Selected quad for the lemma: soul_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
soul_n body_n flesh_n receive_v 3,631 5 5.7176 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A47643 A practical commentary upon the first epistle general of St. Peter. Vol. II containing the third, fourth and fifth chapters / by the most Reverend Robert Leighton ... ; published after his death at the request of his friends. Leighton, Robert, 1611-1684.; Fall, James, 1646 or 7-1711. 1694 (1694) Wing L1029; ESTC R36245 321,962 503

There are 17 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

the first was there is no power of hell can dissolve it He suffered once to bring us once unto God never to depart again as he suffered once for all so we are brought once for all We may be sensibly nearer at one time than another but yet we can never be separate nor cut off being once knit by Christ as the bond of our Union Neither Principalities nor Powers c. shall be able to separate us from the love of God because it holds in Christ Jesus our Lord. Being put to death in the flesh but quickned by the Spirit The true life of a Christian is to eye Christ every step of his life both as his rule and as his strength looking to him as his pattern both in doing and suffering and drawing power from him for going through both for the look of Faith doth that fetches life from Jesus to enable it for all being without him able for nothing Therefore the Apostle doth still set this before his Brethren and here having mentioned his suffering in general the condition and end of it he specifies the particular kind of it that which was the utmost put to death in the flesh and then adds this issue out of it Quickned by the Spirit The strongest engagement and the strongest encouragement he our head crowned with Thorns and shall the body look for Garlands We redeemed from hell and Condemnation by him and can any such refuse any Service he calls them to they that are washt in the Lambs blood will follow him wheresoever he goes and following him through they shall find their Journeys end overpay all the troubles and sufferings of the way These are they said he to Iohn which came out of great tribulation tribulation and great tribulation yet they came out of it and glorious too arrayed in long white robes The scarlet Strumpet as follows in that Book died her Garments red in the blood of the Saints But this is their happiness that their Garments are washt white in the blood of the Lamb. Once take away sin and all suffering is light now that is done by this his once suffering for sin they that are in him shall hear no more of that as condemning them binding them over to suffer that wrath that is due to sin Now this puts an invincible strength into the Soul for all other things how hard soever Put to death This t●e utmost point and that which Men are most startled at to die and a violent death put to death and yet he hath led in this way who is the Captain of our Salvation In the flesh Under this second his humane Nature and Divine Nature and power are differenced Put to death in the flesh a very fit expression not only as is usual taking the flesh for the whole Manhood but because death is most properly spoken of that very person or his flesh the whole Man suffers death a dissolution or taking a pieces and the Soul suffers a separation or dislodging but death or the privation of life and sense particularly to the flesh or body but the Spirit here opposed to the flesh or body is certainly of a higher Nature and Power than is the Humane Soul which cannot of it self return and reinhabit and quicken the body Put to Death His death was both voluntary and violent that same power that restored his life could have kept it exempted from death but the design was for death he therefore took our flesh to put it off thus and offered it up as a Sacrifice which to be acceptable must of necessity be free and voluntary and in that sense he is said to have died even by that same Spirit that here in opposition to death is said to quicken him Heb. 9. 14. Through the eternal Spirit he offered himself without spot unto God They accounted it an ill boding sign when the Sacrifices came constrainedly to the Altar and drew back and on the contrary were glad in the hopes of success when they came chearfully-forward but never Sacrifice came so willingly all the way and from the first step knew whether he was going Yet because no other Sacrifice would serve he was most content Sacrifices and burnt Offerings thou didst not desire Then said I loe I come c. Was not only a willing Sacrifice as Isaac bound peaceably and laid on the Altar but his own Sacrificer the Beasts if they came willingly yet offered not themselves but he offered up himself and thus not only by a willingness far above all those Sacrifices of Bullocks and Goats but by the eternal Spirit offered up himself Therefore he says in this regard I lay down my life for my sheep it is not pull'd from me but I lay it down and so it is often exprest by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he died and yet this suites with it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 put to death yea it was also expedient to be thus that his death should be violent and so the more penal carry the more clear expression of a punishment and such a violent death as had both ignominy and a Curse tyed to it and this inflicted in a judicial way though as from the hands of Men most unjustly that he should stand and be Judged and Condemned to Death as a guilty Person carrying in that the Persons of so many that should otherwise have fallen under Condemnation as indeed guilty he was numbred with transgressors as the Prophet hath it bearing the sins of many Thus then there was in his Death external violence joyned with internal willingness But what is there to be found but Complications of Wonders in our Lord Jesus O! high inconceivable mystery of Godliness God manifested in the flesh nothing in this World so strange and sweet as that conjuncture God Man humanitas Dei what a strong Foundation of Friendship and Union betwixt the Persons of Man and God that their natures met in so close embraces in one Person And then look on and see so poor and despised an outward condition through his life yet having hid under it the Majesty of God all the brightness of the Fathers Glory And this the top of all that he was put to Death in the flesh the Lord of life dying the Lord of Glory cloathed with shame But it quickly appeared what kind of Person it was that died by this he was put to Death indeed in the flesh but quickned by the Spirit Quickned He was indeed too great a morsel for the Grave to digest for all its vast craving mouth and devouring appetite crying give give yet forced to give him up again as the fish that Prophet who in that was the figure of him the Chains of that Prison are strong but he was too strong a Prisoner to be held by them as our Apostle hath it in his Sermon that it was not possible that he should be kept by them They thought all was sure when they had rolled to the Stone and
the particular resemblance of it with the rule of Christianity Baptism the like figure c. In them 1. The end of Baptism 2. The proper vertue or efficacy of it for that end A resemblance in both these to Noah's preservation in the flood Save us This is the great common end of all the Ordinances of God that one high mark they all aim at And the great and common mistake of them is that they are not so understood and used We come and fit a while and if we can keep awake give the Word the hearing but how few of us recei●e it as the ingra●ted Word that is able to save our Souls were it thus taken what sweetness would be found in it that most as hear and read it are strangers to How precious would these lines be if we look●● on them thus saw them meeting and concentring in Salvation as their end Thus likewise the Sacraments considered indeed as Seals of this Inheritance annexed to the great Charter of it Seals of Salvation this would powerfully beget a sit appetite for the Lord's Supper when we are invited to it and would beget a due esteem of Baptism would teach you more frequent and fruitful thoughts of your own and more pious considerations of it when you require it for your Children A natural eye looks upon Bread and Wine and Water and the outward difference of their use there that they are set apart and differenced as is evident by external circumstances from their common use but the main of the difference where their excellency lies it sees not as the eye of faith above that espies Salvation under them and Oh! what another thing are they to it than to a formal user of them We aspire to know the hidden rich things of God that are wrapt up in his Ordinances We stick in the shell and superfice of them and seek no further that makes them unbeautiful and unsavoury to us and that use of them turns into an empty custome Be more earnest with him that hath appointed them and made this their end to save us that he would clear up the eye of our Souls to see them thus under this relation and see how they ●uit to this their end and tend to it and seriously 〈◊〉 Salvation in them from his own hand and we shall find it Save us So that this Salvation of Noah and his Family from the Deluge and all outward deliverances and Salvations but dark shadows of this let them not be spoke of these reprivalls and prolongings of this present li●e to the deliverance of the Soul from death the Second death the stretching of a moment to the concernment of Eternity How would any of you welcome a full and sure protection from common dangers if such were to be had that you should be ascertained of safety from Sword and Pestilence that what ever others suffered about you you and your Family should be free And they that have escaped a near danger of this kind resting there as if no more were to be feared whereas this common favour may be shew'd to these that are far off from God and what though you be not only thus far safe but I say if you were secured for afterwards which none of you absolutely are yet when you are put out of danger of Sword and plague still death remains and sin and wrath may be remaining with it and shall it not be all one to dye under these in a time of publick peace and welfare as if it were now Ye● something more unhappy by the increase of the heap of sin and wrath guiltiness augmented by life prolong'd and more grievous to be pulled away from the World in the middle of peacable enjoyment and Everlasting darkness to succeed to that short Sun-shine of thy day of ease happiness of a short date and misery for ever What availed it wicked Cham to outlive the flood to Inherit a Curse after it to be kept undrown'd in the waters to see himself and his posterity blasted with his Fathers Curse Think seriously what will be the end of all thy temporary safety and preservation if thou share not in this Salvation and find not thy self sealed and marked for it to flatter thy self with a dream of happiness and walk in the light of a few sparkles that will soon dye out and then lie down in sorrow a sad bed that the most have to go to after they have wearied themselves all the day all their life being in a chase of Vanity The next thing is the power and vertue of this means for its end That it hath a Power is clear in that it is so expresly said it doth save us which kind of power is as clear in the way of it here exprest not by a natural force of the Element though adapted and sacramentally used it only can wash away the silth of the Body its Physical Efficacy or power reaches no further but it is in the hand of the Spirit of God as other Sacraments and as the Word it self is to purifie the Conscience and convey Grace and Salvation to the Soul by the reference it hath to and union with that which it represents It saves by answer of a good Conscience unto God and it affords that by the Resurrection of Iesus from the dead Thus then we have a true Accompt of the Power of this and so of other Sacraments and a discovery of the error of two extreams 1. Of those that ascribe too much to them as if they wrought by a Natural inherent Vertue and carried Grace in them inseparably 2. Of those that ascribe too little to them making them only signs and badges of our Profession signs they are but more than signs meerly representing they are means exhibiting and seals confirming Grace to the Faithful But the working of Faith and the conveying of Christ into the Soul to be received by Faith is not a thing put into them to do of themselves but still in the Supream hand that appointed them and he indeed both causes the Souls of his own to receive these his Seals with faith and makes them effectually to confirm that Faith which receives them so They are then in a word neither empty signs to them that believe nor effectual Causes of Grace to them that believe not The mistake on both sides arises from the inconsideration of the relative Nature of these Seals and that kind of Union that is betwixt them and the Grace they represent which is real though not Natural or Physical as they speak So that though they do not save all that partake of them yet they do really and effectually save Believers for whose Salvation they are means as the other external Ordinances of God do Though they have not that Power which is peculiar to the Author of them yet a Power they have such as befits their Nature and by reason of which they are truely said to Sanctifie and Justifie and so to
