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A48949 The souls ascension in the state of separation Summarily delivered in a sermon preached at Shenly in the county of Hertford, the 21. of November, 1660. at the funeral solemnities of Mrs Mary Jessop, late wife of William Jessop esq; and since enlarged and publish'd for common benefit. By Isaac Loeffs. M.A. Loeffs, Isaac, d. 1689. 1670 (1670) Wing L2818; ESTC R222694 62,138 158

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continuance of its separation having a natural inclination to be re-united to its own body without which it cannot be perfectly happy though in heaven it self in all degrees for notwithstanding the fulness of the glory of God in heaven whereof it is partaker in the presence of Christ yet being but a part it wants the natural perfection of its relation and receiveth its happiness and glory but according to the measure of a part waiting for the redemption of its body Whence we may conclude that the natural state and condition of the sould of every man is to be in the body and there it is in its proper habitation as the Apostle saith we are at home in the body 2 Cor. 5.6 So that how strange soever the desire of a gracious soul may be to be with Christ and to be absent from the body by departing hence yet it is naturally and necessarily detained till the death of the body leave it free as in a be-widdowed estate to remove to Christ its wellbeloved and to the Father of spirits for a time to visit those mansions wherein it shall abide for ever in the fulness of glory with the assumed body made more suitable and spiritual for it at the resurrection It appeareth also from hence that it is no less then wilful murther and consequently a breach of a great command voluntarily to endeavour or hasten the dissolution of these two united parts of body and soul nature and grace commanding and commending the use of all lawful meanes and that by physick as well as food and other natural helpes to preserve this present life until God in the course of providence shall make a separation Secondly Believers while they are in the body are absent from the Lord Christ both in respect of local distance and also of the nature and manner of their communion with him For Christ is in heaven and they upon earth and their communion with him now though it be spiritual and joyful yet it is weak and darke in comparison of an immediate presence For we walk by faith not by sight 2 Cor. 5.7 Which faith being the substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen begetteth in the heart a fervent love and an unspeakable joy in an absent and unseen Saviour 1 Pet. 1.8 Whom having not seen ye love in whom though now ye see him not yet believing ye rejoyce with joy unspeakable and full of glory Nevertheless the communion the Saints have with Christ through faith and hope in him is but weak and dark here in comparison of what shall be in heaven when they shall be with him and these graces appropriato this present life and state shall cease through immediate vision and fruition whereby their love shall be perfect in the presence of its object For faith apprehendeth Christ by spiritual knowledge which is the sight in the eye of faith and the highest degree of knowledge the soul is capable of here in heavenly things is but obscure to what it shall be hereafter What we see through many mediums is but darkely seen and though mediums may be helpful to natural sight in case of weakness of the organ or distance of the object yet such a sight falls short of a strong and clear inspection of something near at hand and at a due distance Thus it is in regard of the souls apprehension and knowledge of spiritual things which being at a great distance and far remote in their nature and perfection we look at them as through a glass and that darkely 1 Cor. 13.12 For we know in part and we prophesie in part and now see through a glass darkely but then face to face We see the things of God and of heaven through the glass of the Word and Sacraments and the glass of the workes of Providence in which glasses we may be said to see these things also as by reflexion of their image according to that other expression of Paul 2 Cor. 3.18 For we all with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord are changed into the same Image this also is darke in respect of the sight of the maked face or substantial glory of Christ in a direct line and without reflexion for though it be with open face the vail of natural ignorance and blindness being taken away yet it is not face to face in the appearance of Christ nakedly and immediately unto us But what this darkness of knowledge is in this life I shall in a few words more explain The mysteries of heaven and of God and Christ are revealed unto us in the Scriptures according to our capacity of understanding them and the Lord condescending to the nature of man speaketh unto us after the manner of man Now the nature and kind of knowledge which is proper unto us is not intuitive but discursive the rational soul using the organs and senses of the body for the attaining of its knowledge and understanding So that we know all things in a sensible manner according to the first species and impressions made in the understanding which it receiveth from the senses and from thence the understanding by discourse and reason formeth the notions of spiritual and insensible beings And hence it is that in most things that incurre not immediately into the senses our knowledge is so darke and dubious that in natural science we agree not but dispute principles themselves In like manner God revealeth spiritual and invisible things and the great mysteries of the Gospel unto us wherein he speaketh our language and presenteth heavenly things unto us in earthly formes as when he revealeth and describeth himself it is as having the members of our bodies and the passions of our minds which we art to understand figuratively and not literally least we become guilty of blasphemous thoughts and carnal apprehensions of God And thus when our Saviour instructed Nicodemus in the mystery of grace and conversion to God he telleth him he must be born again John 3.5 Nicodemus understood him at first literally and rather wondred then believed wherefore Christ reproveth him verse 13. If I have told you earthly things and ye beleive not how shall ye believe if I tell you of heavenly things Not that regeneration is an earthly thing though it must be a state upon earth and wrought while we are here but Christs meaning is if I have spoken to you of these heavenly and spiritual things in an earthly manner and sensitive way by parables and similitudes and yet ye understand me not so as to beleive how shall ye beleive if I speak in a spiritual and heavenly Dialect and Language Now if we understand heavenly things only as they are revealed for they are therefore so revealed that we might understand them what dark and low what short and weak apprehensions have we of them Therefore a gracious soul desireth to be absent rather from the body and present with Christ that it might
the drop is swallowed up in the ocean and the small dust in the huge mountaine so shall the short moment of this present life be forgotten when the bright morning of eternal joy shall break upon your souls and the righteous shall shine as the Sun in the Kingdom of the Father This is that life and immortality which is brought to light through the Gospel 2 Tim. 1.10 Wherfore gird up the loynes of your mind be sober and hope to the end for the grace that is to be brought unto you at the revelation of Jesus Christ unto whom ye are hastening waiting for the day of your departing hence that ye may be with Christ which is far better Thirdly How doth the death of the Saints bring them immediatly to Christ a their departure in what manner doth the soul depart The Apostle joyneth his departing and being with Christ together by a small copulative particle as if the soul were as soon with Christ after dissolution as we can speak so short a word even in the next moment which is the third general head to be handled In the explaining whereof I shall take it for granted that the soul is immortal and dyeth not with the body but immediately appeareth before God according to the apprehension of St. Paul in my text who therefore desired to depart that he might be with Christ For were not the soul immortal and that in Pauls perfect judgement it had been far better for him to have lived then dyed for to him to live was Christ but in case he had dyed he could not have been with Christ according to his desire had not his soul survived his body Therefore subscribing to the judgement of so great an Apostle I shall wave the needless controversie and proceed to the explication of this last question in hand the truth and manner whereof will appear in these following demonstrations I. Demonst First the Souls of the Saints are spiritually and inseparably united unto Christ He that is joyned to the Lord is one spirit 1 Cor. 6.17 The spirit of Christ dwelleth in beleivers and though the body be dead or mortall because of sin yet the spirit is life because of righteousness Rom. 8.10 11. The spirit of Christ in the soul is a principle of eternal life by conjunction of the soul with Christ whereby we are quickned together with him through which both our spiritual and eternal life is secured the union of the soul with Christ being inviolable Therefore our life is said to be hid with Christ in God Col. 3.3 * Cum Christ in Deo est exira periculum esse Calv. and is out of all danger of ever being separated for who or what shall separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus Rom. 8. latter end I am perswaded saith Paul neither life nor death c. As the hypostatical union of the Godhead and humanity of Christ could not be separated by his death so neither the mystical and spiritual union between Christ and the soul by the death of the Saints For he is the head of his body the Church whereof every true believer is a living member unto whom they are so really spiritually and immediately united that no state condition or power whatsoever can sever or dis-joyn them And though every unfruitful branch may and shall be taken away and cut off from Christ the true vine by final Apostasie Ecclesiastical censure or the judicial sentence that shall pass upon every hypocrite when God shall require and take away his soul every true and living branch shall abide in him for ever through the skill and care of the Father the great husbandman And if we consider the relation which Christ standeth in to all the Saints of a husband to his spouse contracted together by an everlasting covenant betrothed in loving kindness and faithfulness and joyned together by the eternal spirit of grace through which they enjoy the sweet embraces and mutual expressions of their conjugal union and affections how can it be imagined that the Spouse of Christ or any particular Christians should by their dissolution be deprived of so near a relation and firm union for the soul being a spirit and uncapable of suffering the least alteration in its essence by the death of the body from which it is only separated as the life thereof it must of necessity retaine and still possess its spiritual beauty and all supernatural and heavenly priviledges in and with Christ whereof it is far more capable and that more fully and perfectly to receive being separate then in the present body II. Demonstr Secondly the souls of believers are by a natural force and necessity detained from their desired presence with Christ while they are present in the body and thus the death of the Saints bringeth them to Christ by releasing their souls from the tyes and bonds of an absented estate Therefore are we alwayes confident saith the Apostle knowing that whilst we are at home in the body we are absent from the Lord we are confident I say and willing rather to be absent from the body and present with the Lord 2 Cor. 5.6 8. The body is the Saints natural home wherein by a natural necessity they are kept absent from Christ and yet a forced absence in regard of their desires to be with him and to change their bodily home for an eternal house The Philosophers called the body animae carcerem pistrinum the prison and gaol of the soul if so how welcome should death be to the righteous that setteth this prisoner free and enlargeth the souls confinement But how the soul being set at liberty and delivered from the natural bond and relation to the body is immediately present with Christ I shall explain with what clearness and brevity I can for the making good of this second Demonstration First the soul and body in the Godly as in all other men are joyned together by the God of nature in the creation of them as essential parts of one person the humane nature consisting of body and soul which God himself breathed into the humane and organical body and whereby man became a living soul Gen. 2.7 It is also a received maxime in natural science that in the propagation of the humane nature the soul of man is immediately created and that not out of the body but in the body into which it is infused in the very creation of it and so one man is said to beget another not that he doth generate the soul but the body and the union of both God concurring as the first and universal cause with the secondary and particular causes in their natural acts and motions Which union of the soul and body being natural as of two essential parts of the whole though the soul being a spirit hath a subsistence being separate from the body by dissolution yet it is but a separate part and remaineth as a part during the time and
