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A57982 The tryal & triumph of faith: or, An exposition of the history of Christs dispossessing of the daughter of the woman of Canaan Delivered in sermons; in which are opened, the victory of faith; the condition of those that are tempted; the excellency of Jesus Christ and free-grace; and some speciall grounds and principles of libertinisme and antinomian errors, discovered by Samuel Rutherfurd, professor of divinity in the University of St. Andrews. Published by authority. Rutherford, Samuel, 1600?-1661. 1652 (1652) Wing R2397A; ESTC R203460 278,378 498

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justice as we are ready to conceit of our Evangelick rejoicing and holiest works But they are to sorrow for offended love for the body of sin breaking out in scandals I may then have peace with God in the assurance of remission and removall of eternall wrath and yet not have peace with my own conscience 1. Because I may be perswaded that God in Christ hath forgiven me yet am I not to forgive my self 2. I am to beleeve that in Christ I am delivered from eternall wra●h and justified in Christ and yet to sorrow that I have sinned against Christs love 3. I may have peace sense of peace and Pardon in Christ and yea a necessary disquietnesse sorrow and tears that I should have been so unthankfull to so lovely a Redeemer so Christ doth commend the womans tears as a sign of love and of the sense of many sins pardoned Luke 7.44 Thou gavest me no water for my feet But she hath washed my feet with tears yet many sins were forgiven her v. 47. Hence I may 1. Beleeve the Remission of that sin for which I am to sorrow and for the Remission of which I am to pray and which I am to confesse Nathan said to David thy sin is pardoned yet the Spirit of God after that both confessed sorrowed prayed for pardon in David 2. We may comfort those that mourn for sin from assurance of Pardon and yet exhort them to be humbled and afflicted in spirit and to confesse sorrow and pray for Pardon so Antinomians rejoicing evermore after justification without sorrow remorse down-casting for sin at all is but fleshly wantonnesse I may have and ought to have a disquieted spirit and no peace with my self and yet peace with God even as the Sea after a storme and when the winds are gone and the Aire is calmed hath yet a raging and great motion by reason of wind inclosed in the bowels of the Sea and after the cool of a mighty Feaver yet are the humours in the body stirred and distempered But we are hence led to finde out resolution for divers cases of consciences after justification 1. Many dare not question their state of justification so are freed from the storms of apprehended wrath arising from the guilt of sin yet there is another storm within the bowels of the Sea arising from the indwelling of the body of guilt the storm before justification is lesse free lesse ingenuous more servile as looking to that Eternall wrath hanging over the soul for unpardoned sin this is more free and is a peaceable a gracious and heavenly storm raised not for sin unpardoned the Eternal punishment thereof but for sin as sin as indwelling not for the penall guilt and the sting of Hell in sin but for the sinfull guilt and the wounding of Christ. 2. It s unpossible this latter storme can be in the soul till the sentence of justification be pronounced as none can have the moved bowels of a son for the offence of a Father till he be a son 2. Another case is that many have an absolute loose and laxe peace and calmnesse great confidence of deliverance from Eternall wrath and so of a supposed pardon whose peace is convinced to be but a base outside and meer paintry and fairding because there is in them no storm for sin as sin and for the over-motions of boiling lusts no tendernesse to walk spiritually A Faith that eateth out the bottome and bowels of conscience of declining sin and walking with God is the justification of the Antinomians of the old Gnosticks of the naturall men all our professors are cured none or few are healed 3. Full assurance that Christ hath delivered Paul from condemnation yea so full and reall as produceth thanksgiving and triumphing in Christ Rom. 7.25 Rom. 8.1 2. may and doth consist with complaints and outcryes of a wretched condition for the indwelling of the body of sin Rom. 7.14 15 16.23 24. Then the justified that are whole not sick not pained are yet in their sins and not justified what ever Antinomians say on the contrary 4. The flesh in the justified cannot complain of indwelling sin but the flesh mixt with some life of Christ may raise a false Alaram of sins not pardoned which are really pardoned some false grief may and often hath its rise from a false and imaginary ground as a sanctified soul may praise God through occasion of a lying report of the victory of the Church of God when there is no such matter a sanctified child may spiritually mourn for the supposed death of his Father or that he hath offended his Father according to the flesh when his Father is neither dead nor offended at all So gracious affections as gracious may work spiritually upon supposed and false grounds when there is no cause as that the soul hath grieved his heavenly Father and that he is displeased when it is not so 5. Sin indwelling is a greater evill then the feared evill of ten hells and therefore there is more cause of sorrow for sin confession disquietnesse of spirit after justification then before because sin the only true object of fear and disquietnesse of spirit is both a ghuest dwelling in the soul and is more really and distinctly apprehended as a spirituall evil after the light of faith hath shown us the sinfulnesse of sin then ever it was discovered to be before 6. I doubt if justified souls are to be refuted in their complaints and fears for the indwelling of sin providing they fear not eternall wrath which fear is contrary to faith and so they fear not and sorrow not for that God hath changed the Court and the wind of his love turned in the contrary air and he hath forgotten to be mercifull 7. Faith chargeth us to believe that Grace shall at length finally subdue sin and as boat-men labour with oars to promove their course in sailing even when the wind sails and tide are doing somewhat to promove the course so doth faith which purifieth the heart set the soul on work to perfect holinesse in the fear of God and believeth also that God shall work both to will and to do It s not then good Physick for many exercised in conscience especially after their first conversion to apply only the honey and sweetnesse of consolations of the Gospel as if there were not any need of humiliation and sorrow for sin Yet it is to be cleared that 1. Sorrow for sin is no satisfaction for sin for the pride of merit is crafty and can creep in at a smal hole We think there is no repentance where there be no tears God of purpose withholdeth tears as knowing when water goes out wind cometh in 2. They are tenderly to be bound up and comforted in whom sin riseth up with a witnesse O what pity and humble on-looking should be here For a hell of pain in the body is nothing wheels racks whips hot irons breaking
chain of thy neck Holines and the image of God is the object of this love not the cause nor any hire it is not so properly love as the other God rather loveth persons desiring well and good to them then things Mr. Denne is not content with this distinction and why The love of Election and the love of Justification saith he are not diverse loves or divers degrees of love but divers manifestations of one and the same infinite love as when a Father hath conveyed an Inheritance to his son here is no new love from the Father to the son but a new manifestation of that love wherewith the Father loved the son before Answ. Men should not take on them to refute they know not what not any Protestant Divines ever taught that there is a new love in God or any new degree of love in God that was not in him before Arminians indeed tell us of new love new desires and of ebbing flowing love and hatred succeeding one to another in Gods minde these Vorstian blasphemies we disclaim it is indeed one and the same simple and holy will of God by which he loved Peter and John from eternity and choosed them to salvation by which he so loveth them in time as of Free-grace he bestoweth on them Faith Holiness Pardon in Christ and followeth these with his love and the former is called his love of good will to their person ere they do good or ill the latter his love of complacency to their State and the Lords new workman-ship in them as with the same love the husband chooseth such a one for his wife and loveth her being now his married Spouse Obj. 2. Men like those whom they love and so doth God Ans. We grant all these termes of Gods good loving and good-liking are chosen of Divines to expresse the thing God loveth and liketh Jacob not Esau from eternity ere he believe or do good but he doth not so love and like Jacob from eternity to bestow Faith and the Image of the second Adam on him while in time he hear the Word and be humbled for sin and the truth is the love of complacency is not a new act of Gods wil that ariseth in God in time but the declaration of Gods love of good wil in this effect that God is pleased to bestow faith his beauty of holinesse which maketh the soul lovely to God and it is rather the effect of eternall love then love And God hath a love of complacency toward the persons of the Elect love of good will though not of chusing good will toward them for their holiness Cant. 4.9 Obj. 3. It is absurd that God should love the Elect vvith infinite love to chuse them to salvation as touching their persons and withall to hate them with an infinite batred as workers of iniquity Answ. It were absurd I grant if Gods hatred to the Elect as sinners were any immanent affection in God opposite to his love by which he should be averse to their persons But Gods hatred to the Elect because they are sinners is nothing but his displicency against sin not against the person so as he is to inflict satisfactory punishment on the surety Christ for their sin A Father may so love his Prodigall Son as to retain a purpose to make him Inheritor of a Kingdom if he had a Crown for himself and to pay his debts and yet both hate and punish his profuse and lavish wasting of his goods Mr. Denne would teach us how love and hatred toward sinners doth consist The Law saith he and the Gospel speak divers things the one being the manifestation of Gods Justice tells us what we are by nature the other the manifestation of Gods mercy tells us what we are by Gods mercy in Jesus Christ. The Law curseth and condemneth the sinner The Gospel blesseth and justifieth the ungodly Ans. What is this else But that which Mr Denne and other Antinomians condemn in us How can one and the same unchangeable God curse condemn and so hate sinners as to punish them eternally and yet blesse justifie and love to eternall salvation their persons except they teach the same very thing which we do For the Law and the Gospel are no more contrary one to another then love to the persons of the Elect and hatred and revenging justice to their sins Mr. Denne would further clear the point thus What ever wrath the Law speeketh it is to the sinner under the Law although the elect are sinners in the judgment of the Law sense reason yea oftentimes conscience yet having their sins translated into the Son of God in whom they are elected they are righteous in Christ the Mediator Ans. The Law speaketh wrath in regard of its reign and dominion to death to the elect not yet converted and to the reprobate without exception of persons but it cannot speak wrath to the believer though he be one that daily sins and is under the Law that is under the rule of the Law now to be under the Law to Paul Rom. 6. and 7. is to be under the damnation of the Law in which regard believers are not under the Law but under the sweet reign of pardoning grace yet are they under the Law as a Tutor a guide a rule and that the rule and reign of the Law are different is evident 1. because the ruling power of the Law is an essentiall ingredient of the Law without the which the Law is not the Law the reign or damnation of the Law agreeth to the Law by accident in so far as man is a sinner which is a state accidental to the law 2. The Law is a rule and hath a proper guidance and tutory over the confirmed Angels and should have had over man if he had never sinned but the Law can have no reign to death over the confirmed Angels and man in that case as the Iayler hath no power over the man who was never an evil doer 1. We are sinners in the judgement of Law both sin dwelling in vs and 2. the guilt of the Law lying on us to condemnation But being once in Christ and justified we remain sinners as touching the indwelling blot but we are not sinners as we are justified in Christ as touching the Law-obligation to eternall condemnation from which we are fully freed But the justified and redeemed of Christ remain as formally and inherently sinners as Milk is formally white a Raven black Justification removeth not the indwelling of sin and so in regard of sense reason and conscience we are sinners to our dying day but not condemned sinners M. Denne objecteth We pray daily forgive us our sins then we are not righteous in Christ he answereth that Protestants say we begge greater certainty and assurance of forgivenesse but not content with this answer he addeth When we pray for forgivenesse we magnifie his grace who hath freely given us
body of Christ that ye should be married to another 5. For when we were in the flesh the motions of sins which were by the Law did work in our members to bring forth fruit unto death 6. But now we are delivered from the Law that being dead wherein we were held we should serve in newnesse of spirit and not in the oldnesse of the Letter Hence it is clear that there was a time in which Paul and the Elect at Rome were servants of sin Rom. 6.20 21. Under the lusts and motions of sin which work in their Members to bring forth fruit that is sins to death eternall Ro. 7.5 Ergo They were then under the curse of the Law and so far from blessednesse and the servants of sin Rom. 6.20 and persons in the flesh But the case is changed they are now not the servants of sin but servants of righteousnesse Rom. 6.22 Married to a new husband Iesus Christ Rom. 7.4 Whence came this change of two contrary states yea and before God contrary for before God it cannot be one state to be servants of sin under the Law and servants of God and under Grace Certainly from Faith on our part or some other grace in us at least there must be something of grace by which the alteration from a cursed estate to a blessed estate is made then faith is not a naked manifestation of the blessednesse of justification to the which we was intitled before we believed for before we believed we was in a cursed estate This also may be added that if Faith be but a Declaration or manifestation that we are justified before we believe Paul had no reason to deny that we are justified that is that we know to our comfort by works of holinesse that we are justified for works of sanctification are evident witnesses that we are in Christ and are justified 2 Cor. 5.17 1 Joh. 3.14 1 Joh. 2.3 Jam. 2.24.25 2 Pet. 1.10 3. It layeth down this false ground that grace is nothing in us but a meer comfortable sense and apprehension of Free-love and Grace is conceived to be only and wholly in Christ so that there is no inherent grace in the Believer by which he is differenced from an unbeliever sanctification and duties flowing from the habit of grace are nothing but dreams of Legall men Christ justifying the sinner is all and some in the Elect strict and precise walking conduce nothing to salvation To think that it can do any thing in order to salvation is to worship saith Mr. Denne an angry deity 2. To satisfie justice with our works fasting tears duties Therefore our 6. Propos. Is that it is a vain distinction of Master Denne who would have a reconciliation of God to man and of man to God 1. Because we read that man is reconciled to God Rom. 5.10 2 Cor. 5.18 19 20. Col. 1.20 21. Eph. 2.16 Man is the enemy whereas in Adam he was a friend and in Christ the second Adam he is made a friend but that God is reconciled to man or changed toward his own Elect from an enemy and a God that hateth their persons into a friend and lover of them I never read if at any time God be said to be comforted toward his people or eased these are borrowed speeches 2. Love of Election yea the love that putteth God on work to Redeem Call Justifie Sanctifie the Elect is no love bought with hire yea the price of Redemption which Christ gave for sinners cannot buy eternall love blood and the blood of God shed cannot woodset ancient love all the sins of Devils of men cannot forfeit it make sins floods and seas and ten thousand worlds of rivers they cannot quench that eternall coal and flame in the brest of so free a Lover as God in a word the shed blood of Christ is an ●ffect not a cause of infinite love 3. What ●hen doth reconciliation place any new thing in God No Doth it turn him from an Hater to a Lover No Reconciliation active on the Lords ●art is a change of his outward dispensation not ●f his inward affections Fury is not in me he ●ith himself Isa. 27.4 He cannot wax hot and ●●ry in the Acts of his spotlesse and holy will Reconciliation turneth not the heart but the hand of the Lord upon the little ones as he speaketh so that he cannot deal with or punish his elect as otherways he would do The Lords justice may be satisfied his love cannot be budded or hired and the effect of justice the inflicting of infinite wrath is diverted as a River that runneth East hath been made to run West and an issue of blood in one member of the body hath been diverted to run at another channell justice was to run through the Elect of God in the due legal punishing of the sinner which yet is extraneous to the just and eternall will of God but infinite wise mercy caused that River to run in another veine through the soul of Iesus Christ. 