can digest much frowardness of a Husband and make that her patient subjection a sacrifice to God Lord I offer this to thee and for thy sake I humbly bear it The worth and love of a Husband may cause that respect where this Rule moves not but the Christian Wife that hath love to God tho her Husband be not so comely nor so wise nor any way so amiable as many others yet because her own Husband and because of the Lord's command in the general and his Providence in the particular dispose of his own therefore she loves and obeys That if any obey not the Word This supposes a particular Case and applies the Rule to it takes it for granted a believing Wi●e will chearfully observe and respect a believing Husband but if an Unbeliever yet that unties not this engagement yea there is something in it presses it and binds it the more a singular good that probably may follow upon obeying such by that good Conversation they may be gained that believe not the Word not that they could be fully converted without the Word but having a prejudice against the Word that may be remov'd by the carriage of a believing Wife and they may be somewhat mollified and prepar'd and induc'd to hearken to Religion and take it into consideration This gives not Christians warrant to draw on this Task and make themselves this Work by chusing to be joyned to an Unbeliever either a prophane or meer natural Husband or Wife but teaches them being so matched what should be their great desire and their suitable carriage to the attainment of it And in the primitive Christian times this fell out often that by the Gospel preached the Husband might be converted from gross Infidelity Judaism or Paganism and not the Wife or the Wife which is the supposition here and not the Husband and there came in the use of this consideration And in this is the freedom of Divine Grace to pick and chuse where he will one of a Family or two of a Tribe as the Prophet hath it and according to our Saviour's word two in one Bed the one taken and the other left Some selected Ones in a Congregation and in a House a Child possibly or Servant or Wife and leave the rest The Apostle seems to imply particularly that there were many instances of this Wives Converts and Husbands unbelieving We can determine nothing of their conjecture that think there shall be more of that Sex here call'd the weaker Vessel than of the other that shall be Vessels of honour which God seasons with Grace here and hereafter will fill with Glory but this is clear that many of them are converted while many Men and divers of them very wise and learned Men having the same and far greater means and opportunities do perish in unbelief This I say evidences the Liberty and the Power of the Spirit of God that Wind that bloweth where it listeth and withal it suits with that word of the Apostle that the Lord this way abases these things that men account so much of and hath chosen the weak things of the World to confound the mighty c. Nor doth the pliableness and tenderness of their affections tho Grace once wrought may make good use of that make their conversion the easier but the harder rather for through Natures corruption they would by that yield more to evil than to good but the efficacy of Grace appears much in establishing their hearts in the love of God and making them once possess'd with that to be inflexible and invincible by the tentations of the World and the strength and ●lights of Satan That which is here said of their Conversation holds of the Husband in the like case and of Friends and Kindred and generally of all Christians in reference to them with whom they converse that their spotless holy carriage as Christians and in their particular stations as Christian Husbands or Wives or Friends is a very likely and hopeful means of converting others that believe not Men that are prejudic'd observe actions a great deal more than words In those first times especially the blameless carriage of Christians did much to the increasing of their number Strive ye Wives and others to adorn and commend the Religion you profess to others especially those nearest you that are averse Give no just cause of scandal and prejudice against Religion beware not only of gross ●ailings and ways of sin but of such imprudencies as may expose you and your Profession study both holy and wise carriage and pray much for it Iam. 1. 5. If any of you lack Wisdom l●t him ask of God that giveth to all men liberally and upbraideth not and it shall be given him But if Wives and other private Christians be thus oblig'd how much more the Ministers of the Word● Oh! that we could remember our deep engagement to Holiness of life he said right either teach none or let your life teach too Cohelleth anima conci●natrix must the Preacher be the Word of Life springing from inward Affection and then Vita conci●natrix The Sundays Sermon lasts but an hour or two but holines● of Life is a continued Sermon all the Week long They also without the Words may he won The Conversion of a So●l is an inesti●●a●● gai● 't is a high trading and design to go about it Oh! the precious Soul but disvalu'd by most Will we believe him that knew well the price of it for he p●id it that the whole visible World is not worth one Soul the gaining it all cannot countervail that less This Wives and Husbands and Parents and Friend● i● themselves converted would consider seriously and apply themselves to pray much that their unconverted Relations in nature dead may be enliven'd and they may receive them from death and esteem of nothing rest in no natural content nor gain without that at least using unc●s●●nt diligence in seeking it and their utmost skill and p●●ns in it but above all this is the peculiar task of Ministers as the Apostle often repeats it of himself 1 Cor. 9. all gains on earth base for this a Soul converted is gained to it self gained to the Pastor or Friend or Wife or Husband that sought it and gained to Jesus Christ added to his Treasury who thought not his own precious Blood too dear to lay out for this Gain Verse 2. While they behold your chast Conversation coupled with fear AS all Graces are connexed in their own Nature so 't is altogether necessary that they be found so for the end here propounded the conversion of those that are strangers to Religion and possest with false notions of it and prejudices against it 'T is not the regularness of some particular actions nor the observance of some duties that will serve but it is an even uniform frame of Life that the Apostle here teaches Christian Wives particularly in reference to this end the gaining or conversion
or Sign hanging out that tells a vain Mind lodges within 2. Of excessive costliness which both argues and ●●eds the Pride of the Heart and defrauds if not others of their dues yet the poor of thy charity which in God's sight is a due debt too and far more comfort shall thou have on thy death Bed to remember such a time in stead of Lace on my own Cloaths I helped a naked back to cloathing I abated somewhat of my former superfluities to supply the Poors necessities sweeter this than to remember that I could needlesly cast out many pounds to serve my Pride rather than give a penny to relieve the Poor As conscientious Christians will not exceed in the thing it self so in as far as they use lawful Ornament and Comeliness they will do it without bestowing much either diligence or delight on the business To have the mind taken and pleas'd with such things is so foolish and childish a thing that if most might not find it in themselves they would wonder at many others of years and common wit And yet truely 't is a Disease that few escape 't is strange upon how poor things Men and Women will be vain and think themselves some body not only upon some comeliness in their face or feature which though poor yet is a part of themselves but of things meerly without them that they are well lodged or well mounted or well apparell'd either richly or well in fashion light empty minds as bladders blown up with any thing and they that perceive not this in themselves are most drown'd but such as have found it out and abhor their own follies are still hunting and following themselves in these to beat them out of their hearts and to shame them from such fopperies The Soul fallen from God hath lost its true worth and beauty and therefore it basely descends to these mean things to serve and dress the body and take share with it of its unworthy borrow'd Ornaments hath lost and forgotten God and seeks not after him knows not that he is the alone Beauty and Ornament of the Soul Ier. 2. 32. his Spirit and the Graces of it its rich attire as here particularly specified in one excellent Grace and holds true in the rest The Apostle doth indeed expresly on purpose check and forbid vanity and excess in apparel and excessive delight in lawful decorum but his prime end is to recommend this other Ornament of the Soul The hidden man of the heart 'T is the thing the best Philosophy aim'd at as some of their choice men do express it to reduce men as much as may be from their Body to their Soul but this is the thing that true Religion alone doth effectually and throughly from the pampering and feeding of a Morsel for the Worms to the nourishing of that immortal being infus'd into 't and directs it to the proper nourishment of Souls the Bread that came down from Heaven Io. 6. 27. So here the Apostle pulls off from Christian Women their vain outside Ornaments but is not this a wrong to spoil all their dressing and fineness No he doth but this to send them to a better Wardrobe there 's much profit in the change All the Gold and other riches of the Temple figuring the Excellent Graces of Christians of Christ indeed first as having all fullness in himself and furnishing them but secondarily of Christians as the living Temples of God so the Church all glorious but within and the embroidery the variety of Graces the lively colours of other Graces shining best on the dark ground of Humility Christ delights to give much Ornament to his Church commends what she hath and adds more Cant. 1. 10. 11. The particular Grace he recommends is particularly suitable to his subject in hand the conjugal duty of Wives nothing so decoring their whole carriage as this meekness and quietness of Spirit but it is withal the comeliness of every Christian in every estate 't is not a Womans Garment or Ornament improper for Men there is somewhat as I may say of a particular cut or fashion of it for Wives towards their Husbands and in their domestick Affairs but Men all Men ought to wear of the same stuff yea so to speak of the same piece for it is in all one and the same Spirit fits the stoutest and greatest Commanders Moses a great General and yet no less great in this Virtue the meekest Man on Earth Nothing more uncomely in a Wife than an uncomposed turbulent Spirit that is put out of frame with every trifle and inventive of false causes of disquietness and fretting to it self And so of a Husband and of all an unquiet passionate Mind lays it self naked and discovers its own deformity to all The greatest part of things that vex us are not from their Nature or weight but the unsettledness of our Minds How comely is it to see a composed firm Mind and Carriage that is not lightly moved I urge not a Stoical stupidness but that in things that deserve sharp reproof the Mind keep in its own Station and Seat still not shaken out of it self as the most are that the Tongue utter not unseemly rash words nor the Hand act any thing that discovers the mind hath lost its command for the time but truly the most know so ill how to use just anger upon just cause that it is easier and the safer extream not to be angry but still calm and serene as the upper Region not the place of continual tempest and storms as the most are let it pass for a kind of sheepishness to be meek 't is a likeness to him that was a Sheep before the shearers not opening his Mouth 't is a Portion of his Spirit The Apostle commends his exchange of Ornaments from two things 1. Incorruptible and therefore fits an incorruptible Soul Your varieties of Jewels and Rich Apparel are perishing things you shall one day see an heap made of all and that all on a slame and in reference to you they perish sooner when death strips you of your nearest Garment your flesh all the other that were but loose upper Garments above it must off too it gets indeed a covering to the Grave but the Soul is left stark naked if no other Cloathing be provided for it for the Body was but borrowed then it is denuded of all But spiritual Ornaments and this here amongst them remain and are incorruptible they neither wear out nor out of fashion but are still the better for the wearing and shall last Eternity and shine there in full lustre And 2dly because the opinion of others is much regarded in matter of Apparel and 't is most for that we use Ornament in it he tells us of the account of this Men think it poor and mean nothing more expos'd to contempt than the Spirit of Meekness mere folly with Men that 's no matter this overweighs all their disesteem 't is
