Moral Law 2. With the Commands of sin 3. With the torments of the damned 4. With the glory of heaven 1. Christs commands in the Gospel are not grievous Compari 1 compared with the severity of the Moral Law The Moral Law was such a burden as neither we nor our fathers could bear Gal. 3.10 Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the Law to do them Impossible it is that any Christian should come up to the strictnesse of this The golden Mandates of the Gospel comparatively are easie For 1. In the Gospel if there be a desire to keep Gods commandments it is accepted Nehem. 1.11 2 Cor. 8.12 If there be first a willing mind it is accepted Though a man had had never so good a mind to have fulfilled the Moral Law it would not have been accepted he must de facto have obeyed Gal. 3.12 but in the Gospel God crowns the desire If a Christian saith in humility Lord I desire to obey thee I would be more holy † * Isa 26.8 this desire springing from love passeth for currant 2. In the Gospel a Surety is admitted in the Court The Law would not admit of a Surety it required personal obedience but now God doth so far indulge us that what we cannot of our selves do we may do by a Proxy Christ is called the Surety of a better Testament Heb. 7.22 We cannot walk so exactly we tread awry and fall short in every thing but God looks upon us in our Surety and Christ having fulfilled all righteousness * Matth. 3.15 it is all one as if we had fulfilled the Law in our own persons 3. The Law did command and threaten but gave no strength to perform it did Egyptianize requiring the full tale of Brick but gave no Straw But now God with his commands gives power Gospel-precepts are sweetned with promises God commands Ezek. 18.31 Make you a new heart Lord may the soul say I make a new heart I can as well make a new world But see Ezek. 36.26 A new heart also will I give you God commands us to cleanse our selves Isa 1.16 Wash you make you cleane Lord where should I have power to cleanse my self Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean Job 14.4 See the Precept turned into a Promise Ezek. 36.25 From all your filthinesse and from your Idols will I cleanse you If when the child cannot go the father takes it by the hand and leads it now it is not hard for the child to go when we cannot go God takes us by the hand Hos 11.3 I taught Ephraim also to go taking them by their armes 4. In the Gospel God winks at infirmities where the heart is right The Law called for perfect obedience it was death to have shot but an hairs bredth short of the mark it were sad if the same rigor should continue upon us Wo to the holiest man that lives saith Austin if God comes to weigh him in the ballance of his justice 'T is with our best duties as with gold put the gold in the fire and you will see drosse come out what drossinesse in our holy things but in the Gospel though God will not endure haltings yet he will passe by failings Thus Christs commands in the Gospel are not grievous compared with the severity of the Moral Law 2. Christs commands are not grievous compared with the commands of sin Sin layes an heavie yoak upon Compari 2 men Sin is compared to a † Talent of lead * Onera unusquisque portas sua peccata sunt Aug. Zac. 5.7 to shew the weightinesse of it The commands of sin are burdensome let a man be under the power and rage of any lust whether it be covetousnesse or ambition how doth he tire and excruciate himself what hazards doth he run even to the endangering of his health and soul that he may satisfie his lust Jer. 9.5 They weary themselves to commit iniquity And are not Christs precepts easie and sweet in comparison of sins austere and inexorable commands Therefore Chrysostome saith well That Virtue is easier than Vice * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys Temperance is lesse burdensome than Drunkennesse doing justice is lesse burdensome than violence There 's more difficulty and perplexity in the contrivement * Micah 2.1 and pursuit of wicked ends than in obeying the sweet and gentle preceps of Christ Hence it is that a wicked man is said to travel with iniquity Psal 7.14 To shew what anxious pain and trouble he hath in bringing about his wickednesse What tedious and hazardous journeys did Antiochus Epiphanes take in persecuting the people of the Jews Many have gone with more pain to hell than others have to heaven Compari 3 3. Christs commands are not grievous compared with the grievous torments of the damned The rich man cries out I am tormented in this flame Luke 16.24 Hell-fire is so unconceivably torturing that the wicked know not either how to bear or to avoid it The torment of the damned may be compared to a yoak and it differs from other yoaks usually the yoak is laid but upon the neck of the beast but the hell-yoak is laid upon every part of the sinner his eyes shall behold nothing but bloody Tragedies his ears shall hear the groans and schreeks of blaspheming spirits He shall suffer in every member of his body and faculty of his soul and this agony though violent yet perpetual The yoak of the damned shall never be taken off Vestiga nulla retrorsum Sinners might break the
Christian Why art thou troubled for wanting that which a reprobate have when thou hast that which the glorified Saints have Thou hast Christ with all his Perquisites and Royalties Suppose a father should deny his son furniture for his house but should settle all his Land upon him had he any cause to complain If God denies thee a little furniture in the world but in the mean time settles his Land upon thee he gives thee the field wherein the pearle of price is hid hast thou any cause to repine A Christian that wants necessaries yet having Christ he hath the one thing needful Col. 2.10 Ye are compleat in him what compleat in Christ and not content with Christ Luther saith the Sea of Gods mercy should swallow up our particular afflictions surely this Sea of Gods love in giving us Christ should drown all our complaints and grievances let the Christian take the Harp and the Viol and bless God Branch 6 6. If Christ be all see the deplorable condition of a Christless person he is poor he is worth nothing Rev. 3.17 Thou art wretched and miserable and poor c. The sadness of a man that wants Christ will appear in these seven particulars 1. He hath no justification what a glorious thing is it when a poor sinner is absolved from guilt and is declared to be rectus in curia but this priviledge flows from Christ all pardons are sealed in his blood Acts 13.39 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 By him all that believe are justified So then he who is out of Christ is unjustified the rea● us or guilt of sin cleaves to him he must be responsible to justice in his own person and the curse stands in full force against the sinner 2. He that wants Christ wants the beauty of holiness Jesus Christ is a living spring of grace John 1.14 Full of grace and truth Now a Christless person is a graceless pe●son he hath not one shred of holiness The siens must first be engrafted into the stock before it can receive sap and influence from the root we must first be engrafted into Christ before we can of his fulness receive grace for grace John 1.16 A man out of Christ is red with guilt and black with filth he is an unhallowed person and dying in that condition is rendred uncapable of seeing God Hebr. 12.14 3. He that wants Christ hath no true Nobility it is through Christ that we are akin to God of the blood-royal of heaven it is through Christ that God is not ashamed to be called our God Hebr. 11.16 But out of Christ we are looked upon as ignoble persons the Traytors blood runs in our veins a man out of Christ is base-born whoever is his natural father the Divel is his spiritual father John 4.48 4. He that wants Christ wants his freedom nihil durius servitute John 8.36 If the Son make you free you shall be free indeed A man out of Christ is a slave when he sins most freely 5. He that wants Christ hath no ability for service he is as Sampson when his lock was cut his strength is gone from him he wants a vital principle he cannot walk with God he is like a dead member in the body that hath neither strength nor motion John 15.5 Without me ye can do nothing The Organs will make no sound unless you blow in them so unless Christ by his spirit breath in the soul it cannot make any harmony or put forth strength to any holy action 6. He that wants Christ hath no consolation Christ is called the consolation of Israel Luk. 2.25 A Christless soul is a comfortless soul how can such a 〈◊〉 have comfort when he comes to dye he is in debt and hath no surety his wounds bleed and he hath no Physitian he sees the fire of Gods wrath approaching and hath no screen to keep it off he is like a ship in a tempest sickness begins to make a tempest in his body and sin to make a tempest in his conscience and he hath nowhere to put in for harbour oh the terror and anguish of such a man at the houre of death Isaiah 13.8 Their faces shall be as flames an elegant expression the meaning is such fear and horror shall seize upon sinners in the evil day that their countenances shall change and be as pale as a flame what are all the comforts of the world to a dying sinner he looks upon his friends but they cannot comfort him bring him his bags of gold and silver they are as smoak to sore eyes it grieves him to part with them bring him Musick what comfort is the Harp and Viol to a condemned man There are in Spain Tarantula's venemous spiders and those who are stung with them are almost dead and are cured with Musick * Tarantula icti tibiis aut tympanis curantur but those that dye without Christ who is the consolation of Israel are in such hellish pangs and agonies that no Musick is able to cure them 7. He that wants Christ hath no salvation Eph. 5.23 He is the Saviour of the body he saves none but them who are members of his body mystical a strong Scripture against the doctrine of universal redemption Christ leaped into the Sea of his Fathers wrath only to save his Spouse from drowning he is the Saviour of the body so that those who dye out of Christ are cut off from all hopes of salvation Use 2 2. It reproves them who busie themselves about other things with a neglect of Christ Reproof magno conatu nihil agunt Isa 55.2 Wherefore do you spend money for that which is not bread and your labour for that which satisfieth not If you get all the world you are but golden beggars without Christ The Physitian finds out noxious diseases but is ignorant of soul-diseases and while he gets Receits to cure others he neglects the receit of Christs blood to cure himself The Lawyer while he clears other mens titles to their Land he himself wants a title to Christ The Tradesman is busied in buying and selling but neglects to trade for the pearle of price like Israel who went up and down to gather straw or like the load-stone that draws iron to it but refuseth gold These who so mind the world as to neglect Christ their work is but spider-work Hab. 2.13 Is it not of the Lord of Hosts that the people shall labour in the fire and weary themselves for very vanity 1. If Christ be all then set an high valuation upon Use 3 Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 2.7 Exhort To you that believe he is precious If there were a jewel which contained in it Branch 1 the worth of all jewels would you not prize that such a jewel is Christ so precious is he that Saint Paul counted all things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dung that he might win Christ Phil. 3.8 Oh that I could raise the appretiation of Jesus Christ prize Christ above
