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A56675 Jesus and the resurrection justified by witnesses in heaven and in earth in two parts : the first shewing that Jesus is the Son of God, the second that in him we have eternall life / by Symon Patrick ... Patrick, Simon, 1626-1707. 1677 (1677) Wing P816 585,896 1,396

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God v. 1. and xviii 5. from this glorious presence here which appeared afterward also to give the Law from the same place After which you find that he and Aaron with his sons and the seventy Elders of Israel being invited by God to approach towards the foot of that Mount where he spake with Moses it is said that they saw the God of Israel xxiv Exod. 10. In both which places though Maimonides would willingly understand a spirituall sight of God with the mind being afraid lest any man should imagine God to be corporeall More Nevoc part 1. cap. 5. yet he acknowledges it is safe enough to interpret it as the Chaldee doth of a sight of that Glory which I treated of in my former Book Chap. IV. or of an Angel which in a luminous Body appeared to them But this last is rejected by a Rule in the Talmud * Tit. Kid. ●u hinc 11. where this very place last named is explained It is this He that interprets a verse of Holy Scripture always according to the literall sound is a Liar and he that addeth to it is a Blasphemer As for example when it is said they SAW THE GOD of Israel if any body interpret it literally he is a Liar for the God of Israel cannot be seen And if any one adde that they saw the Angel of God he blasphemously gives the honour of God to Angels The Chaldee onely is in the right who says They saw the GLORY of the God of Israel And so S. Cyrill of Alexandria understood it in the like case L. 3. Glaphy in Exod. when he observes the people were brought to Mount Sinai that they might be both Auditours and Spectatours of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or of his Divine and secret Glory Which having never been seen out of the Secret place made now a most illustrious appearance and at the bottom of it called his feet there was a pavement on which the Glory stood very bright and becoming the Majesty that was upon it For the Text says it was like a Sapphire-stone and as clear as the purest and serenest sky A token I suppose of the Divine favour towards them which the clearness of the Heavens very well represented as clouds and darkness were signs of God's displeasure And accordingly it follows v. 11. that he did not lay his hand upon the nobles of Israel i. e. did not hurt them though the common opinion was that if men saw such a sight they should die presently No so far were they from receiving any harm by it that they did not merely see God but also eat and drink of the reliques of the Sacrifices that had been v. 5 newly offered to him He entertain'd them with provision taken from his own Table and they feasted with his Majesty to their great joy and satisfaction Such a Glory I told you S. Stephen saw when his persecutours were going to stone him And it is reasonable to suppose that in some part of the Heavens God now manifests himself in a most glorious visible Majesty to the exceeding ineffable joy not terrour and affrightment of those who shall be admitted to approach to that Light which is now inaccessible So that this will be a part of our eternall happiness to live in those pure clear Regions where unknown Glories and most splendid magnificent sights will present themselves to us where we our selves shall be cloathed with a brightness like that wherein our Lord appeared to S. Stephen and S. Paul and behold him in a greater Majesty and brightness then that was because our capacities will be inlarged to make room for more illustrious manifestations of God to us We shall live in that place as was said before where he dwells in light unapproachable by mortall men in the company of the holy Angels who as so many Stars of glory will add if it be possible to the splendour of that place and with our Blessed Saviour God-Man whose glorified Body we shall behold And so behold it that we shall bear the image of the heavenly as we have born the image of the earthy We shall be made immortall that is we shall be ever with the Lord in such glorious Bodies as his is so that in our selves we may see the Glory of God For it must be noted here that though our Happiness will begin when our Spirits depart this life yet it will not be perfected till the Son of God shall come the second time to raise our bodies out of the dust that they may have a part with our Souls in a never-dying Life Till then the Happiness I speak of it must be confessed will not have its Crown or utmost Consummation But yet the Soul in the mean time I shall prove in its proper place doth not lie asleep nor hath all its Powers bound up in a cold and lethargick dulness though it have not attain'd the utmost enjoyment of that Good for which it hopes Our Saviour seems to make these two distinct things the putting us in possession of everlasting life and the raising us up at the last day vi Joh. 40. This is the will of him that sent me that every one which seeth the Son and believeth on him may HAVE EVER LASTING LIFE and I will RAISE HIM VP at the last day which he repeats again v. 54. The former of which expressions may well denote the comfortable Hope we have of Happiness when Soul and Body shall be united and the other the perfection of this Happiness when they shall be again united We shall enter into a great part of Felicity when we quit these Earthly Tabernacles our Souls shall then feel themselves alive and alive in the midst of those delights that will still increase and never have any end and they shall joyfully expect the Resurrection of the dead and the Glory wherein our Saviour shall then appear and all his Saints together with him who having received abundance of grace and of the gift of righteousness shall reign in life by Jesus Christ Thus I have said a little concerning this great promise of SEEING GOD and it is so little that I feel my self unsatisfied and would fain penetrate farther or at least speak more distinctly of this ETERNALL LIFE But this small glance we have had of it may well awaken our Souls and excite them in the worst condition here to burst out into those words which the Authour of the Commentaries upon Job under the name of Origen puts into that Holy man's mouth Lib. I. p. 448 449. Thither will I go where the Tabernacles of the Righteous are where are the Glories of the Saints where is the Rest of the Faithful where is the Consolation of the Godly where is the Inheritance of the Mercifull where is the Blessedness of the Vndefiled Thither will I goe where Light and Life dwells where Glory and Mirth where Gladness and Exultation inhabit from whence Grief Sadness and Sighing fly
away where the former Tribulations which afflict the Body upon this Earth are no more remembred Thither will I goe where we shall lay down our Troubles where we shall have a reward of our Labours where is the Bosome of Abraham where the Propriety of Isaac where the Familiarity of Israel where are the Souls of the Saints where the Quires of Angels where the Voices of Archangels where is the Illumination of the Holy Ghost where the Kingdome of Christ where the never-ending Glory and the blessed Sight of the Eternall God the Father Thither will I go there I hope to arrive not complaining not finding fault much less cursing and blaspheming but blessing and praising and with giving of thanks saying The Lord gave the Lord hath taken away as it pleased the Lord so it is come to pass Whatsoever pleases God is good whatsoever pleases him is just It pleased him to give his pleasure was good it pleased him to take away his pleasure was just All that the Lord wills is Life is Light is Rest and Peace is eternall Blessedness Whatsoever pleases the Lord therefore whether to inrich or to impoverish all is incorruptible and endless Bliss Blessed is the man O Lord whom thou chastenest As pleases the Lord so it is Let the Name of the Lord be blessed world without End Amen CHAP. II. A more particular Discourse of this LIFE THERE is the greatest Reason that all Christians as the same Authour goes on should say and doe and think thus in all circumstances and in all things that occurre and say so with the devoutest the most humble and chearfull Submission to him since it is the will and pleasure you heard just now of this Great Lord that his Son Jesus should give us after our short labours or sufferings here Everlasting Life The very name of which sounds so delightfully that we cannot well presently cease to speak of it nor chuse but desire to be better acquainted if it be possible with so transcendent a Bliss It concerns us more then any thing else to understand it and to be sure of it For the Hope of it is our Refuge the Anchour the Stay yea the Joy and comfort of our hearts And therefore for the sake of those who desire to be led into a more particular knowledge of this Happiness I shall venture something farther in the description of it and know not how to conduct them better in this enquiry then by explaining as clearly as I can these two words LIFE and the ETERNALL duration of it And if the nature of the First be examined you will find that LIFE is nothing else but the exercise of all those faculties and powers which are proper and peculiar to us upon their true and naturall objects Whence it is that wicked men are said in the Sacred style to bedead because nothing that is reasonable nothing that constitutes the form of a man acts in them and on the other side they that are converted from Vice to Vertue are said to be made alive because such persons onely imploy and make use of all those powers which belong to reasonable creatures and have devoted themselves to the best improvement of them There is in a man as Philo excellently expresses it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a certain notion and sense that loves God and is a friend to Vertue which when it is extinguished in his Soul the man is dead and when it is revived he is then again made alive Since therefore St. John is speaking of the highest Life that man is capable of we are directed by this notion to look upon it as consisting in the most intended operation of all our Powers and that in their highest improvement upon the greatest and noblest Good which we saw before is God himself Let us then consider that man consists of Soul and Body as his essential parts and that the Soul as the better part must be most considered in this state of Bliss for from it Bliss will be derived to the Body and therefore consider again what the several Faculties and Operations of our own Souls are and farther how much they shall be inlarged and their force increased by the mighty change which shall be made in us at death and at the resurrection and lastly how that all these Faculties thus improved and made bigger then they themselves can now comprehend shall be filled to the brim with that fullest Good and we shall be able to frame in our mind some distinct apprehension of this blessed Life Now we all know there are two Faculties of our Soul the Vnderstanding and the Will upon which all Operations depend and it is as certain that the satisfaction and felicity of the Understanding can consist in nothing but in Knowledge and contemplation of the Truth and that the happiness of the Will consists in the Love of that which is Good And by necessary consequence the utmost satisfaction of both these is in the clearest Contemplation of the highest Truth and in the most ardent Love o● the highest Good And therefore every one sees where we must begin to speak of this most Blessed LIFE I. Which consists in the greatest Treasures of Divine Knowledge by the contemplation of the fairest Object which is the exercise of the prime Faculty in man and the good of his Soul as it is rationall For the better understanding of which let us consider 1. that the Soul in it self is apt to receive the notice of all manner of things as we may easily discern if we do observe how things most cortrary in themselves can agree to lodge together in our Mind and we behold them one after another or both together without any disturbance yea with abundance of pleasure But 2. whatsoever our capacity now is we find it is very little that we actually know by reason of many impediments that we are clogg'd withall And yet that little when we are masters of any notion communicates so much pleasure to us that we are hugely desirous of having our minds enlarged to know more and think it necessary to our happiness that we should be put into a condition of more free and undisturbed converse with Truth When therefore 3. we shall be rid of this clog being either alone without this body or having it made so spiritual that it will be under absolute command and when we shall be in a still and quiet place and enjoy perfect settlement of mind and peace of conscience the want of which is the onely thing conceivable to disturb an uncloathed Soul in its contemplations we may reasonably hope to be put into that most desirable condition But we finding 4. even in this narrow condition wherein our Souls are pent up such an infinite thirst after Knowledge that the Mind of man is never satisfied we may guess by that how vehement this desire will grow when our Souls shall be no longer imprison'd and their
reverence to his Majesty Whatsoever Moses hath written against Idolatry S. John here from Jesus in the conclusion of his Epistle hath summed it up in a few words Little children keep your selves from IDOLS In this the Jews could not accuse him nor durst let such a word fall from their mouths that he was a false Prophet because he endeavoured to draw their hearts after other Gods which was the great mark of an Impostor xiii Deut. No he tells them that this is Eternal Life to know the only true God which words are spoken in opposition to all others and Jesus Christ whom he had sent But in this they might have seen that his design was far more noble and glorious than that of Moses who contented himself to preserve that one Nation from the infection of Idolatry whereas our Lord Jesus plainly declared his intention was by his Apostles to turn all Nations from Idols to serve the living and true God There was never any man that appeared so great a lover of God as he was Never any man that undertook to set on foot such a design for the advancement of the universal knowledge of him All the Divine Attributes and Perfections also He hath revealed so perspicuously that there never was such a manifestation made of them to the World as we see in Him From whom we learn how Just how Good how Wise how Faithful and how Powerful the Blessed and only Potentate is who only hath immortality whom no man hath seen or can see And if we would know our Duty either towards God in actions of Piety or towards Men in actions of Righteousness or towards our selves in actions of sobriety we can learn it no where so easily and completely as if we go to him and to those who have delivered it to us with great care and plainness from his mouth As for the Actions of PIETY He teaches us inwardly to Honour God v. Joh. 23. that is to have an high esteem of him as our Lord and as our chiefest Good to Love him also and that with all our heart and all our Soul and all our mind and all our strength xii Mark 30. And to Fear him seeing he can cast both Body and Soul into Hell which makes him again and again bid us be sure to Fear him xii Luke 4 5. To confide likewise and Trust in him the living God 1 Tim. iv 10. To Hope in his mercy 1 Pet. i. 21. And to rejoyce evermore 1 Thess v. 16. And as we are thus to worship him in our Minds so we are taught by his Religion externally to adore him and fall down before him iv Matth. 10. iv Rev. 10. to pray to him both for our selves and others 1 Tim. ii 1 8. and to be incessant in our Prayers or to perform this holy duty very oft xviii Luke 1. 1 Thess v. 17. and to offer up by him the sacrifice of Praise to God continually xiii Heb. 15. And in every thing to give thanks which is the will of God concerning us in Christ Jesus 1 Thess v. 18. and especially to shew the Lords death that is publish it with thanks and praise till he come to judge the World 1 Cor. xi 26. The manner also of addressing our selves to God he hath taught us so fully that nothing can be added to it For he tells us The Father will be worshipped in Spirit and in Truth iv John 23. And that we must lift up holy hands 1 Tim. ii 8. And that when we pray we must forgive others xi Mark 25. and ask in Faith xxi Matth. 22. and avoid vain babling and not affect much speaking nor desire to be seen of men and to joyn Fasting and Alms with our Prayers and Devotions to God Matth. vi It is impossible to conceive any thing more Divine than these Instructions To which he adds as rare Precepts for Actions of RIGHTEOUSNESS concerning which he hath given us such an absolutely perfect Rule that it comprehends the measures of CHARITY too No wit of man can think of any thing more holy than that LOVE THY NEIGHBOUR AS THY SELF or that WHATSOEVER YE WOULD THAT MEN SHOULD DO TO YOU DO YE EVEN SO TO THEM This is a rule that reaches all men and compendiously yet completely tells them how they should behave themselves towards each other If a man were a Magistrate or a Parent or stood in any other superiority over his Neighbours he would desire honour and obedience from them that therefore says our Saviour let him give to those who are in Authority If a man be our equal we desire if not his friendship yet his fidelity in word and deed that very thing let us be sure to render him and all others in the same equality with us If we be placed below others we desire the favour the help the relief and counsel of our Betters all these Jesus here teaches us to afford with the same chearfulness that we would expect them in their case to those who are in want of our kind assistance Nay he hath told us in particular what our duty is in these matters by the mouths of his holy Apostles that no man may think to excuse himself by his ignorance and inability to apply a general Rule to every action of his life I shall not name all the places where you may find such words as these that follow but only tell you He would have us so far from doing evil to any man that he requires us owe him nothing but only love And this debt we must be always paying and think our selves debtors to all men not only to treat them civilly and give them good words but to love them in deed and in truth Which Love must teach us as to be meek and gentle towards all men to put away all bitterness and wrath and anger and clamour and evil speaking not to circumvent or go beyond our Brother in any matter not to lye to our neighbour nor defame him much less do him any hurt in his body or goods So to relieve his poverty to help forward his joy to comfort him in his sorrow to cover his defects to make a fair interpretation of his actions to let our judgment of him incline to the more favourable side to mind what is lovely or grateful to others and what things are of good report to study things that make for peace to compose and reconcile differences to beg pardon of those whom we have offended and make them satisfaction and if any have offended us readily to forgive their fault to forbear revenge when it is in our power to requite an injury to do good for evil to bless those that curse us to overcome mens hatred with benefits to pray to God for those who use us despitefully and to be long-suffering when it is fit to punish any man for his crime And as for those who are truly pious we are taught to do them good above all other men to