Ierusalems Wall● than for the binding up and healing of it self and in that Psal. that seem's to be the expression of his joy being exalted to the Throne and sitting peaceably on it yet he still thus prays for the peace of Ierusalem And the Penman of that 137. Psalm makes it an execrable oversight to forget Ierusalem ver 5. or to remember it coldly or secundarily no less will serve him than to prefer it to his chief joy Whatsoever else is top or head of his joy as the word is Ierusalems wellfare shall be its Crown shall be set above it And the Prophet whoever it was that wrote that poured out that Prayer from an afflicted Soul comforts himself in this that Zion shall be favoured my bones are consum'd c. But it matters not what becomes of me let me languish and wither away provided Sion flourish tho' I feel nothing but pains and troubles yet thou wilt arise and shew mercy to Sion I am content that satisfies me But where is now this Spirit of high sympathy with the Church sure if there were of it in us 't is now a fit time to act it If we be not altogether dead sure we will be stirr'd with the voice of those late stroaks of Gods hand and be driven to more humble and earnest prayer by it Men will change their poor base grumblings about their privacy Oh! what shall I do c. into strong cries for the Church of God and the publick deliverance of all these Kingdomes from the raging Sword but vile selfishness undoes us the most looking no further if themselves and theirs might be secur'd would regard little what became of the rest as one said when I am dead let the World be fir'd but the Christian mind is of a larger Sphere looks not only upon more than it self in present but even to after Times and Ages and can rejoyce in the good to come when it self shall not be here to partake of it is more dilated and liker unto God and to our head Iesus Christ. The Lord says the Prophet Esay in all his peoples affliction was afflicted himself and Jesus Christ accounts the sufferings of his Body the Church his own Saul Saul why persecutest thou me the heel was trod upon on earth and the head cryeth from Heaven as sensible of it and this in all our evils especially our spiritual Griefs is a high point of comfort to us that our Lord Jesus is not insensible of them This emboldens us to complain our selves and to put in our petitions for help to the Throne of Grace through his hand knowing that when he presents he will speak his own sense of our condition and move for us as it were for himself as we have it sweetly express'd Heb. 4. 15. 16. Now as it is our comfort so it is our pattern Love as Brethren Hence springs this feeling we speak o● Love is the cause of union and union the cause of sympathy and of that unanimity before they that have the same spirit uniting and animating them cannot but have the same Mind and the same feelings And this Spirit is derived from that head Christ in whom Christians live and move and have their being their new and excellent being and so in living in him they love him and are one in him they are Brethren as here the word is their fraternity holds in him he is head of it the first born among many Brethren Men are Brethren in two natural respects their Bodies of the same earth and their Souls breathed from the same God but this third fraternity that is founded in Christ is far more excellent and more firm than the other two for being one in him they have there taken in the other two for that in him is our whole Nature he is the Man Christ Iesus but to the advantage and 't is an infinite one being one in him we are united by the Divine Nature in him who is God blessed for ever and this is the highest certainly and the strongest union that can be imagin'd Now this is a great Mystery indeed as the Apostle says speaking of this same point the union of Christ and his Church whence their union and Communion one with another that make up that Body the Church is deriv'd In Christ every believer is born of God is his Son and so they are not only Brethren one with another that are so born but Christ himself own 's them as his Brethren both he which sanctifies and they who are sanctifi●d are all of one for which cause he is not asham'd to call them Brethren Sin broke all to pieces Man from God and one from another Christ's work in the World was Vnion to make up these breaches he came down and begun the union which was his work in the wonderful union made in his Person that was to work it made God and Man one and as the Nature of Man was reconciled so by what he performed the Persons of Men are united to God Faith makes them one with him and he makes them one with the Father and from these results this oneness amongst themselves concentring and meeting in Jesus Christ and in the Father through him they are made one together And that this was his great work we may read in his Prayer where it is the burden and main strain the great request he so iterates that they may be one as we are one ver 11. a high comparison such as Man durst not name but after him that so warrants us and again ver 21. that they all may be one as thou Father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us and so on So that certainly where this is it is the ground work of another kind of Friendship and love than the World is acquainted with or is able to judge of and hath more worth in one drachme of it than all the quintessence of civil or natural assection can amount to The friendship of the World the best of them are but tyed with chains of glass but this fraternal love of Christians is a Golden chain both more precious and more strong and lasting the other are worthless and brittle The Christian ows and pays a General Charity and good will to all but peculiar and intimate friendship he cannot have but with such as come within the compass of this fraternal love Which after a special manner flows from God and returns to him and abides in him and shall remain unto eternity Where this love is and abounds it will banish far away all those dissentions and bitternesses and those ●rivolous mistakings that are so frequent amongst the most it will teach wisely and gently to admonish one another where it is needful but further than that it will pass by many offences and failings and cover a multitude of sins and will very much sweeten Society and make it truly profitable therefore the Psalmist calls it both
that for Cry in the Psalm do mean and in that sense the Lord's open ear and hearkning hath in it his readiness to answer as one that doth hear and to answer graciously and really as hearing favourably Some directions 1. For Prayer that it may be accepted and answered 2. For observing the answers of it 1. For Prayer the qualification of the Heart that offers it 2. The way of offering it The Heart 1. In some measure a holy Heart according to that here the Righteous no regarding iniquity entertaining of friendship with any sin but a permanent ove and desire of Holiness Thus indeed a man prays within himself as in a sanctified Place whither the Lord's ear inclines as of old to the Temple need not run superstitiously to a Church c. intra te ora sed vide prius an sis templum Dei The sanctified Man's Body is the Temple of the holy Ghost as the Apostle speaks and his Soul the Priest in it that offers sacrifice both holy to the Lord consecrated to him a believing Heart no praying without this Faith the very life of Prayer whence springs Hope and Comfort with it to uphold the Soul and keep it steady under storms with the promises and as Aaron and Hur to Moses keeping it from fainting strengthening the hands when they would begin to fail that word Psal. 10. 17. for the preparing of the heart which God gives as an assurance and pledge of his inclining his ear to hear signifies the establishing of the Heart that indeed is a main point of its preparedness and due disposition for Prayer Now this is done by Faith without which the Soul as the Apostle St. Iames speaks is a rolling unquiet thing as a Wave of the Sea of it self unstable as the Waters and then driven with the Wind and tossed too and fro with every tentation see and feel thine own unworthiness as much as thou canst for thou art never bid believe in thy self no but countermanded that as Faith's great Enemy but what hath thy unworthiness to say against free promises of Grace which are the basis of thy Faith so then believe that that you may pray this is David's advice Ps. 62. Trust in him at all times ye people and then pour out your hearts before him confide in him as a most faithful and powerful Friend and than you will open your hearts to him 2. For the way of offering up prayer 't is a great art a main part of the secret of Religion to be skill'd in it and of great concern for the comfort and success of it much here to be considered but for the present briefly 1. Offer not to speak to him without the heart in some measure season'd and prepossess'd with the sense of his Greatness and Holiness and there is much in this considering wisely to whom we speak the King the Lord of Glory and setting the Soul before him in his presence and then reflecting on our selves and seeing what we are how wretched and base and filthy and unworthy of such access to such a Great Majesty the want of this preparing of the heart to speak in the Lord's ear by the consideration of God and our selves is that which fills the exercise of prayer with much guiltiness makes the heart careless and slight and irreverent and so displeases the Lord and disappoints our selves of that comfort in prayer and answers of it that otherwise we would have more experience of We rush in before him with any thing provided we can tumble out a few words and do not weigh these things and compose our hearts with serious thoughts and conceptions of God The Soul that studies and endeavours this most hath much to do to attain to any right apprehensions of him for how little know we of him yet should we at least set our selves before him as the purest and greatest Spirit a Being infinitely more Excellent than our Minds or any Creature can conceive this would fill the Soul with awe and reverence and balast it make it go more even through the exercise to consider the Lord as that Prophet saw him sitting on his Throne and all the Host of Heaven standing by him on his right Hand and on his left and thy self a defiled Sinner coming before him as a vile Frog creeping out of some Pool how would this fill thee with holy Fear Oh! His greatness and our baseness and Oh! the distance This is Solomon's advice be not rash with thy mouth and let not thy heart be hasty to utter any thing before God for God is in Heaven and thou upon Earth therefore let thy words be few This would keep us from our ordinary bablings that heart nonsense tho' the words be sense yet through the inattention of the heart are but as impertinent confus'd Dreams in the Lord's ears as there follow v. 3. 2. When thou addressest thy self to prayer desire and depend upon the assistance and inspiration of the holy Spirit of God without which thou art not able truly to pray 't is a supernatural work and therefore the principle of it must be supernatural He that hath nothing of the Spirit of God cannot pray at all he may howle as a Beast in his necessity or distress or may speak words of Prayer as some Birds learn the Language of Men but pray he cannot and they that have that Spirit ought to seek the movings and actual workings of it in them in Prayer the particular help of their infirmities teaching both what to ask a thing that of our selves we know not and then enabling them to ask breathing forth their desires in such sighs and groans as the breath not simply of their own but of God's Spirit 3dly As those two before it so in the exercise of it you should learn to keep a watchful eye over your own hearts throughout for every step of the way that they start not out by the keeping up of a continued remembrance of that presence of God which in the entry of the work is to be set before the eye of the Soul and our endeavour ought to be to six it upon that view that it turn not aside nor downwards but from beginning to end keep sight of him who sees and marks whether we do so or no. They that are most inspective and watchful in this will still be faulty in it but certainly the less watchful the more faulty and this we ought to do to be aspiring daily to more stability of mind in prayer and driving out somewhat of that roving and wandring that is so universal an Evil and certainly so grievous to those that have it most but that observe and discover it most and endeavour most against it A strange thing that the mind even the renewed mind should be so ready not only at other times but in the exercise of Prayer wherein we peculiarly come so near to God yet even then to slip out and leave him and follow some