7. Propos. Joy of the holy Ghost is a fruit of the Kingdom of Grace Rom. 14.17 But not that joy spoken of Rev. 21.4 and Is. 35.10 Which excludeth all tears death sorrow crying all sighing as Mr. Denne dreameth so as joy can no more be separated from the Subjects of that kingdom then light from the Sun heat from the fire or ebbing and flowing can be stopped in waters as he saith far lesse is it true that actuall love and obedience doth inseparably follow this condition except we were made Angels when we are once justified nor is the Kingdom of God spoken of 1 Cor. 6.9 10. And the seeing of God Heb. 12.14 The Kingdom or state of Grace or the seeing of God in a vision of Faith here in this life but of the Kingdom of glory and of the vision of God in the other life as M. Denne expoundeth it that he may elude all necessity of holinesse but that which floweth from no obligation of any Law or Commandement of God But which is in our power of love to perform or not perform if we perform it not it s no transgression of any Law of God 1. M. Denne himself granteth pag. 84. God is not like some nigardly man who will not bid us welcome to his house unlesse we bring our cost with us Nor is holinesse required of us without Faith and before we believe and enter Citizens of the kingdom of Grace Nay by this interpretation 1 Cor. 6. We must be Justified and washed before we can inherit this Kingdom v. 9 10.11 But we are not to be washed and justified before we inherit the Kingdom of Grace and before we believe for so we should be justified and washed before we be justified and washed and the like I say of the Kingdom of God John 3.3 For it should follow that a man must be born again ere he be born again if he must be born again ere
chase few men to Christ three grounds thereof p. 44 How men naturally love the Devil p. 45. Satan how an unclean spirit p. 46 It s true wisedome to know God savingly p. 47. What hearing bringeth souls to Christ p. 49. Four defects in hearing p. 50. Hell coming to our senses in this life should not cause us believe without effectuall Grace p. 51. It s good to border near to Christ p. 52. SERM. VI. Crying in prayer necessary p. 53. Five grounds thereof p. 54. Prayer sometimes wanteth words so as groaning goeth for Prayer p. 55. How many other expressions beside vocall praying go under the liew of praying in Gods accompt ibid. 8. Objections removed p 55.56.57.58 59 60. Some affections greater then tears p. 56. Looking up to heaven praying ibid. Breathing praying p. 57. That wher●in the least of prayer the Minimum quod sic consisteth ibid. Broken Prayers are Prayers p. 58. The Lord knoweth non-sense in a broken spirit to be good sense p. 59. SER. VII Why Christ is called frequently the Son of David not so the Son of Adam of Abraham p. 62. Christ a King by Covenant p. 63 What things be in the Covenant of Grace ibid. The parties of the Covenant p. 64 Christ hath a sevenfold relation to the Covenant 1. He is the Covenant it self 2. The Messenger 3. The Witnesse 4. The Surety 5. The Mediator 6. The T●stator 7. The principall party contracter p. 64 65. Christ the Covenant it self ibid. Christ a Messenger of the Covenant in 4. particulars ibid. A Witnesse in four things p. 66. A Surety in three p. 67 68. A Mediator in three things 1. A Friend 2. A Reconciler 3. A Servant p. 69. Christ a servant of God and our servant ibid. Christ confirmed and sealed the Testament p. 70 Christ the principall consederate party ibid. The Covenant made with Christ personally not mystically proved from Gal. 3.16 The contrary Reasons answered p. 71. A Covenant between the Father the Son proved ibid. Of the Promises of the Covenant p. 73. Two sorts of Promises p. 74. Christ took a new Covenant right to God p. 75. Five sorts of promises made to Christ and by proportion to us ibid. SERM. VIII The condition of the Covenant p 77. Libertines deny all conditions of the Covenant p. 78. The new Covenant hath conditions to be performed by us ibid. Six Objections removed p. 77 78 79 80 81. A twofold dominion of gracious and supernaturall acts p. 79. We are not justified before we beleeve proved by six Arguments p. 81. A condition taken in a threefold Notion p. 83. It s not a proper condition by way of strict wage and work when we are said to be justified and saved upon condition of faith p. 85. The Freedom 2. Eternity 3. Well-ordering of the Covenant the three properties thereof p. 87 88. The freedom of the Covenant is seen in regard 1. of Persons 2. of Causes 3. of Time 4. of manner of dispensation p. 86 87. Uses of the Doctrine of the Covenant p. 88 89 90. SERM. IX Christ God and man and our comfort therein p. 91. Christ immediate in the Act of Redeeming us and so sweeter ibid. Christ incomparable p. 92. Four other necessary uses p. 91 92 93 94 95. To believers all temporall favours are spiritualized and watered with mercy four grounds thereof p. 96. By what reason our Father as a Father giveth us spiritual things by that same he giveth us all things p. 98. Mercy originally in Christ and how p. 99. SERM. X. Parents affection their spirituall duty to children p. 102. Thirteen Practicall Rules in observing passages of Divine providence p. 103 104 105 106 107 108. 1. We are neither to lead nor to stint Providence p. 103 2. But to observe God in his wayes and not to look to by-ways of providence ibid. 3. Omnipotency not laid down in pawne in any means p. 104. 4. God walketh not in the way that we imagine ibid. 5. Providence in its concatenation of Decrees actions events is one continued contexture going along from Creation to the day of Christs second coming without one broken threed p. 105. 6. The spirit is to be in an indifferency in all casts of Providence p. 106. 7. Low desires best p. 107. 8. We are to lie under providence submissively in all ibid. 9. Providence is a mistery ibid. 10. Walketh in uncertainties toward us ibid. 11. Silence is better then disputing p. 108. 12. It s good to consider both what is inflicted who ibid. 13. God alway ascendeth even when second causes descendeth ibid. SERM. XI Every temptation hath its taking power from the seeming goodnesse in it p. 109. Reasons why this was a temptation to the woman p. 110. The scope of the Temptation to make the tempted believe there is none like him p. 111. The non-answering of Christ is an answering ibid. 5. Reasons of the Lords not hearing of Prayer p. 113. Seven wayes prayers are answered ibid. Praying in Faith alwayes heard even when the particular which we suit in Prayer is denied p. 114. Faith in one and the same Prayer seeketh and knocketh and answereth and openeth to it self p. 115. The light of saving Faith and the Propheticall light of the Pen man of the word of God differ not in ●p●ce and nature ibid. The dearest not admitted into God at the first knock p 116. SERM. XII Naturall men and even the renewed in spirit in so far as there remaineth some flesh in them are ignorant of the mystery of an afflicted spirit p 117. Peace of conscience is a work of Creation p. 118. A reason why it s so hard to convince the deserted p. 119. Christ sweeter to the deserted then all the world ibid. Difference between Gods trying and the creatures temp●ing in three Positions p. 121. A Creature cannot put a fellow creature to act sin upon an intention of trying him ibid. In the actions of creatures we must know Quis 2. Quid 3 Quare Who ●ommandeth 2. What 3. And for what end In Gods actions It is enough to know Quis Who that is Jehovah p. 122. Four doubts of the tempted p. 124 125. In the sending of Christ to the lost sheep of the house of Israel there be three things considerable 1. His designation 2. Qualification 3. Commission p. 126. The Son most fit to be Mediator ibid. How Christ is qualified p. 127 His Commission ibid. It is not properly grace that we are born its grace that Christ is born p. 128. Gods hidden decree and his revealed will opened p. 129 A twofold intention in the promises ibid. How and who are to believe the Decree of Reprobation concerning themselves p. 130 SERM. XIII It s a priviledge of mercy that Christ is sent to the Jews first p. 131 Nine priviledges of the Jews p. 132. The honour and priviledges of Britain p. 133. The Redeemed called sheep upon four grounds p. 134. How passive the Redeemed are in the way to
heaven in five particulars ibid. The Saints most dependent creatures p. 135. How we know the Scripture to be the Word of GOD two grounds one in the subject another in the object p. 136. Phancy leadeth not the Saints but Faith p. 137. How the Saints need a fresh supply of Grace from Christ though they have a habit and stock of grace within them proved by six reasons p. 138. Grace and glory but one continued thred p. 140. Three considerations we are to have of Gods work in leading us to Heaven p. 140 141. Faith is both active and passive ibid Desertions have reall advancing in the way to Heaven in eleven particulars ibid. We are not freed from Law-Directions p. 142. Actuall condemnation may be and is separated from the Law ibid. Two Objections removed p. 142. How works of holinesse conduce to salvation three things herein to be distinguished p. 143. We are to doe good works both from the principle of Law and love p 145. O●her three Objections removed ibid. Of the Letter both of Law and Gospel diverse errors of Libertines touching the point p. 146. The Scriptures are not to be condemned because they profit not without the teaching of the Spirit proved by three reasons p. 147. Repentance different from Faith proved against Liberti p. 148 Repentance the same in the Old and New Testament p. 149. SERM. XIV In what sense Christ came to save the lost p. 150. A twofold preparation for Christ to be considered p. 151. Conversion is done by foregoing preparations and successively proved by four reasons p. 152. Sense of poverty fitteth for Christ p. 154. The Objections of D. Crispe removed sinners as sinners not fit to receive Christ p. 155. How Christ belongs to sinners under the notion of sinners ibid How the spirit acts most in the Saints when they endeavour least p. 157. The marrow of Libertinisme to neglect sanctification and to wallow in fleshly lusts ibid. Christs death maketh us active in duties of holinesse proved from three grounds p. 158. How Christ keepeth us from sin p. 159. SERM. XV. Eight necessary duties r●quired of a beleever under Desertion 1. Patience 2. Faith c. p. 160. Hope Prophesieth glad tidings at midnight p. 162. It s a blessed mark when temptations chaseth not a soul from duties illustrated in three cases p. 166. It argueth three good things to go on in duties under a temptation p. 167. Antinomians take men off duties p. 169. Christ tempted cannot sin saints tempted dare not sin p. 170 Faith traffiqueth with heaven in the sadd●st storms p. 171. SERM. XVI Nationall sins may occur to the conscience of the childe of God in his approach to God p. 172 173. A subtill humble pride the disease of weak ones who dare not apply the promises p. 175. Sense of Free-grace humbleth exceedingly ibid. How far forth conscience of wretchednesse hindereth any to come to Christ p. 177. Who ever doub●eth if God will save him doubteth also if God can save him p. 179. Sin k●●peth not the door of Christ to hold out the sinner p. 180 Sense of sin and sense of the grace of Christ may consist p. 181. Holy walking and Christs excellency may both be felt by the believer holy walking considered as 1. A duty 2. A mean 3 A thing promised in the Covenant of Grace ibid· How we may collect our state and condition from holy wal●ing p 182. The error of D. Crispe and Antinomians herein p. 183 Christ a great house-holder p. 184. The priviledge of the children of the house ibid. Christ the bread of life p. 185. Communion between the Children and the first heir Christ in five particulars ibid. The spirit of an heir and of a servant p. 186. There is a seed of hope and comforts in the hardest desertions of the Saints in three particulars illustrated p. 187. SERM. XVII Grace maketh quicknesse and wittinesse of heavenly reasoning p 189. Faith contradicteth Christ tempting but humbly and modestly p. 190. The Saints may dispute their state with Christ when they dare not dispute their actions p. 191. We are to accept humbly and with patience of a wakened conscience but not to seek a storming conscience ibid. True humility and its way in seven particulars see the place p 192. How we are to esteem every man better then our selves p. 195. The proud man known a far off p. 195. Graces lowlinesse in taking notice of sinners p. 196. Causes of unthankfulnesse p. 197. A justified soul is to confesse sin proved by three Arguments p. 199. And to mourn for sin by divers reasons p. 202. If we be not to mourn for sin committed because it s pardoned nor should our will be averse from the committing of it because before it be commited it is also pardoned as Antinomians teach p. 203. Libertines conspire with Papists in the doctrine of justification p. 206. SERM. XVIII How sins are removed in justification how not p. 207. There remaineth sin formally in the Justified proved by si● Arguments p. 208. How sin dwelleth in us after we are justified p. 209 A twofold removall of sin one Morall or Legall in justification another Physicall in our sanctification p. 210. The difference between the removall of sin in justification and its removall in sanctification p. 214. Seven grounds why sin dwelleth still in the justified person 216 How sins past present and to come are pardoned in justification p. 224. There 's a twofold consideration of justification but not two justifications p. 225. Sins in three divers respects are taken away according to Scripture ibid. Christs satisfaction performed on the Crosse for sin is not formally justification but only causatively fundamentally or meritoriously p. 226. There 's a change in justification p. 227. How sins not committed are remitted p. 228. There is but one justification of a beleever illustrated by a comparison p. 229. There 's a difference between Pardon of sin the justification of the person and the repeated sense of the pardon p. 230. Justifying Faith is some other thing then the sense of justification p. 232. How fear or hope or reward of glory have influence in our holy walking p. 233.234 Objections removed p. 235. SERM. XIX The Lord Jesus is so made the sinner in suffering for sin as there remaineth no sin in the sinner once pardoned as Antinomians teach especially Doctor Crispe p. 235. Sin so laid on ●hrist as that it leaveth not off to be our sin 238 The guilt of sin sin it self are not one the same thing 241. An inherent blot in sin and the guilt and debt of sin ibid. Two things in debt as in sin p 242. The blot of sin two wayes considered ibid. A twofold guilt in sin one intrinsecall and of the fault another of the punishment and extrinsecall p. 244. Reasons why sin and the guilt of sin cannot be the same 245 Christ not intrinsecally the sinner p. 250. Imputation of sin no imagination no lie p. 251.