hope in him with the loss of their lives And as long as they live they will find it the highest of all pleasures to think that they shall never die Of which happiness we can by no means be so well secured as by the Christian Religion All the Philosophers of greatest fame as Eusebius * Lib. 1. Prapar Evang. c. 4. observes talkt like Children about the Immortality of the Soul in comparison with Christians Among whom saith he boys and girls and those Barbarians too and the most despicable people declare this truth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not so much by their discourses as by their deeds which they perform by the power and cooperation of our Saviour The Discourses of Aristotle about this matter are justly said by Saint Greg. Nazianzen * Orat. xxxiii p. 535. to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because as Jacobus Billius hath demonstrated he thought the Souls of men to be mortall And accordingly Theodoret ranks him in this regard with Democritus and Epicurus who boldly said they were corruptible So little force was there as he also observes * Lib. v. Therapentices p. 546. 556. in the many discourses of the most wise Plato to prove the Soul's Immortality which could not make his greatest Scholar in love with his Opinion Whereas our Fishermen and Publicans and Shoemakers perswaded both Greeks and Romans and Egyptians and all other Nations of mankind to believe it And you shall see saith he not onely the Doctours of the Church but Smiths and Weavers and other Artizans both men and women that understand these things And not onely such people as live in cities but poor country-men are so well instructed that one may find a Ditcher or a Neatherd discoursing of the Holy Trinity of the Creation of the World and that knows more of humane Nature then either Aristotle or Plato For Plato himself was not constant in his Opinions about the state of the Soul after it departed this body But sometimes speaks of great torments which the wicked endure in dark prisons and describes their punishments to be dreadfull by the sentence of impartiall Judges and otherwhere he talks as if those Souls were at liberty to chuse what body they will please to go into and that it pleases them better to be a Bird or perhaps an Ass then formerly it did to be a Man Which contrariety of opinion is observed and handsomely represented by Eusebius * Lib. xiii Praepar c. 16. whose words I shall not transcribe For we find the Philosophers talking so discontentedly concerning the present state of mankind who are subject they say to more calamities and therefore in a worse condition then any other Creature upon the face of the earth that it is sufficient to convince us how little certainty they had of a future state The stedfast belief of which being taught as Theodoret observes with one mouth and without any disagreement or doubting by all the Apostles and Followers of Christ made all Christian people not onely contented with their portion though more calamitous in those days then any other mens but also chearfull under the sorest burthens that oppressed them And though the ancient Hebrews were taught by holy men of God to know better then the Philosophers and God in his infinite goodness was pleased when they were in danger of grievous troubles for Religion sake then to give them still more and more hope of another life as Grotius wisely observes both upon the story of Elijah's calling the Soul of the Widow's Son back again 1 King xvii 21. and upon the dead man's rising again when he touched the bones of Elisha 2 King xiii 21. and may be farther verified from the story of the Maeeabees yet it must be acknowledged there was no particular promise made to them of Eternall Life either before the giving of the Law or in that Covenant made with them by Moses nor any clear and express promise in after-times untill the coming of our Lord Christ Who hath made a New Covenant with us which is established upon better promises then those in the Old as the holy Writer to the Hebrews speaks viii 6. For the promises of the Covenant made with them by Moses were onely that they should possess the land of Canaan and lead a happy life there while they observed his Precepts But the promises of the Gospell are that by obedience to our Lord we shall come to live eternally with him in the heavens So the Church of Christ hath always understood it as any one may be satisfied who can reade the Answer of Ger. Cap. xxiii Vossius to Ravenspergerus Where he shews that the ancient Doctours especially Saint Augustine lookt upon the Old Testament as containing properly and directly the promises onely of earthly and temporall things which were the Figures of those that are celestiall and eternall The words of Saint Augustine are very memorable to this purpose in a little Book of his Epist cxx cap. 2 3. wherein he answers to five Questions put to him by Honoratus to which he adds another of his own concerning the Grace of the New Testament in which that Grace is revealed which was hid in the Old God willing to shew saith he that even earthly and temporall felicity is his gift and ought not to be expected but from him alone though fit long ago to dispense the Old Testament which belongs to the Old man from whom this life must needs begin But those felicities of the Fathers are proclaimed to be granted by the bounty of God though belonging to this transitory life For those earthly gifts were the things that were openly and apparently promised and given Covertly indeed the New Testament was figuratively foretold in all those things and was understood by a few whom the same Grace was pleased to honour with the gift of prophecy By which gift bestowed not upon a few persons in one Nation but as their Prophets foretold upon all flesh these things which were then lockt up in secret are now laid open to the view of all and so plainly revealed that we reade of ETERNALL LIFE oftner in the New Testament then they did of health and riches and victory and long life in the Old Blessed be the tender mercy of our God should all those that have any faith say who hath called us into his marvellous light whereby we see such things as eye never saw and see them so clearly that we cannot reasonably doubt of them We enjoy the body of that whereof they had but the shadow We have that in substance which they had but in picture The promise of that is ours which they had onely in the type We have the proof the evidence the demonstration of that which was onely represented to them in mysticall figures So far are we illuminated beyond those great Souls who were the glory of their times that we understand the meaning of their own Books and the signification
capacities so much inlarged And therefore you may consider farther 5. that if this capacity and this desire in our Souls be not filled we shall be so far from leading an happy life that we shall be more miserable then we are now because we shall be more able to discern our wants And thence we may conclude that to make us happy our Mind shall be gratified and it s widened enlarged Faculties filled with a Divine light proportionable to the power it hath to apprehend Well then 6. considering that all objects are finite and limited both in their nature and number except God alone who contains in his own Being all things that are and can possibly be our Minds will certainly be carried to him as the onely object that can perfect their Happiness by satisfying their boundless desire of wisedom and knowledge He alone can fill those Minds who long to know all things and who have an aptitude to a vaster knowledge then now can be conceived And 7. who can doubt but he will fill them since he hath promised as you have heard by our Saviour that the pure in heart shall see him that is know him and contemplate him in that Eternall LIFE which Christ hath revealed For in this our enjoying God must begin and it may well be called SEEING in Scripture because Knowledge to the Mind is the same with Seeing to the Eyes and the Vnderstanding to the Soul is the same with the Eye to the Body And 8. we can as little doubt but that their Souls will be most happy who shall lead such a Life which begins in their admission to this blessed Sight The contemplative Life even in this world hath been thought by the greatest Philosophers to be the most excellent and in a manner Divine as Aristotle endeavours to prove by severall Arguments in the conclusion of his Ethicks Lib. x. c. 7 8. Now the more excellent the object is which we contemplate the more excellent is the contemplation it self From whence he concludes xii Metaphys in another place that God must needs be the most Blessed because he perfectly and perpetually contemplates himself whom all acknowledge to be the most excellent and perfect object And since the Understanding says he conceives by a kind of conjunction with that which it understands so that in some sort they are made one from thence also we may argue that his Contemplation of himself must needs be the most excellent because it is the most intimate as well as constant and never interrupted enjoyment of the most excellent Being The more then our mind can be fixed on God and the more we understand of him and the nearer we approach to him the more we shall partake of his most blessed Life who being most intimately One with himself never ceases to contemplate his own most adorable Perfections You will be the more sensible of this if you do but imagine how happy many a man would think himself could he but raise his mind to understand the wonderfull frame of the World and discover the rare wisedom that lies hid in the contrivance of every part of so goodly a Fabrick If there be such pleasure in looking into the curious composure of this great Book of the Creatures and searching after all the mysterious learning contained in it which employs the study of innumerable souls night and day you may easily conceive it must needs be a most sublime satisfaction to know him clearly who is the Authour of this Structure whose Artifice now ravishes contemplative minds into such admiration They seem to have meant nothing else anciently who discoursed of the Musick of the Spheres or celestiall Orbs but the extraordinary pleasure and delight wherewith the minds of those Philosophers were struck who beheld the orderly and gracefull motion of those heavenly bodies And the same men said the Mind of man was an Harmony because of the well-set notions whereof it is composed and the sweet touches that it gives us when it is in tune and runs into coherent thoughts and orderly speculations Now look what joy it would be to a contemplative man if he could know the Art there is in the frame of the Heavens or if he could but so reflect upon his own Soul as to know its nature all its motions the spring and the manner of them nay but to know his own Body which as the Psalmist says is so fearfully and wonderfully made that it astonishes our minds when we seriously think of it and by this you may judge what an happy life it will be to be acquainted with God by whose wisedom the heavens were made and all the host of them by the breath of his mouth and who fashioned all our Souls and curiously wrought all the members of our bodies where no eye could see but onely his own yea to know so much of him that But it is not in my power to make you understand what this Knowledge shall be for that would be to place you in Heaven Nay we cannot conceive how God himself should make us know it in this state unless he work a change in us and cause these bodily operations to cease All that I can doe is to make you understand that our Souls shall be enlarged to know more then now we can conceive and that we shall be as inconceivably pleased in that knowledge for the very hope of it now is not without its singular pleasure You will ask perhaps But what is it that we shall know of him Do you tell us of a mysterious Darkness or which is all one an inapprehensible Light This is but to know that we are ignorant And who can fasten his heart on things of which he hath no perception or delight in the thoughts of that with which he hath no acquaintance I answer We are already acquainted blessed be God with something of him though as I have said before we see but through a glass darkly 1 Cor. xiii 12. As a glass represents not the thing it self but its image and he that sees a thing in a glass doth not know it immediately from its self but from its image such is the knowledge we have of God in this life We know him by the effects of his Wisedom Power and Goodness and by the revelation he hath made of his Mind and Will in his Gospel We know him not immediately and by himself but we know as it were an Image of him in his Works and in his Word And though this knowledge be but obscure and not so clear as we desire yet so much is plainly revealed that one day we shall see him face to face that is we shall be more nearly present to him and immediately contemplate him who is a Mind and Spirit joyning himself to our very Mind by himself and not by an image What that is some excellent Souls seem also to have had a little tast of here in this world by gasping with the mouth
Correspondencies And they who have neither Father nor Mother Wife nor Children near Kindred nor Relations whereon to place their affection let them consider if they have but a singular Friend what the pleasure is that two persons who sincerely and purely love take in the sweet company and conversation of each other Or if I must suppose any man to be so unkind and so unhappy as to have no love for any body but his own self let him think what contentment he hath and how he is pleased if he can arrive any thing near to a quiet enjoyment of his dear Self And such a delightfull state may be a small image of Heaven where holy Souls will love God with a far greater flame then ever they did or shall then love themselves because He will appear infinitely more lovely and to bear also a far greater love to them then it is possible for then to do to themselves Now none can tell how transporting it will be to a good Soul when it feels i● self the Beloved of God as well as full of love to him because we cannot think how great the Love of the Almighty is unless we could know how great he is himself This is a thing that cannot fail to have a strange power over our affections and to master them so that we shall be taken quite out of our selves for we all extreamly love to be beloved If any neighbour shew us an unexpected and undeserved kindness we are apt to think he is the best person in the world And the poorest Wretch that is if we see in him the undoubted signs of an hearty love to us we cannot chuse but requite it with some expressions of kindness back again Nay if a Dog as I have said elsewhere or such a dumb creature do but fawn upon us and delight in our company and with a great deal of observance follow us wheresoever we go we cannot but be so far pleased with this inclination towards us as to make much of it and to be troubled to see any harm befall it and to love to see it play and be well pleased Judge then what a pleasure it will be to pious Souls to find themselves beloved of him who hath put these kind resentments into our nature To what an height will the sweet breathings of his Love blow up the flames of theirs Into what Ecstasies will they fall when they feel by the happy fruits what an exceeding great affection their Heavenly Father bears to them It is above our present thoughts to apprehend the joy that will then overflow them but we may conceive a little of it if we remember that GOD is Love and that by our Love He will be in us and by his Love we shall be in Him But if you please let us fall much lower then this and onely represent to our selves how great an happiness we shall account it to be beloved of the whole Family of God in Heaven Look down from the highest Angel to the smallest Infant that shall be blessed there from the noblest to the meanest in that celestiall Court and there is not one of them but will love us and be ready to shew their sincere and most affectionate kindness towards us They that are the greatest in that Glory will be the greatest Lovers they that enjoy most of God will be disposed to let us enjoy most of them For there is no Pride nor Envy in the heavenly Quire but the more any are Beloved the more they will delight in the most effectuall expressions of their Love And how can they chuse but interchange to each other unspeakable contentment who live in the comfort of such indissoluble Amity and Friendship Nothing can be thought of beyond this to set forth their happiness But we much conclude with * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 459. Philo that this i● the best definition of immortall life 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be held fast in an unfleshly and incorporeall love and friendship of God You will say perhaps that I have been now speaking of some other Love besides his which supposing our hearts so fixed on him we shall not be capable to entertain our selves withall in the other world For who can divert himself from so beloved a Good which sends also such tokens of Love to him and turn to any other object We cannot think that they who love God perfectly will be inclined to love any thing else And you may think so still if you please without any prejudice to what I have said This will but make that LIFE the more desirable and move us to wish for such an happy state where God will be in all our thoughts and we shall always love him and yet love one another too For these are not at all inconsistent but we may delight our selves in the sweet society of Angels and Saints and yet always SEE GOD because we see and love Him in every thing They will be his Beauties which we shall behold in them Those holy ones will shine in his Glory So that our affections will not incline to run to any person merely for himself but because we behold the face of God in him and see his Graces wherewith he is adorned All the Love there will be Divine And the more of God shall appear in any persons the more lovely they will be and the more we shall be ravisht with their company and rejoyce in a happy league of friendship with them Well then withdraw your thoughts a while from all the things you love here and raise them above to look at Love where it reigns and hath an uncontrolled Empire Behold it sitting on its Throne advanced to its utmost pitch of Perfection and shewing it self in its full Glory And then keep the beginnings of this Heavenly LIFE out of your Souls if you can It will be impossible you should not think there is nothing so much to be desired as to be all Love O happy Life will you say where they love as much as they are able and where they shall be able to love more then now can be conceived and where they will be beloved more then they can love and have their Love hereby heightned when they reflect upon it in an endless Circle of joy and pleasure Let us enter upon this Life with all the speed we can make Let us begin it this very moment and endeavour that no moment may pass hereafter but in the Love of God For there is no heart so stony sure and insensible that will not be dissolved into flesh and receive any impressions from God if it be once touched with the serious thoughts of this state of Love No Soul so hard frozen and icy that will not be thawed and melted to run whether God pleases when it doth but feel the least spark of this heavenly Fire fall down upon it Do but go from the reading of this with the thoughts of this Happiness burning
which they apprehend and receive such impressions as they are able to make there But by this means the Soul touches and strikes it self sealing those impressions deeper and pressing them harder upon our spirit The presence of a Friend without asking our leave excites a joy and sudden passion of pleasure in our heart upon his very first approaches But when we consider with our selves not onely that he is our Friend but how good a Friend he hath been and what joy he hath now and many other times given us we then affect our selves with his presence and sweet company and make the joy greater by minding how great it is For it is the highest kind o● life in this world which hath an apprehension that it lives This makes the life of a man above the life of beasts and his pleasures above those that they enjoy This is it also which makes a man in ● Lethargy to be no better then dead because he hath no perception of his own life The quicker therefore and the more lively this apprehension of our LIFE and of the happiness and contentment of it grows the more blessed and joyfull will the LIFE it self be which we shall then lead If by loving without seeing we rejoyce in this world with joy unspeakable and full of glory 1 Pet. i. 8. how glorious will the joy be there when Sight or Knowledge shall be if I may so speak in its high-noon and Love at its full sea and when there will be no declension much le● night nor the least ebbe any more and when we shall with the most accurate quickness instantly apprehend and observe every circumstance that adds to our unconceivable happiness We have many considerations left us now in the Gospel of Christ to refresh our minds withall from his great Love in becoming a Man for us from his Cross from his Resurrection from his Ascension and sitting at God's right hand from his promise of coming again and the hope we have of reigning with him for ever but by not attending to such blessed Truths as these we lose the comfort of them And when they are mightily urged upon us by others and the Holy Spirit of God also touches us and makes us sensible of the glad tidings that they bring us we lose still a great deal of the pleasure by not pressing them farther upon our hearts marking how they are affected with them And when all this is done we shall still feel a damp upon our spirits unless we can comfortably reflect upon our own sincere love to God and assure our selves that we are persons qualified for this supreme Joy But there will be no danger of any such defects in that happy World above where holy Souls will as readily improve as they easily discern every thing that gives them satisfaction As nothing will escape their observation which brings any joy along with it so they will please themselves in the contemplation of their own pleasures till they grow greater And so far they will be from wanting any reflexions on themselves as the persons whom God loves and delights to honour that they cannot but perceive it and be transported with the joyfull sense of it For if we should speak strictly this Joy will be so great that it will need no attention to it It s own strength will make it be most sensibly felt and as some have ventured to express so sublime a state it will by the transcendent force of its delight essentially reflect upon it self 4. But let us come down from these heights and consider again that as much as the Joy which God hath in himself exceeds all other satisfaction so much will the Joy which we shall have in him exceed all that we have or can enjoy in any other thing In his presence says the Psalmist xvi 11. is fulness of joy and pleasures everlasting which cannot fail to be the portion of those who shall be admitted into his presence and have the happiness to See him For since by our sight of him we shall be assimilated to him as was said before and made in a manner such as he is we must needs be partakers with him in his Joy as well as in other things and have such a measure of it as exceeds all the measures that our scanty apprehensions can now take of so full a Good It is too little to say that this Joy alone exceeds all worldly pleasures as far as the longest life exceeds a moment or this whole World the least mote we see in the Sun-beams rather we may say as far as God surmounts this World or Eternity Time between which there is scarce any comparison to be reasonably made 5. To all which you may subjoyn this as the highest consideration of all that such are the Perfections of the Divine Nature such is his infinite Bounty that they who are united to him in Love will meet with an infinite Satisfaction All objects of our delight here may be comprehended by our Understanding and we may see an end of all their perfection For which reason they may be slighted by our Will as less then our selves and unable to give us the contentment we desire It is at our choice whether we will love them or no or at least what portion of our love we will bestow upon them and therefore it is no great joy that they can give to one who feels how much he is above them But God now is so full so infinitely above us that he intirely satiates the heart of those that love him We cannot refuse him when we are perfectly acquainted with him nor is it at our liberty to love him but to such a measure No He will force our Soul then to love him and delight in him as much as it can yea more then naturally it could without the presence of such a Good more then it believed it should ever have been able to love And this is not a force of which the Soul grows weary as in other cases when it is strained beyond its present capacity but a plesing violence to which it opens it self and perceiving the power of that great Good would willingly be more possessed of it The pleasure that it feels sweetly dilates it and with a gratefull constraint so stretches and widens it that the extension becomes natural to it And with all this New Love created in it the joyfull Soul will for ever remain thus big embracing its most beloved Good and delighting it self in this largeness of Love This is the incomparable pleasure of the LIFE that Christ promises All other joys are but cold and dull in respect of the flames and spirits of this It is but a dream of drowzy delight which we enjoy here in comparison with that substantiall sprightly pleasure which our Souls will find in the bosom of God's Love wherein they will repose themselves with such a transport as if they would lose themselves to be all one with