as he is the head of the body the corner stone of the building the rock of their strength the fountain of all fulness and their everlasting rest and peace But to conclude this second Demonstration As natural things tend to their center by a direct motion so the souls of all believers are directed in their motion to Christ at dissolution by the Ministery of Angels as in the Parable of Lazarus Luke 16.22 And it came to pass that the beggar dyed and was carried by the Angels into Abraham 's bosome Whether the soul be carried by Angels only by conducting it in its motion as we are said to carry a friend to an unknown place by directing in the way or whether by assistance in the motion and defence they being mighty in power it is not much material to determine since the soul moving according to the motion of its Angelical guides and companions is in an instant brought unto Christ its desired end and rest III. Demonst Thirdly All the Saints stand in near and unchangeable relations unto Christ through regeneration and spiritual adoption unto God the full comfort and priviledge whereof they cannot enjoy while they are present in the body So that though death parteth the nearest friends and dearest relations on earth yet it bringeth heavenly and spiritual relations together The force of relation is very strong relations being of the least entity but the strongest efficacy witness the strong affections and cords of love whereby persons naturally related are tyed to each other What bowels have Parents towards their Children and Children again unto them What indeared affections between loving yoke-fellowes And how strong is the bond of brotherly love All which long after and endeavour the mutual presence each of other Such are the relations and much more powerful between Christ and every beleiver Not only God himself but Christ is their Father and they his children Isa 9.6 His Name shall be called the everlasting Father the Prince of peace He is their Husband and they his Spouse 2 Cor. 11.2 I have espoused you to one husband that I might present you as a chast Virgin unto Christ He is their Brother and they his Brethren unto whom they are conformed Rom. 8.29 That he might be the first-born among many brethren Many other relations are mentioned in the Scriptures between them he is their King and they his Subjects their Captain and they his Souldiers their Friend and they his Favourites their Lord and Master and they his Servants and their Shepherd and they his Flock And what engagements and affections soever there are in any or all these relations in the Bond of nature there is much more in Christ and the Saints through the God of Grace and the powerful efficacy of the Spirit of Christ that dwelleth in them But yet being absent from each other while beleivers are present in the body they desire to depart that they may be with him And what a joyful greeting there is in heaven at the meeting of them let the Angels of heaven declare who are eye witnesses thereof Welcome then that day and hour when the messenger of death shall call and bring the children to their Fathers house their Spouse to her Beloved and the Sons of God to the first begotten When the loyall Subjects of Christ shall be crowned and the spiritual Souldiers receive the price of their reward when the true friends of Christ shall enjoy their Redeemer who loved them to the death and the faithful Servants shall enter into the joy of their Lord when the sheep shall return to their Shepherd who hath given unto them eternal life that they should never perish IV. Demonstr Fourthly the greatest promises made to beleivers in the covenant of Grace are of the life to come which they cannot inherit till they depart and are with Christ Thus Godliness is profitable to all things having promise of the life that now is and of that which is to come 2 Tim. 4.8 The Saints are heires of great and precious promises which are summed up in that general promise of eternal life 1 John 2.21 This is the promise which he hath promised us even eternal life Which promise and all the promises of God are yea and amen in Christ the Mediator of the Covenant established upon better promises Through which though the heires of promise have strong consolation in regard of the immutability of God and his counsel and oath wherein it is impossible that he should lye yet most of them are yet in hope and not in hand and therefore through patience they wait for them till they come to Christ the heir of all things with whom they are joynt-heires bearing up their hearts in the mean time with the hope set before them Heb. 6.19 20. Which hope we have saith the Apostle as an anchor of the soul both sure and stedfast and which entreth into that within the veil whither the forerunner is for us entred even Jesus made an High-Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedech Thus beleivers wait in hope for what they see not and receive not in this present life as the Patriarchs Heb. 11.13 Who dyed in the faith not having received the promises but having seen them afar off and were perswaded of them and imbraced them and confessed they were strangers and pilgrims upon earth Therefore beloved be not slothful but followers of them who through faith and patience inherit the promises Heb. 6.12 For ye have need of patience saith the same Apostle that after ye have done the will of God ye might receive the promise Heb. 10.36 Which promise is no other then the Crown of life and righteousness which Christ the righteous Judge shall give unto all those that love his appearing Thus we have shewed you though in a weak measure the glorious priviledge of the Godly in their death in that their death bringeth them immediately unto Christ according to my Text For I am in a straight betwixt two having a desire to depart and to be with Christ which is far better I am come at length to the Application of this Doctrine and Subject and that I may be profitable to all and divide the word of God so as to give every one his portion I shall weild this Text as a two-edged Sword striking both wayes to the godly and ungodly to Saints and sinners to beleivers and unbeleivers Use I. First it may serve to inform us from hence of the sad miserable and woful state of every carnal sinful and Christless soul that shall dye in such a condition It were happy for wicked men if they might never dye but for ever enjoy the mean portion of creature comforts which they have in this world though they are infinitely short of the glory and happiness of the Godly with Christ in heaven But to have your portion here and that for so short a season as the time of this present life onely how inconsiderable is it
to the eternity of the Saints felicity with Christ and the eternity of your own misery in Hell torments Therefore Christ in the parable bringeth in Abraham thus speaking to the rich man in Hell Luke 16.25 Son remember that thou in thy life time receivedst thy good things and likewise Lazarus evil things but now he is comforted and thou art tormented The Prophet David also praying for deliverance from his enemies describeth them by their temporal blessings Psal 17.13 14. Deliver my soul from the wicked which is thy sword from men which are thy hand O Lord from the men of the world which have their portion in this life Let not therefore the people of God envy the prosperity of the wicked for they have but the crumbs and broken meat that your heavenly Father giveth to strangers and enemies yea to Doggs for so the Scripture calleth the wicked Rev. 22.15 Without are Doggs and Sorcerers and Whore-mongers and Murderers and Idolaters and whatever loveth and maketh a lye And let the fear of death bridle and restrain the rage and riot of all prophane persons considering how soon your present joyes shall be at an end and your endless sorrowes commence when God shall lay your honour in the dust and require your souls from you Why tremble ye not at the sight of an inclosed corpse and the open grave before your eyes Ye also shall surely dye O ye covetous worldlings wretched drunkards prophane swearers unclean adulterers ye proud and gaudy vanities put your heads into the dust and stretch forth your hands and feel those cold and dry skulls and bones and lay it to heart before ye lye down in sorrow And for the awakening of your sleepy consciences who look and see no further then to what is obvious to your senses like a brutish people and a generation of sottish and foolish men give me leave to deal faithfully with you according to my present design in shewing you what is on t'other side the Grave and the deplorable estate of every carnal heart in death as soon as the soul hath taken its leave of its sinful body and house of clay First Every wicked and ungodly soul is miserable in death in that it is deprived of the happiness of heaven and the glory thereof in the presence of Christ for as it is the Saints priviledge in death to depart unto Christ so on the contrary it is part of every sinners punishment to depart from him Matth. 7.23 Depart from me ye that work iniquity How will your hopes perish and your hearts break when ye shall find heaven gate shut upon you and Christ himself deny your knocking 's and intreaties with I know you not Matth. 25.12 Be not deceived any longer but know that neither fornicators nor Idolaters nor adulterers nor effeminate nor abusers of themselves with mankind nor thieves nor covetous nor drunkards nor revilers nor extortioners shall inherit the kingdom of God 1 Cor. 6.9 10. And such are some of you Friends what think ye of perishing and being banished from the presence of the Lord and the glory of his power when ye shall weep and gnash your teeth because ye shall see Abraham and Isaac and Jacob and all the Prophets in the Kingdom of God and your selves shut out Luke 13.28 Ye shall see indeed the righteous whom ye have despised and persecuted and reproached solacing themselves in their full plenty and rejoycing in their everlasting inheritance all the treasures of heaven being opened unto them but ye shall not be able to passe that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or great gulf of separation that is and shall be fixed between them and you so as to approach their presence or to partake of their joyes Augustine moveth a question why the rich man could see Lazarus in Abrahams bosome and Lazarus could not see the rich man in hell and he giveth this answer to it because he that is in the darke may see him that is in the light but he that is in the light cannot see him that is in the dark Heaven is a place of light through the presence of the glory of God and of Christ the Son of righteousness wherein all the righteous shall shine as the Sun and therefore called the inheritance of the Saints in light Acts 26.18 But the state of the wicked shall be darkness and blackness of darkness a total deprivation of the light of the countenance of God and the comfortable presence thereof from which they shall be driven into the remotest distance of place and condition and therefore it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 outer darkness Mat. 25.30 Cast the unprofitable servant into outer darkness there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth And though this be the greatest loss imaginable yet it is the least of your woe in regard of the torments ye shall suffer in the Lake that burneth with fire and brimstone And so I proceed from the punishment of loss to the punishment of sense and torment Secondly Every wicked man shall be miserable in his death in respect of the state of his soul which death shall bring it unto without Christ And the state of a damned soul after death and the manner of a sinful soul entring into condemnation and torment after dissolution may somewhat be discerned by these following steps and degrees In opening whereof I shall wholly wave the question about the place of hell and torment as a nicety rather then a necessary Subject for serious Auditors First Every wicked and unbeleiving person dieth in the guilt of all his sins unpardoned Remission of sins is a priviledge peculiar to beleivers through faith in Christ Jesus faith being the condition of the promise and the application of the death and righteousness of Christ for justification Rom. 3.25 26. Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his bloud to declare his righteousness for the remission of sins that are past through the forbearance of God that he might be just and the justifier of him that believeth in Jesus But he that believeth not is condemned already because he hath not beleived in the Name of the only begotten Son of God John 3.18 So that unbelief leaveth the soul under the guilt of sin and sealeth up the final condemnation thereof Whereupon Christ telleth the unbelieving Jews that they should die in their sins John 8.21 24. Then said Jesus again unto them I go my way and ye shall seek me and shall dye in your sins whither I go ye cannot come I said therefore unto you that ye shall dye in your sins for if ye beleive not that I am he ye shall dye in your sins A wicked man carryeth all his sins to the grave with him which for number are as the hairs of his head and for nature damnable and defiling he dieth clothed and clogged with sin and the guilt of all his sins that ever he committed in thought word or deed cleave to his