smitten of God in the dark and so wicked men never do come lawfully out of affliction they see not God nor sin and for that cometh not out of prison by the Kings keyes but they break the Goal and leap out at a window the Land is to see all the circumstances of this bloody War in these three Kingdoms We are to put a difference between Gods afflicting one man and a whole Church Now God hath his fire in our Sion and we wonder that Wars have lyen on Germanie twenty six years and that for divers years the sword hath been on us in these Kingdoms 1. There be many vessels to be melted a fire for an afternoon or a war for a morning of a day or a week cannot do it Seven dayes sicknesse of a dying Childe putteth David to go softly and in sackcloth Years are little enough to humble proud Scotland and England God humbled Israel 400. years and above in Aegypt and kept them forty years in the Wildernesse and Judah must lye smoaking in the Furnace seventy years 2. One Temple was forty six years a building God hath taken eighty years to Reform England and many years to Reform Scotland and the Temple is not builded yet give to our Lord time hope and wait on 3. Babylon is a great Cedar that cannot fall at the first stroak it s not a work of one day or a year to bring that Princes the Lady of Nations from Her Throne of glory to sit in the dust and take the Milstones and grinde meal SERMON V. VExed with a Devil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 She is Devilled that is fully possessed The malice of the Devill is a naturall agent and worketh as intently and bently as he can as agens maximum quod sic the fire putteth forth all its strength in burning the Sun heateth and inlightneth as vehemently as it can A Milstone fallen from the sphere of the Moon down to the earth useth no moderation or abetment in its motion The malice of Hell being let loose it worketh mischief by nature not by will Satans possession is full Peter saith to Ananias Acts 5.3 Why hath Satan filled thy heart to lye against the Holy Ghost As there is a fulnes of God Eph. 3.19 so there 's a fulnesse of the Devil as Rom. 1.29 being filled with all unrighteousnesse It is no wonder that Cavaliers and Malignants work as their Father the nature of the Father is in the son modus operandi sequitur modum essendi the manner of working is sutable to the nature of the worker hel works like Hell Ier. 3.5 Behold thou hast spoken and done evil as thou couldst Esa. 5.18 They draw sin and iniquity not with a rush or a threed but with ●ords of vanity and with a cart rope Mic. 7.3 They do evil with both hands earnestly All that malice and Hell could do of cruelty to young old to women sucking infants hath been done in Ireland and England The Devil in his element is twice a Devil he is in his own when he formeth and actuateth bloodie instruments and he aboundeth in his own sphere Satans malice its alone is great and a sinners wrath is heavier then stones and sand but when they are conjoyned as united force is stronger who can stand before them Christs Lambs have been preserved amidst Devils and men since the Creation amongst Wolves by no humane power and strength Observe That all that came to Christ have been forced through some one necessity or other either a leaprous body blind eyes a palsey a bloody issue a withered arme or a dying son and that some have been brought to Christ at least their Parents or Friends have come to Christ through reason of bodily possession by the Devil but we read of none that came through reason of the Devil 's spirituall possessing of them either by themselves or others 1. There is much flesh and much nature in us and so much sense and little spirit and little of God a blinde eye will chase thee to Christ a soul under the Prince of darknesse will not 2. We are all body and life and time but we are not all Soul and Spirit and Eternity Heaven is far from being the master Element in us 3. Misplaced love is much Ioh. 8.44 Ye are of your Father the Devil saith Christ to the Jews every childe loveth the Father Why And men love not the Devil doth not every wretch through natures instinct abhor the Devil Is not this the Mother-devotion of any wretch that knoweth nothing of God from the womb God save me from the Devil and all his works I have nothing to do with that fowl spirit It s true There 's a physicall hatred of the Devil as he is a spirit an Angel and the Pursevant of divine justice inflicting evil of punishment on all men naturally but there 's in all men an inbred morall love of the Devil as he is a fallen spirit tempting to sin here every prisoner loveth this keeper like loveth like broken men and Bankrupt flee together to Woods and Mountains an Out-law loveth an Out-law Fowls of a feather flock together the Devil and sinfull men are both broken men and Out-laws of Heaven and of one blood wicked men are 1 Ioh. 3.10 The children of the Devil they have that naturall relation of Father and Son There 's of the Devils seed in sinners there 's a spirituall concupiscence in Devils to lust against Gods Image and Glory and Satan findeth his own seed in us by nature to wit concupiscence a stem a sprouting and childe of the house of Hell It were good we knew our own misery the man resolveth a prisoner has a sweet life who loveth his own chains because made of gold and hateth them not because chains and falleth to Paint the walls of his Dungeon and to put up Hangings in his Prison and will but over-gild with gold his Iron Fetters Oh! are we not in love with our own Dungeon of sin and do we not bear a kinde love to our Father the Devill We bring in provision for the flesh and nourish the Old man as old as since Adam-first sinned Alas we never saw our Father in the face we love the Devill as the Devill fallen in sin but we see him not as a Devill but only under the embroderies of golden and silken temptations we sow to the flesh we Inne our Crop to the Devill but we know not our Land-lord and because sense and flesh is nearer to us then God we desire more the Liberties of State free commerce and peace with the King then Christs Liberties the power and purity of the Gospel that we may negotiate with Heaven and have peace with God Vnclean spirit This is the quality of this Devil An unclean Devil Now whether he be called so because he tempted the Maid to some prodigious acts of uncleannesse or because in generall he tempteth to uncleannesse of
place the Father his place Faith its place the sinner his place 1. Vse· All without this covenant are miserable Christ undertaketh not for them The Lord dealeth with them by Law read Deut. 28. Lev. 26. Job 20. chap. 18. and 27. They have bread but it s not sure not so the beleever Isa. 33.16 His bread shall be given him his waters shall be sure The beleever has all by the free holding of Grace his bread by covenant his sleep by promise safety from the sword to lie down and no man shall make them afraid by covenant his land is tilled by the Covenant of Grace Ezek. 36.34 The man not in this covenant hath all by tenour of the condemning Law the weapon of Steel shall go through bones and liver by vertue of the curses of the Law 2. Men never try their standing whether they be under the first husband of the Law or if they be married to the better husband Christ and under Grace where art thou O sinner in Christ or no They live at random and by chance not knowing that the two covenants hath influence on eternity a man is judged according to his state rather then his actions 3. No state so stable and sure as the covenant of Grace Christ is surety for the believer that he fall not away Christ honour is ingaged he shall not have shame of his Tutory Isa. 50.7 I know I shall not be ashamed saith Christ It s his honour to raise me when I fall 4. We may use arguments of Faith challenging God Jer. 31.18 Turn thou me and I shall be turned why For thou art the Lord my God The Covenant is Faiths Magna Charta the grand mother-promise all prayers must be bottomed on this Jer. 14.21 Do not abhor us Why vers 22. Art not thou he the Lord God Isaiah 64.9 Remember not our iniquity for ever behold see we beseech thee Why we are all thy people every one doth for its own the Prince for his own People the Father for his own children yea the damme for her own young ones the Shepherd for his own sheep and God for his own in covenant with him an offensive and defensive covenant of Peace and War taketh in the believer and all that serveth him the stones of the field Job 5.23 and in covenant with the horse thou ridest on that it shall not cast thee and crush thee in covenant with the sword with the Canon and Musket with the Spear and Bow yea with Death as a Boat to carry thee over the water to thy fathers Land So the Covenant I 'le blesse them that blesse thee and curse them that curse thee Isa. 54.16 I have created the water to destroy Creation is a work of omnipotency only no creature can do it Then fire cannot consume water cannot drown the Saints except by a dispensation of the Lord. 5. Christ is not fastned as a loose nail or as one broken or rotten wedge in the covenant He is there as a nail in a sure place Zach. 10.4 Isa. 22 23. Hang all the vessells of the Fathers house on Christ He cannot break O sweet we are given to the Surety of the covenant Ioh. 17.3 Son answer for him thy life for his life thy glory for his glory and render account of him when the Kingdom shall be given up to the Father Adam was surety in the first covenant and so it fell out free-will holdeth all sure in the Arminian Covenant 6. In desertion to swim upon the covenant keepeth from sinking so Christ in his sad and black hour My God my God why hast thou forsaken me SERMON IX O Lord thou Son of David The one word O Lord holdeth forth Christs Godhead the other Son of David holdeth forth his Man-hood Here 's the perfection of our Mediator in that he is the substantiall Covenant and Emanuel God with us or God us in a personall union the substantiall marriage and aliance between the two houses of Heaven and Earth God and clay 2. He is not ashamed to call them brethren Heb. 2.11 And why would he take part of flesh and blood but because he would be a child of our house vers 14. 3. He would be of blood to us not only come to the sick and to our bed side but would lie down and be sick taking on him sick clay and be in that condition of clay a worm and not a man that he might pay our debts and would borrow a mans heart and bowels to sigh for us mans eyes to weep for us his Spouses body legs and arms to be pierced for us our earth our breath our life and soul that he might breath out his life for us a mans tongue and soul to pray for us and yet he would remain God that he might perfume the obedience of a High Priest with heaven and give to justice blood that chambered in the veins and body of God in whom God had a personall lodging 1. Vse O what love Christ would not intrust our redemption to Angels to millions of Angels but he would come himself and in person suffer he would not give a low and a base price for us clay he would buy us with a great ransom so as he might over-buy us and none could over-bid him in his market for souls if there had been millions of moe believers and many heavens without any new bargain his blood should have bought them all and all these many heavens should have smelled one Rose of Life Christ should have been one and the same Tree of Life in them all O we under-bid and under-value that Prince of love who did over-value us we will not sell all we have to buy him he sold all he had and himself too to buy us 2. Vse What an incomparable thing must the Mediator God-man be There 's no fair creature no excellent one but there 's a peece of nothing and creature-basenesse and creature-vanity in it even a thing of blood to the mother-nothing of the creation of God there is no Rose but it hath a Brier growing out of it except the Rose of Sharon that flower of the field not planted with hands the Son without a Father and who shall declare his generation A Rose that should smell and cast out odours for a mile of earth or for ten miles could draw to it many beholders but if it should smell for the bounds of the half of the earth it should be more admirable the flower that sprang out of the root of Jesse spreads his beauty and the odours of his myrhe through heaven and earth could the darknesse of hell stand and look on the face of the Sun blacknesse of darknesse should be better seen but convene all the little pieces of the Creation summon before Christ faire Angels all the Troops of the sin-lesse glorified spirits the broad skies fair heavens lightsome stars all the
children are our self and their sins white and innocent sins to us Eli honoured his sons more then God and God put a mark of wrath on his house My daughter Observe the rise of this passage of providence Christ wearied of Judea came to the borders of Tyre and Sidon 2. He went to a house to hide himself from her 3. She heard of Christ 4. The hard condition her daughter was in tormented with a Devil upon this God driveth her to Christ 5. Christ is hereby declared to be the Saviour of the Gentiles 6. An illustrious miracle is wrought see a wise consociation of many acts of Providence as one cluster of passages of the Art of wise omnipotency as many herbs and various sorts of flowres make up one pleasant and well smelled Meadow many Roses Lillies and the like one sweet smelling Garden in which these practicall considerations may have our thoughts for Rules 1. Rule Go not before God and Providence but follow him prescription of such and such meanes to God and no other is to stint omnipotency and to limit the holy one of Ilrael The true God tied to a forbidden Image to receive glory is made an Idol so to fetter God to this mean as if not free to work by other meanes is Idolatrous 2. Rule The book of Providence is full both Page and Margin God hath been adding to it sundry new Editions and like children we are in love with the golden covering the Ribbons Filleting and the Pictures in the Frontis-piece but understand little of the Argument of Providence Psal. 107.43 Who so is wise and will observe these things even they shall understand the loving kindnesse of the Lord Job 32.7 I said saith Elihu dayes things of Providence shall speak and multitude of years should teach wisdom God is worthy to be Chronicled 3. Rule God hath not laid his God-head and omnipotency in pawn in the power of means so as God useth meanes because they are efficatious but because he useth them they are efficacious A Ram horn is as near of blood to cause the walls of Jericho fall in Gods hand as Engines of war a straw is a spear to omnipotency 4. His wayes are often contrary to our judgement we lie and wait the way to see God come upon the tops of mountains but we are deceived he cometh the lower way through the valleys we thought omnipotence must change the Kings heart ere such Brambles as Prelates be thrown over the hedge but our King is himself and omnipotence taketh another way the Disciples thought that Christ would make them Kings and restore