if we observe as we may easily from what hath been said that as they wanted the express promises which we have so what they understood of the nature of this Felicity by the light they enjoyed was but very dull in comparison with what is revealed to us Who can see more even in their Books then they could do themselves and find out that by the light of the Cospell which was wrapt up in dark figures and clouds under the Law and the Prophets As they saw Christ in Isaar and in a Lunb so they beheld Heaven under the figure of Paradise and in a Land flowing with milk and honey and in the ●●oly city and the Temple of stone the greatest glory whereof was when it was filled with the cloud 1 King viii 10 c. But now in the Church of the New Testament there is no Temple but the Lord God Almighty and the L●mb are the Temple of it xxi Rev. 22. And he saith not now I will dwell in thick darkness but as it follows there ver 23. the glory of God inlightens the Church and the Lamb is the Light thereof who hath made us with open fa●e to behold his glory in the heavens and given us full assurance that we shall be changed into the same image from glory to glory 2 Cor. iii. 18. This he published so clearly that the dullest and most illiterate fouls saw there was no Master comparable to him who had the Words of ●●ernall life and by his Death Resurrection and Ascension opened to all believers the Kingdom of heaven That 's a word St. Austin confesses * Tom. vi L. xix contra Faust Man cap. ult he could not find in all the Old Scriptures and St. Hierom says the same There are Testimonies there saith he of Eternall life whether plain or obscure it matters not though the places he alledges would have been obscure if we had not been inlightned before we reade them by the Gospell but this Name of the KING DOM OF HEAVEN I can meet withall in no place Hoc enim propriè pertinet ad revelationem Novi Testamenti For it properly belongs to the Revelation of the New Testament And it is a word as the Authour of the Answers ad Orthodoxos teaches us which doth not simply siguifie the Resurrection 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but the state of things after the Resurrection when we shall be so marvell ously changed as to be fit companions for the Angels and reign with our Saviour in his glory Of which things the Jews have now so little knowledge that they expect onely to rise again to feast here upon earth with the M●ssiah whom they look for and after they have spent some years in the enjoyment of the good things of an earthly Paradise then they think their bodies shall die and their Souls onely live for ever * Vid. Jacch●ades in viii Dan. 14. L'Empereur ib. Let any one that is able but reade what Manasseh ben Israel hath writ of the Resurrection and he will find it such poor stuff that the best use that can be made of it will be to put our selves in mind how much we stand ingaged to the Divine love for acquainting us so plainly with the Happiness he will give us at the Resurrection of our bodies to an immortall life Our Saviour indeed saith they might have learnt better out of the Scriptures then to imagine there will be eating and drinking and marrying after the resurrection but there was none of their books could teach them that we should be companions of Angels and shine like the Sun and see God and be coheirs with Christ and such like things which by the Gospell are now so clearly discovered to us that the most ignorant know more then the wisest that want this Revelation R. Tanchum who would fain prove the life of the World to come from the words of Abigail who speaks of the binding David's Soul in the bundle of life 1 Sam. xxv 29 * D. Pocock Not. miscell c. vi p. 91. observes that this Mystery which was a stranger to mens understandings in other nations and far remote from their thoughts to the knowledge of which none but very wise men came by much labour and exercise and after long disquisitions and difficult reasonings was known then among the Jews and manisest even to the Women An argument saith he that wisedom was much spred in our Nation and that as Moses speaks iv Dent. 6. we are a wise and understanding people Which is far truer of the Disciples of the Lord Jesus among whom even the most simple are taught such things as whatsoever such a wise woman as Abigail may be supposed to understand in ancient days their greatest Doctours have been so ignorant of since that we see the words of Isaiah xxix 14. sulfilled in them The Wisedom of their wise men shall perish and the und●rshanding of their ●●ndent men shall be hid Where is the wise as St. Paul triumphs over them 1 Cor. i. 20 27. where is the S●●●● where is the disputer of this world God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise Made use 〈◊〉 of such men as the World for wa●● of humane learning accounted no better 〈◊〉 fools to publish so clearly and with such evidence the doctrine of Lternall Life that it may justly make men of the greatest repute for learning blush who could not speak one wise word about it But suppose them all to have been indued with a clearer sight then indeed they had of the Life to come yet of the Blessedness which God intends for us there that of St. Paul 1 Cor. ii 9. will still be true Eye hath not seen nor ear heard neither have entred into the heart of man the things which God hath prepared for them that love him There is a passage in the Prophet Isaiah very like this lxiv. 4. which the Jewish Doctours themselves expound in the mysticali sense of the future life and from thence St. Paul is supposed to have borrowed these expressions Though the very words ●●●mselves of St. Paul being found in the Apocryphall Book of Elias it is probable as Grotius thinks that this was grown a common saying among the Rabbins who had been taught by ancient tradition to expect such things in the days of the Messiah as never any eye had seen nor ear heard nor had entred into any man's heart to conceive Which is verified in the whole Revelation of God's will in the Gospell especially in this part of it No man had so much as a thought or a desire of such things as God hath done for us and intends to doe by our Lord Jesus That he should send from heaven his own Son his onely-begotten Son begotten of him before all worlds to be incarnate of a pure Virgin to die for our sins that he might rise again to sit at God's right hand where our Nature shines far brighter
so glorious a purchace Or suppose a man will chuse to lose all his worldly goods which he hath got that he may preserve his liberty and not be inslaved here is a greater Good still which will dispose a man to kiss his cords or his chains and sing like Paul and Silas in the innermost prison Or suppose again that to save his life a man should embrace the chains and fetters which tie him fast to his oar nere is something still beyond this which is the onely thing that can make a man chearfully sacrifice his life for the loss of which nothing else can make him any recompence The reason is because there is no proportion between this and all other things either as to greatness or goodness not so much as between a Kingdom and a barly-corn 5. And therefore I may adde that it will make us in love with all piety at once and with all the means leading to it though never so troublesome It doth not work upon us after the way of Art but as Nature it self doth It doth not teach us vertue and godliness by little parcels as a Statuary first forms one part of his statue and then another now working on the face and then on the hands or feet but instills it altogether in the whole mass as I may so speak and works in us such an universall love to goodness as to have a ready will presently to doe whatsoever God would have us Just as you see the spirit of Nature or a particular Soul work in the formation of the body of a plant or of an animall in the womb which it begins in all its proportions together and so proceeds on still to bring the parts to a greater bigness and strength even so doth this mighty Good operate when it touches the heart not inclining it first to the grace of temperance and then by another touch to the grace of charity and after that by a third to the grace of contentedness c. but at once begets an hearty love to universall goodness and forms the whole body of Christian Vertues all together which grow up after the same manner all alike there being the same power inspiring us unto all Which may spare me the labour of shewing what a Motive it is to inforce the practice of every particular Vertue Which it makes easie also because this one thing which is the reason for all is easily kept in our mind Eternall Life is like a short Sentence which contains in it the pith and strength of a long Discourse or like unto a little Leaven which infuses it self into the whole mass wherewith it is mixed And it makes all Divine graces intire and perfect also For where the mind is once impregnated with it and it hath begun a Divine life there it will never produce a monstrous birth No lim of the New man if I may so speak shall here be wanting It will not suffer us I mean to be defective in any part of true piety nor shall one part draw all the nourishment to it and overgrow the rest It will not let us spend our zeal about some particulars while we are cold and remiss in other Christian duties but make us equally affected and spirited unto all From whence likewise arises another benefit that while by the thoughts of this we excite our selves to any one grace we promote our growth also in every one When we stir up our selves to the practice of our present duty we are disposed thereby to the like chearfull obedience on any other emergent occasion When we call up our Souls by this to doe God's will it impowers us also though we should not then think of it to suffer what he would have us And while we animate our selves hereby to suffer one thing it enables us to doe and suffer all O the power of this Divine Good if it once seat it self in the very throne of our hearts How it makes them beat with the love of God and with the love of our neighbour How it inspires us with resolution with confidence with zeal with joy with all other pious affections It will let us scruple none of God's Commands because it is of equall force to make us submit to all Neither prophaneness nor hypocrisy neither listlesness nor despondency can ever lodge in that heart where this belief is deeply rooted that God will give to our little short labours here an immense eternall recompence in the other World 6. One cannot imagine how it should be otherwise if we go on to consider once more how naturally this belief fills our hearts with love to that blessed God who is so good as to design us such inconceivable Blessedness and to his will as the onely way and means to be partaker of it We shall easily be perswaded that the Will of him who promises us immortality must needs be the Rule of Goodness It will never enter into our hearts to suspect that he who loves us so much can enjoyn us any thing but what is truly good for us And so our wills and affections will readily bow and stoop to his without any dispute at all about it But I have said too much already about this business to have any room left for a new argument of the power of this great Good IV. Let us proceed rather to consider what the matter is that a Motive in it self so great and so powerfull should have so little power upon mens hearts to move them to vertue and goodness One may justly wonder at it and ask What is the cause that men are so dull so sluggish so backward to doe well since the reward is so certain so transcendent and it is as certain they will miss of it in any other way but this of vertue and piety Where is the Violence which the holy Gospel speaks of and which in all reason was to be expected when the Kingdom of heaven was opened One would have thought upon the report of so great a Blessedness men would have throng'd into heaven and with eager violence striven to thrust in themselves before others into such preferment as was offered them in our Saviour's Kingdom His Disciples sure thought that men could not chuse when they heard such news but all flock to his fold and prepare themselves to receive his blessing And there have been those * Maldonate and de Celada who have fansied the Apostles were so possessed with these thoughts that this was the reason they were troubled to hear our Saviour say whither he went they could not go that is at present xiii Joh. 33. because they imagined all would run so thick towards the Bliss which he promised that if they went not to heaven with him then it was to be questioned whether there would be any room left for them and all places might not be taken up before they came And to comfort them our Saviour say they bid them not be troubled for in
in the city and Gabriel to Mary and Elizabeth and Anna and Symeon to those in the Temple Nor were men and women onely transported with the pleasure but an infant that had not seen the light leapt in its mother's womb and all were strangely lifted up in hopes of what was a-coming These things all fell out straightway after his birth But when he appeared in the World there were more Miracles and greater then the former appeared again For not so little as a Star and the Heavens not Angels or Archangels not Gabriel or Michael but the Father himself proclaimed him from heaven and with the Father the Comforter came down with a voice and remained on him And therefore well might the Apostle say We have seen his glory the glory as of the onely-begotten of the Father And not by these things alone but by those which followed after For now not merely Shepherds and an aged Prophetess and reverend men published the glad tidings of the Gospell but the voice it self of the things he did louder then the sound of any trumpet which was heard presently every-where For the fame of him saith the Evangelist went into all Syria and revealed him to all and cried every-where that the King of heaven was come to men For Daemons every-where fled and got away and the Devill departed and Death began to give place and not long after quite vanished and all manner of infirmities were loosed and the tombs dismissed the dead the Daemons left those that were mad and Diseases those that were sick Wonderfull and strange things were to be seen which the Prophets desired to see and did not For one might have seen eyes new made paralytick lims strengthened motion given to withered hands and lame feet ears that were stopt up opened and the tongues of the dumb loosed In one word like an excellent workman that comes into an house which is decayed and rotten by time he repaired or re-built rather humane Nature For who can tell how he made the Souls of men new which is a greater wonder then all the rest For the wills of men oppose their cure which the body doth not They will not yield we see no not to God himself And yet these were reformed by him and all kind of wickedness expelled Nor were they onely freed from Sin but like the bodies to which he gave the best habit after he had cured their diseases they were advanced to the highest degree of vertue A Publican became an Apostle A persecutour a blasphemer a reproacher of Christianity turned the Preacher of the Word A thief was made a Citizen of Paradise and a strumpet became illustrious by a great faith And abundance of others worse then these were listed in the number of the Disciples till whole cities and countries were strangely reformed by the Gospell Who is able to declare the wisedom of his Precepts the vertue of his heavenly Laws the excellent order of his Angelicall Conversation For he hath taught us such a life he hath given us such laws and instituted such a polity that they who use them though before the worst of men straightway become Angels and like to God according to our power The Evangelist therefore recollecting all these things the Miracles he wrought upon mens bodies upon their Souls and upon the elements the Precepts the secret Gifts the Laws the Polity the power of perswasion the future Promises his Sufferings he pronounced this wonderfull lofty voice We beheld his glory the glory as of the onely-begotten of the Father full of grace and truth For they did not admire him onely for his Miracles but for his Sufferings As for example because he was nailed to a Cross and scourged because he was beaten because he was spit upon because those buffeted him to whom he had been a benefactour upon the account even of these which seem most shamefull that voice is worthy to be repeated again because he himself hath called this a Glory For then Death was destroyed the Curse was dissolved Daemons were put to shame and he triumphed over them openly and the hand-writing of sins or obligation to punishment was nailed to the Cross and cancelled And besides these wonders which were invisible there were others apparent unto all which shewed he was the onely-begotten Son of God and the Lord of all the Creation For while his blessed body yet hung upon the Cross the Sun withdrew its beams the earth was astonished and wrapt in darkness the ground shook the tombs were broke open a great many dead people walkt out of their graves and went into the City the stone upon his grave was rolled away and he arose He that was crucified he that was fastned with nails to the cross he that was dead arose and filling his Apostles with great power sent them to all the World as the common physicians of humane Nature the rectifiers of mens lives the sowers of the knowledge of heavenly Doctrine the loosers of the Devill 's tyranny the teachers of the great and hidden Goods the preachers of the glad tidings of the immortality of the Soul the Eternall life of the body and the rewards which as they pass all understanding so never have any end These and many more such like this blessed man beholding which he knew but was not able to write because the world could not have contained the Books he cried out We beheld his glory the glory as of the onely-begotten of the Father full of grace and truth Who is now as able I may adde to give us new bodies and inconceivably-improved Souls and then to perpetuate the happiness of both in heaven as he was to cure diseases and raise dead bodies and purify mens minds when he was here on earth Let our conclusion therefore as he says elsewhere be sutable to our discourse Hom. xiii p. 607. 5. And what 's so sutable as Doxologies and giving glory to God in such manner as is worthy of him Not by our words onely that is but much more by our deeds So our Saviour himself exhorts us saying Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorifie your Father which is in heaven For there is nothing more bright and shining then an excellent conversation as one of the wise men hath said The ways of the just shine like the light And they shine not onely to those that light their lamps by their works but to all that are near unto them Therefore let us pour oyl continually into these lamps that the flame may rise higher and the light shine more abundantly Having received such grace and truth by Jesus Christ Id. p. 611. let us not grow the lazier by the greatness of the gift For the greater honour hath been done us the more we are bound to excell in vertue Let that therefore be our business to purify our selves so throughly that being thought worthy to see Christ we may not at that Day