soul It is dreadful to consider what a mass and mountainous bigness the sins of a poor carnal wretch arise unto if we lay them together his original sin actual sins sins of omission and commission his secret sins and open and scandalous sins his whole life hath been a trade of sin and whatsoever proceedeth from him is sin the ploughing of the wicked is sin and his prayer is turned into sin And to his own sins personally committed we may add his other mens sins either occasioned countenanced or allowed Now multiply these by their particulars and individuals and measure all by their sinful circumstances and then judge of the guilt of every sinful ma that dieth in unbelief and without pardoning grace through the bloud of Christ Secondly The conscience of every wicked man is awakened immediately after death and dissolution to a continual sense of the guilt of all his sins Natural conscience in carnal men is for the most part peaceable silent in this present life delight custome in sin hardning the heart and searing the conscience which they labour to keep asleep by diverting the thoughts to worldly objects or to satisfie by a formal profession attended with some outward performances But as soon as ever the soul of an unregenerate person is separate from the body this lyon awaketh sleepeth no more the faculties of the soul being alwayes in act and exercise in a separate state whereby his sins shall be alwayes before him and set in order before his eyes upon which his conscience shall reflect continually without diversion or intermission Then the sins you have laboured to forget and cast out of mind shall be brought to remembrance and ye shall ever behold them for which conscience shall charge and accuse you and in the fresh remembrance of them you shall lye down self-condemned for ever This is the worm that never dieth Mark 9 48. But shall gnaw your hearts to eternity Thirdly Hereupon the soul of a wicked man shall tremble at the sight and presence of God That the soul of every man and consequently of the wicked shall see and approach the powerful and immediate presence of God in his Divine nature and essence upon their dissolution is apparent in that the spirit of man is said to go upward Eccles 3.21 And to return to God who gave it Chap. 12.7 As also by the particular judgement immediately consequent upon death whereby God appearing to conscience decideth and determineth the eternal state and condition of every soul preparative to the last and glorious appearing of Christ at the great and terrible day who shall then judge the whole world and the soul and body together For it is appointed unto men once to ye and after this the judgement Heb. 9.27 Which may include this particular judgement after death whereof we are speaking as well as the last and general judgement yet some restrain it to the particular only But in what manner the soul of a wicked man shall see God take in a few words Death being the unclothing and putting off off the earthly house of the body the soul remaineth naked in respect of that clothing which nakedness of the separate souls of the Saints is covered and clothed upon with the glory of their house in heaven 2 Cor. 5.3 In which state of nakedness wherein the souls of the wicked abide the soul must needs be quickly and powerfully apprehensive of God and of any impression and influence of God upon it as the body being naked of its clothing is tenderly sensible of heat or cold and any thing that approacheth unto it For the foul being separate from the body receiveth its object no more through the senses of the body but in an immediate way of discovery of them We know also that the Lord doth sometimes immediately wound the spirit of man while it is in the body by letting fall the drops of wrath upon it and thereby tormenteth it which David calleth the rebukes of God Ps 39.11 When thou with rebukes dost correct a man for iniquity thou makest his beauty to consume away like a moth Moreover if the soul being a spirit and separate from the body can converse with spirits as the Saints with Angels and the damned with Devils much more with God the Father of spirits who can discover himself unto them as he pleaseth But take heed of mistaking here for though a gracious and and sanctified soul reconciled unto God hath to do with him as a father in the apprehension of his love through which it hath comfort and joy in communion with him yet it is not so with the sinful soul of that than that dieth in his sins which apprehendeth God only as he appeareth to it in wrath and displeasure for without holiness no man shall see the Lord that is with peace and comfort Heb. 12.14 Now consider ye that forget God can ye see and behold the wrath of his countenance doe ye not tremble in your very thoughts of him Surely the presence of an angry God will make every guilty soul to fear and tremble at his feet when they shall be brought before him by his Serjeant Death The apprehension of guilt and of God together made Adam and Eve to run behind the Trees for fear when they heard the voice of God in the garden Gen. 3.8 Moses though a Favourite yet when he saw the appearance of God in the thundrings and lightnings and earthquakes the smoke and fire heard the sound of the trumpet upon Mount Sinai he said I exceedingly fear ●nd quake Heb. 12.21 When Elijah apprehended God was in the still small voice he wrapped his face in his mantle ●nd went out and stood in the entring of the ●ave 1 Kings 19.13 When Job came to see God with his eyes he abhorred himself in dust and ashes Job 42.6 The judgements of God made holy Davids flesh to tremble Psal 119.120 My flesh trembleth for fear of thee I am afraid of thy judgements The glorious vision which Isaiah saw how did it work upon that holy Prophet Isaiah 6.5 When he saw the Lord sitting upon a throne and cryed woe is me for I am undone because I am a man of unclean lips I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips for mine eyes have seen the King ●he Lord of Hosts And if these Saints so eminent for grace and holiness have trembled at the presence of God manifested unto them in love and mercy how shall the unner and ungodly stand in his sight Doest thou beleive there is a God If not thou shalt see and beleive but remember that the Devils beleive and tremble Fourthly The soul of a wicked man thus trembling before God the holiness of God breaketh forth in wrath upon the soul to punish torment it For the soul appearing before God in the guilt of all its sins which are the greatest contrariety opposition against the holy nature of God who
the spirit and render beleivers unfit for a natural dissolution how much more will they entangle in a time of persecution And what will it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul For saith our Saviour whosoever will save his life shall lose it and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it Matth. 16.23 24. Remember that Christ is your life and the cause and fountain of life and if you lose life it self for him you will find it again in him nec propter vitam vivendi perdere causam venture not the losing of Christ himself for this life sake This was Pauls present case and condition in my Text he was willing to suffer and by suffering for Christ to depart unto Christ which is far better Thirdly This fear of death may flow from a want of a clear evidence of an interest in Christ When a Christians evidence for heaven is darke and dubious the white stone slurred and the new name hardly legible when neither his own spirit nor Gods spirit beareth full witness or give in a clear testimony to adoption and reconciliation in this case eternity is terrible and the face of death and its appearance exceeding ghastful Sometimes the death of the Godly is a streight passage and a darke entrance when together with the pangs of dissolution the guilt of sin appeareth to conscience the wonted favour of God is withdrawn by removing his supporting presence and the Devil by strong assaults and temptations takes advantage of weakness to vex and disquiet the soul striving and strugling for support and comfort Methinks I hear such a heart cry out in the words of the Prophet David Psal 39.13 O spare me that I may recover strength before I go hence and be no more seen It is exceeding hard for a Christian to venture to launch forth into eternity upon uncertainties and without a hopeful at least if not a full and satisfactory perswasion of happiness and salvation In this case the soul hath no other help but to roul it self upon mercy by renewing the acts of faith upon Christ to stay it self upon God though hiding his face and strongly to rest and rely upon the rock of ages And let this comfort and support in such an hour of trouble and tryal that when thou droppest into eternity and seemest to fall in the act of dissolution into eternal sorrow then the everlasting armes are ready to receive thee and as soon as ever death closeth the eyes of thy body thy soul shall see the glorious face of God himself to thy everlasting though unexpected joy Therefore imitate and follow the steps of Christ thy forerunner who in the same condition of desertion exercised faith upon the cross saying Mat. 27.46 My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Fourthly The Saints may be subject to the fear of death and not chearfully submit unto it from their ignorance of the state of heaven and their happiness with God hereafter It is a received axiome ignoti nulla cupido we cannot desire what we do not know and apprehend And though the greatest part of what we know here be the least part of what we know not but shall know hereafter for we know but in part yet most Christians are guilty of neglect unexcusable ignorance in that they might know far more of the state of heaven then they doe It is true what the beloved Disciple and Apostle asserts 1 John 3.2 Beloved now are we the Sons of God and it doth not yet appear what we shall be but we know we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is The Scriptures are not altogether silent in revealing So the glorious inheritance of the Saints that though we are not able in our understanding while we are in the body to behold so great a glory had it been fully revealed yet so much is revealed thereof unto us that we may in the promises thereof discerne and contemplate as we doe the glory of the Sun by its reflexion in still waters For as it is written 1 Cor. 2.9 Eye hath not seen nor ear heard neither have entred into the heart of man the things which God hath revealed unto them that love him but as it followeth in the next verse God hath revealed them unto us by his spirit for the spirit searcheth all things yea the deep things of God among which are profunda coeli the high or deep things of heaven It would be endless to gather together those pieces of heaven which like rich pearles and sparkling diamonds lye scattered up and down the Scriptures Let every high and heaven-born soul look more after his portion and spend more i me in surveying that inheritance incorruptible undefiled that fadeth not away reserved in the heavens for him This will sweeten the thoughts of death and strengthen the soul to encounter the King of terrours Who would not endure the strongest paines for heavenly pleasures who would not shoot this gulph for eternal gain who would not dare to dye once that he might live and never dye more yea who would not depart that he might be with Christ Use 4. Then suffer the word of exhortation and first let every natural men accept of a friendly call to provide and prepare for the day and hour of his dissolution Consider wherefore thou art come into the world and how thou mayst close thy dayes in peace Wherefore hath God given thee a being and breathed into thy nostrils the breath of life Why did not she that bare thee miscarry before she had reckoned her months that thou wast not the untimely fruit of the womb why wast thou not stifled in the birth and the long expectations of him that begat thee frustrate with the news of a stilborn child or why diedst thou not in thine infancy as a blossome withered through sudden blasting By how many preventing and preserving providences hath thy life been renewed and continued unto thee that thou still drawest thy breath and swallowest thy spittle what account canst thou give of the golden talent of time God hath betrusted thee withal upon every moment whereof dependeth eternity Call to mind the dayes that are past and gone and shall return no more and examine the short periods and divisions of time never to be recalled which thou hast spent either idlely and impertinently or for the most part sinfully and prophanely Art thou born to sin or dost thou therefore sin that thou mayst shorten thy dayes by hastening to fill up the measure of thine iniquity why shouldst thou dye before thy time Is there no measure of sin or bounds of profaneness that thou drinkest in sin as the fish the water and drawest iniquity with cart ropes and the cords of vanity O make not so much hast to hell thou wilt be there too soon but turn at reproofe and to day whilest it is called to day harden not thy heart who knoweth