God to beautifie thee and the blood of God to redeem thee Christ was the Priest his Divine Nature the Altar his blood the sacrifice which he did offer up as an atonement for our souls Now reckon what a drop of Christs blood is worth and then tell me what a soul is worth 2. Satan doth value souls he knows their worth he saith as the King of Sodom did to Abraham Give me the persons and take the goods to thy self So saith Satan Give me the Persons He cares not how rich you are he doth not strive to take away your estates but your souls Give me the persons saith he take you the goods whence are all his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his warlike stratagems his subtile snares but to catch souls Why doth this Lyon so roar but for his prey he envies the soul its happiness he layes the whole train of tentation to blow up the whole Fort-royal of the soul Why doth he lay such sutable baits he allures the ambitious man with a Crown the covetous man with a golden apple the sanguine man with beauty why doth he tempt to Dalilah's Lap but to keep you from Abrahams bosome Latet anguis in herba The Divel is angling for the precious soul to undo souls is his pride he glories in the damnation of souls it is next to victory to dye revenged If Sampson must dye it is some comfort that he shall make more dye with him if Satan that Lyon must be kept in his hellish Den it is all the heaven he expects to reach forth his paw pull others into the Den with him 2. Having shewed you the souls preciousness the next thing to be demonstrated is that the soul is more precious than a world 't is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The world is made of a more impure lump Rudis indigestaque moles The world is of a courser make of an earthly extract the soul is heaven-born of a finer spinning of a more noble descent the world is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Origen calls it a great Book o● Volume wherein we read the Majesty and Wisdom of him that made it but the soul is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Image of God Gen. 1. The soul is a studied piece when God made the world it was but fiat let it be and it was done but when he made the soul all the persons in the Trinity sate together at the Councel-table Gen. 1.26 Come let us make man in our own likeness The soul is a Glass wherein some Rayes of Divine Glory shine much of God is to be seen in it though this glass be cracked by the fall yet it shall one day be perfect we read of spirits of just men made perfect Hebr. 12.23 The soul since the fall of Adam may be compared to the Moon in its conjunction very much obscur'd by sin but when it is sanctified by the Spirit and translated from hence it shall be as the Moon in the full it shall shine forth in its perfect glory 1. If the soul be so precious see then what that Use 1 worship is that God doth expect and accept namely Inform. that which comes from the more noble part of the soul Branch 1 Psal 25.1 To thee O Lord do I lift up my soul David did not only lift up his voyce but his soul though God will have the eye and the knee the service of the body yet he complains of them that draw near with their lips when their hearts were far from him Isa 29.13 * Neque enim in Sacrificiis munera eorum sed corda intueba●ur Deus Cypr. The soul is the jewel David did not only put his Lute and Viol in tune but his soul in tune to praise God Psal 103.1 Bless the Lord O my soul his affections joyning together in worship made up the consort The soul is both Altar Fire and Incense it is the Altar on which we offer up our prayers the Fire which kindles our prayers and the Incense which perfumes them Gods eye is chiefly upon the soul bring an hundred dishes to Table he will carve of none but this this is the savoury meat he loves He who is best will be served with the best when we give him the soul in a duty now we give him the flowre and the cream by an holy Chymistry we still out the spirits A soul inflamed in service is the cup of spiced wine and the juyce of the Pomgranate which the Spouse makes Christ to drink off * Cant. 8.2 without the worship of the soul all our Religion is but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bodily exercise 1 Tim. 4.8 which profits nothing without the soul we give God but a carcass What are all the Papists Fastings Pennance Pilgrimages but going to hell in more pomp and state What are the Formalists prayers which do even cool between his lips but a dead devotion It is not sacrifice but sacriledge he robs God of that which he hath a right to his soul Branch 2 2. If the soul be so precious then of what precious account should Ordinances and Ministers be 1. Ordinances they are the golden ladder by which the soul climbs up to heaven they are conduits of the water of life O how precious should these be to us they that are against Ordinances are against being saved 2. Of how precious account should Ministers be whose very work is to save souls their feet should be beautiful 1. Their labours should be precious they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 6.1 They labour with God and they labour for your souls all their sweat their tears their prayers are for you they woe for your souls and oftentimes spend their lives in the suit 2. Their liberties should be precious Constantine was a great honourer of the Minstry if indeed you see any of them who are of this holy and honourable function like that drug the Physitians speak of which is hot in the mouth but cold in operation if you see them either idle or ravenous if they do not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 divide the Word rightly and live uprightly censure and spare not God forbid I should open my mouth for such In the Law the lips of the Leper were to be covered that Minister who is by office an Angel but by his life a Leper ought to have his lips covered he deserves silencing A good Preacher but a bad liver is like a Physitian that hath the plague though his advice and receits which he gives may be good yet his plague infects the Patient so though Ministers may have good words and give good receits in the Pulpit yet the plague of their lives infects their people If you finde a Hophni and Phineas among the sons of Levi whose unholy carriage makes the offering of God to be abhorred you will save God a labour in ejecting them but be sure you distinguish between the precious and the vile
7.29 but Adam by eating the Apple fell sick and had dyed for ever had not God found out a way for his recovery For the amplification of the Doctrine there are three things to be considered 1. In what sence sin is resembled to sicknesse 2. What the diseases of the soul are 3. That sin-sicknesse is the worst 1. In what sence sin is resembled to sicknesse 1. Sin may be compared to sicknesse for the manner of catching First Sicknesse is caught often through carelesnesse some get cold by leaving off cloaths So when Adam grew carelesse of Gods command and left off the garment of his innocency he caught a sicknesse he could stay no longer in the Garden but lay bed-rid his sinne hath turned the world which was a Paradise into an Hospital Secondly Sicknesse is caught sometimes through superfluity and intemperance Excesse produceth sicknesse When our first parents lost the golden bridle of temperance and did eate of the forbidden tree they and all their posterity surfeited on it and took a sicknesse The Tree of Knowledge had sicknesse and death under the leaves it was fair to the eye Gen. 3.6 but poyson to the taste we all grew desperately sick by eating of this tree Adams intemperance hath brought us to fasting and weeping and besides that disease at first by propagation we have added to it by actual perpetration We have encreased our sicknesse therefore sinners are said to wax worse and worse 2 Tim. 3.13 2. Sin may be resembled to sicknesse for the nature of it As 1. Sicknesse is of a spreading nature it spreads all over the body it works into every part the head stomach it disorders the whole body So sin doth not rest in one part but spreads into all the faculties of the soul and members of the body Isa 1.5 6. The whole head is sick the whole heart is faint from the sole of the foot even unto the head there is no soundnesse in it but wounds and bruises and putrifying sores c. 1. Sin doth corrupt the understanding Gregory Nazianzene calls the understanding the lamp of reason 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this lamp burns dim Ephes 4.18 Having their understanding darkned Sin hath drawn a vail over the understanding it hath cast a mist before our eyes that we neither know God nor our selves naturally we are only wise to do evil Jer. 4.21 Witty at sin wise to damn our selves the understanding is defiled 1 Cor. 2.14 We can no more judge of spiritual objects till the Spirit of God anoint our eyes than a blind man can judge of colours our understandings are subject to mistakes we call evill good and good evil we put bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter Isa 5.20 A strait stick under water seems crooked so to a natural understanding the strait line of truth seemes crooked 2. The memory is diseased the memory at first was like a golden cabinet in which divine truths were locked up safe but now it is like a Colander or leaking vessel which lets all that is good run out The memory is like a Searcer which sifts out the flower but keeps the bran So the memory lets saving truths go and holds nothing but froth and vanity Many a man can remember a story when he hath forgot his Creed Thus the memory is diseased the memory is like a bad stomack that wants the retentive faculty all the meat comes up again So the most precious truths will not stay in the memory but are gone again 3. The Will is diseased the will is the souls commander in chief it is the master-wheele but how irregular and excentrick is it The Will in the Creation was like that golden bridle which Minerva was said to put upon Pegasus to guide and rule him it did answer to Gods Will This was the language of the Will in innocency I delight to do thy will O God Psal 40.8 but now it is distempered it is like an iron sinew that refuseth to yeild and bend to God Isa 48.4 John 5.40 ye will not come to me that you may have life Men will rather die than come to their Physician The Arminians talk of Free-will the Will is sick what freedome hath a sick man to walk the Will is a Rebel against God Acts 7.51 ye do alwayes resist the holy Ghost The Will is diseased 4. The Affections are sick First the Affection of desire a sick man desires that which is hurtful for him he calls for wine in a Feaver So the natural man being sick he desires that which is prejudicial for him he hath no desire after Christ he doth not hunger and thirst after righteousnesse but he desires poyson he desires to take his fill of sin he loves death Prov. 8.36 Secondly The Affection of grief a man grieves for the want of an estate but not for the want of Gods favour he grieves to see the Plague or Cancer in his body but not for the plague of his heart Thirdly the Affection of joy many can rejoyce in a wedge of gold not in the crosse of Christ The Affections are sick and distempered 5. The Conscience is diseased Titus 1.15 Their minde and conscience is defiled Conscience is either 1. Erroneous binding to that which is sinful John 16.2 Acts 26.9 I verily thought with my self I ought to do many things contrary to the name of Jesus Conscience is an ignis fatuus leading out of the right way Or 2. Dumb it will not tell men of sin it is a silenced Preacher Or 3. Dead Ephes 4.19 Conscience is stupified and sencelesse the custome of sinning hath taken away the sence of sinning Thus the sicknesse of sin hath gone over the whole soul like that cloud which over-spread the face of the heavens 1 Kings 18.45 2. Sicknesse doth debilitate and weaken the body a sick man is unfit to walk So this sicknesse ofsin weakens the soul Rom. 5.6 When we were without strength Christ died In innocency Adam was in some sence like the Angels he could serve God with a winged swiftnesse and filial chearfulnesse but sin brought sicknesse into the soul and this sickness hath cut the lock where his strength lay he is now disarmed of all ability for service and where grace is wrought though a Christian be not so heart-sick as before yet he is very faint The Saints prayers do but whisper in Gods eares and if Christ did not pray them over again God could not hear them we sin fervently but pray faintly as David said 2 Sam. 3.39 I am this day weak though anointed King so Christians though they have the oyle of grace poured upon them and they are anointed spiritual Kings yet they are weak sin hath infeebled them they take their breath short and cannot put forth such strong desires after God as they ought When we finde our selves dead in duty our holy affections languishing think thus This is my sickness sin hath made me weak as Jephtha said to his daughter
think all is well there is a curse belongs to him who puts sin in a secret place Deutr. 27.15 The hiding and concealing a disease proves mortal Prov. 28.13 He that covereth his sins shall not prosper 3. If sin be a soul-sickness then what need is there Branch 3 of the Ministry Ministers are Physitians under God to cure sick souls God hath set in his Church Pastors and Teachers Eph. 4.11 The Ministers are a Colledge of Physitians their work is to finde out diseases and apply medicines 't is dura provincia an hard work while Ministers are curing others they themselves are nigh unto death Phil. 2.30 They finde their people sick of several diseases some have poysoned themselves with error some are surfeited with the love of the creature some have stab'd themselves at the heart with gross sin O how hard is it to heal all these sick gangren'd souls many Ministers do sooner kill themselves by preaching than cure their Patients * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but though the work of the Ministry be a laborious work it is a needful work while there are sick souls there will be need of spiritual Physitians How unworthy then are they who malign and persecute the Ministers of God 1 Cor. 4.9 O unkind world thus to use thy Physitians Can there be a greater injury to souls would it not be a piece of the highest cruelty and barbarism if there were an Act made that all Physitians should be banished out of the Land And is it not worse to see multitudes of sick souls lie bleeding and to have their spiritual Physitians removed from them which should under God heal them This is a wrath-procuring sin 2 Chron. 36 16. They misused his Prophets untill the wrath of the Lord arose against his people till there was no remedy See what is inscribed in Levies blessing Deutr. 33.8 11. And of Levi he said Let thy Thummim and thy Urim be with thy holy One bless Lord his substance and accept the work of his hands smite through the loyns of them that rise against him and of them that hate him that they rise not again The Lord will wither that arme which is stretched out against his Prophets Use 2 1. If sin be a soul-disease let this serve to humble us Exhort the Scripture often calls upon us for humility 1 Pet. Branch 1 5.5 Be ye cloathed with humility if any thing will humble this consideration may sin is a soul-disease if a woman had a fair face but a cancer in her breast it would keep her from being proud of her beauty So Christian though thou art endued with knowledge and morality which are fair to look upon yet remember thou art diseased in thy soul here is a cancer in the breast to humble thee this certainly is one reason why God leaves sin in his own children for though sin be healed as to the guilt of it yet not as to the stain of it that the sight of their sores may make their Plumes of pride fall There are two humbling sights a sight of Gods glory and a sight of our diseases Uzziah the King had no cause to be proud for though he had a Crown of gold on his head he had the Leprosie on his fore-head 2 Chron. 