the Kingdom Christ is dead and buried and he goeth another low way through deaths belly to make them Kings and Priests to God Christ goeth away there be great endeavours and running through streets Cities walls O streets saw you him O broad wayes saw you him whom my soul loveth O dear watchmen where is he But they are all dumbe Christ taketh a lower way Cant. 3.4 It was but a little that I passed from them but I found him whom my soul loveth 5. Rule Slander not Gods wayes of Providence with the reproach of confusion and disorder to God all his works are good very good as were the works of creation There is a long chain and concatenation of Gods wayes Counsells Decrees Actions Events Judgements Mercies and there is white and black good and evil crooked and straight interwoven in this web and the links of this chain partly gold partly brasse iron and clay and the threeds of his dispensation go along through the Patriarchs days Adam Enoch Noah Abraham Isaac and are spun through the ages of Moses and the Church in Egypt and the willdernes and come through the times of the Kings of Israel and Iudah and the captivities of the Church and descend along through the gene●rations of Prophets Christ the Apostles persecuting Emperors and Martyrdomes of the witnesses of Jesus slain by the woman drunken with the blood of the Saints while the end of the threed and last linke of the chain be tied to the very day of the marriage of the Lamb now in this long contexture of divine Providence you see 1. Not one threed broken My father worketh hitherto and I work saith Christ providence hath no vacancy but causes events actions ways are all bordered one upon another by the wisdom of Providence so that links are chained and fettered to links not by hazard or chance 2. Though this web be woven of threeds of divers colours black and white comfortable and sad passages of Gods Providence yet all maketh a fair order in this long way Jacob weepeth for his dead child Joseph Joseph rejoiceth to come out of the prison to reign David danceth with all his might before the Ark David weepeth sore for Absalon his sons miserable death Iob washeth his steps with butter and the Candle of the Almighty shineth on his head and Iob defileth his horne in the dust and lieth on ashes and mourneth all is beauty and order to God 6. Rule Put the frame of the spirit in Equilibrio in a composed stayed indifferent serenity of mind looking to both sides black and white of Gods providence so holy David was above his crosse 2 Sam. 15.25 26. If I shall finde favour in the eyes of the Lord he will bring me again and shew me both the Ark and his habitation But if he thus say I have no delight in thee behold here am I let him do to me as seemeth good He putteth his soul upon Gods two ifs if he save its good if he destroy its good Make sure this generall Christ is mine at that Anchor in this harbour my vessell must ride What ever wind blow in externals Christ died for me If I live it s in Christ if I die its to Christ if I ride with Princes on horses its good if I go on foot with servants it is good if Christ hide his face and frown its Christ its good if it be full Moon and he over shadow the soul with rayes and beams of love and light it s also Christ it s also good 7. In all things blesse Christ let the desires below Ier. 45. 5. Seekest thou great things for thy self Seek them not saith Ieremiah to Baruch It s easier to adde to desires then to substract better the heart ascend from a Sallet of herbs to Wines then compell thy spirit to descend and weep 8. Faiths speculations to the worst and hardest in point of resolution is sweet Iob putteth on a conclusion of faith from black premises suppose the Devil and Hell form the principles Faith can make a conclusion of gold and of heaven What if God should kill me What though it were so Yet I will trust in God Job 13.15 What if he throw me in Hell It were well resolved I would out of the pit of Devils cry Hallelujah praise the Lord in his justice
3. To make an opposition between Christ and his grace the fountain and the stream Ioh. 1.16 Tit. 1.14 1 Joh. 3.8 Obj. If the actions of grace be all turned upon this axle-tree of Gods gracious will what can I do when I am indisposed to do good Ans. If this be a rationall question then is no man condemned because he believeth not in the only begotten Son of God contrary to Ioh. 3.18 36. For Reprobates are finally indisposed to believe 2. Indisposition is our sin that we should be humbled for and Inke water cannot wash a blacked cloth sin excuseth not sin SERMON XV. 25. Then came she and worshipped him saying Lord help me CHrist had denyed her to be His but she wil not deny but Christ is hers See how a Believer is to carry himself toward Christ deserting frowning Christ first answered her not one word 2. He gave an Answer but to the Disciples not to the woman O dreadful Christ refuseth to give her one word that may go between her and Hell and dispair 3. The Answer that he giveth is sadder and heavier then no Answer it s as much As woman I have nothing to do with thee I quit my part of thee Yet she is patient 2. She believeth 3. She waiteth on a better answer 4. She continueth in praying 5. Her love is not abetted she cometh and adoreth 6 Acknowledgeth her own misery Lord help me And putteth Christ as God in his own room to be adored 7. She taketh Christ aright up and seeth the temptation to be a temptation 8. She runneth to Christ she came nearer to him and runneth not from him she claimeth to Christ though Christ had cast her off 1. Patient submission to God under desertion is sweet What though I saw no reason why I cry and shout and God answereth not 1. His comforts and his answers are his own free-graces he may doe with his own what he thinks good and grace is no debt Hear O Lord for thy own sake Dan. 9.19 2. Infinite Soveraignty may lay silence upon all hearts good Hezekiah Isa. 38.15 What shall I say he hath spoken unto me and himself hath done it It is an act of heaven I bear it with silence 2. She believeth Isa. 50.11 There 's a high and noble Commandment laid upon the sad spirit He that walketh in darknesse and seeth no light let him trust in the name of the Lord stay upon his God 2. Fill the field with faith double or frequent acts of Faith Psal. 22.1 My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Two faiths are a double breast-work against the Forts of Hell 3. In the greatest extremity believe even as David in the borders of Hell Psal. 23.4 Yea though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death I will fear no evil it s a Litote I will believe good it s a cold and a dark shadow to walk at deaths right side Job 13.15 Though he slay me yet will I trust in him See Steven dying and believing both at once Christs very dead corps and his grave in a sort believing Ps. 16.9 My flesh also shall rest in hope How sweet to take Faiths back-band subscribed by Gods own hand into the cold grave with thee as Christ did vers 10. Thou wilt not leave my soul in grave 4. Faith saith sense is a Lier Fancy sense the flesh will say Job 16.13 His Archers compassed me round about he cleaveth my reins asunder and doth not spare and poureth out my gall on the ground but Faith saith ver 19. I have a friend in Heaven Also now my witnesse is in heaven Job 19.11 Sense maketh a lie of God He hath also kindled his wrath against me and taketh me for his enemy No Iob thou art the friend of God see how his Faith cometh above the water ver 25. I know that my friend by blood or my Redeemer liveth c. 3. She waiteth on in hope and took not the first nor second answer Hope is long breath 't and at mid-night proph●sieth good of God Mic. 7.9 Though I fall I shall rise again Jonah 2.4 Then I said I am cast out of thy sight yet I will look toward thy holy Temple There 's a seed of heaven in hope Iob 13. When God did hide his face from him ver 24. Yet ver 16. He also shall be my salvation There is a negative and over-clouded hope in the soul at the saddest time the believer dares not say Christ will never come again if he say it it s in hot blood and in haste and he wil take his word again Isa. 8.17 4. She continueth in praying She cryed Lord Son of David have mercy on me she has no Answer she cryeth again while the Disciples are troubled with her shouts she getteth a worse answer then no answer yet she cometh and prayeth we know the holy wilfulnesse of Jacob Gen. 32.26 I will not let thee go till thou blesse me rain calmeth the stormy wind to vent out words in a sad time is the way of Gods children Psal. 88.7 Thy wrath lieth hard upon me 9. My eye mourneth by reason of my affliction And what then Lord I have called daily upon thee I have stretched out my hands to thee Psal. 22.2 Christ in the borders of Hell prayed and prayed again and died praying 5. She hath still love to Christ and is not put from the duty of adoring 1 Pet. 1.8 Whom having not seen yet ye love The deserted soul seeth little there must be love to Christ where there is 1. Faith in the dark Faith is with child of Love 2. Where the believer is willing that his pain his hel may be matter of praising of God Ps. 77.13 Who is so great a God as our God The Church was then deserted as the Psal. cleareth 6. She putteth Christ in his Chair of State and adoreth him the deserted soul saith bee what I will he is Iehovah the Lord confession is good in saddest desertion Iob 7.20 I have sinned what shall I do to thee O preserver of man Lam. 1.17 The seed of Iacob is in a hard case before God and under wrath v. 12 13 14. Yet v. 16. The Lord is righteous for I have sinned This maketh the soul charitable of God how sad so ever the dispensation be 7. She seeth it is a triall as is clear by her instant persuing after Christ after many repulses It s great mercy that God cometh not behinde backs and striketh not in the dark Psal. 77.10 And I said this is my infirmity he gathereth his scattered thoughts taketh himself in the temptation Its mercy 1. To see the temptation in the face some lie under a dumb a deaf temptation that wanteth all the five senses Cain is murthered in the dark at midnight with the temptation he knoweth not what it meaneth 2. Gods immediate hand is more to be looked at then any
other temptation 3. Hence the conscience is timerous and traverseth its wayes under the Triall when a night Traveller dare not trust the ground he walketh on he is in a sad condition he is under two evils and hath neither comfort nor confidence Isa. 50. He that walketh in darknesse and hath no light but some glimmering of star light or half moon under the earth and knoweth not the ground he walketh in Let him trust in the name of the Lord. 8. She runneth not away from Christ under desertion But 1. She cometh to him it s a question what deserted souls shall do in that case See 2. that you run not from Christ it was a desertion that Saul was under and a sad one we read of but he maketh ●●●fession of his condition to the Devil a sad word 1 Sam. 28.15 I am sore distressed there●s a heavy and lamentable reason given why the Philistines make War against me Why That is not much they make War alwayes against the people of God Nay but here is the marrow and the soul of all vengeance God is departed from me Why Foolish man What availeth it thee to tell the Devil God is departed from thee Judas was under a totall desertion he went not to Christ but to the murtherers of Christ to open his wound I have sinned Fool say that to the Saviour of sinners the Church deserted Cant. 1. 5. betaketh her self to Christ and searcheth him out Saw ye him whom my soul loveth It s a bad token when men conceiving themselves to be in calamity maketh lies amd policy their refuge Obj. But it is a greater sin to go to Christ being in a state of sin What have I to do to go to him whom I have offended so highly Ans. To run from Christ under desertion is two deaths 1. Desertion is one and if reall the saddest hell out of hell 2. To flee from Christ and life is another death now to come to him though he should kill thee for thy presumption is but one death and a little one in comparison of the other and one little death is rather to be chosen then two great deaths 2. Consider how living a death it is to be killed doing a duty and aiming to flee in to Christ better die by Christs own hand if so it must be as by another and better be buried and lie dead at his feet as to run away from him in a heavy desertion if the believer must die its better his grave to be made under the Throne and under the feet of Jesus Christ as to die in a state of strangenesse and alienation from Christ not daring to come nigh him all the deserted ones that we read of did flee in to himself Psal. 34. Psal. 88. Psal. 39. Job 13.15 Isa. 38. 2. It s good to claime him as thy God though he should deny thee and creep into him though he should throw thee out of his sight Better kisse the sword that killeth thee and be slaine with his own hand as cast away thy confidence 25. But she came and worshipped An heavier temptation cannot befall a soul tender of Christs love then to cry to God and not be answered and to cry and receive a flat and downright renouncing of the poor supplicant yet this doth not thrust her from a duty she commeth and worshippeth and prayeth It s a blessed mark when a temptation thrusteth not off a soul from a duty and 1. when the danger and sad triall is seen its good to go on Christ knew before he should suffer and when they would apprehend him yet he went to the garden to spend a piece of the night in prayer It was told Paul by Agabus if he went to Ierusalem the Jews should binde him and deliver him to the Gentiles it was his duty to go thither he professeth he will go Act. 21.13 What mean ye to weep and break my heart I am ready not onely to be bound but to die for the name of Iesus dying could not thrust him from a duty Esther ran the hazard of death to go in to the King yet conscience of a duty calling she goeth on in faith If I perish I perish 2. In the act of suffering Christ on the Crosse prayeth and converteth the Thief Paul with an iron chain upon his body preacheth Christ before Agrippa and his enemies and preaching Christ was the crime Paul and Silas with bloudy souldiers must sing Psalms in the stocks 3. Indefinitely after the triall and when the temptation is on yet the Saints go on Psal. 44 17. All this is come on us there is the temptation the duty Yet we have not forgotten thee neither dealt falsely in thy Covenant Ps. 119.23 Princes did speak against me there is a temptation yet here is a duty But thy servant did meditate on thy Statutes vers 81. My soul fainteth for thy salvation but I hope in thy Word vers 110. The wicked have laid a snare for me yet I erred not from thy Precepts ver 157. Many are my persecuters and mine enemies yet do I not decline from thy Testimonies Psal. 109.3 They fought against me without cause vers 4. For my love they were my adversaries but I gave my self to prayer 1. It s a sign of a sweet humbled servant who can take a buffet and yet go about his Masters service and when a soul can passe thorow fire and water to be at a duty for then the conscience of the dutie hath more prevailing power to act obedience then the salt and bitternesse of the temptation hath force to subdue and vanquish the Spirit its like Grace hath the day and better of Corruption 2. It argueth a soul well watched and kept from the incursion of a house sin and a home-bred corruption for the temptation setteth on the nearest corruption as fire kindleth the nearest powder and dry timber and so goeth along Ps. 18.18 They prevented me in the day of my calamity vers 23. I was upright before him and I kept my self from mine iniquity The Devill hath a friend within us now there be degrees of friends some nearer of blood then other some the mans own predominant is the dearer friend to Satan then any other sin if pride be the predominant it s so Satan his first-born he agents his businesse by pride 3. So it may argue that the soul steeled and fortified with grace taketh occasion from the sinfulnesse of the temptation and the edge of it to be more zealous and active in duties David scoffed at by Michol said I le be more vile yet so Psal. 22.7 All that see me laugh me to scorn they shoot out the lip they shake the head 8. He trusted in the Lord c. See here a heavy temptation but his faith diggeth deeper to the first experience of Gods goodnesse vers 9. But thou art he that took me out of the womb c. As the Church mocked with this