painful diseases that either quickly cut the thread of Life or make their aged bones full of the sins of their youth Take what way you will there is no place nor condition so senc'd and guarded but publick calamities or personal griefs find away to reach us Seeing then we must suffer however this kind of suffering to suffer for righteousness is far the best what he said 〈◊〉 of doing ill we may well say of suffering ill if it must be 't is best to be for a Kingdome And those are the terms on which Christians are called to su●●er for righteousness if we will reign with Christ certain 〈…〉 s●ffer with him and if we do suffer with hi● 〈…〉 we shall reign with him And therefo●● 〈…〉 are happy But 〈…〉 suffering for righteousness only with relation to 〈◊〉 Apostle's present reasoning his conlusion he establish● 1. From the favour and protection of God 2. From the nature of the thing it self Now we would consider the consistence of this supposition with those reasons 1. The Eyes of the Lord being on the righteous for their good and his Ear open to their Prayer how is it that for all that favour and inspection they are so much expos'd to suffering and even for the regard and affection they bear towards him suffering for righteousness these seem not to agree well yet they do 'T is not said that his Eye is so on them as that he will never see them afflicted nor have them suffer any thing no but this is their great priviledge and comfort in suffering that his gracious Eye is then upon them and sees their trouble and his Ear towards them not so as to grant them an exemption for that they will not seek for but seasonable deliverance and in the mean while strong support as is evident in that 34th Psalm If his Eye be always on them he sees them suffer often for their afflictions are many ver 19. and if his Ear be to them he hears many sighs and cries press'd out by sufferings and they are content this is enough yea better then not to suffer they suffer and often directly for him but he sees it all takes perfect notice on 't therefore 't is not lost And they are forc'd to cry but none of their cries escape his Ear he hears and he manifests that he sees and hears for he delivers them and till he does he keeps them from being crush'd under the weight of the suffering he keeps all his bones not one of them is broken He sees yea appoints and provide these conflicts for his choicest Servants he sets his Champions to encounter the malice of Satan and the World for his sake to give proof of the truth and the strength of their love to him for whom they suffer and to overcome even in suffering He is sure of his design'd advantages out of the sufferings of his Church and Saints for his name he loses nothing nor they lose nothing but their Enemies when they rage most and prevail most are ever the most losers his own glory grows and his peoples graces grow yea their very number grows and that sometimes most by their greatest sufferings It was evident in the first Ages of the Christian Churches where were the glory of so much invincible love and patience if they had not been so put to it 2. For the other that the said following of good would preserve from harm it speaks truly the nature of it what 't is apt to do and what in some measure it often doth but the considering the nature of the World its enmity against God and Religion that strong poyson in the Serpents Seed it is not strange that it often proves otherwise that notwithstanding the righteous carriage of Christians yea even because of it they suffer much 't is a resolv'd case all that will live godly must suffer Persecution it meets a Christian in his entry to the way of the Kingdome and goes along all the way no sooner begin thou to seek the way to Heaven but the World will seek how to vex and molest thee and make that way grievous if no other way by scoffs and taunts as bitter blasts to destroy the tender blossom or bud of Religion or as Herod to kill Christ newly born you shall no sooner begin to enquire after God but twenty to one they will begin to enquire if thou art gone mad but if thou knowest who 't is whom thou hast trusted and whom thou lovest this is a small matter what though it were deeper and sharper sufferings yet still if you suffer for righteousness happy are you Which is the Second thing was proposed and more particularly imports that a Christian under the heaviest load of sufferings for righteousness is yet still happy notwithstanding these suffering 2dly That he is happier even by these sufferings And 1. All the sufferings and distresses of this World are not able to destroy the Happiness of a Christian nor diminish it yea they cannot at all touch it 't is out of their reach If it were built on worldly enjoyments then worldly deprivements and sufferings might shake it yea might undo it when those rotten stoups fail that which rests on them must fall he that hath set his heart on his riches a few hours can make him miserable 't is almost in any bodies power to rob him of his Happiness a little slight or disgrace undoes him or whatsoever the Soul fixes on of these moving unfixed things pluck them from it and it must cry after them ye have taken away my God's But the Believer's happiness is safe out of shot he may be impoverished and imprison'd and tortur'd and kill'd but this one thing is out of hazard he cannot be miserable still in the midst of all these subsists a happy Man If all Friends be shut out yet the visits of the Comforter may be frequent bringing him glad tydings from Heaven and communing with him of the love of Christ and sola●ing him in that 'T was a great word for a Heathen of his false 〈◊〉 kill me they may but they cannot hurt me how much more confidently may the Christian say so banishment he ●ears not for his Country is above nor death for that sets him home into that Country The believing Soul having hold of Jesus Christ can easily despise the best and the worst of the World and give a defie to all that 's in it can share with the Apostle in that which he gives I am perswaded that neither death nor life shall separate me from the love of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. Yea what tho' the frame of the World were a dissolving and salling a pieces this happiness holds and is not stir'd by it for 't is in that Rock of Eternity that stirs not nor changes at all Our main work truly if you will believe it is this to provide this immoveable happiness that amidst all changes and losses and sufferings
and to be above troubles and fears seek for a more lively and Divine Knowledge of God than most as yet have and rest not till you bring him into your hearts and then you shall rest indeed in him Sanctifie him by fearing him let him be your fear and your dread not only outward gross offences fear an Oath fear to prophane the Lord's Holy Day but fear all irregular earthly desires the distemper'd affecting any thing entertaining any thing in the secret of your hearts that may give distaste to your beloved take heed respect the great Person you have in you Company and lodges within you the holy Spirit grieve him not for it will turn to your own grief if you do for all your comfort is in his hand and flows from him if you be but in heart dallying with sin it will unfit you for suffering outward troubles and make your spirit low and base in the day of tryal yea it will fill you with inward trouble and disturb that peace which I am sure you that know esteem more of then all the peace and flourishing of this World Outward troubles do not molest nor stir inward peace but an unholy unsanctified affection doth all the winds without cause not an earth quake but that within its own bowels doth Christians are much their own enemies in unwary walking prejudge themselves of those comforts they might have in God and so are often almost as perplex'd and full of fears upon small occasions as worldlings are Sanctifie him by believing study the main question your reconcilement with him labour to bring that to some point and then in all other occurrences Faith will uphold you by relying on God as now yours for those three things make up the Souls peace 1. To have right apprehension of God looking on him in Christ and according to that covenant that holds in him And 2. A particular apprehension that is laying hold on him in that covenant as gracious and merciful as satisfied and appeased in Christ smelling in his sacrifice which was himself a savour of rest and setting himself before me that I may rely on him in that notion 3. A perswasion that by so relying on him my Soul is at one yea is one with him yet while this is wanting as to a Believer it may be the other is our duty to Sanctifie the Lord in believing the word of Grace and believing on him reposing on his Word and this even sever'd from the other doth deliver in a good measure from distracting fears and troubles and sets the Soul at safety Whence is it that in times of Persecution or Trouble Men are troubl'd within and rackt with fears but because instead of God their hearts are gl●ed to those things that are in hazard by those troubles without their estates or their ease or their lives the Soul destitute of God esteems so highly of such things that it cannot but exceedingly feel when they are in danger and fear their loss most gaping after some imagin'd good and Oh! i● I had but this I were well but then such or such a thing may step in and break all my Projects and this troubles the poor Spiri● of Man that hath no higher designs but such as are so easily blasted and still as any thing in Man lists up his Soul to vanity it must needs fall down again into vexation There is a word or two in the Hebrew for Idols that signifie withal Troubles and Terrors and so 't is certainly All our Idols prove so to us fill us with nothing but anguish and troubles with unprofitable cares and fears that are good for nothing but to be fit punishments of that folly out of which they arise The ardent love or wilful desire of Prosperity or Wealth or Credit in the World carries with it as inseparably ty'd to it a bundle of fears and inward troubles They that will be rich says the Apostle fall into a snare and many noysome and hurtful lusts and as he adds in the next Verse they pierce themselves through with many sorrows He that hath set his Heart upon an Estate or a commodious Dwelling and Lands or upon a healthful and long Life cannot but be in continued alarms of renewed fears concerning them especially in troublous times the least rumor of any thing that threatneth his deprivement of those advantages strikes him to the heart because his heart is in them I am well seated thinks he and I am of a sound strong constitution and may have many a good day Oh! but beside the Arrows of Pestilence that are flying round about the Sword of a cruel Enemy is not far off this will affright and trouble a heart void of God but if thou wouldst readily answer and dispel all these and such like fears Sanctifie the Lord God in thy Heart the Soul that eyes God renounces these things looks on them at a great distance as things far from the Heart and therefore that cannot easily trouble it but looks on God as within the Heart sanctifies him in it and rests on him The Word of God cures the many foolish hopes and fears that we are naturally sick of by representing to us hopes and fears of a far higher Nature which swallow up and drown the other as Inundations and Land●●oods do the little Ditches in those Meadows that they overflow fear not says our Saviour him that can kill the Body what then fear must have some work he adds but fear him that can kill both Soul and Body Thus in the passage cited here fear not their fear but sanctifie the Lord and let him be your fear and your dread And so for the hopes of the World care not to lose them for God there is a hope in you as it follows here that is far above them Be ready always to give an answer The real Christian is all for Christ hath given up all right of himself to his Lord and Master to be all his to do and suffer for him and therefore sure will not fail in this which is least to speak for him upon all Occasions if he sanctifie him in his Heart the Tongue will follow and be ready 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to give an Answer a Defence or Apology Of this here four things 1. The need of it Men will ask an account 2. The Matter or Subject of it the hope in you 3. The manner with meekness and fear 4. The faculty for it be ready 1. Religion is always the thing in the World that hath the greatest calumnies and prejudices cast upon it and this engages those that love it to endeavour to clear and disburden it of them this they do chiefly by the Tract of their Lives the Saints by their blameless Actions and patient Sufferings do write most real and convincing Apologies yet sometimes 't is expedient yea necessary to add verbal Defences and to vindica●e not so much themselves as their Lord and his Truth suffering in the
before thee as a Saviour to believe on that so he may be thy Saviour why wilt thou not come unto him why resuseth thou to believe art thou a sinner art thou unjust then he is fit for thy case he suffered for Sins the Iust for the Vnjust Oh but so many and so great sins yea is that it it is true indeed and good reason thou think so But 1. Consider if they be excepted in the Proclamation of Christ the Pardon that comes in his Name if not if he make no exception why wilt thou 2. Consider if thou wilt call them greater than this Sacrifice he suffered Take due notice of the greatness and worth 1. Of his Person and thence of his Sufferings and thou wilt not dare to say thy sin goes above the value of his suffering or that thou art too unjust for him to justifie thee be as unrighteous as thou canst be art thou convinced of it then know that Jesus the Just is more Righteous than thy unrighteousness And after all is said that any sinner hath to say they are yet without exception blessed that trust in him That he might bring us to God It is a chief Point of Wisdom to proportion means to their end therefore the all-wise God in putting his only Son to so hard a task had a high end in this and this was it That he might bring us unto God In this three things 1. The Nature of this good nearness unto God 2. Our deprivement of it by our own sin 3. Our restorement to it by Christs sufferings 1. God hath suited every Creature he hath made with a convenient good to which it tends and in the obtainment of which it rests and is satisfied Natural bodies have each their own natural place whether if not hindred they move uncessantly till they be in it and there declare by resting there that they are as I may say where they would be Sensitive Creatures are carried to seek a sensitive good as agreeable to their rank and being and attaining that aim no further Now in this is the Excellency of Man he is made capable of a Communion with his Maker and because capable of it is unsatisfied without it The Soul a Being cut out so to speak to that largeness cannot be fill'd with less though he is fallen from his right to that good and from all right desire of it yet not from a capacity of it no nor from a necessity of it for the answering and filling of his capacity Though the Heart once gone from God turns continually further away from him and moves not towards him till it be renewed yet ever in that wandering it retains that natural relation to God as its Center that it hath no true rest elsewhere nor cannot by any means find it It is made for him and is there●ore still restless till it meet with him It is true the Natural Man takes much pains to quiet his Heart by other things and digests many vexations with hopes of contentment in the end and accomplishment of some design he hath but still they misgive Many times he attains not the thing he seeks but if he do yet never attains