such fruitful seasons Nevertheless lift up the hands that hang down the feeble knees up and be doing the worke of the Lord shall prosper in your hands gird up the loynes of your minds and so run that ye may attain being swift to hear not slothful in business fervent in spirit continuing instant in prayer that God would fulfill in you all the good pleaof his goodness and the work of faith with power Fifthly That ye may better redeem the present time of grace and mercy exercise your hope with all sobriety in the use of temporal comforts and enjoyments Take heed of surfeiting your selves with the sweetness of creature delights lest your hearts should say it is good to be here and you sit down ready to take your lot on this side of heaven But be sober and hope unto the end for the grace and salvation that is to be brought unto you at the revelation of Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 1.13 Ye that are the children of the day watch and be sober and with Paul whose example is imitable in this case labour to beat down your bodies and to bring them into subjection that ye be not cast away 1 Cor. 9.21 It is better to starve lust then by pampering the body to make provision for the flesh to fulfill the lusts thereof Therefore study contentment in a mean condition in this world having but food and rayment to supply the bare necessities of this present life A little will serve for your passage though all the world should not content you for your portion because ye are heirs of precious promises and of a rich and glorious inheritance whereof ye shall shortly take possession in the life that is to come and in the enjoyment of God himself in whose presence is fulness of joy and at whose right hand there are pleasures for evermore Wherefore if by Christ the world be crucifyed unto you and you unto the world and ye overcome the world by the victory of faith live above the vanity and emptiness of fading and withering comforts and look not at the fashion of the world which passeth away but use the world as if ye used it not because all these things perish in the using dye in the hand and the beauty thereof corrupteth and vanisheth while your eyes are set upon them And let your moderation be known to all men in respect of your care and contention for the things of this life for the Lord is at hand who if you cast your burthens upon him will sustaine you for he careth for you Content your selves to live at his allowance in your minority and think not hardship unsutable to your present state whereas if you were full ye might forget the Lord and less mind your home and your Fathers house But if the Lord hath enlarged your present estate upon earth content not your selves in being rich unless you are rich towards God and deny your selves in what is in your power to use and possess that ye may doe good in your generation and lay up for your selves a good foundation against the time to come Direct VI. Sixthly For the maintaining of a holy sobriety of spirit act faith upon eternal promises and the unseen glory of heaven Nothing doth more support and bear up the hearts of the Saints then to live by faith and to look over the pale of time to the things which are eternal This will make afflictions light suffering easie the world contemptible and the hardest labour and work for Christ and the Gospel comfortable While we look not at the things which are seen but at the things which are not seen for the things which are seen are temporal but the things which are not seen are eternal 2 Cor. 4.18 While faith feedeth upon the promises of life and glory and eyeth the great reward of happiness and perfection the soul fainteth not under its burden neither is discouraged at the greatest difficulties in the way of its hopes but becometh more lively and undaunted in contending with opposition that it may break through and passe to the tree of life which is in the midst of the Paradise of God Yea how fully is the soul satisfyed in beholding the incomprehensible riches of eternity that when it is taken up with the thoughts and meditations thereof it is ready to forget that it is still in the body as being transported above the sphear of sensitive objects This made David cease to envy the prosperity of the wicked when his heart was raised to a sight of God in the Sanctuary which so ravished his soul that he brake out into that expression Psal 73.25 Whom have I in heaven but thee and there is none upon earth that I desire besides thee And this will ween your affections desires from earthly contentments did ye often by faith visit your heavenly mansions and keep your thoughts upon Christ and his preparations for you which the eye hath not seen nor the ear heard neither hath the heart conceived and yet not beyond the reach of faith as it is the evidence of things not seen Seventhly and lastly Labour after a complying heart with the will of God under every dispensation of providence towards you in this earthly tabernacle Be willing to live or dye to doe or suffer following every call of God whose infinite wisdom disposeth of your conditions and whose gracious power is present to assist and streng then Acknowledge the Lord in all your wayes and he shall direct your paths and commit your way to him and he shall give you the desire of your hearts Take heed of self-will and sinful will in opposition to the will of Christ but lye prostrate at his feet with a holy and an humble resignation of your selves to his will and pleasure And let nothing move or terrifie you neither count your lives dear unto you that ye may finish your course with joy Be contented with any condition which the Lord shall allot unto you in your present pilgrimage and travails homeward and let the consideration of your approaching ascension unto Christ in the highest heavens sweeten every bitter cup which providence shall put into your hands lighten every burden which God shall lay upon you knowing that your sufferings are only temporal but your joyes will be eternal and that ye have all your evil here but your good things are to come O forget not that your treasure is in heaven and where your treasure is there let your hearts be also that for the joy that is set before you ye may endure every cross and despise the shame of all your sufferings for Christ counting the sufferings of this present life not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in you when ye shall depart hence un●o Christ which is far better Not only better then the present straights troubles tribulations and afflictions which attend the Gospel the profession of Christ and the state of Grace but better then the best and most honourable and comfortable condition which the Saints of God have ever enjoyed or can expect to partake of while the foundations of the earth remain Which I shall only add by way of motive to what hath been said by way of counsel that to depart and be with Christ is far better 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that in comparison with the three degrees o excellency attainable in this earthly state First it is better then life and all the comforts of life which the world can afford in pleasure profit or honour For all these things are short and uncertain and at least but created delights and creature enjoyments which Saint John describeth by the lust of the flesh the lust of the eye and the pride of life 1 John 2.15 And laboureth to take off our affections from them by an argument drawn from the love of God And if the loving kindness of God to his people here be better then life it self Psal 63.3 How much more the fulness of his love communicated without measure in the life that is eternal Secondly it is better then all the service which the Saints can doe for God and Christ in their most perfect obedience here below Yea though we could say with Saint Paul to us to live is Christ yet to dye and be with Christ were gain and far better and though in keeping of his commandements there be great reward and the godly have great peace therein yet their happiness hereafter shall be the crown of their holiness here and their reward with Christ shall exceed all their labour and worke for him Lastly It is better then the most uninterrupted fellowship the Saints are capable of with the Father and his Son Jesus Christ in their nearest and most spiritual approaches in the purest ordinances or most heavenly meditations and that by how much the immediate and glorious presence of Christ God himself in heaven surpasseth the clearest discovery manifestations of God to his chosen and precious faithful people upon earth Therefore le● all the Sons of God wait with joy for the day of their ascension when they shall depart unto Christ who is ascended far above all things that he might fill all things And that your hearts may be filled with joy and that ye faint not implore his spiritual presence with his love-sick Spouse Cant. 2. last Vntill the day break and the shaddowes flee away turne my Beloved and be thou like a Roe or a young Hart upon the mountaines of Bether FINIS
THE SOULS ASCENSION IN THE STATE OF SEPARATION Summarily delivered in a Sermon preached at Shenly in the County of Hertford the 21. of November 1660. at the Funeral Solemnities of Mrs Mary Jessop late wife of William Jessop Esq and since enlarged and publish'd for common benefit By ISAAC LOEFFS M.A. Eccles 3.21 Who knoweth the Spirit of Man that goeth upward and the spirit of the beast that goeth downward to the Earth London Printed for N. Ranew and J. Robinson at the Angel in Jewen-street 1670 TO My ever honoured Uncle WILLIAM JESSOP ESQUIRE SIR MY natural modesty and backwardness to appear in publick together with the difficulty of obtaining the Press have detained this short Treatise so long from you that you may well judge it unseasonable now to be presented unto you Yet considering the duty of that relation wherein I stand unto you through your late dear Yoak-Fellow whose death was the occasion of this Discourse and the obligation that is upon me by so many favours and undeserved kindnesses received from you as also the benefit which possibly may accrue to others from so serious a Subject I have ventured it abroad into the world under the protection of your Name how weakly so-ever managed and liable to the censures of this scrupulous Age. However I may hope that as Funeral Sermons above others have an advantage upon Auditors by their sad occasion so this also may affect the impartial Reader by the weight of its Arguments And although it was first intended and promised you for a private present and an acknowledgment of that due respect and unfeigned love which I do and shall ever bear to your self and your Relations yet I presume it will not be the less accepted because others are now made equal sharers in it And my confidence herein is the more strengthned by the consideration of that publick spirit which you have manifested at all times by your willing and unwearied pains in the service of your Generation wherein your integrity and faithfulness have so eminently appeared that your name is known and honoured throughout the Nation But this above all is your Crown that in all your publick employments you have not sought your self and the advancement of your Family so much as the honour of God the interest of his people and the enlargement of the Gospel by your high esteem of and the encouragement you have given unto the Faithful Ministers of it among whom I have been an unworthy Labourer And blessed be the Lord who hath made his Grace to abound towards you by his assisting and supporting presence in all your paines and travels whereby you have been enabled so chearfully to undergo the burden of your hard services who hath also blessed your careful and conscientious endeavours for the promoting of Godliness in your Family and among your near Relations One fruit whereof I cannot but mention for your unspeakable comfort concerning your dear Relation taken from you being present at her dissolution who about to close her eyes from her mourning Children and Friends and all the visible things of this life did sensibly joyfully and openly acknowledge and declare her assured and known interest in Christ unto whom she immediately departed Now the Lord supply all your wants and be your reward and the blessing of your off-Spring And if this poor present may add any thing of spiritual benefit and advantage to your own soul the souls of your relations or any others it will be the rejoycing of From my study at Shenly in the County of Hertford Oct. 20. 1669. Your unworthy Kinsman and Servant in the Gospel ISAAC LOEFFS THe Reader is desired to correct these following mistakes which escaped the Press by reason of the Authors absence PAge 2. Line 27. for walk read reach P. 5. l. 12. leave out not P. 9. l. 13. f. hand 1. head P. 10. l. 3. f. alwayes r. already P. 22. l. 8. f. live r. evil P. 26. l. 5. f. Luther 1. Augustine T. 43. l. 16. f. strange r. strong p. 120. l. 9. f. medicinal r. mystical P. 125. l. 2. f. Christ r. God P. 129. l. 2. blot out in Scriptures THE SOVLS ASCENSION In the State of SEPARATION PHILLIP 1.24 For I am in a straight betwixt two having a desire to depart and to be with Christ which is far better MAN being in honour abideth not or lodgeth not all night therein saith David Psal 49.12 But becomes like the Beasts that perish for that which befalleth the Sons of men befalleth Beasts as the one dieth so dieth the other so that a man hath no preheminence above a Beast saith Solomon Eccl. 3.19 Nevertheless though he dieth like the Beast yet his Spirit retaining the immortality of its essence returneth not to corruption with his body but is capable of a state after death and dissolution according as the infinite wisdom of his Creator doth dispose thereof in a way of justice or mercy * For the spirit returneth to God who gave it Chap. 12 7. And because most men are so irrational and foolish as either through ignorance of their own nature and being to deny the immortality of their souls or through delusion and presumption to conclude the certainty of their future felicity judging all things by sense and the present dispensations of external and common providence therefore it shall be my present design in handling this Text to give unto you a private prospect through the gate of death towards the mountaines and valleys of eternal happiness and misery by presenting unto you the secret and hidden way of the spirit and soul of man in its sudden flight and motion at the time and in the state of separation from the corporeal and fleshy part which falls from it towards its earthly center And forasmuch as the dissolution of nature doth not only divide the two essential parts of soul and body but also the common rode of this temporal life into two distinct paths towards the greatest different states of everlasting joy or sorrow I shall labour to walk both in this subject the first in the doctrinal part because it is the proper and plain scope of the Text and the other in the Application by way of consequence and deduction For which end and purpose it will be necessary for me first to bring you to the Text by the preceeding parts of the Chapter and the occasion of this Epistle to which it hath relation and then by the Text to the matter intended The occasion of Paul's writing this Epistle to the Church at Philippi was an honourable Present the Church had sent unto him being then a prisoner in Rome by the hands of Epaphroditus their pastor by way of charity to supply his present necessities By whom having understood the state and condition of that Church and being affected with so great an expression of their love unto him he returned this sweet Letter and Spiritual Epistle And in this first Chapter after