hath influence in their guilt and contagion on beleevers 1. When they mourn not for them Gods displeasure should be our sorrow 2. When they stand not in the gap to turn away wrath Ez. 22.30 There were Isa. 59. Godly men that departed from ill v. 15. But Gods quarrell was that there was no intercessor in Fasting beleevers though pardoned may have on them a burden of the sins of three nations and be involved in that same wrath with them Nationall repentance is required of every one no lesse then personall Repentance who sorrows for the blood of Malignants and Rebels for their oaths mocking scoffing Massing The sins of the Land Idolatry Superstitious dayes vain Ceremonies c. have influence on a believers conscience in his approach to God But we are here to consider that Christ doth two great and contrary works at once 1. He humbleth the believing woman in reproaching her as a prophane Dog unworthy of the childrens bread that the Will may be more broken for beleeving And 2. He tryeth and tempteth her to see if she can by reproaches be taken off from Christ. A broken will is a broken heart for will is the iron sinew in the heart decourt merit and conceit of any good in thy self but the uncleannesse of a dog And 2. break will that that proud thing may fall in two peeces at Christs feet And 3. Beleeve stick by thy point that though a Dog yet thou art one of Christs Dogs and then all is well The best way to break the will is 1. to offer Hell and the coals of everlasting burning to it yea and when the soul is humbled to humble it more Christ knew that this woman was lying in the dust but he will have her below the dust when he tryeth her with such a humbling temptation Many think the troubled conscience should not be further humbled They say There is nothing for such a soul but the honey and sweetnesse of consolations in the Gospel Nay but often that which troubleth them is subtile invisible pride he 'll not beleeve for want of self-worthinesse Oh I dare not rest on Christ nor apply the Promises because of my sinfull unworthinesse Now if this be humility it s the proudest humility in the world for the soul thus troubled saith I am not good enough nor rich enough for Christ and his fine gold and the truth is he is not a good enough Papist to give a ransome of self-worth for that great ransome of bloud which cannot be bought but though thou shouldst buy Christ the Father will not sell him Christ is disposed to a sinner as a f●ee gift not as a wage or a hire There is a difference between down-casting and saving-humiliation down casting may exceed measure in the too much apprehension of the Law-curses and may be conjoyned with much pride and self-love But right and saving humiliation conjoyned with Faith cannot over passe bounds it ariseth often from the sense of grace rather then from the Law God giveth grace to the humble and he giveth humility to the gracious under the sense of rich grace 1 Tim. 1.15 Eph. 3.8 Tit. 3.3 4 5. 2 Tim. 1.9 Nothing humbleth us more then an opinion of the power and excellency of grace Grace known apprehended in its worth layeth down proud nature on the earth 1 Cor. 15.9.10 Christs Grace was Christs Accomt-book to Paul But by the grace of God I am that I am A borrowed garment though of silke will make a wise man humble many sins pardoned made much love to Christ and much humility in the woman Luke 7.44 And made her lay head and hair yea and heart also under the soles of Christs feet no doubt she thought basely of her self and her hair remembring that grace put these feet to a sad and tiresome journey to come in the world to seek the lost to be pierced with nails for her There 's courtesie in free grace being the marrow and flower of unhired love to kill high thoughts of a self destroying sinner Observe also that not to dare to come to Christ and believe and pray because of unworthinesse such as is in Dogs that are without the new City Rev. 22.15 Is but a very temptation And Christ under the notion of tempting and trying offereth that to the woman that she was too daring and bold being a Dog to presume to ask for the childrens bread hence have we to consider how farre the conscience of sinne ought to stand in our way toward Christ hence these considerations 1. Conscience of sin is to humble any that is to make out for Christ Act. 9. Saul Saul why persecutest thou me Spoken by Christ brought Paul down off his high horse and laid his soul on the dust Rom. 3.19 Now we know that what things soever the Law saith it saith to them who are under the Law that every mouth may be stopped and all the world may become guilty before God It s a speech taken from a malefactor Arraigned and pannelled upon his head When the judge Objecteth What say you this and this Treason is witnessed against you Alas the poor man standeth speechlesse and dumb his mouth is stopped Ezek. 16.63 That thou maist remember thy old shame and be confounded and never open thy mouth any more because of thy shame Christ then hath the sinners neck under his Axe What justice and Law may do that Christ may do The Captive taken in war may be killed by the Law of Wars if he refuse to submit 2. No sin is unpardonable Treason but the sin against the holy Ghost and finall impenitence The Gospel is a Treaty of Peace between parties in war none are excepted but these two 3. But what then if a soul come to this I have either sinned against the holy Ghost or certainly am upon the borders of it because Christ knocked long and a year ago or a long time from this I remember of his farewell rap When Christ knocking took his last good-night with this word he that is filthy let him be filthy still and said he would never come again I grant an ill conscience can speak prophecy Exod. 10.28 29. So Pharaoh did Prophesie and Cain also Gen. 4.13 14. But 2. I can yeeld that there be some farewell knocking 's of Christ after which Christ is never seen or heard at the door of some mens hearts Acts 13.46 Paul speaketh so to the Jews But seeing you put the Gospel from you and judge your selves unworthy of everlasting life lo we turn to the Gentiles The like is Christs language to them Joh. 8.21 Then said Jesus to them I go my way and ye shall seek me and shall die in your sins whether I go ye cannot come I doubt if any can sin the sin against the holy Ghost and the sinner onely and no other complain of it that sin breaketh out in prodigious Acts of wickednesse as blood and persecution Though it were true
That temptations are measured by grans and scruples to the Saints there 's a seed of comfort and hope in Christs glowning and frownings he would say when the children are filled with bread first then you that are dogs shall also have your portion of the childrens bread there is a kisse and bowels of compassion under the lap of that covering and cloak of wrath with which he is covered for in wrath he remembers mercy and moderateth anger Fury is not in me Is. 27.4 2. Gospel trials and temptations are for a mercifull end that Paul may not be puffed up or as he saith 2 Cor. 12.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lest I should be like a Meteor lifted up in the air above measure 2 Corinth 1.9 But wee had the sentence of death in our selves as condemned malefactors that we should not trust in our selves 3. God will not have them above our strength but the burden and the back are proportioned 1 Cor. 10 13. It s good that we know Christ breweth or mixeth our cup he can Sugar the salt and bitter wine with mercy there is no desertion of the Saints that we read of but there 's as much of Christ in it as giveth it some taste and smell of heaven Heaven is stamped upon the hell of the Saints life is written on their death their grave and dead corps are hot and doth breath out life and glory their ashes and dust smell of immortality and resurrection to life Even when Christ is gone from the Church he leaveth a pawn or a pledge behinde him as love-sicknesse for the want of him Cant. 3. and 5. When Christ is nothing but an empty grave and he himself is away yet weeping for the want of him without care of Angels or Apostles when the beloved himself is gone is somewhat of Christ yea he sendeth before a Messenger to tell that the King himself is comming as in a great summer drouth little drops goeth before the great shower to make good report that the earth shall be refreshed 1. longings for him 2. waiting after him 3. Christ in you seeking after Christ are Messengers of heaven sent before to dresse and adorne the lodging for the Prince who is on his journey comming to thee SERMON XVII 27. And she saith truth Lord yet the whelps eat of the crums that fall from the Masters table OBserve 1. The womans witty answer by retortion in great quickness by concession of the conclusion and granting she was a Dog she borroweth the Argument taketh it from Christs mouth to prove her question She Argueth from the temptation Let me be a Dog so I be a Dog under Christs feet at his Table Wisedoms Schollers are not fools Grace is a witty and understanding Spirit ripe and sharp so it s said of Christ Isa. 11.3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vatablus Odorari facit illum Forerius respirare ejus erit in timore Domini Grace has a sagacity to smell things excellently so Prov. 1.4 The wisdom of God in the Proverbs giveth subtilty to the simple Vatablus ductilibus calliditatem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Petaim à Rad. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aquila 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 such as may easily be milked and flattered and perswaded in young ones reason sleepeth affection ruleth all and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gnarma the 70. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quicknesse in all things and the other word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rendered Discretion its Thoughtfulnesse grace furnisheth the soul with quick sharp deep thoughts to know a Divel an Angel Heaven hell and that stollen waters are not sweet Heb. 5.14 They have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 their spirituall senses are as wrestlers experienced or as learned Scholers in Universities acquainted with the knowledge of good and ill 2. Faith is thus pregnant as to draw saving conclusions from hard principles and to exstract the spirit of the promises Christ came to save sinners then saith Paul to save me for 1 Tim. 1.15 I am the chief of these sinners and though a temptations language be the language of hell and unbelief as thus Thou art a sinner a lost and a condemned one and therefore hast nothing to do with Christ Faith argueth the language of Heaven and the Gospell from this I am a sinner and a lost one but one of Christs sinners and one of Christs lost ones and for that same very cause I belong to Christ. 3. Faith doth here contradict the temptation and modestly refute Christ if Christ say Thou art a transgressor from the womb Ans. I confesse Lord But Christ died for transgressors 2. If he say Thou art under a curse Ans. With a distinction It s too true Lord So I am by nature But Christ was made a curse for me 3. If he say Thou hast holden me at the door I confesse Lord it is so But if Christ say I came not for thee thou art a Dog to such belongeth not Christ the bread of children you may then Answer O Lord with all reverence to thy holy Majesty It s not so I am thine thou didst come for me the bread belongeth to me When a sinner dare not dispute his actions with Christ yet he may dispute his estate The state of Son-ship is not sin and therefore we must adhere to this as Christ did when he was tempted If thou be the Son of God c. He refused to yeeld that if then Christ himself should say Thou art a Reprobate expound it as a temptation far more if Satan if conscience if the world say it you are not to acknowledge these to be Heralds sent to proclaime Gods secrets Job would not believe his friends in this Then to be tempted to deny your son-ship and claim in Christ may be your temptation not your sin injections of coals to try may come immediately from God as well as from Satan 2. It is good say Antinomians To lay the Saints under a Covenant of works because it doth this good to make us make sure our evidences that Christ is ours yea some desire a wakened conscience that the terrors of God may chase them to Christ But 1. that is a murmuring at Gods dispensation Let Christ tutour me as he thinketh good he hath seven eyes I have but one and that too dimme 2. We are not to make sad whom God hath not made sad Eze. 13.22 Nor to make a lie of Grace Nor 3. To usurpe the Devils office to accuse a brother far lesse your self Truth Lord the Dogs Behold where humility sitteth 1. Christ cannot put humility lower it sitteth in the dust Luk. 15.19 I am not worthy to be called thy son O great Paul What is lesse then nothing and lesse then the least of all Eph. 3.8 Vnto me who am lesse then the least of all Saints is this grace given 1 Tim. 1.13 I was a persecuter a blasphemer 1 Cor. 15.9 I am the least of the Apostles