26.19 Though the Saints have their golden graces yet they have their leprous spots seeing sin hath made us vile let it make us humble seeing it hath taken away our beauty let it take away our pride if God saith Saint Austin * Si Deus superbientibus Angelis non pepercit did not spare the proud Angels will he spare thee who art putredo vermis but dust and rottenness Oh look upon your boyles and ulcers and be humble Christians are never more lovely in Gods eyes than when they are loathsome in their own those sins which humble shall never damn 2. If sin be a soul-disease and the most damnable Branch 2 disease let us be afraid of it Had we diseases in our bodies an ulcer in the lungs or hectick feaver we would fear lest they should bring death oh fear sin-sickness lest it bring the second death Thou who art a Drunkard or a Swearer tremble at thy soul-maladies I wonder to see sinners like the Leviathan made without fear Why do not men fear sin why do they not shake with this disease surely the reason is 1. Stupidity as they have the Feaver of sin so withall a Lethargy 1 Tim. 4 2. Having their conscience sear'd with an hot iron He that hath an unbelieving heart and a sear'd conscience you may ring out the Bell that mans case is desperate 2. Presumption Many fancy that they can lay a fig upon the boile though they be sick they can make themselves well it is but saying a few prayers 't is but a sigh or a tear and they shall presently recover but is it so easie to be healed of sin is it easie to make old Adam bleed to death is it easie when the pangs of death are on thee in an instant to have the pangs of the new birth oh take heed of a spiritual lethargy fear your disease lest it prove mortal and damnable Physitians tell of a disease which makes men dye laughing so Satan tickles many with the pleasure of sin and they dye laughing 3. If sin be a soul-distemper then account them your Branch 3 best friends that would reclaim you from your sins The Patient is thankful to the Physitian that tells him of his disease and useth means to recover him When Ministers tell you in love of your sins and would reclaim you take it in good part the worst they intend is to cure you of your sickness David was glad of an healing reproof Psal 141.5 Let the righteous smite me it shall be a kindness and let him reprove me it shall be an excellent oyle which shall not break my head Ministers are charged by vertue of their office to reprove 2 Tim. 4.2 They must as well come with Corrosives as Lenitives * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Titus 1.13 Rebuke them sharply that they may be sound in the faith The word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cuttingly as a Chyrurgion searcheth a wound and then lanceth and cuts out the gangren'd flesh or as a Physitian useth Leeches and Cupping-glasses which put the Patient to pain but it is to restore him to health so must the Ministers of Christ rebuke sharply that they may help to save their dying Patients Who is angry with the Physitian for prescribing a bitter potion Why should any be angry with Christs Ministers for reproving when in regard of their office they are Physitians and in regard of their bowels they are fathers but how few are they who will take a reproof kindly Amos 5.10 They hate him that rebuketh in the gate But why do not men love a reproof 1. Because they are in love with their sins a strange thing that any should love their disease
an infinite mercy is it for a man to be made sensible of sin and seeing himself sick to cry out with David 2 Sam. 12.13 I have sinned against the Lord. Were it not a mercy for a person that is distracted to be restored to the use of his reason so for him that is spiritually distempered and in a lethargy to come to himself and see both his wound and his remedy Till the sinner be made sensible of his disease the medicine of mercy doth not belong to him * Non moris ●●t membrum non percussum plaugere nondum suscepto ictu admovere manum fovere unguento ubi non dolet emplastrum adhibere ubi caesura non ost B●rn in Apologe● Branch 6 6. If sin be a soul-sicknesse then labour to get this disease healed if a man had a disease in his body a Plu●i●ie or Cancer he would use all means for a cure the woman in the Gospel who had a bloody issue spent her whole estate upon the Physitians Luke 8.43 Be more earnest to have thy soul cured than thy body Make Davids prayer Psal 41.4 Heal my soul for I have sinned Hast thou a consumptive body rather pray to God to heal the Consumption in thy soul go to God first for the cure of thy soul James 5.14 Is any sick among you let him call for the Elders of the Church and let them pray over him The Apostle doth not say Let him call for the Physitian but the Elders that is the Ministers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Physitians are to be consulted in their due place but not in the first place Most men send first for the Physitian and then for the Minister which shews they are more desirous and careful for the recovery of their bodies than their souls but if soul-diseases are more dangerous and deadly then we should prefer the spiritual cure before the bodily heal my soul for I have sinned let us consider 1. Till we are cured we are not fit to do God any service A sick man cannot work while the disease of sin is violent we are not fit for any heavenly employment we can neither work so God Opera●to animi secundum virtutem nor work out our own salvation The Philosopher defines happiness the operation of the minde about vertue To be working for God is both the end of our life and the perfection Would we be active in our Sphere let us labour to have our souls cured So long as we are diseased with sin we are lame and bed-rid we are unfit for work We read indeed of a sinners works but they are dead works Heb. 6.1 2. If we are not cured we are cursed if our disease abides on us the wrath of God abides on us Quest But how shall we get this disease of sin cured This brings to the second thing in the Text The healing Physitian The whole need not a Physitian Whence observe Doctr. 2. That Jesus Christ is a soul-physitian Doctr. 2 Ministers as was said before are Physitians whom Christ doth in his Name delegate and send abroad into the world He saith to the Apostles and in them to all his Ministers Lo I am with you to the end of the world Matth. 28.20 That is I am with you to assist and bless you and to make your Ministry healing but though Ministe●s are Physitians yet but under-physitians Jesus Christ is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Chief Physitian he it is that teacheth us all our Receits and goes forth with our labours else the physick we prescribe would never work all the Ministers under heaven would not do any cure without the help of this Great Physitian For the Amplification of this I shall shew 1. That Christ is a Physitian 2. Why he is a Physitian 3. That he is the only Physitian 4. How he heals his Patients 5. That he is the best Physitian 1. That Christ is a Physitian it is one of his titles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Exod. 15.26 I am the Lord that healeth thee He is a Physitian for the body he anointed the blinde cleansed the Lepers healed the sick raised the dead Matth. 8.16 He it is that puts vertue into physick and makes it healing and he is a Physitian for the soul Psal 147.3 He healeth the broken in heart We are all as so many impotent diseased persons one man hath a Feaver another hath a dead Palsie another hath a bloody issue he is under the power of some hereditary corruption now Christ is a soul-physitian he healeth these diseases * Medicus aegrotis Jesus Bern. therefore in Scripture the Lord Jesus to set forth his healing vertue is resembled 1. By the Brazen Serpent Numb 21.9 Those who were stung were cured by looking on the Brazen Serpent so when the soul is stung by the old Serpent it is cured by that healing under Christs wings 2. Christ is resembled by the good Samaritan Luke 10.33 34. A certain man went down from Jerusalem to Jericho and fell among Thieves which stripped him of his rayment and wounded him and departed leaving him half dead but a certain Samaritan as he journyed came where he was and when he saw him he had compassion on him and went to him and bound up his wounds pouring in wine and oyle c. We have wounded our selves by sin and the wound had been incurable had not Christ that good Samaritan poured in wine and oyle 3. Christ as a Physitian is resembled by the Trees of the Sanctuary Ezek. 47.12 The fruit thereof shall be for meat and the leaf thereof shall be for medicine Thus the Lord Jesus that Tree of life in Paradise hath a sanative vertue he heals our pride unbelief c. As he feeds our graces so he heals our corruptions 2. Why Christ is a Physitian 1. In regard of his Call God the Father called him to practice Physick he anointed him to the work of healing Luke 4.18 The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he hath anointed me to preach the Gospel he hath sent me to heal the broken-hearted Christ came into the world as into an Hospital to heal sin-sick souls this though it were a glorious work yet Christ would not undertake it till he was commissionated by his father The Spirit of the Lord is upon me he hath sent me Christ was anointed and appointed to the work of a Physitian this was for our imitation we are not to meddle in any matters without a call that is acting out of our sphere 2. Jesus Christ undertook this healing work because of that need we were in of a Physitian Christ came to be our Physitian not because we deserved him but because we needed him not our merit but our misery drew Christ from heaven had not he come we must of necessity have perished and dyed of our wounds our disease was not ordinary it had seized on every part it made us not only sick but dead and such Receits
were requisite as none but Christ could give 3. Christ came as a Physitian out of the sweetness of his Nature he is like the good Samaritan who had compassion on the wounded man Luke 10.33 A Physitian may come to the Patient only for gain not so much to help the Patient as to help himself but Christ came purely out of sympathy there was nothing in us to tempt Christ to heal us for we had no desire of a Physitian nor had we any thing to give our Physitian as sin made us sick so it made us poor so that Christ came as a Physitian not out of hope to receive any thing from us but was prompted to it out of his own goodness Hos 14.4 I will heal their back-slidings I will love them Love set Christ awork not only his Fathers Commission but his own Compassion moved him to his spiritual Physick and Chyrurgery King David banished the blinde and lame out of the City 2 Sam. 5.8 Christ comes to the blinde and lame and cures them it is the sounding of his bowels that causeth the healing under his wings 3. The third particular is That Christ is the Only Physitian Acts 4.12 Neither is there salvation in any other c. There 's no other Physitian besides Verinus Non plures medici sed satis unus erit The Papists would have other healers besides Christ they would make Angels their Physitians all the Angels in heaven cannot heal one sick soul indeed they are described by their wings Isa 6.2 but they have no healing under their wings Papists would heal themselves by their own merits Adam did eat that Apple which made him and his posterity sick but he could not finde any herb in Paradise to cure him our merits are rather damning than healing to make use of other Physitians and medicines is as if the Israelites in contempt of that brazen Serpent which Moses set up had erected other brazen Serpents O let us take heed of that turba medicorum Indeed in bodily sickness it is lawful to multiply Physitians when the Patient hath advised with one Physitian he desires to have others joyned with him but the sick soul if it joyns any other Physitian with Christ it surely dies 4. How Christ heals his Patients Answ There are foure things in Christ that are healing 1. His Word is healing Psal 107.20 He sent his Word and healed them His Word in the mouth of his Ministers is healing when the Spirit is wounded in desertion Christ doth create the lips that speak peace Isa 57.19 The Word written is a Myrothecium or Repository in which God hath laid up Soveraign oyles and balsomes to recover sick souls and the Word preached is the pouring out of these oyles and applying them to the sick Patient He sent his Word and healed them We look upon the Word as a weak thing What is the breath of a man to save a soul but the power of the Lord is present to heal Luke 5.17 Christ makes use of his Word as an healing medicine the Receits which his Ministers prescribe he himself applies he makes his Word convincing converting comforting Caution Not that the Word heals all to some it is not an healing but a killing Word 2 Cor. 2.16 To the one we