be with him which in it self considered was earnest agreeable to his earnest expectation or stretching forth of the hand in looking as that word denoteth in the 20. verse of this Chapter To depart 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or to be dissolved according to others or to die as the Apopostle had said in the 21. verse To die is gain The Apostle seemeth to strain himself for a word that he might set forth so gainful a death as he is speaking of which sometimes he calleth a dissolving of this earthy tabernacle and an unclothing 2 Cor. 5.1.4 Peter styles it a putting off of this tabernacle The spirit of God in the Holy penmen of the Scriptures hath set forth the death of the Saints by pleasant and alluring expressions as to sleep to be changed to be gathered to the Fathers and in this place to depart And to be with Christ Paul was in Christ alwayes by grace and Christ revealed in him by the spirit of illumination he was a follower of Christ by conformity and obedience and came behinde none of of the other Apostles in his labour and sufferings for him and as he desir'd to be found in Christ so to depart and to be with him that he might immediately enjoy him and enter into the joy of his Lord and Master unto whom he had been faithful in his ministry and Apostleship The state of happiness is often set forth in Scripture by this phrase of being with Christ and being with the Lord Luke 23.43 This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise Rom. 6.8 Now if we be dead with Christ we believe we shall also live with him And 1 Thes 4.17 Then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air and so we shall ever be with the Lord. Which is far better * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or very much better that is in regard of himself it is better to die then to live though in regard of the Church for him to abide in the flesh it was better and more needful for them as in the following verse And in regard of himself and his glory with Christ it must needs be far better if we consider as Paul did that far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory which should be the reward of his light afflictions as he so them esteem'd comparatively 2 Cor. 4.17 For our light afflictions which are but for a moment work for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is beyond expression * Christus caelum non patiuntur hyperbolem And therefore our translation rendereth it a farre more exceeding as Paul here styles it far better Having thus opened the words of the Text I shall lay down one Proposition only from these words of the Apostle and handle that as suitable to this present occasion and solemnity Doct. That it is the desireable and peculiar priviledge of the Saints to be brought immediately to Christ by their departure hence by death In the managing of this doctrine or proposition I shall endeavour to shew and clear these three general Heads the handling whereof will take in the substance and essential parts of the whole Text it self First What is that death in the nature and quality of it that brings the souls of the Saints departed immediately unto Christ Secondly what is it or what may be understood by this phrase to be with Christ Thirdly how doth the death of the Saints bring them immediately to Christ at their departure and in what manner doth the Soul depart to Christ First What it that death in the nature and quality of it that brings the Souls of the Saints departed immediately to Christ 1. Negatively Every death or the death of every man doth not bring him or his soul to Christ It is not death barely and in it self considered as it is a privation of life by the dissolution of nature and parting asunder of soul and body Otherwise what were the priviledge of Paul which here he so greatly desired more then of Judas the Traitor but that Judas went not to Christ but to his own place is evident Acts 1.25 The godly and the wicked die alike in respect of natural dissolution Eccl. 2.26 How dieth the wise man as the fool As there is no visible distinction or marke of difference between the Godly and the wicked by the external things of providence in the course of their lives but all things fall out a like to all men that no man might know love or hatred by what is before him but by what is within him and upon his heart so neither can the righteous be discerned from the reprobates by any visible character of the outward manner of their departure and dissolution And this will appear in the several kinds of death both are subject unto in the course of providence as also in the outward circumstances thereof The godly and wicked may both die of the same disease and distemper of body as feaver consumption dropsie yea the most painful diseases as the gout and the stone and also of the most noy some and uncomfortable distempers as the small pox and the plague it self of which Hezekiah was sick unto death 2 Kings 20.1 Again they may both die by a violent hand Stephen was stoned to death as well as Achan They may both also die by the same occasion and sudden providences as those upon whom the tower in Siloam fell and slew them Luke 13.4 Which did not argue that they were greater sinners then others Moreover they may both die in the full number of their days and a wicked man may live to be an hundred years old and be accursed Isai 65.20 And though wicked men sometimes through the just judgement of God doe not live out halfe their dayes yet the godly may die in their youth and strength and the Lord in mercy take them away from the evil to come Isa 57.1 Lastly they may die alike in regard of the present peace and calm or trouble and disturbance of spirit a godly man may want assurance upon a death bed and a wicked may goe out of the world like a Lamb with peace and presumption and a quiet dissolution Psal 73.4 There are no bands in their death 2. But positively That death which bringeth the Soul to Christ at the time of departure out of this life is to be considered in relation to the state and condition of the person in death as holy righteous and godly So that it is the quality of the person dying that makes him happy in his death whose death is his gain and his departure to be with Christ To this the Scriptures bear clear and rich testimonie Prov. 14.32 The righteous hath hope in his end Ps 37.37 The godly man is marked with this priviledge Marke the perfect man behold the upright the end of that man is
up their tabernacles for 2 Cor. 5.1 We know that if the carthly house of this tabernacle were dissolved we have a building of God an house not made with hands eternal in the heavens when the Sons of God the heires of promise shall no more have moveable dwellings but abiding mansions and that in their Fathers house John 14.2 3. In my Fathers house saith Christ to his Disciples comforting of them are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 many mansions I goe to prepare a place for you that where I am there ye may be also Lastly the word is also expounded to be delivered Liberari So Beza maketh it the same in signification with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 7.24 O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death or from this mortal body Or as Diodate paraphraseth upon that Text O that I were but out of this animal and terrestrial life during which sin doth dwell in me and through it I am yet under the necessity of dying and that I were transported into the liberty of the glory of Gods children in the life of happiness St. Paul saw a law in his members warring against the law of his mind and leading him captive unto the law of sin and death in the foregoing verse under which bondage he groaned for deliverance and for the obtaining of it looked upon death as the only means conducible The Saints are subject to sin while they are in he body because sin receiveth its power from the corruption of nature not wholly mortified in this life therefore called the law in the members and the deeds of the body Rom. 8.13 Our members that are upon earth Col. 3.5 And the lusts of the flesh Gal 5.24 But the death of the Saints is the death of their sins whereby they put off the whole body of sin O happy death that brings the old man of sin to his grave and the new man in grace to his glory and perfection when the Soul shall be no more tempted unto sin no more troubled with sin but perfectly freed from all motions lusts and inclinations to that which is evil by departing hence unto Christ Secondly What is it to be with Christ unto whom the Saints are brought by their departing hence by death That none of the Fathers and Saints of the Old Testament were in heaven before Christs Ascension is but a Popish fiction and delusion contrary to the plain sence and express doctrine of the Scriptures as may appear to name no more in those two remarkable instances of Enoch and Elijah Gen. 5.24 And Enoch walked with God and he was not for God took him And of Elijah 2 Kings 2.11 And Elijah went up into heaven by a whirlwind But the question may be made which I shall briefly answer how these Patriarchs and Saints could be with Christ when Christ was not yet incarnate neither ascended into heaven For the Solution of this question I shall only assert and briefly prove that though Christ was not in heaven before his incarnation in his humane nature yet he was there with the Godly departed and they with him in his Divine nature For the Divine nature of Christ being one with the Godhead of the Father and the Spirit as it was coessential so it was coeternal In the beginning was the word and the word was with God and the word was God John 1.1 And when Christ was on earch he speaketh of himself as being at the same time also in Heaven which must be understood of his Divine nature John 1.18 No man hath seen God at any time the only begotten Son who is in the bosome of the Father hath declared him So also John 3.13 No man hath of cended up to Heaven but he that came down from Heaven even the Son of man which is in Heaven And when he was to leave the world in his prayer for himself his Disciples and all believers he thus petitioneth his Father John 17.5 And now O Father glorifie thou me with thine own self with the glory which I had with thee before the world was But in what manner the Divine nature of Christ did put off its glory during the time of his exinanition and humiliation upon earth I shall not take upon me to inquire much less to clear so great a Mystery when being equal with God he took upon him the form of a servant having laid by his glory as to the use of it in the mystery of our salvation as learned Beza noteth * Hâ autem gloriâ quod ad usum illius ottinet in salutis no strae mysterio quodam modo sese abdicaverat filius in servi formâ durante suae illius exinonitionis spatio Beza in Johan 17. verse 5. But being out of all question that Christ is now in Heaven in his divine and humane nature and in both glorified I return to shew you the Saints priviledge of being with Christ and what it is to be with him at the terminus ad quem of the Souls motion in the state of Separation First to be with Christ is to be in the place where Christ is or to be locally present with Christ And that Christ is personally and locally in Heaven I will not seem to suspect your faith by being numerous in Scripture quotations Acts. 1.11 The Angels say to the Disciples Ye men of Galilee why stand ye gazing up into Heaven this same Jesus which is taken up from you into Heaven shall so come in like manner as ye have seen him goe up into Heaven And Peter telleth the Jews Acts 3. 21. That the Heavens must receive him until the time of the restitution of all things Stephen saw him in Heaven when he was suffering for him Acts 7.56 Behold I see the Heavens opened and the Son of man standing at the right hand of God And the Apostle Paul layeth it down as an infallible truth to all beleivers Col. 3.1 If ye be risen with Christ seek the things which are above where Christ sitteth at the right hand of God Now Christ hath told us that where he is there we shall be also John 14.2 And if any man will serve me let him follow me and where I am there shall also my servant be John 12.26 Now is it not a desirable as well as a peculiar priviledge to be with Christ Christian wast thou ne're affected in reading the Evangelical story of Christ with the singular priviledge which the Disciples of our Lord had in their immediate attendance upon him and continuance with him to hear and see what they saw and heard and to be his bosom friends and familiar companions and didst thou not wish in thy heart that it might have been thy happy lot to have been one of them How much more comfortable and glorious will it be to be with him in Heaven The presence of Christ on earth was a joyful presence to the Disciples for while the Bridegroome was with