and that which is essentially sin dwelleth in us while we are here as the sad complaints of justified Saints do testifie as Chemnitius observeth yea Andradius saith as Antinomians do that we put blasphemy upon Christ his merits and grace as if he could not in a moment wash us perfectly from all sin And what Arguments Papists in this Point use the same doth Eaton and Antinomians use also yea but justified Job saith cap. 9.30 If I wash my self with snow-water and make my hands never so clean 31. Yet shalt thou plunge me in the ditch and mine own cloaths shall abhorr● me Job 40.4 Behold I am vile what shall I answer thee This Job after he was by Gods pen declared an upright man saith of his own wayes in his sufferings And David a justified man faith Psal. 143.2 Enter not in judgement with thy servant for in thy sight shall no flesh be justified yet Job and David were no hypocrites SERMON XVIII NAy give me leave to say that Antinomians make justification and free grace their Common-place of Divinity as if they only had seen the visions of the Almighty and no other but they are utterly ignorant thereof for they confound and mix what the Word distinguisheth because justification is onely a removall of sin by a Law way so that in Law it cannot actually condemn Rom. 8.1 There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he saith not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nothing that deserveth condemnation Nihil condemnabile So that in Law all obligation to externall punishment called Reatus personae the guiltinesse of the sinner is removed and he shall never be condemned for sin because Christ did bear that guilt for him hence we say in this regard its blasphemy to say that tears of sinners do wash away sin that sorrow for sin and fasting pacifieth or removeth Gods wrath for my part I never used such Popish and unsavory speeches Papists do and we must distinguish between the lax Rhetorick and the strict Divinity of fathers But 2. Justification is not an abolition of sin in its reall essence Physicall indwelling Justified Paul sigheth and cryeth Rom. 7.14 I am carnall sold under sin 18. I know that in me that is in my flesh dwelleth no good 24. O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death Now if the sense of the corrupt flesh make these complaints in Job David Paul and if sinfull flesh opposite to faith apprehending the just contrary in Christ who justifieth the sinner dwell not in us Then 1. David Job Paul did lie in these confessions for to speak contrary to the language of justifying faith must be a lie 2. They were not really carnall and sold under sin but onely according to the sinfull doubting and apprehension of the flesh Pauls crying out of the body of sin was an irrationall fleshly and hypocriticall complaint 3. We are not to grow in the grace of sanctification and abstinence from yeelding to the motions of the flesh because if there be no sinfull imperfections in our sanctification we are not to grow in grace really but only in the false and hypocriticall apprehension of the flesh 4. If God see nothing of sin in the saints after their justification then there can be no sin in them after justification and so the justified cannot sin except they may sin and yet God cannot see them sin contrary to Ps. 69.5 Ps. 139.1 2 3. Yet Iohn saith even of himself and of those who have an Advocate in heaven 1 Ioh. 2.1 That if we say we have no sin we deceive our selves and the truth is not in us 1 Joh. 1.8 Now he cannot speak of men as considered in the state of nature and unjustified because to answer a doubt of weak consciences who said oh if we have sin then are we eternally lost and condemned he answereth 1. the justified are to confesse v. 9. and God is faithfull to forgive 2. He answereth 1 Iohn 2.1 If we sin we have an advocate with the Father 5. It must inevitably follow that Christ commanding these who have a Father in heaven to pray forgive us our sins commandeth them daily to pray out of a fleshly doubting not from the Spirit of Faith I had rather say with Scripture that all the justified Saints must take down their Top-Sail and go to heaven halting and that they carry their bolts and fetters of indwelling 〈◊〉 through the field of Free-Grace even to the gates of glory Christ daily washing and renewing Pardons and we daily defiling to the end that grace may be grace 6. Yea the Scripture is most clear that the fairest face that is now shining in glory was once even in the Kingdom of Grace and in the state of justification blacked with sin and sin-burnt by reason of sin dwelling in them 1 Kin. 8.46 For there is no man that sinneth not This is a black put on the faces of all men dwelling on the earth amongst which you must reckon justified and pardoned souls Eccles. 7. v. 20. For there is not a just man upon earth thr● doth good and sinneth not Then there 's a Thorne in our fairest Rose Davids Sun shines not so bright but there 's a cloud going over it in every justified mans good he doth in every sacrifice he offereth there 's some dung The sun hath looked on him Augustine had the same controversie but on another ground with Julian who also of old conceited that justified souls were free of inherent sin as Libertins now teach but Augustine saith alway That sinne dwelleth in the regenerate but it is not imputed and concupiscence after Baptism is removed Non ut non sit sed ut non imputetur Not that it is not but that in the Court of justice it is not reckoned on our score by which it is more then evident that justification is not such an abolition of sin in its ro●● and essence as shall be in the state of glory ●hen root and branch shall be abolished and not only shall justification free us as it doth in this life from all Law-guilt and obligation to wrath which is but Actus Secundus the second Act of sin the effect not the essence of sin but also sanctification being perfected all indwelling of sin shall be removed sin in the justified hath but house-room and stayeth within the walls as a Captive an Underling a servant it hath not the keyes of the house to command all nor the Scepter to rule All the keys are upon Christs shoulder far lesse hath it a Law-power to condemne therefore saith Augustine ●xcellently Cont. Iulian lib. 6. c. 5. Sanat vit●atum à reatu statim ab infirmitate paulatim God healeth the sinner from his guiltinesse its a Law word and a Law cure presently but from his infirmity by degrees by little and little and Gregory Moral lib. 29. c.
Popish superstition but that such is Christs excellencie that any thing that hath the poorest relation to him is desirable for him 2. A poor woman Luke 7. sought no more of him but to wash the feet of Christ and kisse them Another woman Matth. 9.21 If I may but touch the border of his garment I shal be whole Mary Magdalen sought but to have her arms filled with his dead body Joh. 20.15 She saith weeping to the Gardiner as she supposed Sir if thou hast born him hence tell me where thou hast laid him and I wil take him away To Joseph of Arimathea his bloody winding sheet and his dead and ho●ed and torn body in his arms are sweet Christs Clay is Silver and his Brasse Gold 3. Christs ●harpest rebukes are sweet oyl the wounds ●nd the holes that the sweet Mediatour maketh 〈◊〉 the soul when he smiteth with the rod of his ●outh are with child of comforts he rebuked ●ot the Serpent as not minding salvation to Sa●an but rebuked Evah intending the promised ●●od for her O what sweetnesse of love is that ●●pression Jer. 31.20 For since I spake against Ephraim I do earnestly remember him I will 〈◊〉 have mercy on him saith the Lord. Then rebuking of Ephraim which is called speaking against him is dipt in mercy Hos. 11.7 My people are bent to back-sliding this is a rebuke sharp enough yet he chides himself friends with the people v. 8. How shall I give thee up O Ephraim mine heart is turned within me Here is kissing and love wrapped about rebuks● so Jer. 3.1 Thou hast played the harlot with many lovers but see mercy Yet return to me saith the Lord. 4. His black and sowre Crosse is sweet and honied with comfort his dead Body a bundle of myrrhe Cant. 1.13 The smell of which is strong and fragrant and sweateth out precious gum rejoycing in tribulations Rom. 5.3 Count it joy all joy when ye fall in divers temptations Jam. 1.2 The Eagles smell heaven in the crosse and Christ in it Gal. 6.14 Yea the refuse and the worst of Christs crosse the shame and the reproaches of Christ are sweeter and choicer to Moses then the Treasures Riches yea then the Kingdome of Egypt and the glory of it Heb. 11. ver 26 27. yea the shame and blushing on Christs fair face Heb. 12.2 which he suffered under the Crosse is fairer then Rubies and Gold and hath the colour of the Heaven of Heavens Nebuchadnezzar hath more pain torment in persecuting Dan. 4.19 then the three children had in being persecuted There 's pain and fury in active persecution He was full of fury and the form of his visage changed but there is joy unspeakable and glorious in passive persecution Christs sanctified crosse droppeth honey 1 Pet. 1.6 5. Christs glownings and sad desertions though to the believer they be death and hell yet have much of heaven in them So Psal. 30.7 Thou turnedst away thy face and I was troubled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Niuhal I was troubled like a withered flower that loseth sap and vigor So Exod. 15.15 The Dukes of Edom 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Niuhaln were amazed yet at that time David prayed cryed and was heard ver 8 9 10. The sweetest communion that Christ seeketh of us on earth is prayer Cant. 2.14 and Cant. 5. Desertion is death it self and a death to the soul. 6. I opened to my beloved and my beloved had withdrawn himself and was gone And what was the Churches case My soul went forth from me The Arabick My soul departed I died So is death described by the like phrase Gen. 35.18 Rachels soul was in departing for she died And when men are stricken with sudden fear the heart is said to goe out So Gen. 42.28 The soul of Josephs brethren departed that is they were extreamly amazed When they found their money in their sacks The like was the case of the Church when CHRIST departed she died for sorrow the soul departed from the soul because her Lord and beloved was gone Yet even that death that soul-hell in the want of Christ was a Heaven it was a sweet and comfortable season then hath she a commuion with him in a most heavenly manner 1. Asking at the watchmen for him 2. In binding sad charges on the Daughters of Jerusalem to commend her to God by prayer 3. Then was she sick of Love for him 4. Then fell she out in that large Love rapture in a most heavenly praise of him in all his vertues My welbeloved is white and ruddy and the chief amongst ten thousand c. Here then the Hell that Christ throweth the Saints in in their Desertions is their heaven 6. The meanest and lowest relation with Christ is honour John Baptist placeth an honour in unloosing the Latchets of his shooes and thinketh to bear his shooes is more honour then he deserveth Joh. 1.27 David a great Prophet appointed to be a King O if I might be so near the Lord as to be a door-keeper in his house Ps. 84.10 He putteth a happinesse on the Sparrow and the Swallow that may build their nests beside the Lords Altar Then the fragments and crums that his dogs eateth must be the dainties of heaven and Christs water the wine of heaven Now if any the lowest thing of Christ the Morsell of his dogs be desireable how sweet must himself be if the parings of his bread be sweet What must the great loafe Christ himself be Christ himself is so taking a Lover he hath a face that would ravish love out of Devils so they had Grace to see his beauty he could lead captive all hearts in hell with the lovelines of his countenance which is white and ruddy and pleasant as Lebanon if they had eyes to behold him O he himself is an unknown Lover he hath neither brim nor bottome his Gospel is the unsearchable riches of Christ his Gospel is but a creature How unsearchable must he himself be The wise man Prov. 30.4 putteth a riddle upon all the wisest on the earth Solomon all What is his name We know neither name nor thing Isa. 53.8 Who shall preach his generation O what a mercy ● that he will give sinners leave to love him Or honour us so much that we may lay our black and spotted love on so lovely and fair a Saviour That such an infinite and desireable love as Christs Love should come to borrow that expression within the sides of thy love and heart is a wonder Alas it s a narrow circle and not capacious to contain him and his love that passeth knowledge Eph. 3.19 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It over passeth and transcendeth far the narrow comprehension of created knowledge either of men or Angels To seek Grace is desireable but suppose any person were a Masse and nothing but composed of pure Grace and yet want Christ himself he should be but a broken lamed creature put a soul in heaven and let
swooning and death Gracious love produceth love sicknesse Cant. 2.5 Swooning Cant. 5.6 the Martyrs have died to injoy him and refused to accept of life because of the love of a Union with him Heb. 11.37 How many deserted souls come to this I die if I injoy not Christ. Posit 7. It s good that the affections be ballanced and loaden with Heavenly and spirituall lights Lower vaults and under houses send up smoak to the fair pictures that are in the higher houses lusts dominion over light maketh a misty and unbelieving mind so when the light is carnall and nothing but worldly policy it s like the highest house which if ruinous and rainy sendeth down rain and continuall droppings on the lower house Minde and affections vitiate and corrupt one another Grace in either contributes much to the spirituality of the actions one of another so the mockers of eternity and judgment are ignorant because they will be ignorant 2 Pet. 3.5 And Elies sons will be abhominably lustfull in their affections because they know not the Lord and are ignorant of God 1 Sam. 2.12 Mathew heareth and seeth Jesus and he followeth him Matth. 9.9 The more that Mary Magdalen followeth and loveth the more she knoweth and seeth the excellency of Christ Joh. 20. ver 1.11.12.13.14 compared with ver 17 18. Posit 8. When the desires are naturall then Heavenly objects are desired and sorrowed for in a naturall way Balaam desires to die the death of the righteous but Esau weepeth for the blessing in a carnall way when the desires are spirituall earthly objects are desired in a spirituall way Even bread as it savoureth of Christ Math. 6.9 compared with ver 11.12 And so the woman seeketh deliverance to her Daughter spiritually and with a great Faith Posit 9. The believer saith if the creature will go along with me to my Fathers house welcome if not What then There I must lodge though Gold refuse to go with me See how God in a manner resigneth his own freedom in giving and transferreth this honour on the womans desire God keeps pace with a sanctified will in satisfying when the will keeps pace with God in acting longing and desiring 1. He putteth Heaven upon the choice of a sanctified heart Deu. 30.19 Choose life that both thou and thy seed may live Rev. 22.17 Whosoever will let him take of the waters of life freely Isa. 55.1 Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters 2. Heaven is put upon the quality of the wil and what it desires Joh. 4.10 If thou knewst that gift of God and who it is that sayes to thee give me drink thou wouldst have asked of him and he should have given thee water of Life Rev. 21.6 I will give unto him that thirsteth of the Fountain of the water of life freely There 's an edge upon the word Fountain for the Fountain and first spring of the water of life is above the streams this is promised to him that hath a heavenly and spirituall thirst for Christ. 