the heir of all things He is called by the same name that they were If there were no other reason for it his office would give him a title to it because he is the Lords Christ anointed by God to the highest dignity and government under him not only over that Country but over all Nations on the Earth who by believing on him were all to be made a chosen generation a royal Priesthood an holy Nation a peculiar people 1 Pet. ii 9. But to show his most excellent greatness he is called the Son of God with two marks of his preeminence above all other who have had that name First he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that Son that eminent King the King of Kings like to whom none ever was For secondly whereas those sons of the highest spoken of before were to die like other men Psal 82.7 and to fall like one of the Princes in other Countries He is called the Son 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of that God who liveth xvi Matth. 16. that is of the immortal eternal God And by consequence is like his Father an everlasting King of whose Kingdom as the Angel told his Mother i. Luke 33. there shall be no end Thus the Author of the Epistle to the Hebrews who understood this language well enough hath discoursed in the First Chapter Where he proves that Jesus is the Son of God in a more eminent sence than any Angel in Heaven according to those ancient prophecies before named concerning David and Solomon as you read ver 4 5. From whence the Jews learns to call the Messiah who they confess is in those places mystically spoken of by that name of the Son of God Which the Apostle there shows is the greatest name of excellence and signifies the highest honour and dignity such as God hath conferred upon no other And then he proceeds to show that according to other prophecies which speak of his supereminence his Throne is for ever and ever ver 8. For God who is his God in a peculiar manner loving and rewarding him hath anointed him with the oil of gladness preferred him that is above all that partake of Kingly dignity ver 9. He hath made him indeed his first-born the Prince of all the Kings of the Earth as S. John speaks i. Revel 5. to whom we are to submit our selves with the greatest devotion of spirit and from whom we may then expect Protection Blessing and the noblest Rewards For he is the long expected Son of God who excells all other that were ever called by that name the King of inconceivable Majesty whose splendor could not so much as be fore-shadowed by Solomon in all his glory Thus Nathanael I observe puts these two expressions together in his confession of our Saviour out of a vehement affection redoubling his words Thou art that Son of God thou art that King of Israel i. John 49. This is the business upon which we are to examine these Witnesses we are to consider what they say to this point that the Lord Jesus was sent from God as Moses had formerly been only Moses as a Servant but he as a Son according to what you read iii. Heb. 5 6. with a fulness of authority with all the power of God so that we may confidently rely on every thing that he hath said as the very mind and sence of God This if we can hear them speak they are witnesses so beyond all exception that we cannot chuse but reverence him and receive him and obey him and put our trust in him and rejoyce in his royal favour and love evermore For the first three are no less persons than the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost Whose gracious assistance let us humbly implore that this and all other our works may be begun continued and ended to the glorifying of his holy Name A PRAYER O Father of lights from whom comet● every good and every perfect gift illuminate my mind in these Meditations that I may be able to enlighten others an● lead them into a good understanding in a●● things Guide and direct my thoughts tha● I may reason and discourse aright Shine int● all our Souls by the light of the glorious Gosp●● of Christ John 6.40 that we seeing the Son may believe on him and being made thy childre● by adoption and grace may be daily more an● more renewed by thy holy Spirit Settle i● our Souls that mighty faith whereby we may have power and strength to have victory and to triumph over the Devil the World and the Flesh Strengthen it every day by constant Meditation on those things which thou O Father Son and Holy Ghost hast so many ways declared to us that it may grow still more victorious and we may feel the happy fruit of it in greater joy and triumph of spirit in assured expectation of the Crown of righteousness which thou hast promised to all faithful Souls O that none of the inticing allurements of this world may ever more deceive us and steal away our hearts from our true happiness nor any of the troublesome passages of this life ever hereafter dishearten us and divert us from the pursuit of it But the Faith of Christ may so intirely possess our hearts as to keep us stedfast and upright in the midst of all the temptations of what kind soever they be that assault us And looking up unto Jesus the author and finisher of our Faith we may still say with true resolution of spirit Thou art the Son of God most high thou art the King of incomprehensible Majesty thou art the Lord of all We will constantly adhere to thee as thy faithful subjects We will follow thee in faith and love and patient obedience to the very death And hope that as we feel by thy power in us we are the children of God so we shall be heirs heirs of God joynt-heirs with thee O blessed Lord to whom with the Father and the Holy Ghost be glory and dominion for ever Amen CHAP. II. Concerning the Witnesses in general and the Testimony of the FATHER in particular IF any man urge us to receive a thing which is new and strange we either turn away our ears if we take him for a frivolous person or else require him to show us good evidence for what he says if he seem to be wise and serious And the more importunate he is to be believed the more earnest we are to know what he hath to show for himself and to call for his proofs in which if he fail or they come not home to the purpose he is so far from gaining any credit with those who examine them that they prove a very considerable argument against him Especially when he pretends to come from God and to bring us messages from Heaven we all expect the clearer and diviner demonstrations before we can resign our mind unto him For that which is to make all things credible must have very
testimony of my self because I do but repeat the very same thing which the Father hath said before me For though alone as I have confessed heretofore my testimony of my self is worth nothing and cannot challenge belief yet added unto so high a testimony as his it ought to be duly regarded and accepted But besides this I must add another consideration of great moment Which is that the Testimony of the WORD concerning himself now that he is in the Heavens is of great validity even singly considered though it had no such authority alone when he was upon the Earth For during his stay here on Earth it could not appear by his bare saying so that he was the Son of God the King of Israel because he was in a poor mean and low condition altogether unlike a King And therefore if the Father and the Spirit had not testified so much none could have believed on him But when he was in the Heavens then what he said of himself carried great authority and power with it because he could not say those words to any one but he must appear as a King in glory There were things as well as words to speak for him At the same time that he bare witness of himself they to whom he spake must needs see the truth of his Testimony by the royal state and majesty wherein they beheld him If the question should be whether a person be alive his own appearing in Court would be the best testimony that could be given of it If whether such a one be a King his sitting upon his Throne with his Crown on his head in his royal Palace and his Ministers round about him would be the surest evidence that could be desired to put it out of doubt In this case therefore where the question is whether Jesus be the Son of God or no there cannot be expected a better resolution of it than his own witness to himself by appearing upon the Throne of his Glory There several persons of unblemished credit beheld him and had the confidence to venture their lives upon the certain knowledge they had that they were not deceived From thence he spake to them and directed them to speak and carry his messages to others that they might believe on the Name of the Son of God And let it but be remembred which I noted at the beginning that we are now examining those witnesses which speak from Heaven and not those which speak on the Earth and then you will soon discern that these testimonies of the WORD though concerning himself ought to be received with great reverence and to be judged very full and powerful to prove Jesus to be the Son of God Especially since besides his own word for it we have also the word of the Father who several times called him his Son and that before he took this honour to himself A PRAYER LET all mankind therefore honour thee O blessed Jesus even as they honour the Father Be thou adored every where upon Earth with the same reverence and love wherewith all the Angels in Heaven worship thee whom they and we acknowledge to be the LORD the WORD of God the Wisdom of the Father the bright morning Star the Light of the World the Prince of Life the Heir of all things the KING OF KINGS AND THE LORD OF LORDS God blessed for ever Thou art the King of glory O Christ Thou art the everlasting Son of the Father The Beginner and the Finisher of our Faith the Judge of the World the Author of Eternal Salvation unto all them that obey thee O how happy are they that know thee and stedfastly believe in thee and sincerely love thee and heartily obey thee and have a good hope that thou wilt bless them and imploy thy power for their promotion to that glory wherein thou reignest I rejoyce to hear thee say that thou who wast dead art alive for evermore Amen and hast the keys of Hell and of Death I thank thee for appearing so often to assure our Souls that thou sittest at the right hand of God and hast all power in Heaven and in Earth Great is the consolation which thou hast given us by the sight of that Glory wherein thy first Martyr beheld thee ready to succour all thy faithful servants Marvellous was thy work O Lord for which all thy Church will for ever praise thee in calling S. Paul to be an Apostle separated unto the Gospel of God Adored be thy glorious Majesty which appeared to him for this purpose to make him a Minister and a Witness of what he saw and heard that he might go and open the eyes of the Gentiles to turn them from darkness to light and from the power of Satan unto God that they might receive forgiveness of sins and inheritance among them which are sanctified by faith that is in thee O how full of comfort is that Revelation which thou hast made of thy self to thy servant John Who received the brightest discoveries of thy glory in Heaven when he was in the most desolate condition upon Earth who beheld thy care over thy Church and thy conquests over thine enemies thy Priestly and thy Royal power to the perpetual joy of those that love thee and the terror of all those that oppose thee O blessed Jesus far be it from any of us in the least to contradict thy will who art so highly advanced far above all principality and power and every name that is named not only in this world but also in that which is to come May every Christian Soul be so sensibly affected with the belief of thy Glory as to prostrate it self before thee and say with the same spirit that thy blessed Apostle S. Paul did when thou appearedst unto him Lord what wilt thou have me to do May that ardent love burn in every one of our breasts towards thee and towards one another which was in thy beloved Disciple who bare record of thee and testified to us these things And may none of us prove so false and unkind as to leave our first love but our work and charity and service and faith and patience may be ever commended by thee and the last be more than the first Then shall we be able with a chearful countenance to look up unto thee and to think of thy majesty and glory with exultation and triumph and not with terror and amazement of spirit We will joy in thy strength O Lord and in thy salvation how greatly shall we rejoyce We will rejoyce even in the midst of tribulation and though we walk through the valley of the shadow of death we will fear no evil but stedfastly looking up unto Heaven call upon thee O Lord Jesus and beseech thee to receive our Spirit Into thy hands be they recommended both now and ever with most earnest desires and hope that thou wilt help thy servants whom thou hast redeemed with thy precious bloud and make them to be
from the holy One and knew all things 1 John ii 20. The HOLY GHOST that is was their security from infection which is here called the UNCTION or anointing 1. because by the coming down of this upon our Saviour He was made the CHRIST or anointed of God x. Acts 38. And 2. the Apostles when they received it were made the principal Officers in his Kingdom and endued with such a power to remit sins and unloose men from the punishment of them as he had xx Joh. 22 23. And 3. all others to whom they imparted this gift were openly declared the children of God and if children then heirs heirs of God and joynt-heirs with Christ viii Rom. 16 17. This UNCTION made them all Kings and Priests unto God and they reigned with him on Earth v. Rev. 10. Enjoyed that is many royal priviledges and liberties at present for which they were bound perpetually to praise him beside the right it gave them to an Heavenly Kingdom where they should sit down with him in his Throne as He was in the Throne of his Father iii. Rev. 21. For the Thrones of the Eastern Princes were wide and large as I told you before where others might sit down by them if they pleased to admit any to that high honour which this King of Kings promises to grant to his faithful followers No wonder then that they who were designed to so great glory were also made partaker of the Earnest of it as this Unction by the Holy Spirit is called 2 Cor. i. 22. After God had filled the Apostles and other Apostolical men with the Holy Ghost who were ready to guide and direct all Christian people while they lived There were great numbers also in the Body of the Church who received so many of its gifts from the HOLY one that is God 2 Cor. i. 21. that it enabled them to discern truth from falshood and discover all those cheats and impostures which some went about to put upon them under the name of Christian Doctrine A very great Doctor the Holy Ghost was when they were anointed with it for thereby they KNEW ALL THINGS that is their whole Religion in which it made them so perfect that those pretenders to new Revelations could teach them nothing which they knew not already For it taught them that Jesus from whom it came was the Son of God and had revealed all God's will plainly and fully to them So S. John tells them in the following verses 21 22. I have not written unto you because ye know not the truth but because ye know it and that no lye is of the truth Who is a lyar but he that denieth that Jesus is the Christ c. That is I do not speak of this because you are ignorant of Christianity but because you are well acquainted with it and thereby able to judge when any body contradicts it and to reject all those as lyars who deny Jesus to be anointed by God the Lord of all I know you are well principled in this truth by the UNCTION which he hath given you from the Father All that I desire is as he adds ver 24. that you would suffer that Truth which you have heard from the beginning to abide in you And indeed it was very unreasonable to start from that which had ever been acknowledged since the Holy Ghost first descended on Jesus himself and which the same UNCTION still testified whensoever the Apostles who preached Jesus did but lay their hands on any bodies head and pray to Jesus that he would bestow it on them They could not be seduced if they did but attend as he says ver 26 27. to this anointing which they had received and which was yet among them There was no need of any other teacher but this to instruct them Which gave such an evident demonstration of the power and glory of the Lord Jesus and was so far from being a lye or deceiving them that if they did but do it as it taught them they must needs abide in him This you see was accounted and that justly an infallible witness to him He could never have sent such an UNCTION nor would the Holy Ghost have ever come in his Name if he had not been the King of Heaven They that received this had an invincible proof of his glory and majesty within themselves They could not doubt of it any more than they could of what they felt Which proved likewise so convincing to others that it made unbelievers fall down on their faces and worship God and report that God was in them of a truth 1 Cor. xiv 25. For by this the Divine Majesty did in a proper sence DWELL among Christian people and walk with them as it did among the ancient Israelites 2 Cor. vi 16. This was a glorious Divine Presence in the Church whereby God and our Saviour made their ABODE with them xiv John 23. and they became the HABITATION of God or his Dwelling place through the Spirit ii Ephes 22. Which so constantly bare witness to him that no man who had this Spirit could possibly deny him but every one that spake by the Holy Ghost acknowledged Jesus to be the LORD 1 Cor. xii 3. And they were no small number who were made partakers of it For S. Peter promises it at the very first descent of it to all that would repent and be baptized in the name of Jesus at which word three thousand Souls were added to them ii Acts 38 41. And afterwards a vast company more as you may read in the first Epistle to the Corinthians Where some were endued with one power of the Holy Ghost some with another Chap. xii but in every thing they were enriched by him so that they came behind in NO GIFT Chap. i. 5 7. Wherein our Lord far excelled Moses who could not give his Spirit unto others much less unto the Gentiles whereas Jesus sent great abundance of his Spirit as you see upon his Disciples and gave even to the Gentiles the like gift as he did unto them xi Acts 17. For as S. Peter was preaching to Cornelius and his friends the Holy Ghost fell on all them which heard the word to the great astonishment of the Jewish Christians who wondred to hear them speak with tongues and magnifie God x. Acts 44 45 46. But they should have considered that now he began to fulfil completely that prophecy of Joel mentioned ii Acts 17. which promised that God would pour out of his Spirit upon ALL flesh Now the inclosures were first broken down and that Divine Presence which had hitherto been confined to one Nation appeared in a most amazing lustre to the rest of the World In so much that in a little time great multitudes of all nations and kindred and people and tongues joyned their hearts and voices with the Heavenly Quire saying Holy Holy Holy is the Lord of Hosts the whole Earth is full of his GLORY Thus Esaias heard
the Angels sing vi 3. when he beheld our Saviours glory and spake of him xii John 39. And the Church of Christ from the beginning hath taken these words from their mouths and made them their own iv Rev. 8. when they actually saw this GLORY OF THE LORD filling the Earth with its most holy Presence For our Lord did not cease to pour out more and more of his Spirit on all flesh even after the Apostles were dead But as Justin Martyr tells the Jew in his time which was above an hundred years after this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 * Dial. cum Tryph. c. One might have seen among Christians both women and men who had gifts from the Spirit of God And so one might in the days of Origen * Lib. 1. contr Cels who lived as many years after that who to convince Celsus that it was no Fable which was reported of the descent of the Holy Ghost on our Saviour affirms that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. There were still remaining among them some footsteps of that Holy Spirit which was seen in the form of a Dove For they dispossessed Devils performed many cures and foresaw some things according to the will and pleasure of the WORD concerning what was to come Nay it were easie to show that this Heavenly power descended still much lower and did not quite leave the World in these Ages and that it did not work in some obscure corners only but in the most noted places in the World For the same Justin says in his first Apology that there were many healed by the Name of Jesus Christ in the City of Rome whom no other person could heal So that look how many Souls there were full of the Holy Ghost so many lasting Witnesses there were to our Saviour of his power and glory in every place But intending hereafter to treat of all these gifts of the Holy Ghost alone by themselves I shay say no more of them now having sufficiently shown how they were his Testimony to our Saviour It is possible I confess that there may be another thing included in the name of the HOLY GHOST and that is the old Prophets who received gifts from Heaven whereby they sometimes spake of the Messiah So the HOLY GHOST is said in the x. Hebr. 15. to be a witness of the perfection of our Saviours oblation and for a proof of it the testimony of the Prophet Jeremiah is alledged whose words are called the witness of the Holy Ghost From whence I might take occasion to show that all the predictions of the Prophets do so exactly agree to Jesus and are so perfectly fulfilled in him that we must needs grant him if we receive this testimony of the Holy Ghost and take them to have been inspired thereby to be the Son of God the King of Israel who they had long put that Nation in hope should come and reign over them But this would be a work of too great length and my intention is not to swell this Treatise into an huge Volume which makes me only mention this notion that you may consider with your selves as you have occasion what a resemblance there is between Jesus and that person whom the Prophets describe unto us For this will prove a great confirmation of your faith in him there being no doubt in the minds of the bitterest enemies of our Saviour but that those Holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost I have done now with these witnesses who speak unto us from Heaven and who are one you see in their testimony as well as in their nature They all agree in this that Jesus is the Son of God There is not the least difference between them no doubtfulness in their testimony no backwardness to give it no obscurity that should make it difficult for us to understand it But with one mouth as we say they unanimously plainly readily and clearly pronounce him to be such a Divine person that if we should not hear him and obey him and depend upon him I know not what we shall be able to say to so many Witnesses who will be ready to appear against us whose testimony without any cause was slighted by us Look how many voices have been heard from Heaven how many witnesses have openly appeared in his behalf so many Divine reasons you are to conceive your self to be provided withall for every word that Jesus hath spoken Which you are therefore to take for infallible and to keep as the Apostle speaks 1 Tim. vi 14. without spot and unrebukeable until his second appearing Listen to those words of grace which come out of his mouth Abandon those sins which he requires you to forsake and betake your selves to the practice of those vertues which he so strictly injoyns For the FATHER the WORD and the HOLY GHOST declare that this is the Will of Heaven And what is there in this world so considerable as to perswade the contrary If he be not the Son of God if he do not prove it by undeniable arguments then do as you list But if he be then you are bound to yield him the humblest subjection and it will be a strange stupidity to dispute the matter with him There can be no colour for your refusal should you deny to be governed by him who comes with such Authority that the fulness of the Godhead as you have heard dwells in him bodily O what an honour hath God Almighty hereby done our nature how highly hath he advanced and dignified it by this strange and unexpected favour which he hath conferred on it in making it his Holy place Consider but what I have now said of the Testimony of the HOLY GHOST to Jesus which was an illustrious token likewise of Gods wonderful love to us Is it nothing that God should be manifested in our flesh that he should DWELL in us and make his abode with us and that we should become the habitation of God through the Spirit Look upon the Temple of old and see how it glittered with Gold how it was adorned with Cherubims and Seraphims which were an emblem of the Angelical attendance in that place but especially how it shined with the Glory of the Lord which appeared upon the mercy-seat And then reflect how precious how dear mankind are to Almighty God into whose Nature this Glory is translated whom he hath beautified with greater excellencies and made more splendid by a more intimate conjunction with it Could any man then after he had considered this profane that Nature which God hath so sanctified and separated to himself Could he find in his heart to prostitute himself to any of those base and filthy actions that are below the dignity of humane nature nakedly considered without such a presence of God in it None can submit sure to the government of any fleshly lust but he must first forget that he is a man created after the Image