them they could not mourne Mat. 9.5 But when he told them that he should be taken from them their hearts were filled with sorrow It was one of Luthers three wishes that he might have seen Christ in the flesh Paul preaching and primitive Rome in its flourishing condition Content thy self a while thou precious soul that lovest him and his appearance thou shalt shortly see him with his Father and thy Father and abide with him for ever and thou that hast been ravished with-the sweetness and powerful influence of his spiritual presence in his Ordinances wherein thou shalt in the end of thy dayes drink with him of the wine of the Kindom of God pressed from the clusters of the heavenly Canaan Secondly to be with Christ is to be glorified with Christ and to possess the same glory which Christ hath with the Father Christ chargeth Mary who had the honour first to see him after his Resurrection to forbear his bodily presence saying touch me not for I am not yet ascended unto my Father John 20.17 But goe and tell my brethren and say unto them I ascend unto my Father and your Father and to my God and your God And being ascended he is set down at the right hand of the Majestie on High Heb. 1.3 Or on the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in the Heavens Chap. 8.1 Now Christs throne shall be the Saints throne as he hath promised Rev. 3.21 To him that overcometh will I grant to sit with me in my throne even as I also overcame and am set down with my Father in his throne Christ hath prayed his Father and declared this as his Will to his Father John 17.24 Father I will that these whom thou hast given me be with me where I am that they may behold my glory which thou hast given me And shall they only be spectators of it shall not the beholding of the glory of Christ in Heaven be as powerful to change the Saints into the same glory as seeing his glorious Image 2 Cor. 4.18 For we all with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord are changed into the same Image from glory to glory even as by the spirit of the Lord or as it may be rendred even as by the Lord the Spirit for the Lord is that spirit v. 17. And this is no less then what Christ hath assured us of by his own grant and promise unto us Joh. 17.22 And the glory which thou gavest me I have given them that they may be one as we are one To shew you therefore what this glory of Christ is whereof every bel●iver shall be a partaker with him It is a spiritual and full possession and enjoyment of God himself in perfect union and immediate communion with him For so far as we can discern and understand things so far above us and remote from us in their nature and excellency and as they are revealed unto our capacity in the Heavenly records of Divine writ the glory of Heaven seemeth to be the highest degree of spirituality God is presented unto us to be a spirit John 4.24 And if we cloth the nature of a spirit with the Attributes of God as they are made known unto us by himself it is the highest conception we can have of him For God is a Spirit or a spiritual substance most Holy most Wise Eternal Infinite as that holy and famous writer of ours hath described or defined him The Angels are Spirits or ministring Spirits Heb. 1.14 The Souls of the Saints in Heaven are Spirits the Spirits of just men made perfect Heb. 12.23 And if we may judge as we say the body by the foot ex pede Herculem or of the glory of Heaven and of the Soul by the glory of the body as it is already glorified in Christ and others with him or as it shall be glorified after the Resurrection even the body of all beleivers it will appear still that the spirituality of the Heavenly state is the glory of it The Apostle Paul speaking of Christs coming from hence to raise the body and to glorifie it saith Phil 3.21 That he shall change our vile body and make it like unto his glorious body by the power whereby he is able to subdue all things unto himself So that look what manner of body for glory Christs body now is in Heaven such shall our bodieds be and what the glory of his body is appeareth by the spirituality of it after his Resurrection 1 Cor. 15.44 It is sown a natural body it is raised a spiritual body if not in substance yet in quality And if the nature of grace in the Saints on earth be spiritual and the fruits of the spirit in them constituting them a spiritual people Gal 6.1 Whereby they are blessed with spiritual blessings in heavenly places or things it will follow that the state of glory must be a spiritual state for the soul in a higher degreee of spirituality glory being grace consummate as grace is glory inchoate Now the soul is raised unto the glorious degree of perfection and spirituality in the heavenly presence of Christ by being fill'd with the fulness of God and that by comprehending the highth and length and depth and breadth of the love of God which here passeth knowledge but is fully made known in Heaven by the beatifical vision of God himself letting out his love without measure into the soul whereby it is sublimated and transformed into the likeness of God 1 John 3.2 For now are we the Sons of God and it doth not yet appear what we shall be but we know that when he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is We shall not see him only in his name his word and works but in his nature not his back parts but his face Now we see through a glass darkely but then face to face 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 now we know but in part but then I shall know as I am known 1 Cor. 13.12 This is the blessed rewards of the pure in heart that they shall see God and without holiness no man shall see him Thirdly to be with Christ is to be with them that are with Christ and to have fellowship with the heavenly society of Angels and Saints in the presence of Christ Heb. 12.22 23. Ye are come unto Mount Zion and to the City of the living God the heavenly Hierusalem and to an innumerable company of Angels and to the general assembly and Church of the first born which are written in heaven and to the spirits of just men made perfect First to be with Christ is to have society with all the blessed Angels of God who worship Christ in heaven Heb. 1.6 He saith let all the Angels worship him The sight of Angels on earth did sometimes strike fear into the hearts of Saints and an apprehension of death into them as when Gideon saw the Angel Judges
fully know and understand the hidden things of eternity and hear such words with Paul in the third heaven which are unutterable and therefore could not tell whither he was in the body or out of the body 2 Cor. 12.2 3 4. I knew a man in Christ above fourteen years agoe whether in the body I cannot tell or whether out of the body I cannot tell God knoweth Such a man one caught up to the third heaven and I knew such a man whether in the body or out of the body I cannot tell God knoweth how that he was caught up into Paradise and heard unspeakable words which it is not lawful for a man to utter Hence it appeareth that there is an incapacity in humane nature in the present state thereof to apprehend and express the glory of heaven in the presence of Christ and therefore it is probable Paul was out of the body during this revelation unto him for he repeateth those words twice whether in the body or out of the body I cannot tell But which of the two it was at that time it mattereth not so much in that he is so clear in the Text that for the attaining of such a condition he absolutely declareth his desire to depart and to be with Christ which all Christians conclude with him to be far better Thirdly the souls and spirits of the Saints loosed and separated from the body are swift and instantaneous in their motion to their appointed and desired place of bliss and happiness For the motion of Spirits they being without material and corporeal parts cannot be successive and so measured by time and therefore it is in an instant As the motions of Angels from heaven to earth and from earth to heaven are in an instant so the motion of the soul from the natural body to the presence of Christ in heaven is also in an instant But to speak also to every ordinary capacity and to the unlearned as well as learned in such natural principles I shall illustrate this truth by Scripture instances and similitudes The Angel Gabriel was caused to flye swiftly unto Daniel when he was speaking in prayer Dan. 9.21 Where the motion of an Angel is set forth by the notion of the fowles of the air that flye and move exceeding swiftly And because such motions of spirits are not discernable by sense but are only to be conceived by the mind for the help of such a conception I shall propose the motion of body and soul together in some that did visibly ascend into heaven As that of Elijah who ascended up to heaven in the sight of Elisha 2 Kin. 2.11 12. And it came to pass as they still went on and talked that behold there appeared a chariot of fire and horses of fire and parted them both asunder and Elijah went up by a whirlwind into heaven And Elisha saw it and he cryed my Father my Father the chariot of Israel and the horsemen thereof and he saw him no more We must conceive here that Elijah was in an instant or in the twinckling of an eye transformed out of the natural qualities of his earthly body and changed into spiritual in which condition he was suddenly carried up into heaven And the swiftness of his motion in ascending appeareth in this Scripture in that it is compared to the motion of fire there appeared a chariot of fire and horses of fire Now fiery motions or the motions of fire are exceeding swift as the motion of light or of lightnings from East to West in a moment He is said likewise to go up to heaven by a whirl-wind The wind is exceeding swift as well as strong in its motion therefore God is said to flye upon the wings of the wind Psal 18.10 And of all winds none so swift as the whirlwind Neither is it to be neglected that Elijah cryed after him my Father my Father as if he were presently taken out of his sight The like instance we have of our Saviour when he ascended up into heaven in the view and presence of his Disciples Acts 1.9 While they beheld he was taken up and a cloud received him out of their sight In both these instances we cannot but imagine that both Christ and Elijah were quickly or in a moment at the end of their heavenly journey And if the motion of a spiritual or glorified body be so swift how much more the motion of a separate soul which is a pure Spirit Finally we may in some degree apprehend the motion of the soul in its essence by the motion of its faculties and how soon the soul can be in heaven and with God and Christ in its thoughts we may judge by the spiritual and sudden ejaculations of the heart whereby heavenly Christians are often and secretly ascending and descending between heaven and earth and God and their worldly imployments Lastly Christ in heaven is the center of all sanctified and gracious souls unto whose presence they tend in their separate motion Though the Divine nature or God-head be the center of all things as the cause and fountaine of all beings yet because the glory of God is not every where alike manifested but in heaven where Christ is personally present even at the right hand of God therefore the terme and center of the souls motion after separation is immediately unto him As Christ is the immediate object and term of our spiritual approaches unto the throne of Grace by whom we have access unto the Father and that by a new and living way conservated through the vail of his flesh So the humanity of Christ being finite upon which our thoughts are first placed doth more easily stay and fix the soul then the infinite essence of the Divine nature which being incomprehensible doth rather swallow up and overwhelm our weak faculties Therefore Bernard opening that Text of Solomon Prov. 25.27 according to the Hebrew from which our translation too much varieth exhorteth Christians not to gaze too long upon the Divine Majestie least they be overcome of the glory as to eat much honey is clogging to the stomack And as the Saints before Christ's incarnation prayed towards the temple the type of Christ where the presence of God visibly manifested did in some measure contract and limit the omnipresence of God to their hearts and apprehensions in worshipping of him In like manner Christ in heaven is the fixed period term and center of the Souls motion and approach to its glorious and heavenly state through whom and with whom we are glorified together as coheirs of God with him Therefore Paul desired to depart and to be with Christ that is to depart unto Christ as the terminus ad quem or center of his soul in departing As Stephen when he was stoned called upon God saying Lord Jesus receive my spirit Acts 7.59 As the stone moveth naturally down-ward to the earth so a gracious soul moveth upward to Christ who is the center of the Saints