are a savour of death unto death Some dye of their disease two sorts of Patients dye 1. Such as sin presumptuously though they know a thing to be sin yet they will do it Job 24.13 They are of those that rebel against the light this is dangerous * Num. 15 30. David prays Psal 19. Keep back thy servant from presumptuous sins 2. Such as sin maliciously when the disease comes to this head the Patient will dye Hebr. 10.29 But to them who belong to the election of grace the Word is the healing medicine Christ useth He sent his Word and healed them 2. Christs wounds are healing Isa 55.3 With his stripes we are healed Christ made a medicine of his own body and blood the Physitian dyed to cure the Patient * Ille Colaphizatus lauceatus spinis corenatus in cruce suspensus ut per ejus mortem nobis medelam pararet Aug. in Evang. Joh. The Pelican when her young ones are bitten by Serpents feeds them with her own blood to recover them Thus when we were bitten by the old Serpent then Jesus Christ prescribes a Receit of his own blood to heal and restore us Sanguis Christi salus Christiani * Corpus Christi est aegris medicina languorem sanans sanitatem servans Bern. The blood of Christ being the blood of him who was God as well as man had infinite merit to appease God and infinite vertue to heal us This this is the balme of Gilead that recovers a soul which is sick even to death Balm as Naturalists say is a juyce which a little shrub being cut with glass doth weep out This was anciently of very precious esteem the favour of it was odoriferous the vertue of it Soveraign it would cure ulcers and the stinging of Serpents * Pliny This balm may be an emblem of Christs blood it hath a most Soveraign vertue in it it heals the ulcer of sin the stinging of tentation it merits for us justification Rom. 5.9 O how precious is this balm of Gilead by this blood we enter into heaven 3. Christs Spirit is healing the blood of Christ heals the guilt of sin the Spirit of Christ heals the pollution of sin the Spirit is compared to oyle it is call'd the anointing of the Spirit Isa 61. to shew the healing vertue of the Spirit oyle is healing Christ by his Spirit heals the rebellion of the will the stone of the heart though sin be not removed it is subdued 4. Christs rod is healing Isa 27.9 Christ never wounds but to heal the rod of affliction is to recover the sick Patient * Unguento utitur medicus item ferro igue Bern. Davids bones were broken that his soul might be healed God useth affliction as the Chyrurgion doth his Launce to let out the venome and corruption of the soul and make way for a cure Quest But if Christ be a Physitian Quest why are not all healed Answ 1. Because all do not know they are sick they Answ 1 see not the sores and ulcers of their souls and will Christ cure them who see no need of him many ignorant people thank God they have good hearts but that heart can no more be good which wants grace than that body can be found which wants health 2. All are not healed because they love their sickness Answ 2 Psal 52.3 Thou lovest evil many men hug their disease Augustine saith before his conversion he prayed against sin but his heart whispered Non adhuc Domine Not yet Lord he was loth to leave his sin too soon how many love their disease better than their Physitian while sin is loved Christs medicines are loathed 3. All are not
healed because they do not look out Answ 3 after a Physitian If they have any bodily distemper upon them they presently send to the Physitian their souls are sick but mind not their Physitian Christ John 5.40 Ye will not come unto me that ye may have life Christ takes it as an undervaluing of him that we will not send to him some send for Christ when it is too late when other Physitians have given them over and there is no hope of life then they cry to Christ to save them but Christ refuseth such Patients as make use of him only for a shift Thou that scornest Christ in time of health Christ may despise thee in the time of sickness * Medicum spernens sanari nequit Bern. Answ 4 4. All are not healed because they would be self-healers they would make their duties their saviours the Papists would be their own Physitians their daily sacrifice of the Mass is a blasphemy against Christs Priestly Office but Christ will have the honour of the cure or he will never heal us not our tears but his blood saves Answ 5 5. All are not healed because they do not take the physick which Christ prescribes them they would be cured but they are loth to put themselves into a course of physick Christ prescribes them to drink the bitter potion of Repentance and to take the pill of Mortification but they cannot endure this they had rather dye than take physick if the Patient refuseth to take the Receits the Physitian prescribes no wonder he is not healed Christians you have had many Recipes to take have you taken them ask conscience There are many hearers of the Word do like foolish Patients who send to the Doctor for Physick but when they have it they let the physick stand by in the glass but do not take it it is probable you have not taken the Receits which the Gospel prescribes because the Word hath no operation on your hearts you are as proud as earthly as malicious as ever Answ 6 6. All are not healed because they have not confidence in their Physitian it is observable when Christ came to work any cure he first put this question Believe ye that I am able to do this Matth. 9.28 This undoes many oh saith the sinner There 's no mercy for me Christ cannot heal me Take heed thy unbelief is worse than all thy other diseases Did not Christ pray for them that crucified him FATHER FORGIVE THEM Some of those were saved that had an hand in shedding his blood * Acts 2.36 37 Why then dost thou say Christ cannot heal thee unbelief dishonours Christ it hinders from a cure it closeth the Orifice of Christs wounds it stauncheth his blood Matth. 15.58 Millions dye of their disease because they do not believe in their Physitian 5. The fifth and last particular is That Christ is the best Physitian That I may set forth the praise and honour of Jesus Christ I shall shew you wherein he excels all other Physitians no Physitian like Christ 1. He is the most skilful Physitian he hath his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there is no disease too hard for him Psal 103.3 Who healeth all thy diseases The Pool of Bethesda might be an emblem of Christs blood John 5.4 Whosoever first after the troubling of the water step'd in was made whole of whatsoever disease he had There are certain diseases Physitians cannot cure as a consumption in the lungs some kinde of obstructions and gangrenes Non est in medico semper relevetur ut ager Some diseases are opprobria medicorum the reproaches of Physitians * Rhetor non semper suadebit nec Iatros sanabit but there 's no immedicabile vulnus no disease can pose Christs skill he can cure the gangrene of sin when it is come to the heart he healed Mary Magdalen an unchaste sinner he healed Paul who breathed out persecution against the Church insomuch that Paul stands and wonders at the cure 1 Tim. 1.13 But I obtained mercy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I was bemercied Christ heals head-distempers and heart-distempers which may keep poor trembling souls from despair O saith the sinner never was any so diseased as I but look up to thy Physitian Christ who hath healing under his wings he can melt an heart of stone and wash away black sins in the crimson of his blood there are no desperate cases with Christ * Omnipotenti nihil insanabile Aug. he hath those salves oyles balsomes which can cure the worst disease Indeed there is one disease which Christ doth not heal namely the sin against the Holy Ghost this is called a sin unto death if we knew any who had sinned this sin we were to shut them out of our prayer There is a sin unto death I do not say that he shall pray for it 1 John 5.16 There 's no healing for this disease not but that Christ could cure this but the sinner will not be cured The King could pardon a Traytor but if he will have no pardon he must dye The sin against the Holy Ghost is unpardonable because the sinner will have no pardon he scorns Christs blood despights his Spirit therefore his sin hath no sacrifice Hebr. 10.26 29. 2. Christ is the best Physitian because he cures the better part the soul * Christus medicus animarum Aug. other Physitians can cure the Liver or Splene Christ cures the heart they can cure the blood when it is tainted Christ cures the conscience when it is defiled Hebr. 9.14 How much more shall the blood of Christ purge your conscience from dead works Galen and Hippocrates might cure the stone in the Kidneys but Christ cures the stone in the heart he is the best Physitian which cures the more excellent part The soul is immortal angelical man was made in the Image of God Gen. 1.27 Not in regard of his body but his soul Now if the soul be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so divine and noble then the cure of the soul doth far exceed the cure of the body 3. Christ is the best Physitian for he causeth us to feel our disease The disease of sin though it be most damnable yet least discernable many a man is sin-sick but the Divel hath given him such stupifying physick that he sleeps the sleep of death and all the thunders of the Word cannot awaken him but the Lord Jesus this blessed Physitian awakes the soul out of its lethargy and then it is in an hopeful way of recovery The saylor was never so near a cure as when he cryed out 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sirs What must I do to be saved Acts 16.30 4. Christ shews more love to his Patients than any Physitian besides which appears five wayes 1. In that long journey he took from heaven to earth 2. In that he comes to his Patients without sending for The sick send to their Physitians and use many entreaties here the Physitian comes
to Christs blood he can cure the greatest sin as well as the least * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys Hast thou a bloody issue of sinne running the issue of blood in Christs sides can heal thine 5. Objection But mine is an old inveterate disease Object 5 and I fear it is incurable Answ Though thy disease be chronical Answ Christ can heal it Christ doth not say if this disease had been taken in time it might have been cured he is good at old sores The Thief on the Cross had an old festring disease but Christ cured it it was well for him his Physitian was so near Zacheus an old sinner a Custome-house man he had wronged many a one in his time but Christ cured him Christ sometimes grafts his grace upon an old Stock we read Christ cured at Sun-setting Luke 4.40 He heals some sinners at the Sun-setting of their lives 6. Objection But after I have been healed my disease Object 6 hath broken forth again I have relapsed into the same sin therefore I fear there 's no healing for me Answ It is rare that the Lord leaves his children to these relapses though through the suspension of grace Answ and the prevalency of tentation it is possible they may fall back into sin these sins of relapse are sad It was an aggravation of Solomons offence that he sinn'd after the Lord had appeared to him twice 1 Kings 11.9 These sins after healing open the mouth of conscience to accuse and stop the mouth of Gods Spirit which should speak peace These sins exclude from the comfort of the promise it is as it were sequestred but if the soul be deeply humbled if the relapsing sinner be a relenting sinner let him not cast away the anchor of hope but have recourse to his soul-physitian Jesus Christ can cure a relapse he healed Davids and Cranmers relapse 1 John 2.1 If any man sinne we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ Christ appears in the Court as the Advocate for the Client As he poured out his blood upon the brazen Altar of the Crosse so he poures out his prayers at the golden Altar in heaven Heb. 7.25 He ever liveth to make intercession for us Christ in the work of intercession presents the merit of his blood to his Father and so obtains our pardon and applies the vertue of his blood to us and so works our cure therefore be not discouraged from going to thy Physitian though thy disease hath broken out again yet Christ hath fresh sprinklings of his blood for thee he can cure a relapse Object 7 7. Objection But there is no healing for me I fear I have sinned the sin against the holy Ghost Answ 1 Answ 1. The fear of sinning it is a signe thou hast not sinned it Answ 2 2. Let me ask Why dost thou think thou hast sinned the sin against the holy Ghost I have grieved the Spirit of God Answ Answ Every grieving the Spirit of God is not that fatal sin We grieve the Spirit when we sin against the illumination of it the Spirit being grieved may depart for a time and carry away all its honey out of the Hive leaving the soul in darkness Isa 50.10 But every grieving the Spirit is not the sin against the Holy Ghost A childe of God when he hath sinned his heart smites him and he whose heart smites him for sin hath not commited the unpardonable sin A childe of God having grieved the Spirit doth as Noah when the Dove did flie out of the Ark he opened the windows of the Ark to let it in again A godly man doth not shut his heart against the Spirit as a wicked man doth Acts 7.51 The Spirit of God would come in he keeps him out but a gracious soul opens his heart to let in the Spirit as Noah opened the door of the Ark to let in the Dove * Intra sancte