of God And there is none can continue in this unworthy slavery but he must lay aside these thoughts also that the WORD was made flesh and the Image of the invisible God hath taken up his abode in our Nature By this he hath called us to the greatest sanctity He remembers us what excellent Creatures we are and how Glorious he is desirous to make us And who is there that need despair of recovering himself by the grace of God though he be sunk never so much below himself now that God is come on purpose to lift him up He hath sent Salvation to us by one that is mighty to save He hath revealed himself so graciously and made such discoveries of his Love and Power and Glory to all mankind that they may confidently hope if they will not cast away all care of themselves to be restored to the image and likeness of God again But this Discourse will come in more seasonably when we have joyned the strength of the other three Witnesses to these and heard them all together some from Heaven others from Earth proclaiming this in our ears Behold the Son of God Jesus is your Lord for he is the Lord of all things And we shall be the more ready for a surrender to him when we see withall how much we are beholden to God Almighty for his marvellous inconceiveable love in calling us so many ways by so many arguments to Repentance Faith Obedience and Everlasting Salvation That which I have now explained deserves to be remembred with the most affectionate acknowledgments and we shall be better disposed to hearken to the rest if we give him hearty thanks for what we understand already and say A PRAYER ADored be thy inestimable love O thou Holy Spirit of Grace and Truth the mighty Power of God who hast given such gifts unto men even to the rebellious also that the LORD God might DWELL among them Blessed be thy Goodness who didst anoint our Lord with that oil of gladness which hath run down to the meannest of his subjects Great and wonderful was that Heavenly Power and Love which appeared in such visible Majesty upon him and filled him with the Holy Ghest so that he went about doing good and healing all that were oppressed of the Devil And much more marvellous was that Almighty Goodness which promoted him to the throne of Glory in the Heavens that he might fill all things Praised be that astonishing Love which first filled the Apostles minds with such Heavenly light and inflamed their wills with such fervent heat that they boldly preached the Gospel to all the world For ever magnified be that diffusive Grace which afterwards spread it self in such variety of gifts wrought by one and the self same Spirit dividing to every man severally as he pleased Let the whole Church be giving continual thanks to thee O Lord for stretching forth thy hand in such signs and wonders to glorifie thy holy child Jesus for giving by the Spirit to some a gift of wisdom to others a gift of healing to others divers kind of tongues to others prophecy and for making some Apostles some Prophets some Evangelists some Pastors and Teachers that every knee might bow to Jesus and every tongue confess that he is the Lord. I confess him with all my Soul I honour him as my Dearest Lord. I see thy Glory O blessed Jesus by the light of the Holy Ghost which hath shone so oft from Heaven upon us I see the Power thou hast at Gods right hand I see the royal bounty of thy love Now I know that thou knowest all things and believe that thou art the faithful and the true whose words shall never fail O how much ought I and every Christian Soul to rejoyce in the consolations of the Holy Ghost which hath brought us new assurances from Heaven that our Saviour lives and reigns and sits inthroned at the right hand of God in incomparable majesty and glory Inspire all our minds and hearts O thou quickning Spirit inspire them O Lord and Giver of Life with such ardent love and devotion towards him that we may hope to reign with him and then shall we rejoyce before-hand in this hope with joy unspeakable and full of glory Do not wholly absent they self from us O thou Guide and Comforter of our Souls though we have not been so grateful to thee nor followed thy directions and counsels as we ought but still let thy gracious presence fill every part of the Christian Church Though we have not that UNCTION from above which endued them heretofore with the gifts of tongues and prophecy and healing and working of miracles Yet pour down every where much of the spirit of knowledge and love and devotion and purity and fortitude and undaunted resolution and fervent Zeal which may be ever glorifying the great God and our Saviour Christ Jesus O thou who didst open the eyes of the blind and loose the tongue of the dumb enlighten our minds to see more of those wonders which may inflame our love and incourage our hope and open our lips that our mouths may shew forth thy Praise Still let there be hearts full of Faith in the blessed Jesus full of love to all mankind full of ardent desire to see his Kingdom come full of wisdom to open the mysteries of Salvation to instruct men in the truth as it is in Jesus and to convince them mightily and perswade them to be obedient to it That so by the same Heavenly power whereby the Faith of Christ was planted in the world it may be graciously preserved and promoted and we may see it go forward and advance more and more till every Nation now on Earth speak in their own tongues the wonderful works of God Let all the people praise thee O God Let all the people praise thee Kindle in them such devout affections as may offer up continually the sacrifice of praise to thee Let them praise thee with pure minds and upright hearts and unspotted lives and in perfect unity and godly love say every where Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Ghost As it was in the beginning is now and ever shall be world without end Amen CHAP. V. Concerning the Witnesses on Earth and first of the WATER HAVING given a brief account of the Testimony of the first Three Witnesses and finding much satisfaction in their perfect agreement we have the greater encouragement to go to the other Three who are also nearer to us than the former and take that evidence which they are willing to afford us for our further confirmation in this belief that Jesus is the Son of God These three you read in the eighth Verse are such as bear witness on EARTH whereby we may be the better acquainted with them and they are the more undeniable and furthest off from all question or exception For should any be so bold as to dispute that there might
live with them in unity and godly love to sympathize with them in their several conditions rejoycing with those that do rejoyce and weeping with those that weep Nor hath he failed to tell us by his holy Apostles with what kindness and indulgent affection Husbands should treat their Wives and how they again should so affectionately observe their Husbands that they may together make up a lively Image of that Dearest Love which is between Christ and his Church And he hath instructed us all how to behave our selves towards Magistrates Bishops Presbyters Masters and Parents whom he hath also taught how to bring up their children to use their servants to feed and govern their flocks and to rule their people committed to their charge so that no man can say he goes without that Lesson which is proper for his condition And then if we proceed to those things which we call SOBRIETY his Doctrine is so holy and pure that it requires the greatest Moderation in all things It favours nothing that relishes of Covetousness or Ambition or Voluptuousness or any other violent and inordinate passion whatsoever But quite contrary commands us not to labour with too much eagerness and solicitude for the meat that perishes to lay up our treasures in Heaven to be humble and lowly like little children to be temperate in all things to be watchful and vigilant lest we be overtaken with surfeiting and drunkenness or the cares of this life to be chaste and pure in heart to mortifie our members that are on the Earth fornication uncleanness inordinate affection and evil concupiscence to abstain from lasciviousness foolish talking wanton and unseemly jesting to cut off our right hand and pluck out our right eye if it prove an offence to us to take just measures of our selves as well as others to be content with our portion to do those things which are venerable grave and beseeming our condition and employment which if it be not according to our desires not to repine or be dejected at it if it be not to be transported with vain joy much less with pride and contempt of our neighbours And after all these and such like incomparable Lessons He teaches us to suffer any thing for well doing to bear all worldly troubles valiantly and with a magnanimous heart to despise reproaches nay to rejoyce when our names are cast out as evil for his name sake in patience to possess our Souls and not to be weary in well doing nor faint in our minds but to endure chastening to persevere and suffer with long patience to stand fast in the faith to quit our selves like men and to be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might To all which duties he urges us likewise by the purest the most spiritual the noblest and most Divine Arguments He does not press us with such low and poor motives as the hope of Riches though he promise us things convenient or of Greatness or of Fame and Glory either while we live or when we are dead but propounds his own example to us and the example of all the Saints that are gone before us and quickens us with the hope of Immortality when we depart this life and assures us at present of the friendly protection of Angels and of the joys of the Holy Ghost which none of those shall fail to receive who are not inticed nor affrighted from their duty but resolutely hold out in their Christian warfare and overcome And if any man say that several Philosophers taught excellent things and gave Rules of a vertuous life and yet it does not prove the best of them to be so great as these Witnesses are brought to demonstrate our Saviour was The Answer is that none of them delivered such a complete Rule of holy living as our Lord hath done none of them touched the heart with such powerful reasons and Divine motives nor did any of them write without some mixture of folly or themselves exactly perform that which they taught others Besides that none of them ever had the confidence to pretend to that quality wherein our Saviour came which you shall see presently is of great force to prove such an Holy Person as he was to be indeed what he pretended the Son of God II. But first let us a little consider the second sort of PURITY that of the Life in which our Lord Jesus far out-stript all others He did not only preach after that manner I have now related but so he lived and became a complete pattern of that which he taught He was a LIVING LAW as Lactantius calls him * Lib. 4. Instit C. 25 to all his Disciples whom he taught by Himself and not merely by his Lectures of Piety Other Teachers had conceived in their minds and painted in their Orations a vertue that was no where to be seen for they were not able as the same Author else-where speaks to confirm by present Examples that which they asserted in their Doctrine Their Auditors might still say that no body could live according to their prescriptions because no body ever did Behold therefore our Saviour comes to do and not only to preach the will of God And so holy pure and free from all blame were all the Actions of his life that his greatest Enemies could lay nothing to his charge but only certain words and those such as contained most perfect truth as he proved by his actions and many other ways He was the Lamb of God without spot and without blemish as S. Peter speaks 1 Pet. i. 19. He offered himself by the eternal Spirit without spot unto God ix Hebr. 14. His whole life was such a fair example of that Piety Humility Charity Gentleness Forgiveness Peaceableness Patience and all other vertues which he taught that God restored him to life again after they had crucified him and put him to death because there was no fault in him He was frequent in Prayer to God and sometimes continued therein a whole night together Upon all occasions he gave him thanks He loved his Glory and the Good of mankind more than his life He went about doing good And he taught his Family to be as kind and tender-hearted as himself He was meek and lowly in heart When he was abused He was dumb as a Lamb before the shearers so opened he not his mouth He was full of respect towards Magistrates and Governours very sweet and affable towards the poorest people exceeding kind and compassionate towards his envenomed enemies and perfectly contented in the lowest condition When Foxes had holes and Birds had nests but He not where to lay his head none could be found more chearful thankful and well pleased than he was And as for his Fortitude Courage Constancy Resignation and all other suffering vertues there never was any thing comparable to them For he endured the Cross and despised the shame and contentedly took the contradiction of sinners saying Father not my will
not here proving Jesus Christ to be a true man consisting of Body and Soul like ours and that this Body and Soul were so separated that he was really dead but something far greater and more excellent viz. that he was God's Son which the Water and Bloud that came out of his side were no competent argument to prove That Water and Bloud therefore if they have any relation to these Witnesses here mentioned were only emblems and adumbrations of these two grand Proofs of our Saviours being the CHRIST viz. his PURITY and innocence which appeared in his whole preaching and life to which the Water bears a resemblance and his constant confession of the truth even unto the DEATH which was lively represented by that Bloud These two flowed from him with such force that they have overspread the world with his Faith and the knowledge of the glory of the Lord hath covered the Earth even like to the waters which cover the Sea 2. The second Observation is That they who by apostasie from the Faith of Jesus denied him to be the CHRIST after they had acknowledged it are said to tread under foot the Son of God and to count his BLOUD an unholy thing x. Heb. 29. Which expression could not be justified if the Apostles had not lookt upon his Bloud as an unreproveable Witness to him For the meaning is that those men who fell back to their old Religion again and deserted Christianity made nothing of the Testimony which God had given of his Son As for his Resurrection they did not give any credit to that though so strongly attested but TROD UNDER FOOT the Son of God as if he lay still in his grave and as for his Bloud which was shed at his Death they look'd upon that as if it were but COMMON BLOUD so the word UNHOLY may be taken or rather as if it were the bloud of a malefactor which may be properly called impure and unholy Which is the reason that he says they shall be judged worthy of sorer punishment than the contemners of Moses because these men in effect made Jesus who was infinitely greater than He to be a mere Impostor a false Prophet and a Blasphemer who had done things worthy of the vilest death They justified those that murdered him and crucified the Son of God afresh as it is in a parallel place vi Hebr. 6. by disowning him and denying that he was the CHRIST For this was to acknowledge that he was justly put to death for taking upon him that office and that if he were upon Earth again they saw no reason why they should not treat him as the Jews had done This was the sence of every Christians apostasie it renewed the charge of imposture against Jesus and put him as the Apostle there speaks to open shame They did as bad as publickly declare him to be a deceiver and that he deserved to lose his life in that infamous manner wherein he suffered upon the Cross For which cause such vilifiers of Jesus deserved to partake in that judgment and fiery indignation which he says was ready to devour the adversaries ver 27. that is those who actually crucified Christ and now persecuted his servants for they had his BLOUD in the same contempt and made no more of it than of the bloud of one of the Thieves that were crucified with him Now from hence it follows that his BLOUD testified his innocence as I have shown and was look'd upon by others as well as by S. John to be a witness that he was the Son of God Else they could not have been guilty of so great a crime and faln under such an heavy punishment who despised his Bloud and were no more moved by it than if it had been common like the bloud of other men nay relinquished him as if his bloud had been profane like that of the malefactors who suffered with him This was their condemnation that they cast such a vile reflection on that bloud which heretofore they thought so powerful that thereby they were SANCTIFIED that is perswaded to devote themselves to his service as the only means to obtain remission of their sins which they had by his Bloud This is a sign that they look'd upon it once not only as a thing most sacred but also most powerful to make men believe in Jesus And this increased the sin and guilt of dishonouring his Bloud by Apostasie because it was of great authority and force to draw men to the Faith and to preserve them in it which by forsaking the Faith it confirmed they made to be of no efficacy nor consideration at all Moses his Covenant and Law were sealed only by the bloud of Bulls and Goats and yet those men suffered death without mercy as the Apostle here observes who either fell away to other gods or did any thing presumptuously in contempt of his precepts By which we may judge says he what they are like to suffer a much sorer punishment sure who renounce the Christian Religion which was confirmed by a much greater person and by a more noble bloud even by the bloud of the Mediator of this better Covenant Who did more than Moses ever thought of to attest what he delivered and to prove that he came from God and that all his promises should be made good for he sealed them with his own bloud and therefore might justly expect that men should prove more faithful to him and remain firmer in his obedience at least not be so presumptuous as to despise him by reproaching his precious Bloud Now if his Bloud was not an argument to induce men to believe and to continue in the state of Christianity they could not be charged with such disrespect to it when they left this Religion nor be punished for the undervaluing or rather scorning that which was of no force to tye them to the Faith But if they were guilty of great contempt of it and were to suffer sorely extream sorely upon this account that they gave no more reverence to his bloud then we ought to conclude the Apostles thought it of great efficacy to engage their belief and make them constantly adhere to Christ by the witness that it bare to him Which testimony together with the rest those apostates plainly rejecting they became liable to a far heavier condemnation than any formerly could fall into for affronting Christ and all those who were his Witnesses In short they who did not look upon his bloud as Holy must condemn him for a Malefactor But they that did confess the sacredness of it which appears many ways must needs acknowledge him not to have been a Criminal as the Jews pretended but the Son of God as at his death he professed himself A PRAYER I DO again acknowledge thee O blessed Jesus to be the Son of God most High I behold thy Glory shining through the blackest cloud of thy shameful sufferings Then thou appearedst to be the chosen of God