discover and act all manner of vexation fretfulness reluctancy and opposition under the anguish of its hopeless condition And this may be demonstrated if one consider the nature of a carnal heart and spirit and the tendency thereof which doth naturally end in this degree of sin 1. There is a natural enmity in every carnal soul against God which remaineth for ever in it where grace doth not subdue and mortifie it The carnal mind is enmity to God Rom. 8.7 And it is not subject to the law of God neither indeed can be So that this enmity is discovered in this life by acts of sin and wicked workes done by carnal men against the holy and righteous will of God and consequently abiding in the soul after death it will in like manner manifest it self to eternity the Soul being wholly void of all sanctifying and renewing grace Secondly This enmity will more fully act after dissolution by the total withdrawing of the spirit of God whereby in this life it was limited and restrained God setteth bounds to carnal men in this life to keep the world in some degree of peace for the more quiet habitation of his people without which their lives on earth would be altogether disquiet and uncomfortable through the rage and fury of the wicked But in hell there is not so much as restraining grace to dam up the fountain of corruption from breaking out and flowing forth in its full strength and liberty Thirdly the greatest sufferings whatsoever have no power to suppress or destroy corruption and carnal enmity as in themselves considered It is a sanctified affliction through the love of God that purgeth and taketh away sin from his children who by his chastisements are made partakers of his holiness But the torments of hell are the execution of the fierce wrath of God wherein there is not the mixture of one dram of love God intending the destruction and not the salvation of the soul in taking vengeance upon it So that the sinful habits and habitual enmity of the soul are increased and blown up to the highest degree of malice by despair under eternal punishment Fourthly To this we may also add that to be given up to sin is one of the greatest Judgements of God and therefore may be a part of or at least an adjunct to the torments of the damned God sometimes punisheth sin with sin by hardning the heart for its hardness and searing the conscience for its senselessness and giving up to believe a lye for not receiving the love of the truth as also he gave up those Idolaters who imprisoned the natural light and knowledge of God to uncleanness vile affections and a reprobate mind Rom. 1. Now the highest degree of sin God giveth up a carnal man unto in this life is the sin against the holy Ghost which is to sin with malice and to doe despight unto the spirit of grace Heb. 10.29 When a reprobate heart shall grow to that hardness in sin as to sin under conviction and to revenge it self upon God and the spirit of God by committing sin upon the account of sin or because it is sin otherwise it cannot be a wilful sinning after receiving of the knowledge of the truth This being the highest degree of sin upon earth the formality whereof is malice and revenge we may easily be perswaded to believe that hell is full thereof where this malice is more stirred up by despair under these torments then it can be in this life and where the souls of the wicked vent their malice against God by blaspheming and cursing him to his face which is the proper discovery of it as desperate malefactors sometimes in their torments curse both Judge and Executioner And fo● the proof of this I shall only argue th● the case from two or three Scripture instances First of Job whom Satan supposed to be but a hypocrite and tempt●… God to afflict him with this confidence that he should curse him to his face Jo● 1.11 The Devil well knew what over whelming afflictions would work upon carnal and sinful heart even to curse Go● to his face and had not Jobs sincerit● through the power of God upheld an● preserved him the Devil had had his design and Job had cursed God as well a● the day of his birth Another is of thos● wicked ones of whom the Prophet ●…saiah speaketh Isai 8.21 And th●● shall pass through it hardly bestead an● hungry and it shall come to pass that whe●… they shall be hungry they shall fret themselves and curse their King and their God an● look upward Whence it appeareth tha● when God upon earth punisheth a people for their wickedness with some extream calamity under which they despair looking upwards and seeing no help the wickedness of their hearts will through madness and malice break out into cursing of their King and their God whether true of false Which appeareth yet more clearly in the prophesie of the powring forth of the vials of the wrath of God upon the Antichristian party in several plagues and punishments for their final ruine and overthrow Rev. 16.9 And men were scorched with great heat and blasphemed the name of God which hath power over these plagues and they repented not to give him glory And verse 11. They blasphemed the God of Heaven because of their paines and their sores and repented not of their deeds Likewise verse the last They blasphemed God because of the plague of the hail for the plague thereof was exceeding great Much more will a sinful soul blaspheme in hell where despair is the torment of those torments Which Christ himself seemeth to put out of all question speaking of the sufferings of hell when he saith There shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth Math. 8.12 and 13.42 50. That is against God through fretfulness and malice for so the phrase of gnashing the teeth is taken in other Scriptures Psal 37.12 The wicked plotteth against the just and gnasheth upon him with his teeth So the Jews did upon Stephen Acts. 7.54 When they heard these things they were cut to the heart and gnashed on him with their teeth So that as the Saints in heaven bless God with Praises and Hallelujahs so the damned in hell howl under pain and curse him and thus in hell sin shall be perfected as well as grace in heaven every wicked and graceless soul shall sin under suffering while it is suffering for sin Lastly Hereupon the wrath of God is further provoked and heightned by the actual sin of a wicked and desperate soul under its torments So that to make this everlasting punishment of a damned soul in hell unspeakable miserable the sufferings thereof are not only eternal as they are the just reward of sin committed in this life against an infinite God whose justice can never be fully satisfied but by the eternity of the punishment but they are also for ever increased and renewed by enraging provocations of malice and
gracious person to desire to depart and to be with Christ Who among all the heires of promise doth not desire the possession and enjoyment of his hopes in Christ his deliverance from sin sufferings and sorrow and the full fruition of all the glory and happiness of his heavenly portion and inheritance Let the spiritual ecchoes and silent answers of all true born Israelites resolve this question whose hearts are enlarged to rejoyce in the hope of the glory of God unto which they are begotten by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead This maketh the greatest afflictions of the Saints in this world so light unto them while they look not at the things which are seen but at the things which are not seen 2 Cor. 4.18 And therefore reckon with Paul That the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that shall be revealed in them Rom. 8.18 Hence are those earnest groanes and longing desires of the righteous to be uncloathed and cloathed upon with their house from heaven wherein they symbolize and sympathize with the whole creation which desireth to be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the sons of God Rom. 8.23 And not only they but our selves also which have the first fruits of the spirit even we our selves groan within our selves waiting for the adoption to wit the redemption of our body Use 3. Use of inquiry If it be the desirable priviledge of the Saints to be brought immediately unto Christ by their death then it may be profitable and useful for us to inquire into the causes why many Christians are so far from desiring it chearfully submitting unto death as that they tremble at it and seem to slye from it What is the reason that they are still in bondage to the fear of death notwithstanding the sting thereof is taken away by the destruction of sin and the grave perfumed as a bed of spices by Christ's lying therein Now therefore for satisfaction to this case and withall to remove and cure this uncomfortable distemper I shall lay down briefly some of the chief causes whence this fear may arise First it may arise from a natural principle of self-preservation For God hath planted this instinct of nature in every part of the creation to labour to preserve its being and secure it self from dissolution Hence it is that nature abhorring avacuity or emptiness in any part of the universe because it tendeth to destruction for the preservation thereof causeth in the creatures motions contrary to their inclinations causing the air to descend to fill up vacuities in the earthly element and the water to ascend contrary to its nature to supply the room and absence of the forced air which we see in several experiments and ordinary inventions And this principle appeareth in every particular creature naturally avoiding whatsoever threatneth or tendeth to its destruction But to come nearer to the case of humane dissolution We naturally shun whatsoever we apprehend may offer violence to us and are subject to sudden passions at the approach of cruelty yea nature put in mind of a weakness in any part of the body maketh strongest reparations and fortifieth that place where a breach was made a broken bone well set becometh stronger then before And hence it is that through fear we decline any eminent danger and labour to preserve our natural beings resisting dissolution as the greatest natural evil Therefore the Philosopher called death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the most terrible of terribles and Job the King of terrors Job 18.14 This natural fear was in Christ himself as he was man when he approached his death and sufferings who through a conflict of nature desired to be delivered from them Mat. 26.39 O my Father if it be possible let this cup pass from me And yet there was no sin in it because it was a natural desire and that for a moment suddenly overcome by reason and deliberation or a short suspension quickly subdued by a voluntary submission and firm resolution the spirit being willing but the flesh weak in Christ himself But grace doth not only teach to deny self but is also powerful to subdue our natura wills and inclinations to the will of God as it was also in Christ nevertheless not my will but thine be done Secondly It may proceed from immoderate love and inordinate affections to the world and the things of this present life And there is a great proneness in believers themselves to ●ive too much liberty to earthly and worldly affections and to take too much delight and content in the good things of this life which are but bona corporis the goods of the body These things are snares unto us in our life and as stocks to the feet of the soul at the time of departure How loth are we to let go our tenure and hold of these delights upon a sick bed to take our last farewell and shake hands with near and dear relations to have our eyes closed and no more to be opened upon these visible comforts and to suffer the pillow to be drawn away from our heads that we may yield up our spirits to a more easie and free passage Certainly if we were more crucified to the world and strangers in it we should far more willingly leave it whereas through the love of it we are still hoping for a longer time and continuance in it and that God would still add either more yeares to our dayes or at least more dayes to our years Were not the stakes of our worldly delight drove so deep and strongly fastned in the earth our earthly tabernacles would more easily be dissolved The creatures in themselves are good and life is not only sweet in it self but as it is also ratio possidendi our tenure of them they are but for one life without renewing the lease thereof Therefore for the loosening of these cordes and stakes consider how much better one Christ is then all the creatures and one God then a thousand worlds and the glory of heaven then the superficial varnish and beauty of the whole earth If ye be Christians and risen with Christ take the Apostles counsel Col. 3.1 2 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seek those things which are above where Christ sitteth at the right hand of God and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 set your affections on things above and not on things on the earth for ye are dead and your life is hid with Christ in God When Christ who is our life shall appear then shall ye also appear with him in glory Therefore saith he mortifie your members which are upon the earth inordinate affections evil concupiscence and covetousness which is Idolatry Christians take heed of fastning your affections here it may be Christ may require you should testifie your love to him by suffering for his sake and the Gospel and that unto the death and if worldly affections discompose