3. God putteth himself and the measure or compasse of heaven upon the measure and compass of the bensil and pitch of heavenly desires Pro. 2.3 If thou cryest after knowledge liftest up thy voice for understanding 4. If thou seekest her as silver and searchest for her as for hid treasures 5. Then shalt thou understand the fear of the Lord find the knowledge of God There be four words here to expresse the bensill of the will and desire we are to cry for wisdome the Chalde reads the other part of the ver if thou call understanding thy mother that the cry spoken in the former part may be such a high cry as children use when they weep cry after their Mother The other word is To give the voice to wisdom The other two words do note sweating digging in the bowels of the earth casting up much earth to find a treasure of silver or gold Ps. 81.10 Open thy mouth wide and I will fil it Vatablus Seek what thou wilt and I wil grant it It s a doubt if any man by inlarged desires can put Gods giving goodnes to the utmost extent 4. God maketh his fulnesse in giving far beyond our narrownesse in seeking Eph. 3.20 He is able to do this is as much as he is willing to do Rom. 11.23 Jud. v. 24. exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think according to the power that worketh in us This is considerable that when Christ shall put the Crown of incomparable glory on the head of the glorified soul there shall be thousand millions of moe Diamonds Rubies and Jewels of glory on that Diadem then ever your thoughts or imaginations could reach and more weight of sweetness delight joy and glory in a sight of God then the seeing eye the hearing ear yea the vast understanding and heart which can multiply and adde to former thoughts can be able to fathom 1 Cor. 2.9 When ye seek and ask Christ from the Father you know not his weight and worth when you shal injoy Christ immediately up at the wel head this shal much fill the soul with admiration I believed to see much in Christ having some twilight afternoon or Moonlight glances of him down in the earth But O blind I narrow I could never have Faith opinion thought or imagination to fathom the thousand thousand part of the worth and incomparable excellencie I now see in him You may over-think and over-praise Paradice Rome Naples the Isles where there be two Summers in one year but you cannot over-think or in your thoughts reach Christ and the invisible things of God only glorified thoughts not thoughts graced only are comprehensive in any due measure of God of heaven The glorified soul shal be a far wider more capacious circle the Diameter of it in length many thousand cubits larger in mind thoughts glorified reason will heart desires love joy reverence c then it is now We would in seeking asking praying in adoring God in Christ inlarge our own desires heart will and affections broad and deep that we may take in more of Christ broad prayers flow from broad desires narrow prayers from niggard and narrow hearts we may collect the bignesse of a ship from the proportion and quantity of its bottom in its new framing If the bottom draw but to the proportion of a small vessell which can indure no more but a pair of oares the vessel cannot be five hundred Tun or be able to bear 60. peeces of Ordnance Prayer bottomed on deep and broad hunger and extreame pain of love-sicknesse for Christ and great pinching poverty of spirit must be in proportion wide and deep O but our vessels are narrow our affections ebbe and low the ballance that weigheth Christ weak it is as if we should labour to cast three or four great Mountains in a scale of a Merchants ordinary ballance we are proportioned in our
Land or a Nation must be longer in the fire then one particular person Satan worketh as a naturall agent without moderation Spiritual 〈◊〉 chase ●ew or none to Christ. How men naturally love the Devil Satan how an uncleane Spirit It s true wisdom to know GOD savingly Art 5 Mark 7 What hearing bringeth souls to Christ. Three vices in hearing Simile A sight of Hell should not work Faith without Graces efficacious action It s good to border neer to Christ. Crying in Prayer necessary Obj. 1. Praying sometime wanteth words so as groaning goeth for Prayer Obj. 2. How many other expressions beside vocal prayer go under the worth of prayer in Gods accompt Obj. 3. Some affections in p●ayer are greater and above weeping Obj. 4. Looking up to heaven goeth for praying Obj. 5. Breathing goeth for praying Obj. 6. Wherein is that least in which praeyer may be conserved Obj. 7. Broken Prayers a●e Prayers The Lord knoweth nonsense in a broken Spirit to be good sense Obj. 8. Why Christ is frequently called the son of David not the son of Adam c. The Covenant Christ a King by Covenant What the Crvenant of Grace is and what things are in it Parties in the Covenant Christ h●●h a seven fold relation in the Covenant of Grace 1. Christ the Covenant it self 2. Christ the Messenger of the Covenant Christ as Messenger of the Covenant maketh report to us of his Fathers ●il 2. Of himse●f 3. Of his father to us 4. Of us to the father 3. Christ the witnesse of the Covenant Christ witnesseth especially 4. things 4 Christ the Surety of the covenant Christ a Surety 5. Christ is the mediator of the Covenant Christ hath a threefold relation as a mediator Christ Gods servant and our servant and smitten of both 6. Christ confirmed sealed the Testament 7. Christ the principal confederate party of the Covenant The Covenant made with Christ personally Gal 3 16. Proved from reasons out of the Text. A Covenant between the Father and the Son pr●ved Of the promises Two sorts of promises Jer. 32.38 Zach. 13.9 Christ took a new Covenant-right to GOD. Five sorts of promises made to Christ and by proportion to us in him 4. The conditio● of the covenant Object Dr. Crisp Christ alone exalted Ser. 6. pag. 160. Rise raign Ruine of Antino● Families Er. 16. p. 4. Libertines deny all conditions of the covenant of Grace Obj. 2. The new covenant hath conditions to be performed by us Rise raign of Antinomian Er. 22. page 5 Obj. 3. A two fold Dominion of gracious and supernaturall acts Obj. 4 Obj. 5 Crispe 16.167 Obj. 6. Crispe 16.168 We are not justified before we believe Rise and Reign of Anti. er 38. p. 7. ib Err. 48. p. 9. A condition taken in a threefold notion It s not a proper condition by way of strict Wages work when we are said to be justified saved upon condition of Faith Rise and Reign Err. 36. p. 7. 5. The properties of the Covenant 1. Freedom in regard 1. Of Persons 2. Of Causes 3. Of time 4. Of manner of dispensation 2. Property of the Covenant Eterna●● 3. Well ordered 6. 1. Use. Al without the covenant are under the curse of the Law 2. Use. Men try not if they be in covenant with God 3. Use. They are stable sure and cannot fail 4. Use. We may plead Mercy from the covenant 5. Use. 6. Use. Christ God and man and our faith and comfort there in 1. Use. Christ immediate in the act of redeming us so sweeter 2. Use. Christ incomparable 3. Use. 4. Use. Use 5. 2 Art To beleevers all temporal favours are spiritualized and watered with mer●ie 3. By what reason our Father as a Father giveth spirituall things by that same he giveth us all things Mercy originally in Christ and how Parents spirituall affections and duty to their chil Simil. 1 Rule Practical Rules in observing passages of divine Providence 2 Rule We are neither to lead nor stint Providence We are to observe God in his ways 3 Rule Omnipotency not laid in pawn on any means 4 Rule God walketh not the way that wee imagine Providence in its concatenation of decrees actions events is a continued contexture going along from creation to the day of Christs second appearance and not a threed is here broken all is fair and white 6 Rule The Spirit is to be in an indifferency in all casts of providence 7 Rule Low desired are best 8 Rule Lie under Providence submissively in all 9 Rule 10 Rul 11 Rule 12 Rul 13 Rul Every temptation hath its taking power from the seeming goodnesse in it Reasons why this was a temptation to the woman Temptations scop is to mak the tempted believe there is none like him 1. The non-answering of Christ is an answer Reasons of the Lords no● hearing prayer How t● know that our prayers are answered We are heard when we are not heard praying in Faith is alwayes heard even when the particular that we aske is denyed Faith in a prayer asketh answereth it self The light of saving Faith the Propheticall light of the Prophets not different in nature space 1. Use The dearest not admitted into God at the first knock 2. Use. Naturall men and the renewed in so far as there remaineth in them flesh are ignoran● of the mistery of an afflicted spirit Peace of conscience is a work of Creation 1. Use. A Reason why it s so hard to convince deserted ones of the comforts of the Spirit and to bind them up 2. Use. Christ sweete● to the diserted then all the world ver 24 1 Posit How God tempeth Difference between God trying men and Satan the world sin tempting men 2 Pos. A creature cannot put another creature to act sin upon an intention to try his fellow-creature 3 Pos. In creatures actions and commandements we must 1. know Quis who commandeth 2. Quid what hee comands 3 Quare upon vhat Reason he commandeth But for Gods actions and commandements it s enough Quis who doth it who commandeth it If Jehovah I am silent and must obey 1. Pos. 2. Pos 4 Doubts of the tempted 3. Pos. 1 The Designation of Christ to his office How the Son is most fit to be our Mediator Simil. 2. The qualification of Christ. 3 Christs Commission It s not properly grace that we are born it s an ast of free grace that Christ was born 1. Use. Gods hidden decree his revealed will opened A two-fold intention in the offer of the promises How and who are to believe the Decree of Reprobation concerning themselvs It s a priviledging mercy that Christ is sent to the Iews first Privileges of the Iews 9. reckned here 1. Use. The honour and priviledg of Britain Why the Redeemed are called the Sheep of Christ. 1 Reas. How passive the redeemed are in the way to Heaven 2. Rea. The Saints are most dependent creatures 3. Rea. How know we
Scripture to be the Word of God by a supernaturall instinct 4. Rea. Fancy leadeth not the Saints but faith Rise Reign Ruine of Antino error 51 pag. 10. is c. 52. The Saints need fresh supply of grace from Christ though they have a habite stock of grace within them proved by six reasons 1. Use Grace glory but one continued thread In our progresse to heaven we are to have these considerations 1. Consideration Faith bo●h active and passive 2 Consider Desertion hath ●eall advancing in the way to Heaven in ●1 particu 3 Consider 2 Use. We are not freed from law directions Obj. 1. Actuall condemnation may be separated from the Law Obj. 2. How works of holinesse conduce to Salvation Three things herein to be distinguished Obj. 3. Obj. 4. We are to performe good works both from the principle of love and Law Obj. 5. Of the letter both of Law Gospel divers errors of Libertines touching the point (a) 39. Rise and rai●●●er (b) er 33. (c) er 74. (d) er 7 (e) Er. 61. The Scriptures are not to be condemned because they profit nothing without the teaching of the spirit Obj. 6. Hen. Denne Doctor of Ioh. Baptists pa. 46 47. Repentance is different from Faith the contrary whereof Libertines teach Repentance the same in the Old New Testament In what sense Christ came to save the lost Those whom Christ immediately converteth are first lost A two fold preparation before converted Conversion is done by succession of foregoing preparations proved by foure Reasons Reas. 1 3. Rea. 4. Rea. Sense of poverty fitteth for Christ. Crisp. Ser. 7. pag. 208 209 210. seq Sinners as sinners are not fit to receive Christ. How Christ belongeth to sinners under the notion of sinners Rise Reign c. error 33. How the Spirit acts most in the Sts. when they endeavour least Error 43 The marrow of Libertinisme to neglect sanctification and wallow in fleshly lusts Christs death maketh us active in duties of holinesse Vnsavory speeches Er. 5. Towne Ans. to D. Tailor pag. 23. Rise p. 7 Vnsavory speeches Er. ● p. 19. How Christ keepeth us from sin 8. Necessary duties required of a believer under desolution 1. Patience 2. Faith 3. Hope which prophecieth glad things at midnight 4. Prayer 5. Love to God 6. Acquiting of God and exalting of him 7 A sight of the temptation as a temptation 8. Running into Christ. To run from Christ in desertion is two deaths to flee in to him though unprepared at worst is but one death a little one It s a blessed mark when a temptation chaceth not a soul from a duty in 3. cases illustrated 1. To go on in duties under a temptation speaketh thre● good signes 1 Use. 2 Use. 3. Use. Mat. 15 Mark 7 Nationall sins may occurre to the consciences of the child of God in his approach to God A subtile humble pride the disease of weake ones who dare not apply the promises Sense of free grace humbleth exceedingly How far forth conscience of wretchednesse can hinder any to come to Christ and how it is a temptation Who ever doubteth if God will save him doubteth also if he can save Sin keepeth not the door of Christ to hold out sinners Rise reign ruine of Antino error 17. pag. 4. Sense of my own sinfull condition and a sight of the Excellency of Christ and his grace may stand together Holy walking may bee felt by the believer in himself and Christs excellency also Holiness considered 1. as a Duty 2. As a mean 3. As a promise August DEUS coronat innobis non nostra merita sed sua dona How we collect peace in our spiritual state by holy walking Christ a great housholder The Priviledges of the children of the house Christ the bread of life Communion between the children and the first heir Christ in five particulars The Spirit of an heir and of a servant different There 's a seed of hope and comfort in the hardest desertions of the Saints Grace maketh quicknes and wittines heavenly reasoning The Spirit of the Lord shal mak him of an excellent faculty of smelling Forerius his breathing or smelling of things shal be in the fear of the Lord. 3. Faith contradicteth Christ temp●ing but humbly and modestly The Saints may dispute their state with Christ when they dare not dispute their actions Er. 66. We are to ac●●p● submissively of a wakened conscienc but not to seek a storming conscienc True humility its way in seven particulars Christ cannot put humility lower Humility knoweth no Land-lord but Christ and free grace Humilty as it extolleth Christ so it thinketh the party not onely below grace and merey but also below the justice and wrath of God Humility putteth all men above it self None so capable of Grace as the humble man The humble man cannot complain of Gods dispensation Many ●ich 〈◊〉 conferred on the humble soul. How we are to esteem every man better then our self in the judgement of sense not of charity alwayes far lesse of verity 3. Use. Pride hateful to God 4. Use. Graces lowliness in taking notice of sinners 5. Use. Doct. A justified soul is to confesse sin and to be sorry for it Confession of sins made by the justified proveth to be a duty 2. Mourning for sin warranted to those who are pardoned If we are not to mourn for sin because pardoned the pardoned sin being no sin neither are we to eschew the committing of sin because it is also no sin before it be committed being pardoned as Libertines teach from eternity Honey comb of justification 371 Dec. 5. sess Chemnitius exa Con. Tri· pag. 94. Libertines conspire with Papists in the Doctrine of justification How sins are removed in justification and how not That there remaineth that which is formally sin in the justified and that sin dwelleth in the regenerated is proved by 5. Arguments Sinne dwelling in us after wee are justified A two fold removal of sin one Moral or Legall in justification another Physicall in our sanctification The difference between the removal of sin in justification and its removall in sanctification Simile Simile Seven reasons why sin dwelleth in the godly after they are justified by Grace Obj. 1. How sins past present and to come are pardoned in justifica Asse 1. D. Abb. in Thō Diatriben de intercis justif c. 4. p. 92. There is a twofold consideration of justification but not two justifications far lesse are there not many Ass. 2. Sins in three diverse respects are taken away according to the Scriptures Christs satisfaction performed on the Cross for sin is not formall justification There is a change in justification How sins not committed are remitted and pardoned Ass. 3. There is but one justification of a believer Simile Obj. 2. There 's a difference between pardon of sin in the ●ustification of the person and in the repeated sense of the pardon of sins after committed Iustifying saith is some other