the satisfaction he seeks and expects in it only learns from that to desire something farther and still hunts on after a fancy drives his own shadow before him and never overtakes it and if he did yet it s but a shadow and so in running from God besides the sad end he carries an interwoven punishment with his sin the natural disquiet and vexation of his Spirit fluttering too and fro no rest for the sole of his foot The matters of unconstancy and vanity covering the whole Face of the Earth We study to abase our souls and to make them content with less than they are made for yea we strive to make them carnal that they may be pleased with sensible things and in this men attain a brutish content for a time forgetting their higher good but certainly we cannot think it sufficient and that no more were to be desired beyond Ease and Plenty and Pleasures of Sense for then a Beast in good Case and a good Pasture might contest with us in point of Happiness and carry it away for that sensitive good he enjoys without sin and without the vexation that is mixt with us all These things are too gross and heavy The Soul the immortal Soul descended from Heaven must either be more happy or remain miserable The highest increated Spirit is the proper Good the Father of Spirits that pure and full good raises the Soul above it self whereas all other things draw it down below it self So then its never well with the Soul but when it is near unto God yea in its union with him married to him and mismatching it self elsewhere it hath never any thing but shame and sorrow All that forsake thee shall be ashamed Jer. 17. says the Prophet and the Psalmist Psal. 73. They that are far off from thee shall perish And this is indeed our natural miserable condition and is often exprest this way or estrangedness and distance from God Eph. 2. Gentiles far off by their profession and Nation but both Jews and Gentiles far off by their natural Foundation and both brought near by the blood of the new Covenant and that is the other thing here implied that we are far off by reason of sin otherways there were no need of Christ especially in this way of suffering for sin to bring us unto God The first because of Gods command sin broke off Man and separated him from God and ever since the Soul remains naturally remote from God 1. Under a sentence of Exile pronounced by the Justice of God condemned to banishment from God who is the life and light of the Soul as it is of the Body 2. It 's under a flat impossibility of returning by it self And that in two respects 1. Because of the guiltiness of sin standing betwixt as an unpassable Mountain or Wall of separation 2. Because of the Dominion of sin keeping the Soul captive still drawing it further off from God increasing the distance and the enmity every day Nor in Heaven nor under Heaven no way to remove this enmity and make up this distance and return Man to the Possession of God but this one by Christ and him suffering for sins He endured the Sentence pronounced against man yea even in this particular Notion of it one main ingredient in his suffering was a forsaking to sense that he cried out of And by suffering the Sentence pronounc'd he took away the guiltiness of sin he himself being spotless and undefiled for such an High Priest became us the more defiled we were the more need of an undefiled Priest and Sacrifice and he was both Therefore the Apostle here very fitly mentions this qualification of our Saviour as necessary for reducing us unto God the Iust for the Vnjust so taking on him and taking away the
death and resurrection study them set thine eye upon them till thy Heart take in the Impression of them by much Spiritual and affectionate looking on them beholding the Glory of thy Lord Christ then be transformed unto it 2 Cor. 3. It is not only a moral Patern or Copy but an effectual Cause of thy sanctification having real influence into thy Soul dead with him and again alive with him Oh Happiness and Dignity unspeakable to have this Life known and cleared to your Souls If it were how would it make you live above the World and all the vain hopes and fears of this wretched Life and the fears of Death it self yea it would make it most lovely to them that is the most affrightful Visage to the World It is the Apostles Maxime that the carnal mind is enmity against God as it is universally true of every carnal mind so of all the motions and thoughts of it even where it seems to agree with God yet it s still contrary if it acknowledge and conform to his Ordinances yet even in so doing it s in direct opposite terms to him particularly in this that which he esteems most in them the carnal mind makes least account of He chiefly eyes and values the inside the Natural Man dwells and rests in the shell and superfice of them God according to his Spiritual Nature looks most on the more Spiritual part of his worship and Worshippers The carnal mind 's in this just like it selfe altogether for the sensible external part and cannot look beyond it Therefore the Apostle here having taken occasion to speak of Baptism by terms of Paralel and resemblance with the Flood is express in correcting this mistake It is not says he in putting away the filth of the flesh but the answer of a good conscience Were it possible to perswade you I would recommend one thing to you learn to look on the Ordinances of God suitably to their Natures spiritually and enquire after the spiritual effect and working of them upon your Consciences We would willingly have all Religion reduced to outwards this is ou● natural choice and would pay all in this coyn as cheaper and easier by far and would compound for the Spiritual part rather to add and give more external per●ormance and ceremony Hence the natural complacency of Popery which is all for this service of the flesh and body-services and to those prescribed of God all deal so liberally with him in that kind as to add more and frame new Devices and Rites what you will in this kind Sprinklings and Washing● and Anointings and Incense but whither all this is it not a gross mistake of God to think him thus pleased or is it not a direct afront knowing that he is not pleased with these but desires another thing to thrust that upon him that he cares not for and refuse him what he calls for that single humble heart worship and walking with him that purity of Spirit and Conscience that he only prizes and no outward-service but for these as they tend to this end and do attain it Give me says he nothing if you give not this Oh! saith the carnal Mind any thing but this thou shalt have as many washings and offerings as thou wilt thousands of Rams and ten thousand Rivers of Oyl yea rather then fail let the Fruit of my Body go for the Sin of my Soul Thus we will the outward use of Word and Sacraments do it then all shall be well baptised we are and shall I hear much and communicate of●en if I can reach it shall I ●e exact in po●nt of Family Worship shall I pray in secret all this I do or at least I now promise Ay but when all that is done there is yet one thing may be wanting and if it be so all that amounts to nothing is thy Conscience purged and made good by all these or art thou s●●king and aiming at this by the use of all means then certainly thou shalt ●ind life in them But does thy heart still remain uncleansed from the old ways not purified from the Pollutions of the World do thy beloved sins still lodge with thee and keep possession of thy heart then art thou still a stranger to Christ and an enemy to God the word and seals of Life are dead to thee and thou still dead in the use of them all Know you not that many have made shipwrack upon the very rock of Salvation that many which were baptised as well as you and as constant attendants on all the Worship and Ordinances of God as you yet remained without Christ and died in their sins and are now past recovery Oh! that you would be warned there are still multitudes running headlong that same course tending to destruction through the midst of all the means of Salvation the saddest way of all to it through Word and Sacraments and all heavenly Ordinances to be walking hellwards Christians and yet no Christians baptised and yet unbaptised as the Prophet takes in the prophane multitude of God's own People with the Nations Jer. 9. 26. Egypt and Iudah and Edom all these Nations are uncircumcised and the worst came last and all the House of Israel are uncircumcised in the Heart Thus thus the most of us unbaptised in the heart and as this is the way of personal destruction so it is that as the Prophet there declares that brings upon the Church so many publick Judgments and as the Apostle tells that for the abuse of the Lord's Table many were sick and many slept Certainly our abuse of the holy things of God and want of their proper Spiritual Fruits are amongst the prime sins of this Land 〈◊〉 which so many 〈◊〉 have fallen in the Fields by the Sword and in the Streets by Pestilence and more likely yet to fall if we thus continue to provoke the Lord to his Face for it is the most avowed direct affront to prophane his holy things and thus we do while we answer not their proper end and are not inwardly sanctify'd by them we have no other Word nor other Sacraments to recommend to you than these that you have used so long to no purpose only we would call you from the dead forms to seek the living power of them that you perish not You think the renouncing of Baptism a horrible Word and that we would speak only so of witches yet it is a common guiltiness that cleaves to all who renounce not the filthy lusts and the self will of their own hearts for Baptism carries in it a renouncing of these and so the cleaving unto these is a renou●cing of it Oh! we all were sealed for God in Baptism who lives so few that have the Impression of it on the Conscience and the expression of it in the walk and fruit of their life We do not as clean washed persons abhor and fly all pollutions all fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness We have been a
who are spotless sinless Spirits but their flesh in their Redeemer dignified with a Glory so far beyond them This is that Mystery they are intent in looking and prying into and cannot nor never shall see the bottom of it for it hath none 2. Jesus Christ is not only exalted above the Angels in absolute Dignity but in relative Authority over them he is made Captain over those Heavenly Bands they are all under his Command for all Services wherein it pleases him to employ them and the great Employment he hath is the attending on his Church and particular Elect Ones are they not all ministring Spirits sent forth c. They are the Servants of Christ and in him and at his appointment the Servants of every Believer and are many ways serviceable and useful for their good which truely we do not duly consider There is no danger of overvaluing them and inclining to Worship them upon this Consideration yea if we take it right it will rather take off from that The Angel judg'd his Argument strong enough to St. Iohn against that that he was but his fellow Servant but this is more that they are Servants to us although not therefore inferiour it being a honorary service yet certainly inferiour to our Head and so to his mystical body taken in that Nation as a part of him Obs. 1. The hight of this our Saviour's Glory will appear the more if we reflect on the descent by which he ascended to it Oh! how low did we bring down so high a Majesty into the pit wherein we had fallen by climbing to be higher than he had set us it was high by reason we fell so low and yet he against whom it was committed came down to help us up again and to take hold of us took us on so the Word is Heb. 2. he took not hold of the Angels let them go hath left them to die for ever But he took hold of the Seed of Abraham and took on him indeed their flesh dwelling amongst us and in a mean part emptied himself and became of no repute and further after he descended into the Earth and into our flesh in it he became obedient to death upon the Cross and descended into the Grave And by these steps was walking towards that Glory wherein now he is Phil. 1. he abased himself wherefore says the Apostle God hath highly exalted him so he himself Luk. 24. Ought not Christ first to suffer these things and so enter into his Glory Now this indeed it is pertinent to consider and the Apostle is here upon point of suffering that 's his theam and therefore he is so particular in the ascending of Christ to his Glory who of those that would come thither will refuse to follow him in the way where he led 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the leader of our Faith Heb. 12. and who of those that follow him will not love and delight to follow him through any way the lowest and darkest its excellent and safe and then it ends you see where 2. Think not strange of the Lord's method with his Church bringing her to so low and desperate a Posture many times can she be in a more seeming desperate condition than was her head not only in ignominous sufferings but dead and laid in the Grave and the Stone roll'd to it and sealed and made all sure and yet arose and ascended and now sits in Glory and shall sit till all his Enemies become his Footstool do not fear for him that they shall overtop yea or be able to reach him who is exalted higher than the Heavens be not affraid neither for his Church which is his Body and if his Head be safe and live cannot but partake of safety and life with him though she were to sight dead and laid in the Grave yet shall she rise thence and be more glorious than before and still the lower brought in distress shall rise the higher in the day of deliverance Thus in his dealing with a Soul observe the Lord's method think it not strange that he brings a Soul low very