know you will not pass such a judgment on your own disciples and therefore this fact of theirs condemns your partiality and proves my Divine vertue Nay the Devils themselves we find 5. were so astonished at this power which they felt in his name that thereupon they acknowledged him to be the CHRIST For that 's their meaning when they confessed him to be the HOLY ONE of God i. Mark 24. And so S. Luke expounds it iv 41. The Devils also came out of many crying out and saying Thou art the Christ the Son of God And 6. the most unprejudiced people who could not be worse than Devils took this miraculous work of the SPIRIT to be an argument of it xii Matth. 23. Then was brought unto him one possessed with a Devil blind and dumb and he healed him insomuch that the blind and dumb both spake and saw And all the people were amazed and said Is not this the Son of David By that name they called their KING whom they expected with the power of working more miracles than any Prophet before had done vii John 31. And therefore 7. when Cornelius and his company were desirous to hear of S. Peter all things that were commanded him of God x. Acts 33. he refers them to this in the first place after he had mentioned his being anointed with the Holy Ghost and with power as an argument why they should believe in Jesus that he went about doing good and healing all that were oppressed of the Devil And he offers himself together with others as witnesses of all things that he did both in the land of the Jews and in Jerusalem Which were the more wonderful I must add 8. in the last place because he was a person of such mean education Nothing like to Moses in this who was bred up in Pharaohs Court and acquainted with all the learning of the Egyptians But Jesus was bred up privately and in an homely manner having no advantages at all from a liberal institution Which was the cause that the people of his own Country who knew how he had been trained up were astonished saying xiii Matth. 54 55. Whence hath this man this wisdom and these mighty works Is not this the Carpenter's Son is not his Mother called Mary and his brethren James and Joses and Simon and Judas And his sisters are they not all with us whence then hath this man all these things That is do not we know him and all his kindred How comes he to be wiser and more powerful than they His parentage is poor his breeding was in a Carpenters house he never learnt of any of the Doctors and Masters in Israel nor was otherways disciplin'd than we our selves where then did he learn his skill and who gave him this power This was a just cause of astonishment but none at all of offence as S. Matthew in the following words ver 57. tells us it proved That which made them stumble should have rather drawn them to him and wrought faith in them when they saw such wonderful things done and such excellent things said by one that could not have them unless it were from God It could be no part they might easily think of the Devils craft to dispossess himself and therefore they ought to have concluded that he was the enemy of the Devil and indeed the destroyer of him whom God promised to send into the world And so they would have concluded had not their eyes been blinded with the splendour and pomp of this world and with the love of riches and such like things Which made them readier to follow a man that by the force of arms and their assistance promised to subdue the Roman Legions than him who by one word speaking they saw could cast out Legions of Devils Which naughty temper of mind is that which still prejudices men against the faith and makes their hearts indisposed to receive Christianity They prefer the world before God and love their bodies better than their souls otherwise they would find themselves inclined to believe in the name of Christ If they considered what God is what honour is due unto him and what it is that will make a Soul truly happy and desired this above all other things they would presently see that none ever glorified God so much as our Saviour none so plainly taught the world what worship honour and observance is to be given to him none ever so contrived the improvement and happiness of our immortal Spirits and so they would be disposed to hearken with due reverence and serious attention to what these Witnesses say concerning him Nay did they but prudently consult the good of their bodies only and had respect not merely to their present satisfaction but to their perpetual felicity it would certainly provoke them to examine carefully the Testimony which God hath given him because he promises to change these vile bodies and make them glorious by that power whereby he is able to subdue all things to himself And there is not the least reason to doubt of his power now that he is in Heaven since it was so miraculous while he was here upon Earth that He frequently raised the dead Which is the second thing of which I am to speak a few words II. And there is nothing of this kind like to that of Lazarus his rising to life again after he had been dead four days and was already so far putrified as his friends thought that they disswaded our Saviour from having his Tomb opened lest it should prove offensive and noisom to him For with this S. John concludes all that he had to say of our Saviours miraculous works there being nothing that could be thought of beyond it For it never entred into the mind of any man to think that a person really dead as Lazarus undoubtedly was could be restored to life by any power but that which gives us life the power of Almighty God And therefore our Lord plainly designed this as the last thing he could do for their satisfaction while he was on Earth to prove that he was the Son of God Else Lazarus had not died but he would have gone and prevented it as he did in many other cases For when he heard that Lazarus was sick he would not stir from the place where he was notwithstanding the love he had both for him and for his two sisters So S. John observes when he tells us xi John 5 6. Now Jesus loved Martha and her sister and Lazarus When he had heard therefore that he was sick he abode two days still in the same place where he was This is a strange reason for his making no more haste being at a great distance also from him One would think that he should have said THEREFORE he began his journey presently into Judea that he might come time enough to save him whom he loved But he resolved the quite contrary because the Son of God was to be glorified
visible shape while he lived There is not one of his own followers as the learned Mr. Pocock assures us who makes any mention so much as of the Pigeon which as we commonly tell the tale was wont to flie to his ear as if it whispered some revelation to him There was not that small imitation of what is recorded of our Saviour Much less was there any such glorious body seen descending on him as that which came down like a Dove and crowned our Saviours head The Heavens never opened to him nor was he transfigured in the presence of any of his disciples Where are the Books that can tell us of any such thing or so much as of any miracles which he wrought to confirm his Doctrine He himself says in his Alcoran more than once that he was not sent with Miracles but with Arms. And though his followers afterward pretended that he did work miracles yet they never pretend they were done frequently and most of them are very ridiculous and useless and their learned men do not at all rely upon them nor think he proved his Prophecy by this means There is no news of any blind-mans eyes that he opened or of his making the lame to walk or cleansing a poor Leper much less of a dead-mans hearing his voice and arising out of his grave and of such like things done by his followers which we are sure from eye-witnesses our Lord did and gave those that testifie it power to do the same wonders And if we go to enquire of the Witness of Water in Holiness of Doctrine and Life what a sink of dirty stuff is his Alcoran The pleasures of the flesh are the highest that he had in his thoughts to propound to his followers His Heaven is no better than a sensual Paradise But as for the joys of the Holy Ghost or a taste of any spiritual delights he seems to have had no more sense of them than a Swine How should he being an impure lascivious beast himself who had seventeen Wives besides Concubines And not content with these took another mans Wife the wife of his servant Zaid and pretended a revelation for it Which he had the impudence to say told him that God was not only well pleased he should have her but took it ill he had abstained so long from her out of fear what the world would say Whereas he ought to have feared God rather than men What could be expected from such a Brute but such a Book as he has left a mere heap or dunghill rather of filthy nonsence And if we enquire further for the Witness of BLOUD we can find none but the Bloud of other men which bears witness that he was a false Prophet For his business was to shed the bloud of his opposers rather than to give his own as a testimony to the truth The sword was his principal weapon to subdue men to his belief He did not perswade them by arguments but compelled them to yield by force of arms Go says he in the xix Section of the Alcoran and kill all those who will not be converted He was a Murderer as well as a Lyar like the first Deceiver of all so that to save their Bodies rather than their Souls his neighbours found it the best way to submit themselves to his yoke Did our blessed Saviour use any such violence Did he come with a sword in his hand and say Yield your understandings or your throats No he came not to destroy mens lives but to save them He would not let his Apostles call for fire from Heaven to consume any body though it had been as easie for him to do as to send the Holy Ghost in fiery tongues upon them He never did any miracle to the hurt of the smallest living creature though it would have been recompensed by a multitude of noble cures that he wrought for their owners It did not please him that one of his servants cut off but the ear of Malchus though it was in his defence He was the good shepherd who would not kill the sheep but laid down his life for them This we commemorate perpetually to his eternal praise whereas the false Prophet hath left no other memory but that he was more like a Wolf than a Shepherd for he came for nothing but to worry and destroy But he doth not deserve so much regard as to be thus seriously confuted were not all this said rather to make us sensible of the excellence of our own Religion than to disprove that which was taught by him Whose greatest wisdome was that he chose to begin to make his Proselytes and plant his Religion among a company of rude People who were more like Beasts I told you than Men. If they had been Men of any understanding one cannot imagine how they should have given credit to such ill contrived tales as those which he invented But we are told by his own followers that the People of Mecca a place famous for his Tomb at this day could neither write nor read but were perfectly ignorant Nay Mahomet himself was wont to say that he was sent by God to an illiterate Nation Which they expound of the Arabians about Mecca who were not People of the Book as they call the Jews and Christians but as ignorant as they came out of their Mothers Womb says one of their own Authors having never learnt the art of writing or of casting account Which shows how vastly different the beginnings of that Religion were from those of ours which was preached to the wisest and politest People upon Earth as that was to the most rude and stupid The Greeks and Romans soon saw their Countries filled with this new Doctrine Nor was it in the power of their Philosophers or Orators to stop its progress But there were no such Creatures among those wild Arabians and those Philosophers who arose afterwards of this Sect were ashamed it may be made appear by good proofs of the Alcoran So destitute they are of any thing whereby to support the Religion of that Book that they are fain to fly to the Gospel of Christ from thence to gain some authority to it There says the Saracen in Theodorus Abucara Christ wrote these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I send you a Prophet called Mahomet but Christians have blotted it out of their Books For He they fancy is the Paraclet whom our Saviour promises and it is one of the Names they bestow upon this Impostor in their writings who pretends our Saviour foretold his coming as many have observed out of the lxi Chapter of the Alcoran * Hacksp Dialog de Passione Domin Which shows how hard they are put to their shifts when they fly to us for refuge and when Ignorance is the greatest security and support to their Religion at this day It is very remarkable that as our Religion was propagated among the wisest and most learned Nations by the most illiterate men
study and labour with these the Devil baits his hooks to catch Souls and they who do not bite at one will be nibling at another They that are not tempted by the first to gluttony and drunkenness fornication and such like filthiness feel the second perhaps incline them to covetousness and the sordid love of Money with a thirst and greediness of another kind Or if they can escape and despise these they may notwithstanding be in danger to be carried away with the humor of prodigality and affectation of vain-glory or ambition of Dignities which is attended with emulation envy and other dangerous Vices As the African Beast which some write of is caught with Musick and suffers its feet to be fettered while it listens to the Lessons that are play'd to it So do the generality of Mankind let their Souls be insnared and led into a miserable captivity by the inchanting voice of pleasure riches or glory Whilst they hearken to the bewitching melody which some of these court them withall they are taken in the mighty Hunter's net and become a prey to him that lurks for Souls and seek whom he may devour And it has not been in the power of the wisest Charmers that ever were in the World to open the eares of the most of men and to convey the sense of better things into them All the Philosophy and Learning that was so famous in former Ages could never obtain such numerous chearful and obedient Auditors as the Syren Songs which these three sing in Mens cares have always sound When the World therefore by that wisdome knew not God it pleased God says S. Paul 1 Cor. i. 21. by the foolishness of preaching to save them that believe The faith of Christ directs and disposes us to avoid all those dangerous rocks on which they split themselves who listen to those deceitful Songs Now that the Son of God is come He pulls our feet out of the net and by his far more powerful charms so stops our ears to those inchantments that there is no entrance for them any more It seemed a foolish thing indeed to the World to believe that the crucified Jesus was the Son of God but where this simple faith prevailed it did more than all the wisdome of the World was able to effect before For it gave them a new understanding and saved them from perishing by making them account it the greatest pleasure and glory and treasures to follow Jesus and do the will of God as he did The World they saw passeth away and the lust thereof if they do not leave us we must at last leave them but he that doth the will of God abideth for ever So those three Heavenly witnesses the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost assure us whose voice as it is most sweet and melodious so it is most powerful to disinchant us and to preserve those who receive their testimony from all the bewitching temptations of those other three the lust of the flesh the lust of the eye and the pride of life Nay here are two Threes of infinitely greater vertue and efficacy to prevail with us than all that the WORLD'S Trinity can offer to us if we will but open our ears and diligently listen to their voice And how can we choose but listen when the Father of Heaven calls to us so graciously when the Word opens his secrets to us and the Holy-Ghost proclaims such an abundant love of God towards us The Water the Bloud the Spirit they also with one consent conspire with those and all together sing this New Song THE SON OF GOD IS COME the Son of God is come This one note of theirs more ravishes than all the pleasures and satisfactions which the WORLD infatuates its followers withall Heaven and Earth cannot speak any thing more moving in our ears than this which again and again salutes them with new joy For what would you have them say would it please you to hear that Infinite Goodness loves us that the Heavens stand open to us and show us their glory that God is willing to receive us up thither that he will make us Heirs of a Kingdom equal with the Angels to hear their Songs and joyn with that Celestial Quire Behold they are all included in this one sentence THE SON OF GOD IS COME GOD HATH GIVEN US HIS SON This is the sweetest Aire that can touch our eares this we can never be weary to hear this strikes our souls if we understand it so gratefully that we cannot but say let us hear that again And therefore after the Father the Word and the Holy-Ghost have blest our ears with this joyful sound here are three more that take it up and repeat it to us with the strongest assurances that we hear the Voice of God himself And the oftner we listen to them and lend them our attention the more frequently I mean we think upon the reasons we have to believe in Jesus the more deaf shall we grow to all the sinful allurements of this World how inviting soever before they have been For my part I think there is more real satisfaction in the very understanding of this one place of Holy Scripture than in all the delights of worldly men What is there I beseech you consider in all their sensualities comparable to the rational gust of what is contained in that one voice of the Father THIS IS MY WELL BELOVED SON IN WHOM I AM WELL PLEASED What Riches are there to be equalled with this treasure of Divine knowledge that God hath bestowed his own Son upon us What honour like to this to be preferred to be the Friends yea the Sons of God Can you hear any thing so delicious as that voice of the WORD To him that overcometh will I give to eat of the tree of life in the midst of the Paradise of God ii Rev. 7. Were there ever any Jewels so precious as the inestimable gifts wherewithall the Holy Ghost hath inriched the Church what Musick is there fit to bear a part with those Hymns and Psalms and spiritual Songs that it inspired the hearts of Christians withall Doth it not even ravish the heart of a pious man to think of them though he do not hear the like in these days What is there in all the broken Cisterns of this World that tastes like the Rivers of living Water that Jesus hath poured out unto us What peace does it speak to us like that which by the Bloud of Jesus is purchased for us Or what power is there in any of this Worlds temptation that can stand before the voice of that SPIRIT which says COME and whosoever will let him take the water of life freely xxii Rev. 17. Certainly in the strength of such a faith so fortified so incouraged by all these Witnesses we may easily tread the WORLD under our feet and make its most mighty temptations crouch to us whereas now for want of this solid faith we
Commandments which to a man that has spoil'd his Soul by following divers lusts are so far from being easie that he thinks them insupportable and impossible to be complied withall but when he has recovered himself by the faith of Christ and hath received the supply of these new and Heavenly principles they become to the very same man not only tolerable but sweet and delightful This faith would not be pleased to be excused from this burden it would take it ill not to draw in the same Yoke with Jesus it naturally makes us of his Spirit who said I delight to do thy will O God For what is it that we believe Is it not that Jesus is the Son of God his well-beloved Son And shall we complain of that work which was the business and the delight of God's best beloved when he was in the world It would be too grievous an accusation of God to think that after he had filled the Earth with joy and gladness for the coming of his Son He should instantly quench it all and turn it into heaviness by a number of such severe and intolerable Commandments as no man can look upon and not be melancholy And what are the grounds of our belief Are they not all that Heaven and Earth can afford us Are we not as sure as God can make us Phy for shame then what a reproach is it that any man should sigh and groan look four and sad as if he had all the burden of Heaven and Earth to carry when he has rather the aid and assistance of both to support and strengthen him under an easie load Certain it is that according to our knowledge and understanding so will be our Faith and according to our faith so will be our strength Now how can there be greater evidence and strength of Reason to induce us to believe than these six Witnesses have given us They fully satisfie our understandings they make it completely rational to acknowledge Jesus to be the Son of God And therefore why should not this Faith thus begot and standing on such sure foundations give us a very great strength courage chearfulness and spirit making difficult things become easie harsh things become sweet and the most tedious stay in this world comfortable by presenting us and that so strongly with the power and glory of the Lord Jesus This Faith you see rests upon these six Columns upon these two rows of Pillars as I may so speak on the one side stands the testimony of the FATHER the WORD and the HOLY GHOST on the other side the testimony of the WATER the BLOUD and the SPIRIT and therefore nothing will be too great a burden to lay upon it it will support any weight and never let us groan much less break under its load All things are EAST as well as POSSIBLE to him that believeth It is the observation of Seneca I remember that nothing is so hard but the mind of man can master it and make it familiar by constant thoughts and pains about it There are no motions so natural but some by labour have restrained them and made the forbearance of them easie and none again so unnatural but by the like daily practice and attention they have brought themselves to the delightful use of them As some have kept long and tedious fasts others perpetual silence and have lived out of the company of all mankind which are examples of the former kind And we see instances of the latter in those who learn to walk and dance upon ropes to work with their feet and to dive into the excessive depths of the Sea And can the mind of man alone when it buckles it self to the business be able to perform such difficult things with ease and satisfaction and yet remain utterly unable to take any contentment in obedience to Christ's Precepts though it be exalted by faith and a faith so strong as these six Witnesses if we attend will work in us May things to which nature is not inclined be accomplished at last and become habitual and we think God too severe to expect from us those duties which are most agreeable to our natures as all the actions of vertue are And shall a weaker power master those hard and unnatural tasks and a power stronger than all others sink under the burden of the most reasonable and in themselves most natural Commandments It cannot but put a considering person into a little indignation to hear men complain of the uneasiness of Christ's yoke when they lay more troublesome and unmerciful burdens upon themselves without any murmuring How can one see men without some impatience contend with swift horses and endeavour to out-run them and yet cry out of the tediousness of the race of God's Commandments Shall any man perswade us that it is not so easie to learn the way of God's testimonies as it is to work with his feet or go upon his hands Shall they make us believe it is so hard a business to bend their wills to God's when we see their bodies made as supple as wax that they may wreath them about at pleasure Can it be half so troublesome to lay a bridle on our tongues as it is never to speak at all O man where is thy Reason what is become of thy Soul that thou groanest in the service of God and canst make a sport of far more grievous things Thy own mind might teach thee better if thou wouldst but hearken to its instructions and therefore what may not God expect from the Faith I am speaking of which is a far more powerful Principle and hath made Men stop the mouths of Lions quench the violence of Fire indure torture and not accept deliverance when it was much weaker than our faith need now be I will ingage that if a man do but use himself frequently to ponder these words of S. John and perswade himself fully upon the testimony of these Witnesses that Jesus is the Son of God He will account it a small business to deny his own will as Jesus did He will never complain that he must refrain from any thing in obedience to him and whatsoever he requires him to do he will esteem it an excessive pleasure For there can remain no doubt in his mind that if he be the Son of God he hath power to help us that he wil ever be assistant to us and bless us because by this faith he dwelleth in us and we in him I have read of one of a Noble Family delicately educated and of a tender health who had a great mind to enter upon a Religious course of life as they speak in the Roman Church but was afrighted out of those thoughts by the apparent difficulty of the exercises wherein he was to be imployed for their ill diet retirement poverty watchings and such like hardships he imagined could not be endured Till one day reading those words of the Psalmist which like a flash of