and unworthy wretches who disdain and slight such reports of mercy and the rich mystery of Gods good will towards men in Christ which the Angels admiring bow themselves and stoop down to look into 1 Pet. 1.12 Hearken O ye unbeleivers Is it not a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation that Christ came into the world to save sinners whereof ye are the chief What is the meaning of so many publique Assemblies every Lords day and our occasional comings together upon this or any other providential call what is the meaning that so many are set apart and make it their study and labour to preach unto you whom ye openly see in their Pulpits spreading their hands and hear them with so much zeal and fervency crying aloud spending their very strength and hazarding their healths and life it self in their unwearied paines Is it not Christ whom we preach and in whom ye say that ye beleive How can ye beleive that wallow in the mire of your unclean and polluted conversations How can ye beleive that commit iniquity with greediness and blush not at your open sins and profaneness How can ye beleive that make the world your God and prefer the trrash of the earth before the treasures of heaven How can ye beleive that seek the honour and praise and favour of men more then the honour that is of God that ye may be great upon earth and get a name which shall be written in the earth Is it not true that all men have not faith ye say ye beleive and ye have faith can your faith save you can a dead faith a feigned faith a fruitless and a workless faith save you Can ye prove or shew a true faith without workes Give me leave to try your faith in regard of the object of it Doe ye beleive in the Lord Jesus Christ Doe ye beleive in that Christ who from the beginning was promised to the sore-fathers who saw his day and rejoyced who in the fulness of time appeared in our flesh made of a woman and under the law and took upon him the form of a servant who suffered so much shame and reproach by the contradiction of sinners and at last an accursed death the death of the cross for the satisfaction of divine justice and appeasing of the wrath of God so highly provoked by the sins of men who arose from the grave having overcome and broken the bands of death to assure unto us our justification who lastly ascended into the highest heavens and is there interceeding for his people and ruling and reigning till he overcome all his enemies whence he shall come again and appear the second time without sin unto the final judgement of the world and the full salvation of all that beleive in him Why then do ye say in your selves or is it not the language of our unbeleiving hearts who shall ascend into heaven to bring Christ from above and who shall descend in to the deep to bring up Christ again from the dead What strange fancies have ye in your mindes of Christ and beleiving in Christ Is not your faith a fancy O that the word of faith were nigh unto you even in your hearts the word of faith which we preach And that ye would beleive our report when we preach Christ and him crucified as we have evidently set him forth cruc●fied among you Besides if ye had faith as a grain of mustard seed it would soon manifest its self by the growth of it and the fruits that proceed from it It would be a Christ prizing faith a heart purifying faith a world conquering and crucifying faith it would be a Saint loving and a soul humbling faith it would work in you the fear of God and the fear of sin a love to the truth and to every ordinance of Christ it would make conscience tender and the heart sincere and upright with God yea it would render holiness beautiful and lovely and all the wayes and commands of the Lord delightful and easie besides it would make future things present and present things absent and as if they were not and yet the beleiving soul inherits all things and possesseth all things The exercise of faith is a pleasant joyful and glorious act through the transcendent and unspeakable excellency of Christ the object thereof Now if these things be a mystery unto you and your hearts wholly strangers unto them look into the Gospel more seriously and acquaint your selves further with the riches of the mystery of Christ even the riches of mercy and the unsearchable treasures of Christ and be no more faithless but beleive If ye were but sensible of the wants of your souls as ye are of the straights and necessities of your bodies it would not be so hard to perswade you to come to Christ the great treasury of all supplies who hath gold for the poor and eye-salve for the blind and white rayment for the naked Rev. 3.13 Now are not ye thus poor and blind and naked and consequently wretched and miserable And how freely doth Christ offer himself to become all fulness unto you who is made of God unto all that beleive wisdom and righteousness and sanctification and redemption 1 Cor. 1.30 what sure foundation can ye build upon if Christ be not the corner stone and rock of your trust and confidence and to whom will ye goe for eternal life if ye refuse him and reject the counsell of God by persisting in unbeleif and impenitency I can assure you from the word of God that other foundations can no man lay then is laid by Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 3.11 Neither is there salvation in any other for there is none other name under heaven given among men whereby we must be saved Acts 4.12 To day therefore whilst it is called to day harden not your hearts refuse not him that speaketh from heaven lest you perish in your unbeleife but lay hold upon this strength of God that ye may make peace with him ye shall make peace Isai 27.5 For he is our peace by whom we have access with boldness unto the throne of grace and he is able to save unto the uttermost all those that come unto God by him Heb 7.25 O sinners beleive in the Lord Jesus Christ and ye shall be saved every soul of you your sins shall be blotted out and your iniquity shall be remembred no more and receive him who is ready to receive you and to bless you with all spiritual blessings that ye may be the children of God and heires of the promises and of eternal life in the kingdom of heaven Secondly The exhortation is also to all Christians for to such my text hath a more special relation even to those who with their hearts beleive and love the Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity who though peradventure they cannot so freely with Saint Paul desire to depart yet in case of departing unfeignedly desire to be with him And because
expressions of his love and faithfulness unto you if you can yet read them in Scriptures not defaced or blotted out through unthankful for getfulness Take also a new survey of the carriage of your hearts towards the Lord. What have been your desires after him how have ye trusted in him and cleaved to him what communion with him what delight in him what service have ye done for him how faithful have ye been to him what have been your private affections in duty and your publique zeal in your profession how have you improved his talents and encreased your spiritual stock of grace what growth in meekness self-denial patience faith love knowledge holyness and purity what is the present frame of your hearts after so much means and seasons of grace so long enjoyed Is it more humble more heavenly more unmoveable and fixed upon God And lastly are ye more fruitful and abounding in the work of the Lord Thus can ye manifest the truth of grace by the exercise of it the growth and fruitfulness of it hereby your joy shall be full and Christ's joy shall dwell in you John 15.11 What a glorious evidence hereby had the beleiving Thessalonians to whom the Apostle Paul writeth in their commendation that their faith grew exceedingly and their love one towards another abounded 2 Thes 1.3 Happy are they that can ascend this mountain of assurance and take a sight as from Mount Pisgah of the heavenly Canaan crying out with Saint John in admiration 1 John 3.1 Behold what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us that we should be called the Sons of God therefore the world knoweth us not But if your evidences are lost or hardly legible for the renewing ard preserving of them take this next direction Direct III. Thirdly Then perfect holiness to the highest degree attaineable upon earth This is the Apostles counsel drawn from the great priviledges and promises of grace 2 Cor. 7.1 Having these promises dearly beloved let us cleanse our selves from all pollution of flesh and spirit perfecting holiness in the fear of God And because we deny that any man can be perfect so as to be without sin and all infirmities upon earth for if we say we have no sin we deceive our selves and the truth is not in us 1 John 1.8 Therefore take this necessary caution of proposing any measure unto your selves thereby to limit your utmost endeavours after the greatest measure of grace ye can possibly attain unto for therefore we have a perfect example set before us even God himself that we should be perfect as he is perfect Mat. 5.48 And also of Christ that he that saith he abideth in him ought also to walk even as he walked 1 John 2.6 That though we are not perfect yet with Paul forgetting those things which are behind and reaching forth unto those things which are before we may press towards the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus Phil. 3.13 14. Wherefore beloved laying aside every weight and the sin that doth so easily beset you run with patience the race that is set before you looking unto Jesus the Authour or Leader and the finisher of your faith Heb. 12.1 2. And since ye are dead and your life is hid with Christ in God with whom ye hope to appear mortifie your members which are upon the earth and crucifie the flesh with the affections and lusts thereof labour to conquer all your corruptions to purge out the reliques of the old leaven and to wash your hearts from iniquity and the vanity of your very thoughts and desires Be exceeding careful to suppress and quench every motion arising from the flesh and to avoid whatever may defile the conscience and thereby cloud your comforts and darken the light of your inward joy and peace And I beseech you that ye would walk worthy of the Lord unto all well-pleasing in obedience to every command and the strictest rules of the Gospel and that as ye have at any time heard how ye ought to walk and to please God so ye would abound more and more 1 Thes 4.1 That ye may at last stand perfect and compleat in all the will of God working out your salvation hereby with fear and trembling Phil. 2.14 Col. 4.12 Wherefore add to your faith vertue to and vertue knowledge temperance patience godliness brotherly kindness charity that ye may not be barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge of Christ and tho rather give diligence herein that ye may make your calling and election sure 2 Pet. 1.5 6 10. Direct IV. Redeem your precious time and the seasons of grace for the time is short saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 7.29 The time of life is short the of health and strength is short and consequently the time of grace and the opportunities thereof are short Therefore see that ye walk circumspectly or exactly redeeming the time or season because the dayes are not only short but evil Eecl 5.15 16. And that not only in regard of the temptations and snares thereof but of the perils and afflictions the troubles and tribulations that attend the last dayes of the world Our Saviour knowing the day of his working and ministery to be short having but a while to remain upon earth took all occasions to finish his Fathers work who sent him into the world John 9.4 I must work the work of him that sent me while it is day the night cometh when no man can work And is not your night Christians coming on and your Sun near setting when the light of this present life shall vanish and give place to the darkness of death O that ye would keep an eye upon and the swiftness of that motion which will suddenly have measured your appointed race And be not slack in the work of the Lord but double and redouble your diligence that ye may be ready for the Masters call and the Bride-groomes coming What a blessed condition is that soul in that can say with Saint Paul 2 Tim. 4.6 7. I am now ready to be offered up and my departure is at hand I have fought a good fight I have finished my course I have kept the faith But is it not otherwise with many poor souls who could wish for another life to be renewed unto them for the discharge of their trust they have neglected the improvment of mercies which they have sleighted the filling up of that space they have idly squandred the gathering in of experiences which they have pretermitted and for the laying in of a store and stock of grace and wisdom by such rich advantages of trade and heavenly gain and profit which they have lost and over slipped Who now begin to look back with shame and sorrow upon the time of youth and strength and the yeares of plenty and fulness of the bread of heaven bewailing their folly in not providing for the yeares of famine wherein they will be glad of the gleanings of