low which he means to comfort and exalt very high in Grace and Glory leads it by Hell-gates to Heaven that it be at that point my God my God why hast thou forsaken me was not the Head put to use that Word and so to speak it as the Head speaks for the Body seasoning it for his Members and sweetning that bitter cup by his own drinking of it Oh! what a hard condition may a soul be brought unto and put to think can he love me and intend mercy for me that leaves me to this And yet in all the Lord preparing it thus for comfort and blessedness 3. Turn your thoughts more frequently to this Excellent Subject the glorious high Estate of our great high Priest The Angels admire this Mystery and we flight it they rejoyce in it and we whom it certainly more nearly concerns are not moved with it do not draw that comfort and that instruction from it which it would plentifully afford if it were drawn It comforts us against all troubles and fears is he not on high who hath undertaken for us doth any thing befall us but it is past first in Heaven and shall any thing pass there to our prejudice or damage he ●its there and is upon the Counsel of all who hath loved us and given himself for us yea who as he descended thence for us did likewise ascend thither again for us hath made our Inheritance he purchas'd there sure to us taking Possession for us and in our name since he is there not only as the Son of God but as our Surety and as our Head and so the Believer may think himself even already possest of this Right in as much as his Christ is there The Saints are glorified already in their head where he reigns Where he reigns there I believe my self to reign says Aug. And consider in all thy straights and troubles outward and inward they are not hid from him he knows them and feels them a compassionate high Priest hath a gracious sense of thy frailties and griefs and fears and tentation and will not suffer thee to be surcharg'd is still presenting thy Estate to the Father and using that interest and power he hath in his affection for thy good And what wouldst thou more art thou one whose heart desires to rest upon him and cleave to him thou art knit so to him that his resurrection and glory secures thee thine his life and thine are not two but one life as that of the Head and Members and if he could not be overcome of death thou canst not neither Oh! that sweet word Because I live you shall live also Let thy thoughts and carriage be moulded in this contemplation rightly ever to look on thy exalted head consider his glory see not only thy Nature raised in him above the Angels but thy person interested by
Faith in that his Glory and then think thy self too good to serve any base lust look down on Sin and the World with a holy disdain being united to him who is so exalted and so glorious And let not thy mind creep here engage not thy Heart to any thing that Time and this Earth can afford Oh! why are we so little there where there is such a spring of delightful and high thoughts for us If ye be risen with Christ seek those things which are above where he sits what mean you are ye such as will let go you interest in this once crucified and now glorified Jesus if not why are ye not more like it why does it not possess your hearts more ought it not to be thus should not our hearts be where our Treasure where our blessed Head is Oh! how unreasonable how unfriendly is it how much may we be ashamed to have room for earnest thoughts or desires or delights about any thing beside him Were this by these that have right in it much wrought upon the heart would there be found in them any ingagement to the poor things that are passing away would death be a terrible word yea would it not be one of the sweetest most rejoycing thoughts to solace and ease the heart under all pressures to look forward to that day of Liberty This in●ectious Disease may keep possession all the Winter and grow hot with the year again do not flatter your selves an● think its past you have yet remembring strokes to keep it in your eye But however shall we abide still her●● or is there any thing duly weighed why we should desire it well if ye would be untied beforehand and so feel it less this is the only way look up to him who draws up all hearts that do indeed behold him then I say thy heart shall be removed beforehand and the rest is easie and sweet when that 's done all is gained And consider how he desires the compleating of our union Shall it be his begging and earnest desire and shall it not be ours too that where he is there we may be also with patient submission yet striving by desires and suits looking out for our release from this Body of Sin and death The End of the Third Chapter 1 Ep. St. Peter Chap. IV. Ver. 1. Forasmuch then as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh arm your selves likewise with the same mind for he that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin THE main of a Christians duty lies in these two patience in suffering and avoidance of sin 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and they have a natural influence each into the other altho affliction simply doth not yet affliction sweetly and humbly carried doth purifie and disingage the heart from sin weans it from the world and the common wayes of it And again holy and exact walking keeps the Soul in a sound healthful temper and so enables it to patient suffering to bear things more easily as a strong body endures fatigue heat and cold and hardship with ease a small part whereof would surcharge a sickly constitution The conscience of Sin and careless unholy courses do wonderfully weaken a Soul and distemper it so that it is not able to endure much every little thing disturbs it Therefore the Apostle hath reason as to insist on these two points so much in this Epistle so to interweave so often the one with the other pressing jointly throughout the chearful bearing of all kind of afflictions and the careful forbearing all kind of Sin and out of the one discourse slides into the other so here And as the things agree in their nature so in their great Pattern and Principle jesus Christ and the Apostle still draws both from thence that of Patience ch 3. ver 18. that of Holiness here Forasmuch then as Christ hath suffered for us c. The chief study of a Christian and the very thing that makes him to be a Christian is conformity with Christ. This is the Sum of Religion said that wise Heathen to be like him whom thou worshippest But the example being in it self too sublime is brought down to our view in Christ the brightness of God veil'd and veil'd in our own flesh that we may look on it The inaccessible Light of the Deity is so attempered in the humanity of Christ that we may read our Lesson by it in him and may direct our walk by it and that truly is our only way nothing but wandring and perishing in all other wayes darkness and misery out of him but he that follows me says he shall not walk in darkness And therefore is he set before us in the Gospel in so clear und lively colours that we may make this our whole endeavour to be like him Consider here 1. The high ingagement to this conformity 2. The nature of it 3. The actual improvement of it The ingagement lies in this that he suffered for us Of this before only in reference to this had he come down as some have mis-imagined it only to set us this perfect way of obedience and give us an example of it in our own nature this had been very much that the Son of God would descend to teach wretched man and the great King to descend into man and dwell in a Tabernacle of Clay to set up a School in it for such ignorant accursed creatures and did in his own person act the hardest lessons both in doing and suffering to lead us in both But the matter goes yet higher than this Oh! how much higher hath he suffered not simply as our rule but as our Surety and in our stead He suffered for us in the flesh We the more obliged to make his suffering our example because it was to us more than an example it was our ransom This makes the conformity reasonable in a double respect 1. It is due that we follow him who led thus as the Captain of our Salvation that we follow in suffering and in doing seeing both were so for us its strange how some Armies have addicted themselves to their head to be at his call night and day in Summer and Winter to refuse no travel or endurance of hardship for him and all only to pleasure him and serve his inclination and ambition as Caesar's trained bands especially the eldest of them a wonder what they endured in countermarches and tracing from one Country to another But besides that our Lord and Leader is so great and excellent and so well deserves following for his own worth this lays upon us an obligation beyond all conceiving that he first suffered for us that he endured such hatred of Men and such wrath of God the Father and went through death so vile a death to procure our life what can be too bitter to endure or too sweet to forsake to follow him Were this duly considered would we cleave to our lusts or to our ease would we
of a ready memory nor rich invention acting it self in the performance these may draw a neat picture of it but still the life is wanting The motion of the Heart Godwards holy and divine affection makes prayer real and lively and acceptable to the Living God to whom it is presented the pouring out of thy heart to him that made it and therefore hears it and understands what it speaks and how it s moved and affected in calling on him It is not the guilded Paper and good writing of a Petition that prevailes with a Man but the moving Sense of it and to the King that discerns the heart heart sense is the sense of all and that which he alone regards listens what that speaks and takes all as nothing where that is silent all other excellence i● prayer is but the outside and fashion of it that is the life of it Though Prayer precisely taken is only petition yet in its ●uller and usual sense it comprises the vent of our humble sense of vileness and sin in the sincere confession and the extolling withal and praising the holy name of our God his excellency and goodness and thankful acknowledgment of received mercies Of these sweet ingredient perfumes is the incense of prayer composed and by the divine fire of love ascends unto God the Heart and all with it and when the Hearts of the Saints unite in joynt prayer the Pillar of sweet smoke goes up the greater and fuller Thus says that Song of the Spouse going up from the Wilderness as Pillars of smoak perfumed with Myrrh and Frankincense and all the Powders of the Merchant and as the word there signifies streight Pillars like the tallest streightest kind of trees Indeed the sincerity and unfeignedness of prayer makes it go up as a streight Pillar no crookedness in it tending streight towards Heaven and bowing to no side by the way Oh! the single and fixed viewing of God as in other ways it is the thing makes all holy and sweet so particularly in this Divine Work of Prayer It is true we have to deal with a God who of himself needs not this our pains either to inform or excite him he fully knows our thoughts before we express them and our wants before we feel them or think of them Nor doth his affection and gracious bent to do his Children good wax remiss or admit the least abate and forgetfulness of them But instead of necessity on God's part which cannot be imagined we shall find that Equity and that singular Dignity and Utility of it on our part which cannot be denied 1. Equity that thus the Creaturesignifie his homage to and dependance on his Creator for his being and well-being takes all the good he enjoys or expects from that Sovereign Good declaring himself unworthy waiting for all upon the terms of free goodness and acknowledging all from that Spring 2. Dignity Man was made for communion with God his Maker 't is the Excellency of his Nature to be capable of this end the happiness of it to be raised to enjoy it Now in nothing more in this Life is this communion actually and highly enjoyed than in the exercise of prayer that he may freely impart his affairs and estate and wants to God as the faithfullest and powerfullest Friend the richest and lovingest Father may use the liberty of a Child telling his Father what he stands in need of and desires and communing with him with humble confidence admitted to so frequent presence with so great a King 3. The Vtility of it 1. Easing the Soul in times of strait when it is prest with griefs and fears giving the vent and that in so advantageous a way emptying them into the bosom of God The very vent were it but into the Air gives ease or speak it to a Statue rather than smother it much more ease poured forth into the lap of a Confident and sympathising Friend though unable to help yet much more of one that can and of all Friends our God the surest and most affectionate and most powerful so Isa. 63. 9. both compassion and effectual salvation exprest In all their affliction he was afflicted and the Angel of his presence saved them in his love and in his pity he redeemed them and he bare them and carried them all the days of old And so resting on his Love Power and gracious Promises quiets it self in God upon this assurance that it s not vain to seek him and that he despiseth not the sighing of the poor 2. The Soul is more spiritually affected with its own condition by opening it up before the Lord more deeply sensible of sin and ashamed in his sight in confessing it before him more dilated and enlarged to receive the mercies suited for as the opening wide of the mouth of the soul that it may be filled more disposed to observe the Lord in answering and to bless him and trust on him upon the renewed experiences of his regard to their distresses and desires 3. All the Graces of the Spirit in Prayer are stirr'd and acted and by acting strengthned and increased Faith in applying the Divine Promises which are the very Ground that the Soul goes upon to God and Hope looking out to their performance and Love particularly expressing it self in that sweet converse and delighting in it as love doth in the company of the Person loved thinks all hours too short in speaking with him Oh how the Soul is refresht with freedom of Speech with its beloved Lord and as it delights in that so it is continually advanced and grows by each meeting and conference beholding the excellency of God and relishing the pure and sublime pleasures that is in near communion with him looking upon the Father in the face of Christ and using him as a mediator in prayer as still it must is drawn to further admiration of that bottomless love that found that way of agreement that new and living way of our access when all was shut up and we to have been shut out for ever And then the affectionate expressions of that reflex love to find that vent in prayer do kindle higher as it were ●ann'd and blown up rise to a greater and higher and purer flame and so tend upwards the more strongly David as he doth profess his love to God in Prayer in his Psalms so no doubt it grew in the expressing I will love thee O Lord my strength Psal 18. and Psal. 116. doth raise an incentive of love out of this very consideration of the correspondence of prayers I love the Lord because he hath heard and resolves thereafter upon persistence in that course therefore will I call upon him as long as I live And as the Graces of the Spirit are advanced in prayer by their actings so for this reason further because prayer sets the soul particularly near unto God in Jesus Christ 't is then in his presence and being much with God in this way it is