Spiritus ut habeam te velut signaculum super cor meum Austin Christian is it not so with thee then be of good comfort thou hast not sinned the sin against the Holy Ghost that sin is a malicious despighting the Spirit * Hebr. 10.29 which thou tremblest to think of Therefore laying aside these Argumentations and Disputes whatever the diseases of thy soul are come to Christ for a cure believe in his blood and thou mayst be saved 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 You see what a skilful and able Physitian Christ is what Soveraign oyles and balsomes he hath how willing he is to cure sick souls oh then what remains but that you cast your selves upon his merits to heal and save you of all sins unbelief is the worst because it casts disparagement on Christ as if he were not able to work a cure Oh Christian believe in thy Physitian John 3.15 that whosoever believeth in him should not perish Say as Queen Esther Esther 4.16 I will go in unto the King which is not according to the Law and if I perish I perish So say the Lord Jesus is a Physitian to heal me I will adventure on his blood if I perish I perish Queen Esther ventur'd against Law she had no promise that the King would hold out the golden Scepter but I have a promise which invites me to come to Christ He that comes unto me I will in no wise cast him out John 6.37 Faith is an healing grace We read when the Israelites were burying a man for fear of the Souldiers of the Moabites they cast him for haste into the grave of Elisha now the man as soon he was down and had touched the dead body of the Prophet revived and stood upon his feet 2 King 13.21 so if a man be dead in sin yet let him be but cast into Christs grave and by faith touch Christ who was dead and buried he will revive and his soul will be healed Remember there 's no way for a cure but by believing without faith Christ himself will not avail us Rom. 3.25 Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood Faith is the applying of Christs merit A playster though it be never so rare and excellent yet if it be not applyed to the wound will do no good though the playster be made of Christs own blood yet it will not heal unless applyed by faith The Brazen Serpent was a Soveraign remedy for the cure of those that were stung but if they had not looked upon it they received no benefit So though there bean healing vertue in Christ yet unless we look upon him by the eye of faith we cannot be cured * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost Above all things labour for faith this is the all-healing grace this hand touching Christ fetcheth vertue from him Not that faith hath more worthiness than other graces but only it is influential as it makes us one with Christ If a man had a stone in a Ring that could heal many diseases we
falling away from grace would make a believer wear Cains mark which was a continual shaking and trembling in his flesh they would spill a Christians cordial and break a link of the chain of salvation 2. Let us try whether our grace be true There is something Use 2 looks like grace which is not Chrysostom saith the Divel hath a counterfeit chain to all the graces Trial. and he would deceive us with it Lapidaries have wayes to try their precious stones let us try our grace by a Scripture touchstone the painted Christian shall have a painted Paradise 1. The truth of grace is seen by a displacency and antipathy against sin Psal 119.104 I hate every false way Grace sets it self against complexion-sins Psal 18.23 and against the sins of the Times Rev. 2.2 2. Grace is known by the growth of it growth evidenceth life Dead things grow not a picture will not grow An hypocrite who is but a picture of Religion doth not grow a good Christian grows in love to Christ in humility in good works Psal 92.12 Hos 14.5 He shall grow as the lilly his branches shall spread and his beauty shall be as the Olive-tree and his smell as Lebanon When the Spirit of God distills as dew upon the soul it makes grace flourish and put forth into maturity 3. True grace will make us willing to suffer for Christ Grace is like gold it will abide the fiery trial 1 Pet. 1.7 And if upon a serious scrutiny and trial we find that we have the right jewel the grace of God in truth Col. 1.6 this will be a death-bed cordial we may with Simeon depart in peace being assured that though we cannot resist death yet we shall overcome it Use 3 3. Let me lay down two or three directions for the attaining of grace Direction 1. If we would be enriched with this jewel of grace let us take pains for it we are bid to make an hue and cry after knowledge and to search for it as a man that searcheth for a vein of gold Prov. 2.2 3. Our salvation cost Christ blood it will cost us sweat 2. Let us go to God for grace * Incassum laborat qui aliunde virtutes sperat quam à Domino virtutum he is called the God of all grace 1 Pet. 5.10 We could lose grace of our selves but we cannot find it of our selves * Domine errare potui redire non potui Austin The Sheep can wander from the Fold but cannot return without the help of the Shepherd Go to the God of all grace God is the first Planter the Promoter the perfecter of grace God is the Father of lights Jam. 1.17 He must light up this candle of grace in the soul grace is in his gift it is not an impropiriation but a donative Oh then go to God in prayer lay thy heart before him Lord I want grace I want an humble believing heart and thou art the God of all grace all my springs are in thee Oh enrich me with grace deny me not this before I dye What is gold in the bag if I have no oyle in the Lamp Give me that anointing of God I read in thy Word of the fruits of the Spirit * Gal. 5.22 Lord my heart is a barren soile plant some of these supernatural fruits in me that I may be more useful and serviceable Lord I cannot be put off with other things Who wilt thou give grace to if not to such as ask and are resolved not to give over asking 3. If you would have grace engage the prayers of others in your behalf he is like to be rich who hath several stocks going he is in the way of spiritual thriving who hath several stocks of prayer going for him If you had a childe that were sick you would beg the prayers of others thou hast a soul that is sick sick of pride lust sick unto death oh beg the prayers of godly friends that God will heal thee with his grace a Moses and Jacob have much power with God Believers can prevail sometimes not only for themselves but for their friends Jam. 5.16 A godly mans prayers may do you more good than if he should bestow upon you all his lands of inheritance 4. If you would have grace frequent the means of grace lie at the pool of Bethesda wait at the posts of wisdoms door Inward grace is wrought by outward means the preaching of the Word is Gods Engine that he useth for working grace it is called the rod of his strength Psal 110.2 and the breath of his lips Isa 11.4 By this he causeth breath to enter out of this golden pipe of the Sanctuary God empties the golden oyle of grace into the soul the Ministry of the Gospel is called the Ministry of the Spirit 2 Cor. 8. because the Spirit of God ordinarily makes use of this to work grace this Ministry of the Spirit is to be preferred before the Ministry of Angels Quest Quest Why is the Word preached the ordinary means to convey grace why not conference or reading Answ Answ The reason is because God hath appointed it to this end and he will grace his own Ordinances 1 Cor. 1.21 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it pleased God What reason could be given why the waters of Damascus should not have as soveraign vertue to heal Naamans leprosie as the waters of Jordan only this because the Lord did appoint and sanctifie one to this work and not the other if therefore we would have grace let us wait where the Manna falls and there expect the dew of the Spirit to fall with Manna the power of God goes along with his Word How should we delight in Ordinances Sleidan saith there was a Church in France formerly which the Protestants call'd Paradise as if they thought themselves in Paradise while they were in the house of God those Ordinances should be our Paradise which are the power of God is salvation PROV 4.23 Keep thy heart with all diligence for out of it are the issues of life The spiritual watch THIS Book of the Proverbs is full of many Divine Aphorismes other parts of Scripture are like a golden chain the Verses are linked together by Coherence this Book is like an heap of gold Rings many precious sentences lie scattered up and down in it as so many jewels or sparkling Diamonds That title which some have given to Peter Lombard Solomon might justly challenge to be Master of the Sentences Solomon was the wisest of Kings as his Kingdom was a Map of the worlds glory so his Head was an epitome of the worlds wisdom He was endued with a Divine Spirit while he did write the Holy Ghost did dictate and surely among all his golden sentences none is more weighty and important than this Keep thy heart with all keeping for out of it are the issues of life Agitur de vitâ The Text is about matter of life and death the
words are mandatory for all counsels in Scripture carry in them the force of a command Keep thy heart Here is Gods solemn charge to every man like the Judges charge given upon the Bench. I shall first explain then apply 1. Keep the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to keep hath various significations 1. Sometimes it signifies munire to arm or fence a stroak at the heart kills fence thy heart 2. Sometimes it signifies c●rare to take care of a thing that it be not lost as one would take care of a piece of plate that it be not taken away 3. Sometimes it signifies custodire to keep in safe custody so keep thy heart lock it up safe that it may be forth-coming when God calls for it 2. Thy heart 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the heart is taken diversly in Scripture sometimes it is taken for the vital part Judg. 19.5 sometimes for the soul Deutr. 13.3 sometimes for the mind Prov. 10.8 sometimes for the conscience 1 John 3.20 sometimes for the will and affections Psal 119.36 I shall take it in its full latitude for the whole soul with all its noble faculties and endowments this is the depositum or charge every man is entrusted with the heart 3. With all diligence the original carries it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with all keeping the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies to keep with watch and ward a Christian is to set a continual guard about his heart Some read the words Keep thy heart supra omnem custodiam above all keeping * Junius nothing requires such strict custody a Christians heart must ever be in his eye 4. For out of it are the issues of life 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the heart is the fountain of life if the heart lives the body lives if the heart be touched death follows So the soul is a spiritual fountain out of it issues either sin or grace from this spring-head flow the streams either of salvation or damnation In the words there is 1. A duty Keep thy heart 2. The manner with all diligence 3. The reason for out of it are the issues of life Doctr. Doctr. It must be a Christians great care with all keeping to keep his heart we are to keep our eyes Job set a watch there Job 31.1 I made a Covenant with mine eyes c. We are to keep our lips David bridled his tongue Psal 39.1 I will keep my mouth as with a bridle but especially we are to look to our hearts Keep thy heart with all keeping The heart like Dinah will be gadding abroad and it seldom returns home but it is defiled It was the saying of an Heathen I never come home with such good desires as I went out with Christian thy chief work lies with thy heart Keep thy heart The Serpent when any danger is near keeps his head and to preserve his head will expose his whole body to injury so a wise Christian should especially keep his heart he should adventure his skin to keep a wound from his heart To amplifie this I shall shew that the heart must be kept 1. With all kind of keeping 2. At all times 3. The Reasons enforcing 1. The heart must be kept with all kinde of keeping 1. Keep the heart with all kind of keeping 1. Keep thy heart as thou wouldst keep a Temple the Temple was an hallowed place set apart for Gods worship so the heart is Augustissimum Dei Templum * Seneca the Temple of God 1 Cor. 3.16 This heart-temple must be kept pure and holy no filth * 2 Chron. 