Amen Even so Come Lord Iesus It shall not be well while the Father and Christ the prime Heire and all the weeping children be under one roofe in the Palace-Royall it is a sort of mysticall lameness and that the head wanteth an Arme or a finger and it is a violent and forced conditon for Arme and finger to be separated from the head The Saints are little pieces of mysticall Christ sick of love for union the wife of youth that wants her husband some years and expects he shall return to her from over-sea lands is often on the shoare every ship coming near shoar is her new joy her heart loves the wind that shall bring him home she askes at every passenger news O saw you my husband what is he doing when shall he come Is he shipped for a return Every Ship that carrieth not her husband is the breaking of her heart What desires hath the Spirit and Bride to hear when the Husband Christ shal say to the mighty Angels Make you ready for the journey let us go down and divide the skies and bow the heaven I 'le gather my prisoners of hope into me I can want my Rachael and her weeping children no longer Behold I come quickly to judge the Nations The Bride the Lambs wife blesseth the feet of the Messengers that preacheth such tiding Rejoice O Zion put on thy beautifull garments thy King is coming yea she loveth that quarter of the Skie that being rent asunder and cloven shall yield to her husband when he shall put through his glorious hand and shall come riding on the Raine bow and clouds to receive her to himself The condition of the people of God in the three Kingdoms calleth for this that we now wisely consider what the Lord is doing there is a Language of the Lords fire in Zion and His furnace in Jerusalem If we could understand the voice of the crying Rod The Arrowes of God flee beyond us and beside us but wee see little of God in them We Saile but we see not shoar we fight but we have no Victory the efficacy of second causes is the whole burden of the businesse and this burden we lay upon creatures and it s more then they can bear and not upon the Lord God is crying lamenesse on creatures and multitude that his eminency of working may be more seen 2. Many are friends to the successe of Reformation not to Reformation Mens Faith go along with the promises untill Providence seem to them to belie the promise through light at a key-hole many see God in these confusions in the three Kingdoms but they fall away because their joyning with the Cause was violent kindenesse to Christ it is not a friends visite to be driven to a friends house to be dry in a showre and then occasionally to visite wife and children Christ hath too many occasionall friends but the ground of all is this I love Jesus Christ but I have not the gift of burning-quick for Christ O how securely should Faith land us out of the Gun-shot of the prevailing power of a black hour of darknesse Faith can make us able to be willing for Christ to go thorow a quarter of Hells pain Lord give us not leave to be mad with worldly wisedome 3. When the Temptation sleepeth the mad man is wise the harlot is Chaste But when the vessell is peirced out cometh that which is within either Wine or Water Yet if we should attentively lay our ears to hypocrites wee should hear that their Lute-strings do miserably jar for Hycrisie is intelligible and may bee found out Would Parliaments begin at Christ we should not fear that which certainly we have cause to fear One wo is past and another wo cometh The Prophets in the three Kingdoms have not repented of the Superstition will-worship Idolatry Persecution Prophanity Formality which made them vile before the people and the Judges and Princes who turned judgement into gall and wormwood are not humbled because they were a snare on Mizpah and a net spread upon Tabor No man repenteth and turneth from his evil way no man smitteth on his thigh saying what have I done It s but black Popery the name being changed not the thing to think the by-past sins of the Land are by-past and a sort of Reformation for time to come is satisfactory to GOD Ex opere operato By the deed done Yea the divisions in the Church are a heavier plague then the raging sword These same sins against the first and second Table the reconciling of us and Babylon Pride Bribing Extortion Filthiness and intemperance unpunished blood touching blood and not revenged vanity of apparell the professed way of salvation by all kinde of Religions whatsoever are now acted in another stage by other persons but they are these same sins if that head-ship that flattering Prelates took from Jesus Christ and gave to the King be yet taken from Christ and given to men if Christs Crown be pulled off his head no matter whose head it warme it s taken from Christ both wayes I shall pray that the fatnesse of the flesh of Jacob for this do not wax leane and that the warefare of Britaine be accomplished But if the faithfull watchmen know what hour of the night it is now there be but small appearance that it is near to the dawning of Britains deliverance or that our sky shall clear in hast would God the yeare 1645. were with childe to bring forth the salvation of Britain It was once as incredible that the enemy should have entred within the gates of Jerusalem as it is now that they can enter within the Ports of London Edinburgh Dublin I speak not this to incourage Cavaliers for certainly God watcheth over them for vengeance but that we go not on farther to break with Christ the weaknesse of new heads devising new Religions and multiplying Gods for two sundry and contrary Religions argue interpretatively two sundry Gods According to the number of our Cities must come from rottennesse of our hearts O if we could be instructed before the decree that is with childe of Plagues to the sinners in Zion bring forth a man childe and before the long shadows of the evening be stretched out on us But of this Theame no more Grace is the Proposition of this following Treatise when either Grace is turned into painted but rotten nature as Arminians do or into wantonnesse as others do The error to me is of a far other and higher elevation then opinions touching Church-Government Tenacious adhering to Antinomian errors with an obstinate and finall persistance in them both as touching Faith to and suitable practise of them I shall think cannot be fathered upon any of the regenerated For it is an opinion not in the Margin and borders but in the page and body and too near the Center and vitall parts of the Gospel if any offend that I desire to anger them with good-will to
grace I shall strive and study the revenge only of love and compassion to their souls If some of these Sermons came once to your Honors ears and now to your eyes it may be with more English Language I having stayed possibly till the last grapes were some riper I hope it shall be pardoned that I am bold to borrow your Name which truly I should not have done if I had not known of your practicall knowledge of this noble and Excellent Theame the Free-grace of God I could adde more of this but I had rather commend Grace then gracious persons I know that Jesus Christ who perfumeth and flowreth Heaven with his Royall presence and streweth the Heaven of Heavens to its utmost borders with glory is commended that hee was full of grace a vessell filled to the lip Ps. 45.2 Ioh. 1.16 Yea Grace hath bought both our person and our service 1 Pet. 2.24.25 Even as he that buyeth a captive gives money not only for his person but for all the motion toile and labour of his body legs and arms and Redeeming Grace is so perfect that Satan hath power possibly to bid but not to buy any of the Redeemed no more then a merchant can buy another mans bought goods without his consent All our happinesse that groweth here on the banks of time is but thin sowen as very Straw-berries on the Sea-sands what good parts of nature we have without Grace are like a fair Lilly but there is a worm at the root of it it withereth from the Root to the Top Gifts wither apace without grace Gifts neither break nor humble Grace can do both Grace is so much the more pretious and sweet that though it be the result of sin in the Act of pardoning and curing sinfull Lamenesse yet it hath no spring but the bowels of God stirred and rowled within him by onely spotlesse and holy goodnesse Grace is of the Kings house from Heaven only the matter subject or person it dwelleth in contributed nothing for the creation of so noble a branch Christ for this cause especially left the bosome of GOD and was clothed with flesh and our nature that he might be a Masse a Sea and boundlesse River of visible living and breathing Grace swelling up to the highest banks of not only the habitable world but the sides also of the Heaven of Heavens to over-water Men and Angels So as Christ was as it were Grace speaking Psal. 45.2 Luk. 4.22 Grace sighing weeping crying out of horrour dying withering for sinners living again Heb. 2.9 Joh. 3.16 Rom. 8.32 33. And is now glorified Grace dropping downe raining downe floods of Grace on his members Eph. 4.11 12 13 14 15 16. Joh. 14.16 17. Joh. 16.7.13 Christ now interceding for us at the right hand of God Is these sixteen hundreth years the great Apple Tree dropping down Apples of Life for there hath been Harvest ever since Christs Ascension to Heaven and the grapes of Heaven are ripe all that falleth from the Tree Leaves apples shadows smell blossomes are but pieces of Grace fallen down from him who is the fulnesse of all and hath filled all things We shall never be blessed perfectly till we all sit in an immediate Union under the Apple Tree This is a rare piece by way of participation of the Divine nature Christ passed an incomparable act of rich Grace on the Crosse and doth now Act and Advocate for Grace and the applying of the Grace of Propitiation in Heaven 1 Joh. 2.1.2 And by an Act of Grace hath all the Elect and Ransomed ones ingraven as a seal on his heart and Christ being the fellow of God the man that standeth straight opposite to his eye the first opening of the eye-lids of GOD is terminated upon the breast of Christ and on the ingravening of Free-grace All the glory of the glorified is that they are both in the lower and higher house even when they are the States and Peers of Heaven the everlasting Tenants and Free-holders of Grace so as a soul can desire no fairer Inheritance then the Patrimony Lot and Heritage of Free-grace Now to this Grace commending Your Spirit as an Heir of Grace I rest Your Honours at all Obliged Respectivenesse in the GOD of Grace S. R. The Table of the Contents of the BOOK SERM. I. THe Scope Order and Contents of the Text Pag. 1 2. Matthew and Mark reconciled p. 3. Properties of Christs love ibid. What woman this was p. 4. The Art of the wise contexture of divine Providence in black and white fair and foul mixed in one for beauties sake p. 5. Two sides of Providence ibid. We erre in looking on Gods wayes by halfs especially on the black and sad side only p. 7. SERM. II. Christ took an humane will that he might stoop to God in all things p. 8. The strength of corrupt will p. 9. Two things in the will 1. The frame of it 2. The quality and goodnesse of it p. 10 There 's a necessity of renewing the will ibid. The Dispensation of God not Scripture nor a rule of faith p. 12. We trust possession of Christ by Faith more then we do right and Law through Faith p. 13. SERM. III. How Christ and his Grace cannot be hid in six particulars p. 14. 1. In his cause p. 15. 2· In the good and evil condition spiritual of the soul ibid. 3. In the joy of Christs presence p 16. 4. In a sincere profession ibid. 5. In the bearing down the stirrings of a renewed conscience p. 17. 6. In Desertions p. 18. We are to be obsequious and yeelding to the breathings of the Spirit p. 19. Our hearts are to be variously sutable to the various operations of the spirit from four reasons ibid. Grace falleth on few p. 21. Grace how rare choice a peece in four particulars p. 22. Grace not universall and common to all ibid. Nine Objections of the Arminian and naturall man Answered p. 22 23 24 25. SERM. IV. Grace falleth often on the most gracelesse p. 26. Grace maketh a great change three reasons thereof ibid. There 's a like reason for Grace on our Lords part to the vilest of men as to Moses Daniel Paul p. 28 The same Free-grace that we have here we have it in Heaven in the state of glory ibid. In Heaven we raign by Grace as by the same we War here p. 29. The justified in Christ are corrected for sin p. 30 The Furnace of affliction the work-house of the Grace of Christ four grounds thereof ibid. Mr. Townes assertion of Grace p. 32. How Antinomians judge sinnes to be corrected in the justified ibid. How Papists judge sins to be punished in the justified ibid. That God punisheth pardoned sins proved by seven Arguments p. 33. Rules to be observed in affliction p. 40. A Land or a Nation must be longer in the fire then one particular person p. 42. SERM. V. Satan worketh as a naturall Agent without moderation p. 43. Spirituall evils