cannot consist with the love of God as St. Iohn tells us drunk with the inordinate unlawful love even of their lawful calling and the lawful gain they pursue by it their hearts going after it and so reeling to and fro never fixed on God and heavenly Things but either hurried up and down with uncessant business or if sometimes at ease it is as the ease of a drunken man not compos'd to better and wiser thoughts but falling into a dead sleep contrary to the watching here joyned with sobriety Watch. There is a Christian Rule to be observed in the very moderating of bodily sleep and that particularly for the interest of Prayer but Watching as Sobriety here is chiefly the spiritual circumspectness and vigilancy of the mind in a wary walking posture that it be not surprized by the assaults or slights of Satan by the World nor its nearest and most deceiving enemy the corruption that dwells within that being so near doth most readily watch unperceived advantages and easily circumvents us Heb. 12. 1. The Soul of a Christian being surrounded with enemies of so great both power and wrath and so watch●ul to undoe it should it not be watchful for its own safety and live in a military vigilancy continually keeping constant watch and sentinel and suffering nothing to pass that may carry the least suspicion of danger to be distrustful and jealous of all the motions of his own Heart and the smilings of the World and in relation to these it will be a wise course to take that word as a good caveat be watchful and remember to mistrust Under the Garment of some harmless pleasure or some lawful liberties may be conveyed into thy Soul some thief or traytor that will either betray thee to the enemy or at least pilser and steal of the preciousest things thou hast Do we not by experience find how easily our foolish hearts are seduc'd and deceived and so apt to deceive themselves and by things that seem to have no evil in them yet are drawn from the height of affection to our highest good and from our Communion with God and study to please him which should not be intermitted for then it will abate but ought still be growing 2. Now the Relation of these is clear they are inseparably link't together each of them assistant and helpful to the other in their nature as they are here in the words Sobriety the friend of watchfulness and prayer of both Intemperance doth of necessity draw on sleep excessive eating or drinking sending up too many and so gross vapours surcharge the brain and when the body is thus deaded how unfit is it for any active imployment Thus the mind by a surcharge of delights or desires or cares of earth is made so heavy and dull that it cannot awake hath not spiritual activeness and clearness that spiritual exercises particularly Prayer do require Yea as bodily insobriety full feeding and drinking not only for the time indisposes to action but by custome of it brings the body to so gross and heavy a temper that the very natural spirits cannot stir to and fro in it with freedom but are clog'd and stick as the Wheels of a Coach in a deep miry way Thus is it with the Soul glutted with earthly things the affections bemir'd with them make it resist and unactive in spiritual things and the motions of the spirit heavy and obscured in it grows carnally secure and sleepy prayer comes heavily off But when the affections are soberly acted and even in lawful things that they have not liberty with the reins laid on their Necks to follow the World and carnal projects and delight when the unavoidable affairs of this life are done with a spiritual mind a heart kept free and disingaged Then is the Soul more nimble for spiritual things for Divine Meditation and Prayer it can watch and continue in these things and spend it self in that excellent way with more alacrity Again as the Sobriety and the watchful temper attending it enables for Prayer so Prayer preserves these it winds up the Soul from the Earth raises it above these things that intemperance feeds on acquaints it with the transcending sweetness of Divine Comforts the love and the loveliness of Jesus Christ and these most powerfully wean the Soul from these low creeping pleasures that the World gapes after and swallows with such greediness He that is admitted to nearest intimacy with the King and is called daily to his presence not only in the view and company of others but likewse in secret will he be so mad as to sit down and drink with the kitchin boys or the common guards so far below what he may enjoy surely no. Prayer being our near Communion with the great God certainly it sublimates the Soul and makes it look down upon the base ways of the World with disdain and despise the truly besotting pleasures of it Yea the Lord doth sometime fill these Souls that converse much with him with such beautiful delights such inebriating sweetness as I may call it that 't is in a happy manner drunk with those and the more of this the more is the Soul above base intemper●nce in the delights of the World as common drunkenness makes a Man less than a Man this makes him more that throws him below himself makes him a beast this raises him above makes him an Angel Would you as sure you ought have much faculty for Prayer and be frequent in 〈◊〉 and find much the pure sweetness of it then 〈…〉 selves more the muddy pleasures and sweetness of the World if you would pray much and with much advantage then be sober and watch unto prayer 〈…〉 your hearts to long so after ease and wealth 〈◊〉 esteem in the World these will make your hearts if they mix with them become like them and take 〈◊〉 quality will make them gross and earthly and unable to mount up will clog the wings of pray●r and you shall find the loss when your Soul is heavy and drowsie and falls off from delighting in God and your Communion with him Will such things as those you follow be able to countervail your damage can they speak you peace and uphold you in a day of darkness and distress or may it not be such now as will make them all a burden and vexation to you But on the otherside the more you abate and let go of these and come empty and hungry to God in prayer the more room shall you have for his consolations and therefore the more plentifully will he pour in of them and enrich your Soul with them the more the less you take in of the other 2. Would you have your selves raised to and continued and advanced in a spiritual heavenly temper free from the surfeits of earth and awake and active for heaven be uncessant in prayer But thou wilt say I find nothing but heavy indisposedness in it nothing but roving and vanity of
give thy Soul to him to keep upon terms of liberty to sin he will turn it out of his Doors and remit it back to thee to look to as thou wilt thy self yea in the ways of sin thou dost indeed steel it back and carriest it out from him thou puttest thy self out of the compass of his defence goest without the trenches and art at thine own hazard expos'd to armies of mischiefs and miseries Inf. This then is primely to be lookt to you that would have safety in God in evil times beware of evil ways for in these it cannot be if you will be safe in him you must stay with him and in all your ways keep within him as your fortress now in the wayes of sin you run out from him Hence 't is we have so little establisht confidence in God in times of trial we take ways of our own and will be gadding and so we are surprized and taken as they that are often venturing out into the enemies reach and cannot stay within the walls 't is no idle repetition Psal. 91. 1. He that dwelleth in the secret place of the most high shall abide under the shaddow of the Almighty He that wanders not out but stays there shall find himself there hid from danger They that rove out from God in their ways are disquieted and tossed with fears this is the fruit of their own ways but the Soul that is indeed given to him to keep keeps near him Study pure and holy walking if you would have your confidence firm and have boldness and joy in God you will find it that a little sin will shake your trust and disturb your peace more than the greatest sufferings yea in those your assurance and joy in God will grow and abound most if sin be kept out that 's the trouble feast that unquiets the Conscience which while it continues good is a continual feast so much sin as gets in so much peace will go out afflictions cannot break in upon it to break it but sin doth All the winds that blow about the Earth from all points stir it not only that within the bowels of it makes the Earthquake I do not mean that for infirmities a Christian ought to be discouraged but take heed of walking in any way of sin for that will unsettle thy confidence innocency and holy walking makes the Soul of a sound constitution that the counter blasts of affliction wear not out nor alter it not sin makes it sickly and crazy that it can endure nothing therefore study to keep your Consciences pure and they shall be peacable yea in the worst times readily most peacable and best furnisht with spiritual confidence and comfort Commit the keeping of their Souls The Lord is an entire protectot he keeps the bodies yea all that belongs to the believer and as much as is good for him makes all safe keeps all his bones not one of them is broken yea says our Saviour the very hairs of your head are numbered But that which is in the Believers account and in Gods account so certainly in it self most precious is principally committed and received into keeping their Souls They would gladliest be secured in that here that shall be safe in the midst of all hazards That whatsoever be lost that may not that 's the Jewel therefore the prime care of that if it be safe all is well 't is riches enough What shall it profit a man though he gain the whole World says our Saviour and lose his Soul and so what shall it disprofit a Man though he lose the whole World if he gain his Soul Nothing at all When times of trial come Oh! what a bustle to hide this and that to fly and carry away and make safe that which is but trash and rubbish to the precious Soul but how few thoughts of that were we in our wits that would be all at all times not only in trouble but in days of peace Oh! how shall I make sure about my Soul let all go as it may can I be secured and perswaded in that point I desire no more Now the way is this commit them to God this many say but few do give them into his hand lay them up there so the word is and they are safe and may be quiet and composed In patience possess your Souls says our Saviour impatient freting Souls are out of themselves their owners do not possess them Now the way to possess them our selves in patience is thus to commit them to him in confidence then we only possess them when he keeps them They are easily disquieted and shakt in peices while they are in our hands but in his hand they are above the reach of dangers and fears Inf. Now this is the proper act of Faith rolls the Soul over on God ventures it in his hand and rests satisfied concerning it being there And there is no way but this to be quiet within to be impregnable and unmoveable in all assaults and changes fixed believing on free love therefore be perswaded to resolve in that not doubting and disputing whether shall I believe or no shall I think he will suffer me to lay my soul upon him to keep so unworthy so guilty a Soul were it not presumption Oh! what saist thou why doest thou thus dishonour him and disquiet thy self if thou hast a purpose to walk in any way of wickedness indeed thou art not for him yea thou comest not near him to give him thy Soul but wouldest thou have it delivered from sin rather then from trouble yea rather than from hell is that the chief safety thou seekest to be kept from iniquity from thine iniquity thy beloved sins doest thou desire to dwell in him and walk with him then whatsoever is thy guiltiness and unworthiness come forward and give him thy Soul to keep if he should seem to refuse it press it on him if he stretch not forth his hand lay it down at his foot and leave it there and resolve not to take it back say Lord thou hast made us those Souls thou callest for them again to be committed to thee here is one it is unworthy but what Soul is not so is most unworthy but therein will the riches of thy grace appear most in receiving it and leave it with him and know he will make thee a good accompt of it Now lose goods or credit or friends or life it self it imports not the main is sure if so be thy Soul be out of hazard I suffer these things for the Gospel says the Apostle nevertheless I am not ashamed why for I know whom I have trusted and am perswaded that he is able to keep that which I have committed to him against that Day Now the ground of this confidence is in these two in him whom we trust ability and fidelity There is much in perswasion of the power of God though few think they question that there is in us secret