29.16 mus● lie here sweep the dust out of the Temple * Mundemus ●oc Templum quod non fumo nec pulvere sed mal● cogitatio nibus sordidatur Lactan. the vessels of the Temple were cleans'd 2 Chr. 29.15 Thus the memory affections conscience these Temple-vessels must be cleansed 2 Cor. 7.1 Christ whipped the buyers and sellers out of the Temple John 2. The cares of the world will be crowding into the heart now you must get a whip made of the threatnings of the Law and drive these money-changers out of the Temple of your heart let not Gods Temple be made an Exchange the Temple had a fire burning on the Altar take heed of strange fire but keep the fire of zeal and devotion flaming upon the Altar of thy heart do Temple-work offer up the sacrifice of a broken heart When the heart is Dei sacrarium a consecrated place an Holy of holies now God will walk there Many a mans heart is a Pest-house a Bedlam being polluted with sin this is to put Swine into Gods room this is to let the Divel come into Gods Temple Davids heart was a Temple dedicated Psal 119.38 2. Keep thy heart as thou wouldst keep a treasure A man that hath a great treasure of money and jewels will keep it with lock and bolt that it be not stollen Christian thou carriest a precious treasure about thee even all that thou art worth an heart * Particula divinae aurae the Divel and the world would rob thee of this jewel oh keep thy heart as thou wouldst keep thy life if thou art robbed thou art ruined few know the value of their hearts an husbandman can set a price upon corn but not on pearle men know not the worth of that treasure they carry about them therefore prefer other things keep thy heart as a treasure 3. Keep thy heart as thou wouldst keep a Garden Thy heart is a Garden * Ca● 4 1● weed sin out of thy heart Among the flowers of the Spirit weeds will be growing the weeds of pride malice covetousness these grow without setting therefore every day be weeding thy heart by prayer examination repentance 1. Weeds hinder the herbs and flowers from growing the weeds of corruption hinder the growth of grace where the weed of unbelief grows it hinders the flower of faith from growing 2. Weeds spoil the walks Christ will not walk in an heart over-grown with weeds and bryars Christ was sometimes among the lillies Cant. 6.3 never among the thistles Poor sinner thou complainest thou hast not communion with God time was when God did make himself known to thee but now he is grown strange and never comes near thee this is the reason sin hath spoiled Christs walks thy heart lies like the field of the sluggard Prov. 24.30 And will Christ walk there Indeed we read Christ was once in the wilderness when he was tempted Matth. 4.1 But he did not go thither for delight but that he might duel and skirmish with Satan 't is the garden Christ delights in oh weed thy heart daily let not thy heart be a Thicket for Satan 4. Keep thy heart as thou wouldst keep a Garrison The heart of man is a Garrison * Cor hominis tanquam castellum Bern. or Fort-royal this Garrison is besieged the Divel shoots his fiery darts of tentation
heart sometimes seems to be in a good frame but it soon alters set the water on the fire it boyles set it in the open Aire it freezeth Those good affections which boyle in the Church often freeze in the Shop one day a Christian is quick and lively in prayer another day like the Disciples heavy and sleeping Luke 22.45 At one time a Christian is like David when he danced before the Ark with all his might 2 Sam. 6.14 At another time like Sampson when his hair was shaved and his strength went from him Judges 16.19 When the gold hath been made pure in the fire it remains pure but it is not so with the heart when it hath been purified in an Ordinance it doth not remain pure it gathers new soile and dross The heart is one day humble next day proud one one day meek the next day passionate one day quick in its motion towards heaven the next day the clock is set back 't is with the heart as with a sick mans pulse which alters almost every quarter of an houre The heart being so full of variation and inconstancy it is needful to keep the heart with all keeping the heart like a Viol will soon be out of order therefore we must often scrue up the strings and keep the instrument in tune that we may make melody in our heart to the Lord * Ephes 5.19 3. The heart must especially be looked to and watched because the heart is the fountain of all our actions and purposes the heart doth either sweeten or poyson all we do the heart is the spring which makes the current of our life run either pure or muddy the heart is the Throne either of sin or grace If the root be soure no sweet fruit can grow upon it so if there be a root of bitterness springing u●n the heart * Hebr. 12.15 it is impossible that our services should give a sweet rellish As in the natural body the heart is the fountain of life if the heart lives the whole body lives if the heart be tainted and poysoned the body dies So it is in a spiritual sense if the inner man of the heart be holy then the thoughts and actions are holy if the soul be earthly and impure the actions receive a bad tin●ture In Religion the heart is all we judge of mens heart by their actions God judgeth of mens actions by their hearts the heart differenceth actions Amaziah did that which was right in the sight of the Lord but not with a perfect heart 2 Chron. 25.2 But of Asa it is said his heart was perfect all his dayes 2 Chron. 15.17 It is the heart gives the denomination to a thing now if the heart be the spring which makes our actions good or bad then the heart is chiefly to be watched and tended preserve the spring pure keep thy heart with all diligence Use 1 1. It shews a difference between the godly and the wicked Inform. the hypocrite looks most to externals he keeps his actions from blotting he sets a watch before his lips the godly man sets a watch before his heart his main work lies within doors he sees the first ebullitions and risings of sin and grieves for them he labours to set his heart right the heart is the Altar which sanctifies the gift Use 2 Reproof 2 If we are to keep our hearts with all keeping then it reproves four sorts of persons 1. Such as have no care at all about their hearts they will have a care to keep their land that it be not morgaged but no care to keep their hearts Salvation and blessedness depend upon the keeping of the heart yet how few mind their hearts they let the Divel get into their hearts The Shepherd keeps his Flock the Physitian keeps his Receits the Lawyer keeps his Evidences the Merchant keep his Wares the Covetous man keeps his gold but few that keep their hearts Quest Quest Why do not men keep their hearts Answ 1 Answ 1. Because they study not the preciousness of them what a treasure is the heart it is divinely ennobled it is capable of glory but few know the worth of this jewel 2 Men keep not their hearts because they are taken up Answ 2 in keeping other things Cant. 1.6 My own vineyard have I not kept Many a man may say I have been cumbred about the world I have been keeping my estate tending my lusts but my own heart hath been neglected my own vineyard have I not kept Judas was keeping the bag when he should have kept his heart 3. Men keep not their hearts because they keep themselves Answ 3 in sloth to keep the heart requires diligence and few are willing to put themselves to the trouble but should not a Merchant keep his books of account because he finds some trouble in it 4. Some think their hearts are so good that they need Answ 4 not spend time about them to keep them Many a bold sinner is presumptuously confident of heaven he thinks he wants nothing but taking possession hence it is he never looks into his heart or searcheth his evidences till it be too late 2. It reproves them who when they should be keeping their hearts fall asleep Mat. 13.25 While men slept the enemy came and sowed tares When men are asleep and neglect their spiritual watch the Divel comes and sowes poysonful seeds in their hearts seeds of malice pride lust they say when the Dragon is asleep a jewel is taken out of his head so the Divel takes away this jewel of the heart while men sleep in security 't is death for a Souldier to fall asleep upon his guard 3. It reproves them who instead of keeping their hearts have suffered them to be stollen away The love of the world hath stollen away mens hearts we may make an hue and cry after hearts Satan catcheth mens hearts with a golden bait this this is the reason why preaching the Word doth so little good Ministers preach to mens ears but the world hath stollen away their hearts 4. It reproves those who keep half of their heart but not all they have affections to good things but let out some rooms of their heart to sin H●rod did many things but he let out one room of his heart to the Divel he lived in incest * Ubi regnat peccatum non potest regna●e Dei regnum Au● The true mother would not have the childe divided God will not endure to have the heart divided he will have the whole heart kept for him Use 3 3. It exhorts Christians to keep their hearts Merchants complain of losses at Sea Exhort but whatever we lose if we can keep our hearts we shall do well enough Keep thy heart with all diligence This is I confess an hard work Eliah found it easier to shut heaven by prayer than to shut his heart from evil thoughts * Facilius est coelum obse●a●e quam
animum but this is the work every good Christian must set upon the keeping of his heart Quest Quest. But if my heart be evil must I keep it Answ Answ No Cast away the evil of it and keep that which is good as when we candy fruit we pare off the skin cut out the core and rotten and preserve that which is best so do with thy heart what is evil in it cast away what is good preserve if thy heart be hard cast away the stone keep it soft if hypocritical cut out the rotten keep that which is sound separate between the precious and the vile The sin in thy heart throw away the grace keep and cherish in a word do with thy heart as they in the Parable did with the Fish Mat. 13.43 They gathered the good into vessels but cast the bad away This is the great Exhortation Heart-custody sinners look to your hearts let not your hearts be bewitched and stollen away with the pleasures of the world Hos 4.11 Whoredom and wine take away the heart many have drowned their hearts in wine Clemens Alexandrinus reports of a certain Fish that hath not an heart distinguished from the belly as other fishes but hath the heart in the belly an emblem of Epicures their heart is in their belly Quest Quest What is the holy frame and posture in which I should keep my heart Answ Answ Keep thy heart awake Cant. 5.2 My heart waketh Psal 108.2 I my self will awake early * Ut te ipsum serves non expergisceris Hor. though we have been sluggish yet now it is high time to awake out of sleep Rom. 13.11 Take heed of sleeping in ignorance impenitency security the heart is naturally asleep sin may be compared to sleep 1. A man that is asleep his senses are tyed up * Somnus est ligatio sensuum so a sinner whose heart is asleep in sin his spiritual senses are taken away he is not sensible of sin or wrath Eph. 4.19 He is going to hell but knows it not he laughs in his sleep 2. Though in sleep the senses are bound yet the fancy is let loose the man dreams he is at a Banquet Isa 29.8 So when the heart of a sinner is asleep in sin yet his fancy is quick he fancies that he is an heir of the promise that God loves him fancy is let loose 3. Sleep hinders from action he that is asleep cannot work so a sinner fallen asleep in sin cannot work out his salvation 4. A man asleep is in danger to be robbed his money or jewels may be taken away so while the sinner is asleep he may be robbed of his soul oh therefore keep thy heart awake let the judgement of God on sinners be as an alarum to awaken thee make that prayer of David Psal 13.3 Lighten mine eyes that I sleep not the sleep of death 2. Keep thy heart jealous towards others exercise charity towards thy self jealousie the better the heart is the more suspitious Satan hath a party within us the heart is not true to its self therefore it needs excubation and caution little did Hasael think what was in his heart 2 Kings 8.13 Had one come to Noah and said Noah Thou wilt be drunk shortly he would have been ready to have defied him there 's all sin seminally in the heart whether will not the heart run if we do not guard it it will run to Idolatry Atheisme Incest Be ever jealous jealousie breeds vigilancy and vigilancy safety let thy heart be ever in thy eye keep it in with the curben-bit of mortification 3. Keep thy heart serious take heed of a light heart Zeph. 3.11 His Prophets are light The heart of the wicked is vain and in this sense is said to be little worth Prov. 10.20 If you put a feather in the scale it weighs nothing so feathery is the heart of a sinner vanity swims on the top and deceit lies at bottom Christ saith of the Sparrows Are not two of them sold for a farthing Matth. 10.29 Thousands of the sinners thoughts are not worth a farthing a light heart is like a ship without a ballast it soon overturns a vain heart will be unstable light things are blown every way a flashy Christian is not broken for sin sin seldome lies heavy on a light heart keep the heart serious fix it upon God Psal 57.7 O God my heart is fixed Grace consolidates the heart and keeps it from floting in levity poize thy heart with the thoughts of hell and judgement 4. Keep thy heart humble 1 Pet. 5.5 That is the best frame of heart which fits a man for Gods presence the humble heart is the Valley where God delights to walk the house where he will take up his residence * In spirituali deficio fundamen●i locus ponitur in imo Hugo de Claustr anim l. 1. Isa 57. The humble heart doth sibi ipsi vilescere * Ba●n it hath a low esteem of it self and an high esteem of others Phil. 4.3 The more humble the heart is the more fertil in grace those Meadows which lie low are the richest grounds Keep thy heart humble view thy own wants and others perfections the impostume of pride kills The Eagle lifts up the Tortoise into the Aire and then throws her down upon a rock and breaks her * Valer. Max. so the Divel lifts the heart up in pride and so destroys it 5. Keep thy heart sublime Col. 3.1 2. Seek those things which are above Keep down thy heart with the weight of humility yet mount it up with the wing of heavenly-mindedness when the heart is touched with the loadstone of the Spirit it ascends Thus you have seen the holy frame and posture the heart is to be kept in Quest Quest What means is to be used for the keeping of the heart 1. If you would keep your heart keep the Word in Answ 1 your heart Psal 119.11 Thy Word have I hid in my heart Rules for keeping the heart that I might not sin against thee The Word is a preservative and antidote to keep the heart from spiritual infection What are all the golden precepts in the Word of God but several receits for the keeping of the heart if a Mariner would keep his ship he must have his eye to the Star and the Compass the best way to keep our hearts is to sail by a Scripture-compass 2. If you would keep your heart have a care what Answ 2 company you keep incorporate your selves into the society of the Saints when the people of God are together they heat and quicken one another their counsels are seasonable their prayers helpful That ship is most likely to be preserved from Pirates which goes with a Convoy Christian Wouldst thou keep thy heart safe in thy voyage to heaven let the communion of Saints be thy Convoy take heed of coming near such as are irreligious they are infectious and will poyson thy