of Heaven and Earth the Fountain of all that is good and amiable in this world who here entertains us with so many pleasures that by them we may guess what he is able and willing to doe for them who have no greater care then above all things to please him They shall be fixed in a stedfast sight that is enjoyment of him to their infinite satisfaction IV. And if we mark the words of S. John who speaks this more fully and tells us in the place before named we shall see him AS HE IS which he makes the reason and cause of our being like him they will imbolden us still to seek into a farther meaning of this phrase And since we can enjoy nothing without a knowledg of it preceding we are to understand that to see God as he is will be to have our minds filled with a knowledg of him so clear so distinct and strong that it will even turn us into his own Nature Life and Bliss We shall not behold that is know him as we do now by similitudes resemblances and expressions borrowed from other things which is all our natures are here able to bear but by a clear notion of him formed in our minds wherein our hearts will be infinitely pleased and feel his happiness come flowing into them My meaning may be thus explained As it is an imperfect sight of a man which we have in a Picture though drawn by the most curious hand and strongest fancy and the man himself if he stand before a Looking-glass will in a moment draw an Image more like him then the skilfullest Artist can delineate all his life long especially if he never saw the person but onely had a description of him in a book or by report just such is the sight or knowledg that we have of God in this world either by his Word or by his Works or by the Idea's of our own mind a very imperfect thing and much like the picture of a person which we never yet had before our eyes But hereafter when he will be pleased to appear to give us a more immediate sight of him without these helps and present himself to our mind as the face to a glass this will be to know him indeed and to see him as he is Now as the sight of a Friend when he presents himself to the eye doth marvellously refresh and comfort us and there is a sense of pleasure imparted to us in the very beholding a rare beauty which we are not like perhaps to see any more so this Seeing God is no barren thing but instantly infuses the highest satisfaction and delight into pure hearts who by knowing his blessed Nature will find it imprinting it self as it were upon them and making every one of them to be the blessed Image of it Look what God is that they by the sight of him shall be He will dwell in them as the image of a thing does in the glass And they shall be possessed of him of his life of his joys by having a sensible perception of the Wisedom the Goodness the Purity and all the other Perfections that shine in himself V. Or if this be too hard to be understood let us content our selves to know that to SEE GOD as he is is to enjoy him as he is in heaven that is according to that manner and measure wherein he shews and manifests himself in those celestiall places Pious Souls shall really perceive all the effects of his Bounty Wisedom and Power which are known and communicated in that other world Which as it is higher then this so hath more of God to be seen in it then can be discovered here All that the holy Angels see and enjoy of him all that Good which he lets forth out of himself in that glorious place wherein above all other he is said to be shall be the portion of those happy Souls who may be said therefore to see him AS HE IS They shall not enjoy him in so low a manner as the highest and the most highly beloved persons have enjoyed him in this world where there is but little of him but in the noblest manner that he can be enjoyed so as the heavenly Ministers yea our ever-Blessed Lord are made partakers of him For when our Lord prays that his Disciples may behold or see his glory which the Father had given him xvii Joh. 24. his meaning is according to what I have said of the word Seeing that they might have their share at last with him in his Happiness and be admitted to take a part with him in that supreme Dignity to which he was ready to be advanced And thus when St. John invites others into the Christian Society telling them that their fellowship was with the Father and his Son jesus Christ 1 Joh. i. 3. it is as much as to say that they could no-where be so happy because it is the singular priviledge of Christian people to be admitted unto a partnership with God and our Saviour in their most happy life and to have hopes and expectation to partake with them in their eternall Bliss VI. Which may very well give me occasion to adde that since Grace Mercy and Peace come to us now from God the Father Son and Holy Ghost we may hope in this Vision of God to have as well a clear Knowledg of that ever-Blessed Trinity as a full communication from their ineffable Love We shall understand that Holy Mystery which now the sense of our weakness forbids us to pry into and be able perhaps to unfold how the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost is one God without any diversity or separation of nature Epist cxii ad Paulinam cap. 19. Homil. de Martyre Mamante as St. Austin expresses this Mystery which I durst not in my former Treatise adventure to explain For St. Basil had taught me to mark this in those words of our Saviour x. Joh. 27. My sheep hear my voice that he says 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they hear not question or dispute They believe he is the Word of God but do not ask how nor say if he was alway then he was not begotten or if he was begotten then he was not alway These are not the words of the Sheep of Christ who receive his voice and enquire no farther And I had learnt also from a great Divine of our own Nation D● Jackson Pres to Cathol Church to whose grave judgment I thought there was a greater veneration due then to the little forward Censurers of this Age that the Doctrine of the Holy Trinity is an Argument more fit for Meditation in Prayers and Soliloquies then for Controversie or Scholastick Discourse We believe one Divine Nature in three Persons and that the Divine Nature in the Person of the Father required Satisfaction for the Transgressions of men against his Holy Laws and that the same Divine Nature in the Person of the Son undertook to make
Satisfaction for us in taking our Nature on him whereby he had by right of Consanguinity the authority and power of redeeming us and the same Divine Nature in the Person of the Holy Ghost doth approve and seal as he speaks this happy and ever-blessed compromise But what it is to be a Person and what manner of distinction is between the Persons in the Blessed Trinity are points Knowledge of Jesus Christ Chap. xxv saith he which I never had a mind to dispute after the manner of the Schools but was always ready to admire what I knew not to express For what is it that we can say of God who can conceive so little of him It is an ancient saying of Plato that to conceive God is difficult to express him is impossible But he should rather have said Greg. Naz. Orat. 34. in the opinion of a greater man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is impossible to express him and more impossible to conceive him For that which we can conceive in our mind we may declare in words if not indifferently well yet at least obscurely provided they that hear us are not dull of understanding But to comprehend in our mind so great a thing as God is utterly impossible not onely to the dull and stupid 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but to the most sublime Souls and those who are lovers of God Alas all that comes to us from him now Ib p. 548. is but onely a short glance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and as it were a little beam of a great Light We may call it a full knowledge of the Blessed Trinity as Origen * In vi Bom. p. 633. and see Greg. Nazian Orat. 36. p. 594. doth when we can say The Father is Light and in his Light which is the Son we see Light the Holy Ghost But how far short is this of what we long to know of these Three in One How much are we in the dark still And what a satisfaction will it therefore be to see them clearly shining on us and discovering their Blessed Nature to us which hitherto no man hath been able to find out and whether ever any shall find let those inquire who have a mind In my opinion Greg. Naz. ibid. saith the forenamed Father then we shall find when this Divine this God-like thing our Mind and Reason shall be intimately joyned with its heavenly kindred and the Image shall return to its Archetype or originall Patern of whose acquaintance it is now so desirous And this seems to me to be that which is so much discoursed of to know as we are known Now we know onely in part saith St. Paul to whose words he hath respect 1 Cor. xiii 11 12. we behold rather the images of things then the things themselves and those also but darkly and in a cloud but then we shall see face to face and behold God so clearly that we shall know him as he knows us He hath a double knowledge says Elias Cretensis upon those words of Nazianzen one whereby he simply knows all things and another whereby he knows his own Image when it is not quite spoil'd which is accompanied with love and delight And in this latter sense Gregory here understands it For look how much serenity and stilness void of all perturbation God beholds in his own Image so much of his knowledge will he bestow upon it giving to every one a measure of illumination answerable to its purity and holiness Then we may hope to discover those things which are Secrets now and no more understood by us then a Child understands the thought of the wisest men For if St. Paul himself as St. Chrysostome discourses upon those words he who knew so much compares himself to an infant while h● was in this state what may we think of our selves how childish are ou● thoughts and how like children do w● speak about Divine matters especially of the transcendent Nature of God th● Father Son and Holy Ghost But how resplendent then must the conception be of our grown estate since in this infancy of knowledge God hath revealed so much of himself to us beyond the thoughts of former times If these things be so bright which we see now but in a glass and obscurely too think what the sight of the face will be And the better to understand this difference and to dart a ray of light saith he though but duskish into thy mind look upon those things under the Law now that Grace shines Before Grace came they appear'd great and wonderfull but hear now what S. Paul saith of them after Grace 2 Cor. iii. 10. that even those glorious things had no glory in this respect by reason of the glory that excelleth Such is the difference between the knowledg we now have and that which we shall have hereafter even what we see of God here though as S. Paul says so exceeding glorious hath no light in it in this respect by reason of that light which transcendeth And therefore if our Saviour pronounced his Disciples blessed because their eyes saw and their ears heard such things as the old Prophets and just men had long'd to see and hear but could not attain that happiness how much more blessed shall we find our selves when we come to see things as much beyond what is now manifested as this Revelation is beyond the ignorance of former Ages We shall both wonder at our childish presumption in offering to talk of things so much above our reach and wonder at the grace of the ever-blessed Trinity which hath conducted us notwithstanding to the sight of their undivided Glory VII But it is time to put an end to this and therefore I shall say no more of this promise of being so happy as to SEE GOD but that there is a sense to be made of it which will admit the Body as well as the Soul to a share with him in those supreme Felicities For when an exceeding great Splendour beyond any created Light appeared to Holy men in ancient times they called it by the name of God who was hereby represented to be present with them and the beholding this is called Seeing God As when Moses saw the Bush in a flame and from thence a light broke forth at noon-day as Greg. De vita Mosis p. 172. Nyssen speaks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 brighter then that of the Sun we reade that he thought of approaching to behold with his eyes the wonder of that light but which was more wonderfull as the same Father goes on he had his ears illuminated with its beams 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the voice of that light forbad him to come near the mountain Whereupon he presently apprehended that there was a Divine Presence in the Bush and it is said He hid his face out of reverence and a holy dread and was afraid to look upon God iii. Exod. 6. Thence this Mountain is called the mount of
to which our Faculties shall be advanced and impowered which may be as much as God pleases so certainly will the fulness and the overflowing measure of the delight be which rises and falls according to the alterations that are in in us for in GOD there is none at all To all this I have one Consideration more to adde that the Soul as you heard before by knowledge becomes in a manner what it knows not indeed by being changed into the object but by receiving the object into it self As we see some Bodies admit others so intirely into them that they have all the qualities of the nature which they have assumed iron for instance in the fire becomes red and warms or burns according as other bodies approach it so our Minds by the knowledge they have of things are after a sort united to them and partake so far of their qualities that Heaven and Earth do not differ more then two Souls do who have fixt their thoughts the one on Earthly the other on Heavenly things And therefore when we shall come to know God face to face the sight of him will be nothing less then a full possession of him a kind of becoming what he is in a true and reall as Divines speak though not essentiall likeness to him in Wisedom Righteousness Goodness Immortality and I may adde Power too because we shall perfectly command our selves and have our present unruly thoughts and affections in a due subjection to his sovereign Will For if as the Apostle saith by beholding now without a veil but in a glass the Glory of the Lord Christ we are changed into the same Image from glory to glory 2 Cor. iii. 18. then much more when we shall come without the help of words and writings to behold the Face of God himself we shall be transformed into his image and by being assimilated to his Divine Nature be made partakers of the joys and pleasures which are inseparable from it And if the transfigur'd Humanity of Christ as Anselm * in Matt. xvii meditates in the company of two Saints gave such delight when it was seen but for a point of time O how great will the pleasure be of seeing the Deity among the Quires of Angels If Peter beholding the glorified Humanity was affected with such a joy that he desired never to part with that sight what shall we think of those who shall be counted worthy to see the Divinity We may ask the Question as oft as we please but can no more give an Answer to it now then the Disciples could tell till they beheld it on the holy Mount what it was for their Master to be transfigured Then we shall understand it when we come to the High and Holy place where Jesus is of which that Mountain was but a figure For the present we must be content if we can raise up our minds to some small conceptions of its greatness by such considerations as these O● which I have the longer insisted because they lay the foundation of what follows and lead our thoughts to the easier understanding of it II. And if the nature of this LIFE be farther examined you will find the Mind is not the onely Faculty that shall be gratisied but the Will shall conceive a Love as great as the Knowledge of which I have discoursed For as God is the highest object of the Understanding being the Prime Truth so he is the chiefest object of the Will being the First and Best Good And therefore as the Understanding shall then ●ost clearly know him so the Will in like manner shall most ardently love him and find perfect satisfaction in that Love There is a necessary connexion between these things and it cannot be otherwise but that from the best Good clearly known there will flow the greatest Love drawing along with it the greatest delight and the most perfect repose And therefore to SEE GOD virtually contains in its notion both Love and Delectation with Rest or Satisfaction Love naturally flows from thence as from its fountain and the other naturally flow from Love Which is the highest act of that Faculty which we call the Will as knowing and contemplating is of the Understanding Desire indeed is the first Motion of it when any thing is apprehended to be good for us but that will there be quenched in possession and enjoyment and no more of it can be conceived to remain then a longing after the continuance and increase of this Happiness which yet will be so certain that we shall be rather confident then desirous The Will therefore having such a glorious object always before it will be wholly imploy'd in Love and spend it self without any decay in flames of affection towards this Universall Good which shines so fairly and brightly in its eyes It will apply it self to the enjoyment of it with as great a vehemency as it can and laying its mouth as St. Austin teaches me to speak to the Spring of all happiness do more then taste the sweetness of it We may expect to have it filled with those delicious pleasures which we know attend on Love and which in that state will be proportionable to the greatness of the Good that is embraced and to the strength and ardency of the embracement And whereas here in this world men are wont to love beyond all reason whereby their love becomes adulterate and is mixed with so many discontents that it proves but a bitter-sweet There our Understanding as you have heard will be in its full growth and highe●● pitch so that as nothing which is reasonable shall be omitted to be done nothing likewise shall be done that is unreasonable This Love will be grounded upon the clearest Judgment this Flame kindled by the purest Light so that there will be no ●nquiet or trouble in it but perfect rest and peace And whereas in this world mens affections flow to things that are not ●ea● so big as themselves i. e. as 〈…〉 desires and so they languish and faint and fall sick even in the enjoyment of the best good that it affords because they find it is not a supply proportionable to their want or to their expectations There will be no such emptiness nor want of satisfaction in those celestial enjoyments because we shall embrace not onely our proper good but that which is commensurate to our desires and beyond our hopes Our Affections will not fall then upon that which cannot sustain the whole weight of them but feeling themselves born up to the greatest height of Love by a Good so full that it will leave no room for complaint or uneasiness they will enjoy the most solid Rest and Satisfaction Do but conceive then in your minds what a pleasure it is here in this Life to Love and to be Beloved and you will have some notion whereby to take a measure of the LIFE we are speaking of which will consist in such mutuall Love and delightfull