undiscovered unbelief even in that point Therefore the Lord so often makes mention of it in the Prophets Isa. 50. 3. c. And in this point the Apostle particulary expresses I am perswaded that he is able to keep c. So this Apostle chap. 1. 5. Kept by the power of God through faith unto Salvation ready to be revealed in the last time This very needful to be considered in regard of the many and great oppositions and dangers the powerful enemies that seek after our Souls He is able to keep them for he is stronger than all and none can pluck them out of his hand says our Saviour This the Apostle here hath in that word Creator if he was able to give them being sure he is able to keep them from perishing This relation of a Creator implies likewise a benign propension and good will to the works of his hands if he gave them us at first when once they were not forming them of nothing will he not give us them again being put into his hand for safety And as he is powerful he is no less faithful a faithful Creator Truth it self They that believe on him he never deceives nor disappoints Well might St. Paul say I know whom● I have trusted Oh! the advantage of faith It engages the truth and power of God his royal Word and honour lies upon it to preserve the Soul that faith gives him in keeping if he remain able and faithful to perform his Word that Soul shall not perish There be in the words other two grounds of quietness of Spirit in sufferings 1. It is according to the will of God The believing Soul subjected and levelled to that complying with his good pleasure in all cannot have a more powerful perswasive than this that all is ordered by his will This settled in the heart would settle it much and make it even in all things not only to know but wisely and deeply to consider that it is thus That all is measured in Heaven every dram of thy troubles weighed by that skilful hand that doth all in weight number and measure And then consider him as thy God and father who hath taken special charge of thee and thy Soul thou hast given it to him and he hath received it And upon this consideration study to follow his will in all to have no will but his This is thy duty and thy wisdom nothing gained by spurning and struggling but to hurt and vex thy self but by complying all is gained sweet peace it is the very secret the mystery of solid peace within to resign to his will to be disposed of at his pleasure without the least contrary thought And thus as two faced pictures those sufferings and troubles and whatsoever else to look to it on the one side as painful to the flesh hath an unpleasant visage yet go about a little and look upon it as thy fathers will and then it is smiling and beautiful and lovely This I would recommend to you not only for temporals as easier there but in spiritual things your comforts and sensible enlargements to love all he does it s the sum of Christianity thy will crucify'd and the will of thy Lord thy alone desire joy or sorrow sickness or health life or death in all in all thy will be done The other ground is in the first word reflecting on the foregoing discourse Wherefore what seeing your reproaches and sufferings are not endless yea they are short they shall end and quickly end and end in glory be not troubled about them overlook them the eye of faith will do it a moment what are they this is the great cause of our disquietness in present troubles and griefs we forget their end we are affected withour condition of this present life as if it were all and it is nothing Oh! how quickly shall all the enjoyments and all the sufferings of this life pass away and be as if they had not been Tbe End of the Fourth Chapter 1 Ep. St. Peter Chap. V. Ver. 1. The elders which are among you I exhort who am also an elder and a witness of the sufferings of Christ and also a partaker of the glory that shall be revealed THE Church of Christ being one body is interessed in the condition and carriage of each particular Christian as a part of it but more eminently in those that are more eminent and organick parts of it Therefore the Apostle after many Excellent directions given to all his Christian Brethren to whom he writes doth most reasonably and fitly add this express Exhortation to these that had oversight and charge of the rest The Elders that are amongst you c. The words have 1. A particular definement of the Persons exhorted and exhorting 2. The Tenour of the Exhortation it self The former in the 1 verse the Persons exhorted The Elders among you First Elders This here as often is a name not of Age but of Office yet named by that Age that is or ought to be most suitably qualified to such an office and imports that men though not aged yet if called to that office should be noted with that Wisdom and 〈◊〉 of mind and carriage which may give that authority and command that respect that is requisite for their calling not Novices as St. Paul speaks not as a light bladder being easily blown up as young unstable minds are but such as young Timothy was in humility and diligence as the Apostle testifies of him Phil. 2. 20. and further exhorts him to be 1 Tim. 4. 12. Let no man despise thy youth but be an example of believers in word in conversation in charity in faith in purity The name of Elders indifferently signifies either their age or their calling and of ruling sometimes civil Rulers sometimes Pastors of the Church as amongst the Jews both Here it appears that Pastors are meant as the Exhortation of feeding the flock evidences which though it sometimes signifie ruling and here may comprise it yet is chiefly by Doctrine and then the stile given to Christ in the encouragement added the chief Shepherd A due frame of spirit and carriage in the Elders particularly the Apostles of the Church is a thing of prime concern for the good of it It is one of the heaviest threatnings when the Lord declares that he will give a rebellious People such Teachers and Prophets as they deserved and indeed desired If there be a man to prophecy of wine and strong drink such a one shall be a prophet says he to that People And on the other side amongst the sweetest promises of mercy this is not the least to be furnisht with plenty of faithful Teachers Though prophane men make no reckoning of it yet were it in the hardest times they that know the Lord will account of it as he doth a sweet allay of all sufferings and hardship though the Lord give you the bread of adversity and the water of affliction yet shall not
but true willingness of heart so this willingness should not arise from any other but pure affection to the work not for filthy gain but purely from the inward bent of the mind As it should not be a compulsive or violent motion by necessity from without so it should not be an artificial motion by weights hung on within avarice love of gain the former were a wheel driven or drawn going by force the latter little better as a Clock made go by art by paces hung to it But a natural motion as that of the heavens in their course a willing obedience to the Spirit of God within moving a Man in every part of this holy work that 's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his mind carried to it as the thing he delights in loves to be exercised in it There may be in a faithful Pastor very great reluctances in ingaging and adhereing to the work upon a sense of the excellency of it and his unfitness and the deep apprehension of those high interests the glory of God and the Salvation of Souls and yet he enter into it and continues in it with this readiness of mind too that is with most single and earnest desires of doing all he can for God and the flock of God only grieved that there is in him so little suitableness of heart so little holiness and acquaintance with God for enabling him to it but might he find that he were satisfied and in attendance upon that goes on and waits and is doing according to his little skill and strength and cannot leave it is constrained indeed but all the constraint is that of love to Iesus and for his sake to the Souls he hath bought and all the gain sought is to gain Souls to Christ which is far different from the constraint and that gain here discharged yea is indeed that very willingness and readiness of mind which is opposed to that other constraint this without this within that other gain is base filthy gain this noble and divine Inf. 1. Far be it from us that necessity and constraint be the thing that moves us in so holy a work The Lord whom we serve sees into the heart and if he find not that primely moving accounts all our diligence nothing And let not base earth be within the cause of our willingness but a mind toucht with Heaven It is true the tentations of earth with us in matter o● ●gain are not great but yet the heart may cleave to them as much as if they were much greater and if it do cleave to them they shall ruin us as well a poor stipend and glebe if the affection be upon them as a great Denary or Bis●oprick if a Man fall into it he may drown in a small brook being under water as well as in the great Ocean Oh! the little time that remains let us joyn our desires and endeavours in this work bend our strength to him that we may have joy in that day of reckoning And indeed there is nothing moves us aright nor shall we ever find comfort in this service unless it be from a cheerful inward readiness of mind and that from the love of Christ thus said he to his Apostle lovest thou me then feed my Sheep and feed my Lambs love to Christ begets love to his peoples Souls that are so precious to him and a care of feeding them he devolves the working of love towards him upon his flock for their good puts them in his room to receive the benefit of our services which cannot reach him in himself he can receive no other profit from it It is love much love gives much unwearied care and much skill in this charge How sweet is it to him that loves to bestow himself to spend and be spent upon his service whom he loves Iacob in the same kind of service endured all and found it light by reason of love the cold of the nights and the heat of the days seven years for his Rachel and they seemed to him but a few days because he loved her Love is the great endowment of a Shepherd of Christs flock He says not to Peter art thou wise or learned or eloquent but lovest thou me then feed my Sheep The third evil is ambition and that is either in the the affecting of undue authority or the overstraining and tyrannical abuse of due authority or to seek these dignities that suit not with this charge which is not Dominium but Ministerium Therefore discharg'd Luke 22. There is a ministerial authority to be used in discipline and more sharpness with some than others but still lowlin●ss and moderation predominant and not domine●ring with rigour rather being examples to them in all holiness and especially in humility and meekness wherein our Lord Jesus particularly propounds his own example But being ensamples Such a pattern as they may stamp and print their Spirits and carriage by and be followers of you as you are of Christ and without this there is little or no fruitful teaching Well says one either teach not or teach by living so the Apostle exhorteth Timothy to be an example in word but withal in conversation that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the best printed copy But this pares off will some think all encouragements of learning No advantage no respect nor authority Oh! no it removes poor worthless encouragements out of the way to make place for one great one that is sufficient which all the other together are not that is Verse 4. And when the chief Shepherd shall appear ye shall receive a Crown of Glory that fadeth not away THou shalt loose nothing by all that restraint from base gain and vain glory and Worldly power No matter let them go for a Crown that weighs them all down that shall abide for ever Oh! how far excellent A Crown of Glory pure unmixt glory without any ingrediency of pride or sinful vanity or any danger of it And a Crown that fadeth not of such a flower as withers not not a temporary garland of fading flowers such as all here are Wo to the Crown of pride Isa. 28. 1. Though it is made of flowers growing in a fat valley yet their glorious beauty is a fading flower but this fresh and in perfect lustre to all eternity May they not well trample on base gain and vain applause that have this Crown to look to They that will be content with those let them be doing but they have their reward and it s done and gone when faithful followers are to receive theirs Joys of royal pomp marriages and feasts how soon do they vanish as a dream that of Ahazverash that lasted about half a year but then ended and how many since that gone and forgot But this day begins a triumph and a feast that shall never either be ended or be wearied of still fresh new delights all things here the choicest pleasures cloy but satisfie not Those