continual wrestling as Jacob wrestled with the Angel so we must wrestle with our corruptions we must not lay our sins in our bosome but set our feet upon their necks if we foyle our sins and get them down 't is not baseness or cowardise to strike them when they are down and we must wrestle with Satan wrestlers get one within another Satan labours to get within us and give us a fall as he did our first Parents What the Divel would have done to Christ thrown him from the pinacle of the Temple Mat. 4. that he did to our first parents he threw them down from the Pinacle of happiness therefore we must wrestle with him resist the Divel and he will flie from you Jam. 4.7 3. Sometimes the life of a Christian is compared to fighting 1 Tim. 6.12 Fight the g●od fight of faith Christ is the Captain of the Saints Forces he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Captain of their salvation Hebr. 2.10 We must all be Military persons faith is our shield hope is our helmet the Word of God our sword we come into the world as into a field-battel lusts war against us 1 Pet. 2.11 Good reason therefore that we should war against them 't is a day of battel and it is dangerous going abroad without our Armour 4. Sometimes a Christians work for heaven is compared to the running of a race so in the Text Know ye not that they which run in a race run all but one receiveth the prize So run that ye may obtain In which words the Apostle seems to allude as learned Writers observe either to the Olympian games which were kept every fifth year in honour of Jupiter or to the Isthmian games celebrated near Corinth in the honour of Neptune in which games they did put forth all their strength to win the prize So saith the Apostle Run the race of Christianity which is set before you with a winged swiftness that ye may obtain the prize of salvation The words fall into two general parts 1. The race to be run 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so run 2. The end of running 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that ye may obtain The Observations out of the Text are these two 1. That Christianity is a race 2. That wise Christians should labour so to run as to win the prize 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so run that ye may obtain Doctr. The first Doctrine is That Christianity is a race or the life of a Christian is a race Hebr. 12.1 Let us run with patience the race that is set before us We must be Viatores before we are Comprehensores heaven is a place of rest Hebr. 4.9 There remains a rest for the people of God No more wrestling there for then we have overcome the enemy the Saints in glory are set forth with Palms in their hands Rev. 7.9 in token of victory No more running there for the prize being obtain'd the Saints have Thrones to sit and rest themselves upon Revel 3.21 But this life is a race and it must be run and so run For the illustration of the Doctrine there are three things to be opened 1. Wherein a Christians life is compared to a race 2. Wherein the Christian race differs from other races 3. Why this race must be run 1. Wherein a Christians life is compared to a race that appears in four particulars 1. In a race there is the way or path to run in * Stadium locut erat in quo cursu c●rtabatur pedibus aut equis Estius so in Christianity there is the path-way in which we must run Psal 119.32 I will run the way of thy Commandments this is a good old way Jer. 6.16 'T is as good as it is old The way of sanctification and obedience is the way the Saints have gone in and the way which God hath been found in this way we are to run in is 1. A pleasant way 't is sweetned with comfort Prov. 3.17 All her wayes are pleasantness Rom. 15.13 Joy in believing The way of Religion is strowed with Roses oh the bunches of grapes that God cuts down the flagons of wine that he gives to those that turn their feet into this way 2. The way of Gods Commandments is a clean way 't is a way paved with holiness Isa 35.6 Christians may run in this way and never wet the sole of their feet the way of sin is defiling such as use themselves to this way the filth of hell sticks upon them in the wayes of sin there are such deep sloughs that men sink into perdition but the way of the Christian race is clean such as run this race cleanse themselves from all pollution of flesh and spirit perfecting holiness 2 Cor. 7.1 2. A race is laborious the running of a race is a violent exercise men do vires exerere put forth all the strength of their bodies in running Thus Christianity is a race for labour we must put forth all our strength in this race My soul followeth hard after God Psal 63.8 I reach forward Phil. 2.13 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word signifies I stretch my neck forward and saith the Apostle I press 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 toward the mark as runners in a race gather up their feet with all swiftness and stretch themselves forward to lay hold on the prize 't is not an idle wish a dead prayer will win the garland but a Christian must put forward with all speed and vigour of affection that he may obtain what he runs for 3. A race is short breve curriculum as Horace calls it the Greek word for a race 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies a short stage of ground the Olympian race contained six hundred feet 't was one hundred twenty paces long as Authors report A race is but a short space of ground it is soon run Thus our time being short our race cannot be long and this may encourage us in the race of Religion and keep us from being out of breath remember it is but a short race 1 Pet. 5.10 After ye have suffered awhile So I may say after ye have run awhile you will be at the end of the stage it is but awhile Christians and you shall have done wrestling weeping praying and you shall reap the fruit of all your prayers it is but awhile and you shall have done suffering and be among the spirits of just men made perfect it is but awhile and you shall be at the end of your race 1 Pet. 1.9 Receiving the end of your faith c. How should a childe of God rejoyce to think he hath got over a good part of his race and is almost at the end as Doctor Taylor Martyr once said I have but two stiles to go over and then I shall be at my Fathers house You that have set out betimes for heaven now are in your old age comfort your selves with this you have but a few steps more to take
the fruit of thy body and the fruit of thy ground blessed shall be thy basket and thy store c. If thou shalt keep the Commandements of the Lord thy God c. He that hath a fruitful Heart shall have a fruitful Crop God will make him to thrive in his Estate And his basket shall not only be full but blessed God will bless what he hath Here is not only the Sack full of corn but money in the mouth of the Sack 2. Spiritual blessings Exod. 19.5 If ye will obey my voice indeed then ye shall be a peculiar Treasure to me above all people You shall be my Portion my Jewels the Apple of my eye I will give Kingdoms for your ransome Jer. 7.23 Obey and I will be your God I will make over my self to you by a deed of gift What a Superlative distinguishing mercy is this Psal 14.4 Happy is that people whose God is the Lord. 3. Eternal blessings Heb. 5.9 Christ became the author of Eternal salvation to all them that obey him It is a salvation that bears date to eternity Oh then who would not be in love with obedience while we please God we pleasure our selves * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Homer II. We are ready to say as Amaziah 2 Chron. 25.9 But what shall we do for the hundred Talents Ye see brethren you are no losers by Obedience who did ever kindle a fire on Gods Altar for nought Mal. 1.10 3. I shall lay down some Rules to help Christians in Use 3 their Obedience Direction that it may be the Sacrifice of a sweet smelling savour to God Obedience must have these four Ingredients in it It must be cordial Deutr. 26.16 The Lord thy God hath commanded thee to do these statutes thou shalt therefore keep and do them with all thy heart 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 6.17 Ye have obeyed from the heart * Obedienta non servili metu sed cordis affectu servanda non timore poenae sed amorae justitiae Obedience without the heart is like fire on the Altar without Incense The heart is the seat of Love and 't is Love perfumes every duty The heart makes service a Free-will offering else it is but a tax Cain brought his sacrifice not his heart it was rather a mulct than an Offering Without the heart our Religion is like the Angels assuming dead bodies those bodies did eat and drink and walk but they had no soul to animate them They did movere not vivere how many do but assume the duties of Religion Obedience without the heart is hypocrisie How canst thou say I love thee when thy heart is not with me Judg. 16.15 2. Obedience must be extensive it must reach to all Gods Commandments 1 King 9.4 Luke 1.6 Quest But who can arrive at this Answ Though we cannot keep all Gods Commandements Legally yet we may Evangellically A good Christian 1. Consents to the equity of the whole Law Rom. 7.12 The Law is holy and just and good he sets his seal to every Law 2. He doth make conscience of every Law David had respect to all Gods Commandments Psal 119.6 his eye was upon all every command hath such authority upon a Christian that he knows not how to dispence with it though he fail in every duty yet he dares not neglect any duty 3. A child of God desires to keep every command Psal 119.5 O that my wayes were directed to keep thy statutes what a child of God wants in strength he makes up in will Rom. 7.18 To will is present The regenerate Will stands bent to all Gods Precepts 4. The gracious soul mourns that he can do no better when he fails he weeps O wretched man that I am Rom. 7.24 O this unbelieving heart how am I clog'd with corruption The good I would I do not Thus doth a Child of God lament his failings and judge himself for them and this is in a Gospel sense to keep every Law Unsound hearts as they are slight in their obedience so they are partial some duty they will dispense with some sinne they will indulge in this thing the Lord pardon thy servant 1 King 5.18 The Hypocrite will walk in some of Gods statutes not in all like a foundred Jade that will not set all his feet upon the ground but favours one foot Such foundered Christians there are who halt and limp and favour themselves in some things though it be to the hazard of their souls Herod could as well die as leave his Incest True obedience is universal as the Papists say we owe to our Mother the Church an Unlimited subjection its true here we owe to our God Unlimited obedience 3. The third Ingredient into obedience is Faith Heb. 11.6 Without faith it is impossible to please God therefore it is call'd the obedience of faith Rom. 16.26 Abel is said by faith to offer up 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 abetter sacrifice than Cain Sacra solet magnis rebus inesse fides Faith is a vital principle without it all our services are dead * Sicut in arbore quicquid pulchritudinis inest ex radice proficiscitus ita in anima quicquid decorum ex fide Aug. Therefore the Scripture speaks of dead works Hebr. 6.1 But why must this silver thread of faith run through the whole work of obedience I answer because faith looks at Christ in every duty and so both the person and offering is accepted Ephes 1.6 He hath accepted us in the beloved We are not accepted through our duties but through the beloved Faith looks at the Merit of Christ to take away the guilt and the Spirit of Christ to take away the filth which cleaves to the most angelical services thus it procures acceptance The High Priest under the Law looked at Christ in all when he offered up the Sacrifice he laid his hand upon the head of the beast slain which did point at the Messiah Exod. 29.10 So Faith laies its hand in every Gospel-sacrifice upon the head of Christ his Blood doth cleanse and the sweet Odours of his Intercession do perfume our holy things Now Faith looking up to Christ in every Duty finds acceptance Nay Faith doth not only look at Christ but it unites to Christ as the Siens is graffed into the stock Believers are part of Christ Christ and the Saints make one body Mystical no wonder then if God casts a favourable aspect upon those services which Believers present to him 4. Obedience must be constant Revel 2.26 He that keepeth my works unto the end to him will I give the morning star Faith must lead the Van and Perseverance must bring up the Rear There is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 something still remaing for a Christian to do Non currenti sed vincenti datur corona Aug. and he must not leave work till the night of death comes on Mnason of Cyprus an old Discilple Acts 21.16 what an honour is it for one
none of these breathings after Christ Job 21.14 They say unto God depart from us Christ and grace are dead commodities they care not for them if the heart move Christ-ward the Spirit as a divine loadstone hath been drawing it 2. Hast thou given up thy self by an universal subjection to Christ art thou his not only by education but dedication this is a good sign that Christ is thine Psal 27.8 When thou saidst Seek ye my face my heart said unto thee Thy face Lord will I seek Branch 5 5. Be thankful for Christ God hath done more for you in giving you Christ than if he had set you with the Princes of the earth Psal 113.8 He hath done more for you than if he had made you Angels for by vertue of your marriage-union with Ghrist you are richer than the Angels O be thankful for Christ God in giving you Christ hath done more for you than if he had given you the whole world he can make more worlds but he hath but one Son as Naomi said to her Daughters Ruth 1.11 Are there yet any more sons in my womb Hath God any more sons to give in short God cannot give a greater gift than Christ for in giving Christ he gives himself to us and all this calls aloud for thankfulness Use 4 Use ult Here is a breast of comfort to every man that hath Christ Consol Christ is all it is good lying at this fountain head When a Christian sees a deficiency in himself he may fee an all-sufficiency in his Saviour Happy is that people whose God is the Lord. Psal 144. ult That servant need not want who hath his Masters full purse at command he need not want who hath Christ for Christ is all and in all What though the Fig-tree doth not flourish if thou hast Christ the Tree of life and all fruit growing there In the houre of death a believer may rejoyce when he leaves all he is possessed of all as Ambrose said to his friend I fear not death because I have a good Lord. So may a godly man say I fear not death because I have a Christ to go to death will but carry me to that torrent of divine pleasure which runs at his right hand for ever more I will end with that 1 Thes 4.18 Wherefore comfort one another with these words MATTH 16.26 For what is a man profited if he shall gaine the whole world and lose his own soul or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul The preciousnesse of the Soul EVery man doth carry a treasure about him a DIVINE SOUL and that this Jewel should not be undervalued our Saviour here sets a price upon it he laies the soul in ballance with the whole world and being put in the scales the soul weighs heaviest What is a man profited if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul The world is a stately fabrick enriched with beauty and excellency it is like a curious piece of Arras set about with divers colours 't is a bright Myrror and Christal in which much of the wisdom and majesty of God is resplendent But as glorious as this world is every man doth carry a more glorious world about him a precious soul Magna res est anima It would banquer the world to give half the price of a soul it will undo the world to buy it and it will undo him that shall sell it If we can save our souls though we lose the world it is a gainful losse if we lose our souls though we gain the world our very gains will undo us For what is a man profited if he shall gain the whole world and lose his own soul or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul The words branch themselves into these five parts 1. A supposal of a purchase if a man shall gain The Proposition is hypothetical Christ doth not say he shall gain but puts a case if he shall gain it is not a certain purchase 'T is only supposed 2. The purchase it self the world 3. The extent of the purchase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the whole world the world with all its revenues and perquisits 4. The tearms of this purchase he shall lose his soul not that his soul shall be annihilated that were happy but he shall lose the end of his creation he shall misse of glory he shall lose his soul And the losse of the soul is amplified by two things First the Propriety his own soul that which is nearest to him that which is most himself subjectum á praestantiori the soul is the most noble part it is the man of the man he shall lose his own soul Secondly the irrecoverablenesse of the losse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What shall a man give in exchange for his soul The words are a Miosis there is lesse said and more intended What shall he give as if Christ had said alas he hath nothing to give or if he had something to give yet nothing will be taken for it the soul cannot be exchanged there shall be no bail or mainprize taken for it What shall a man give in exchange for his soul 5. Our Saviours Verdict upon this purchase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for what is a man profited as if Christ had said he will have an hard bargain of it he will repent him at last 't is but the fools purchase for what is a man profited c The observation is Doctr. that the soul of man is a jewel more precious than a world all souls are of one price in this sence that maxim in Philosophy holds true all souls are alike † The soul of Prince Peasant all are equal * Anima rationales sunt aequales every soul of more value than a world For the illustration of the Doctrine there are two things to be demonstrated First That the soul is very precious Secondly That it is more precious than a world 1. That the soul is very precious What Job saith of Wisdom I may fitly apply to the soul Man knows not the price thereof it cannot be vallued with the gold of Ophir with the precious Onyx or the Saphire the gold and the Chrystal cannot equal it and the exchange of it shall not be for jewels of fine gold Job 28.13 16 17. The soul is the glory of the Creation The inscription of it may be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The soul is a beam of God it is a sparkle of celestial brightnesse as Damascen calls it it is according to Plato a Glasse of the Trinity There is in the soul an Idaea and resemblance of God an Analogy of Similitude not proportion as the Schoolmen speak If David did so admire the rare texture and workmanship of his body Psal 139.13 15. I am wonderfully made I was curiously wrought in the lowest parts of the earth If the Cabinet be so curiously wrought what is the Jewel how richly and gloriously is the
world as the Diamond to the Ring it doth bespangle and beautifie A soul decked with grace is as the Dove covered with silver wings and golden feathers Excellency 4 4. Grace hath a soul-cleansing excellency By nature we are defiled sin is an impure issue 't is a be filthying thing 2 Cor. 7.1 A sinners heart is so black that nothing but hell can pattern it but grace is lavacrum animae a spiritual lavor therefore it is called the washing of regeneration Tit. 3.5 The grace of Repentance cleanseth Maries tears as they washed Christs feet so they washed her heart faith hath a cleansing vertue Acts 15.9 Having purified their hearts by faith Grace layes the soul a whitening it takes out the Leopards spots and turns the Cypriss into an azure beauty Grace is of a Celestial nature though it doth not wholly remove sin it doth subdue it though it doth not keep sin out it keeps it under though sin in a gracious soul doth not dye perfectly yet it dies daily Grace makes the heart a spiritual Temple which hath this inscription upon it Holiness to the Lord. 5. Grace hath a soul-strengthning excellency it enables a Excellency 5 man to do that which exceeds the power of nature it hath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist Grace teacheth to mortifie our sins to love our enemies to prefer the glory of Christ before our own lives Thus the three children by the power of grace marched in the face of death neither the sound of the Musick could allure them nor the heat of the Furnace affright them Dan. 3.17 They did bear up infracto animo prorsus chalybeo Grace is a Christians Armour of proof which doth more than any other Armour can it not only defends him but puts courage into him Tertullian calls Athanasius Adamas Ecclesiae an invincible Adamant * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys in Gen. hom 3. grace makes a Christian not only bear suffering but glory in suffering Rom. 5.3 A soul steeled and animated with grace can tread upon the Lyon and Adder Psal 91.13 and with the Leviathan can laugh at the shaking of a Spear Job 41.29 Thus doth grace infuse an heroick spirit and derive strength into a man making him act above the Sphere of nature Excellency 6 6. Grace hath a soul-raising excellency it is a divine sparkle that ascends when the heart is divinely touch'd with the load-stone of the Spirit it is drawn up to God Prov. 15.24 The way of life is above to the wise Grace raiseth a man above others he lives in the altitudes while others creep on the earth and are almost buried in it a Christian by the wing of grace flies aloft the Saints mount up as Eagles Isa 40.31 A believer is a Citizen of heaven there he trades by faith grace shoots the heart above the world Psal 139.17 Phil. 3. ult Grace gives us conformity to Christ and communion with Christ 1 John 1.3 Our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus A man full of grace hath Christ in his heart and the world under his feet grace humbles yet elevates Excellency 7 7. Grace hath a perfuming excellency it makes us a sweet odour to God Hence grace is compared to those spices which are most odoriferous and fragrant Myrrhe Cinamon Frankincense Cant. 4.13 There is a double perfume that grace sends forth 1 It perfumes our names Hebr. 11.2 By faith the Elders obtained a good report Grace was the spice which perfumed their names How renowned was Abraham for his faith Moses for his meekness Phineas for his zeal what a fresh perfume do their names send forth to this day The very wicked cannot but see a splendent Majesty in the graces of the Saints and though with their tongues they revile grace yet with their hearts they reverence it Thus grace is aromatical it embalms the names of men a gracious person when he dies carries a good conscience with him and leaves a good name behinde him 2. Grace perfumes our duties Psal 141.2 Let my prayer be set forth before thee as incense Noahs sacrifice was a perfume Gen. 8.21 The Lord smell'd a sweet savour The sighs of a wicked man are an unsavoury breath his solemn sacrifice is dung Mal. 2.3 There is such a noisom stench comes from a sinners duties that God will not come near Amos 5.21 I will not smell in your solemn Assemblies Who can endure the smell of a dead Corps but grace gives a fragrancy and redolency to our holy things Heb. 11.4 By faith Abel offered a more excellent sacrifice than Cain God testifying of his gifts Abels sacrifice was better sented God smell'd a sweet savour of it for he testified of his gifts If it be asked what this testimony was God gave of Abels sacrifice Hierom saith Deus inflammavit God set his sacrifice on fire * 1 King 18.38 so from heaven testifying his acceptance of Abels offering and if grace doth so perfume you wear this flower not in your bosomes but your hearts 8. Grace hath a soul-ennobling excellency it doth ennoble Excellency 8 a man Grace makes us vessels of honour * Summa apud Deum nobilitas clarum esse virtutibus Hier. it sets us above Princes and Nobles Theodosius thought it more dignity to be Christs servant and wear his Livery laced with the silver graces of the Spirit than to be great and renowned in the world Isa 43.4 Since thou wert precious in my sight thou hast been honourable Sin doth debase a man Christ tells wicked men their Pedigree John 8.44 Ye are of your father the Divel They may put the cloven foot in their Scutchion an ungracious person is a vile person Nahum 1.14 I will make thy grave for thou art vile the Hebrew word for vile 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies to be lightly esteemed There is nothing so vile but an ungracious man will do he is ductil and facil to any thing like wire which will be bent awry he will snare his conscience stain his credit run as a Lackey after the sinful injunctions of men but grace ennobles he who is divinely inspired as he is high-born 1 John 3.1 so he acts sutably to his birth he hates whatever is disingenuous and sordid The Saints are Called Kings and Priests for their dignity Rev. 1.6 and jewels for their value Mal. 3.17 Excellency 9 9. Grace hath a soul-securing excellency it brings safety along with it You all desire to be safe in dangerous times if sword or pestilence come if death peep in at your windows * Jer. 9.21 would you not now be safe nothing will secure you in times of danger but grace grace is the best life-guard it sets Christians out of Gun-shot and frees them from the power of hell and damnation Prov. 10.2 Righteousness delivers from death Do not righteous men dye yes but righteousness delivers from the sting of the first death and the fear of the second It was the