could you but at once behold all the blessings that are crouded into every moment what admiration would it raise up in your hearts what a volume of praises would you be able to compose and how much sweeter would this one act of lauding and praising God be then the enjoyment of all the good things you praise him for Raise up your minds then to conceive the height of those Praises that will be continually springing and bubbling up from thankfull hearts and always filling their mouths when they shall be able to shoot their thoughts down to the very bottom of their days and see all the curious Providences of God about them all the favours they have enjoyed and all the dangers they have escaped as they passed through the tumultuous Sea of worldly affairs O what Hallelujahs will it create when these shall be represented thick together or stand at once before us and when we shall not onely look upon the past loving-kindnesses of God in one train of thoughts but in the next behold all our present enjoyments the quiet shoar where we are landed with the riches and pleasures of the Heavenly Country and when we shall also think again of those that are still future which are always beginning and never ending always present and always to come This sure will make the voice of praise more loud and shrill and every note so sweet that it will give the most gratefull touch unto the heart Look upon the little Birds and hearken how they chirp and sing in the wide and spacious air where they have no limits set to their liberty and then think what a chearfull life they lead in comparison with one that is perpetually coup'd up in a cage and spends many lonesome days and melancholick nights in that solitude And look again upon your own Souls which we think are capable of the highest pleasures and cannot you conceive a little how delightfull they will find it to be always singing in the vastest liberty and freedom to be spreading their wings in the boundless Light to which God will bring them and to be uttering their joys as they see themselves incompassed on all sides with innumerable objects of contentment O how infinitely will it transcend all that they are capable of while they are imprisoned or rather pinioned in this body though one moment of those Joys which are sometimes felt here by holy Souls is not to be exchanged for all that the world can offer in its stead And these Songs will be made the more melodious by the company that shall joyn together in the most harmonious consort All the Saints and Angels will make up but one happy Quire and will all strive we may imagine with an holy emulation to excell each other and without any envy contend who shall sing the loudest and sweetest praises to our Creatour and Redeemer And what delight may we conceive will they take in the delicate strains of each other How will they be pleased to hear their own voices accompanied with the hymns of so many celestiall creatures How will the whole number be even rapt out of themselves by the melting airs of the whole Quire when they all lift up their voices together as those myriads of holy ones which St. John saw v. Rev. 11. acknowledging the Lamb worthy to receive power and riches and wisedom and strength and honour and glory and blessing which as he says v. 13. all good Christians even in this world delight to ascribe unto him that sits upon the throne and to the Lamb for ever and ever The Pagans had some little sense of this pleasure as we may learn from Metrodorus himself who though an Epicurean Lib. v. Strom. p. 614. yet in these words as Clemens Alexand observes spoke divinely Remember O Menestratus who art born mortall and hast received a life which will have an end that ascending with thy Soul even till thou comest to eternity and the infinity of things thou shalt see both things to come and things that have been For according to Plato we shall contemplate with the happy Quire 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the blessed Vision and Spectacle Where we attending upon Jupiter and others upon other Gods shall be admitted if it be lawfull to speak it to celebrate the most blessed Mysteries Which we shall joyfully observe being intire and insensible of any of those evills which expected us in our latter days And we shall be admitted to the mysterious contemplation of those perfect and steady sights in pure light being our selves pure and disingaged from this body which we carry now about with us to which we are tied as fast as an oyster is to its shell They felt it appears by these words very strong motions in their Souls after a sight of those things to which they could not reach while they were in these Bodies And they had a faint hope also that when they were got loose from these shackles they should neither be confined nor clouded but in pure light and liberty rejoyce and be glad in the love of their gods who they expected would admit them to the knowledge of such secrets as they imparted onely to their Friends For that 's the meaning of celebrating the Mysteries which were Secrets that all were not permitted to see and when any had seen they might not reveal but were kept with festivall joys after the most solemn manner by those who were thought worthy of them To the delight of those feasts he compares the joy they should have in the other life which they were wont to promise to all those who were admitted to the sight of their Mysteries There they fansied they should rejoyce in a nobler manner then they did when they followed the pomp of Bacchus and Ceres to whose mysteries this Authour alludes and without that noise and tumult which accompanied such trains behold in quiet the unknown spectacles of the invisible World But if you think that all the expressions I have used borrow too much from sensible things yet remember at least what delightfull touches a sweet voice or other excellent musick hath in any moment given your Soul and conceive then what a pleasure it would be to have two hours continued like that one minute or your spirits so delicately moved for one whole day together By this means you will the better understand the truth of what I have said for just such is the pleasure of those Souls which now strike themselves and touch their own hearts with a lively sense of the Goodness of God towards them and which feel withall the finger of God giving the like stroaks upon them There is nothing so delicious as this nothing so powerfull to ravish them out of their bodies The very strings would crack and the Soul and flesh would dissolve their Union should there remain such a powerfull and delightfull motion for some hours as for a little space they sometime feel transporting them They cannot but
imagine that the prolonged harmony of one day should it bless the Soul would make it account all the pleasures in this world harsh and troublesome and cause it to cry out as the man St. Hierom speaks of who after he had dreamt he was in Paradise called still to those who were about him Set me again in those flowry fields restore me to those pleasant walks O let me enjoy that melody once more let me hear those sweet songs trouble me no more with any of these worldly noises but bless me again with those heavenly touches Lift up your minds then by such thoughts as these to conceive what not one day or year or age but an eternity of such rare ravishing delight would be and that is a part of that blessed LIFE which I am treating of Which by your own confession must needs be more desirable then all that can be expressed by Musick and sweet Airs and melodious Strains and Songs or any such like words which must be acknowledged to be weak and imperfect able to express onely the outward images and shadows of those Divine enjoyments And the more perfectly you digest and frequently excite such thoughts as these the more you will apprehend of this bliss and the more impossible it will be that any thing should hinder you from beginning to be so happy by devoting your selves to a Christian life One part of which is to praise and bless the Lord at all times to bear in your gratefull minds a faithfull remembrance of his benefits and to express it as oft as you can in the most thankfull acknowlegments In which exercise whilst you seriously employ your selves you will be able thereby to know in part what the blessing of Eternall Life is wherewith our Lord hath promised to reward our hearty obedience V. And here it will be seasonable to adde that such will be our Knowledge and Love of God and our true Delight in him that they will produce a most sweet harmony between our Wills and his and move us to yield a free and constant Obedience to him with all our powers The Vnderstanding which now is subject to many mistakes and errours will then shine upon the Will with the rays of the purest Light And the Will which now is oft too refractory will not then in the least rebell against the Understanding but be obsequious to its illuminations And the Affections will be as ready to obey the Will and follow its motions which will all agree with the Mind of God and perfectly correspond to his desires His Will shall be always done and ours shall be but a sweet compliance with his For our knowing him making us like him will take away all liberty from us of doing any thing but what he would have us And the whole appetite being so intirely filled and satisfied as hath been said with this great Good there can be no room left for any inordinate desires but we must eternally cleave to God and cannot be turn'd aside from him any more And it will not prove any trouble to us neither to be thus fast bound to his will and observe all his motions but we shall fly as swiftly about in that free light as the winged Angels now do who never fetch so much as one sigh when they receive his commands but chearfully in every thing obey his pleasure Nay it would be the greatest trouble to us if we should doe otherways We should create a disturbance in the midst of that heavenly Rest should we not thus readily obey him One groan would spoil all the sweet accents of the joyfull Praises which are there continually offered Much more would one act of disobedience be so jarring with that harmony as to make us lose the pleasure of it But there will be no danger of this we shall all be changed as the Apostle speaks not onely in our Body but also in our Spirit and in this as well as all other things that our liberty of indifferency the freedom we now have to chuse good or let it alone yea to chuse evill as well as good shall be turned into a chearfull spontaneous motion towards that which is Good alone The will as some have expressed it shall remain but not the choice we shall willingly serve God but not chuse whether we will serve him or no. For that Sight which we shall have of his Beauty will not let us take our eyes off from him and that Love which flows from thence cannot but be exercised by those who have that blessed Sight and they that cannot but see and love so great a Good will not be able to turn their minds and hearts inordinately to any thing else They therefore who shall be accounted worthy of that World to come will be free from Sin and from the fear of sinning whereby they will be secure of perpetuall Blessedness which is necessary to make us perfectly happy For they are very short of it who are in danger or in fear of losing the felicity they enjoy Both these will be far remote from that happy World where they will be fixt in their Happiness because they will be fixt in their Obedience Which as it may grow it is possible still more and more chearfull so it will infuse a greater sense of the Divine Love into their hearts and every act wherein they doe the will of God may be rewarded perhaps with a greater increase of happiness Who would not chuse then to obey God now that hereafter he may not be able to doe otherwise Who would not strive to bring his will in subjection to Christ that he may at last exchange his own will wholly for his the liberty that is of a man for the liberty of the Divine Nature which is always determined by an happy necessity to that which is Good Yea who would not chuse such an happiness as is always it is probable growing more perfect the excellency of which we can never comprehend because it will be growing more excellent A Life so noble that every operation of it makes it more divine It is no disparagement to its worth to say that we cannot at first know all that we shall know nor love so much as we shall be able to love nor possess all the joy of our Lord but it is rather a commendation of it that after such an height of knowledge love and joy as we shall arrive unto at first we shall be advancing to a greater nearness and familiarity with God IV. But it is time to bring this Discourse to a conclusion when I have told you that it is not the Soul onely which will be happy in this Eternall LIFE That word I said at the first imports the supreme felicity of the whole Man and therefore Man consisting of a Body as well as a Soul that must come in for a share in this Bliss and at last be made partaker of it Yet I shall not stay to tell you
Schoolmen imagine is the Aureola or little golden Crown which the Judge will give to rare Vertues By which they mean some accidentall reward superadded to the essentiall Blessedness Like the little crown of gold wherewith the other crown upon the Table of Shew-bread was finished as the Vulg. Lat. renders xxv Exod. 25. from whence this expression seems to be borrowed But that the overplus of reward which Christ will give to some shall consist onely in a peculiar brightness of their body I see no ground to determine because God hath so many other ways to crown the faith and love and hope of those whom he delights to honour It is better to conclude all this discourse with the words of the same Father which follow a little after * Ib. cap. 21. What and how great the spirituall grace of the Body will be because the time is not come to make experiment I am afraid lest all that we say of it be rashly spoken And therefore I shall onely adde of which we may be certain that as Macarius observes whether it be a greater or a lesser glory that we attain we shall all shine together in one most blessed and glorious place His words are these As Birds produce feathers of a different kind Homil. 32. and some fly nearer to the earth others farther off but all fly in one common air or as there is one Heaven which hath many Stars in it some greater then others but all fixed in heaven So the Saints shall be differently planted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in one Heaven of the Divinity and in one invisible country Thither let us all direct our paths thither let us continually aspire saying as he does in another place to which I shall adde the words of another great man O how ineffable are the promises of Christians Macarius Homil. 4. who have such glorious expectations that the Faith and riches of one single Soul cannot be equalled by the glory and beauty of heaven and earth though we take in all their furniture and treasures and variety and goodliness and bravery And yet how fairly do these things shine in our eyes and with what pleasure do we behold their beauty Anselm in Protolog If then the created life be so good how good is that Life which creates If the salvation we receive be so pleasant how sweet is that Salvation which gives all Salvation If that wisedom be so lovely which understands the works of God how lovely is that Wisedom which of nothing contrived them all Finally if there be so many and so great delights in delectable things what and how great is that Delight which is in him that made all things delectable He that shall enjoy this Good what shall he have what shall he not have He shall have what he will and what he would not he shall not have If honour and riches be desired God will make his good and faithful servants rulers over many things Nay they shall be called Sons of God and Gods and where his Son is there they shall be heirs of God and coheirs with Christ If they desire true security there is none like that for certainly they shall be as certain that these or rather this Good shall never by any means be wanting to them as they are certain they shall never leave it of themselves nor God their Lover ever take it away against the will of those he loves nor any thing stronger then He be able to separate them and God They shall rejoyce therefore perpetually And they shall rejoyce as much as they love and love as much as they know And how much O Lord shall they know thee then how much shall they love thee Certainly neither eye hath seen nor ear heard nor hath it entred into the heart of man in this life how much they shall know thee and how much they shall love thee in that I beseech thee O God let me know thee let me love thee that I may rejoyce in thee And if I cannot do it to the full in this life O that I may profit every day untill it come to the full Let thy Knowledge grow in me here and there be made full let thy Love increase and there also be full that here my Joy may in hope be great and there in possession full Amen CHAP. IV. Of the ETERNITY of this LIFE FRom this larger then was at first designed consideration of the nature of this LIFE pass we now to a short Meditation of the ETERNITY of it which indeed is the Crown that God sets upon its head the Circle if I may so speak which wreathing it self about this Happiness makes it to be our sovereign Good And it may not be unworthy our observation that this Eternity of Life is as far above the continuance of all other blessings heretofore promised as the Life it self is LIFE among the Jews according to the letter of their Law signifying onely all earthly good things there was onely a long life not an eternall in the land of Canaan promised to them that kept that Law But quite otherwise the LIFE promised by Christ consisting onely in the enjoyment of spirituall and heavenly blessings it is not a long but an eternall never-ending life in the possession of these good things which he hath assured to us It being but fit that as the Life exceeds that which Moses promised so the duration of it also should as much out-run his as for ever extends it self beyond an Age. Now the word ETERNALL may be conceived to comprehend in it these Three things I. First that there is nothing but LIFE in this state of Blessedness which shall not be interrupted by any dolefull accident Life and Death I told you in the holy language signifie the same with Blessedness and Misery And therefore the Eternity of life must include in its notion a state of pure happiness of mere and unmixed pleasure without any thing that deserves the name of Death to give it the least annoyance There we may hope to be so happy as to know without mistake and to be wise without folly and to increase in knowledge without our present toil to acquire it Love is there without hatred jealousy or envy joy without any sighing or sorrow praises without complaints obedience without reluctance speed and alacrity without dulness and heaviness in one word perfect purity and holiness without spot or blemish to sully the glory of it As this lower region of the air we see is the place of clouds and darkness thunder and lightning storm and tempest but to the dwellings of the Sun and fixed Stars none of these pitchy vapours ascend to obscure their brightness or trouble their peace just so is this World the scene of misery and vexation confusion and disorder our bodies are tossed with severall storms and our Souls many times hurried with more violent tempests the fierce gusts of their own passions but when
us in a great many thoughts and be paid for with much care and solicitude afterward to preserve our contentments which else will be in danger to be lost and leave us the more miserable There will be many also that envy to us our happiness and others perhaps that will endeavour to oppress us and deprive us of it And if we can escape all these troubles yet we must have a sore conflict with our selves and our spirituall enemies which will put us to great pains to keep our selves from being corrupted with the delights of this world or poisoned and infected with the evill examples that are round about us Therefore this present time may well be called the time of our labours after all which there is nothing we have got but must also have an end and we shall be forced quickly to take our leave of it But now in that joyfull Sabbath that is to succeed we shall rest from all these labours and be at no more pains to attain or keep our happiness There will be no danger as I have said of our being despoiled of it No Serpent can creep into that Paradise to tempt and allure us from that great felicity nor shall we be in any danger from our own Flesh nor find our selves in a World where there will be any thing to excite our desires but what we may freely take the fullest satisfaction in By which and all the rest that hath been discoursed you may clearly see there can be nothing wanting to compleat the happiness of that state but onely the never-ceasing duration or continuance of it Now in this as was said at first the Rest we expect in the other world differs from that which God promised the Hebrews in the land of Canaan For by virtue of Moses his Law they had a title onely to a long life in that fruitfull Country in opposition to which as well as to our short life here the Christian Rest is called an everlasting Life an inheritance immortall because incorruptible and undefiled and that fadeth not away reserved in heaven for us 1 Pet. i. 4. So our Lord himself calls it a great number of times in one discourse he had with the stupid Jews Joh. vi where he exhorts them to labour not so much for the meat that perisheth as for the meat that endureth to everlasting life which the Son of man came to give them ver 27. For this is the will he tells them of him that sent him that every one which seeth the Son and believeth on him may have everlasting life ver 40. And because they were still sottishly regardless of what he said he affirms it again with the most vehement asseverations ver 47. Verily verily I say unto you He that believeth on me hath everlasting life And 58. He that eateth of this Bread shall live for ever which is repeated again in sundry other places of the same Chapter And I must tell you for your more ample satisfaction that our Saviour hath taken care to deliver this Doctrine to us in such words as can have no other sense or meaning The word for ever or everlasting in the Old Law sometime signifies onely the duration of severall years or a long compass of time which at last might have an end As the Hebrew servant who had sold himself for six years if when they were at an end he chose not to go free he was to serve his master for ever xxi Exod. 6. that is till the Jubilee if his master lived so long and he were not redeemed nor released And there are many Ordinances of Moses not now to be enumerated which are said to be everlasting because they were to continue till the coming of Christ Now lest any one should imagine that the Life our Saviour speaks of shall be everlasting onely in the same sense a very long continued happiness severall Ages suppose which in conclusion might determine and come to an end he hath prevented such thoughts by using other words besides this of everlasting life that we may be assured it signifies more in the Gospel then it did under the Law that is an Endless Bliss For 1. he not onely tells the Jews in the forenamed Chapter vi Joh. 50. that he was the bread of which if a man did eat he should not die but that whosoever liveth that is every living man and believeth in him shall never die xi Joh. 26. Which is as much as to say He will give us a Life without any death And farther 2. he says that whosoever keeps his saying shall never see death viii 51. Which if it signifie any thing distinct from the former must denote that he shall never be in any danger of death or come near it which in the next words vers 52. is called tasting death How can this be say the Jews since Abraham and the Prophets are dead and thou sayest if a man keep my saying he shall never taste of death That 's the phrase wherein our Saviour's Passion is expressed who tasted death i. e. lay in the grave a while for every man ii Heb. 9. And therefore may signifie here that our Saviour's faithfull Disciples after he hath given them everlasting life shall not die at all no not for the space of three days though afterward they might rise again But I have taken notice of one expression fuller then this for he doth not onely say that they shall not die nor taste of death but 3. that they cannot die any more xx Luk. 36. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There is no possibility after they have attained that life that they should die again for they are equall to the Angels and are the children of God being by the Resurrection begotten to an immortall life Hence it is that the Apostle calls this happy state by the name of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 immortality 2 Tim. i. 10. and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 incorruption ii Rom. 7. and saith that our bodies shall be raised in incorruption 1 Cor. xv 42. and put on immortality ver 53. and bear the image of the heavenly Adam i. e. of our Lord now he is in glory who we know dies no more ver 49. Which all signifie the Body as well as the Soul shall enjoy such a solid state of happiness as cannot moulder or be dissolved but will remain firm and durable like the Authour of it by whom death shall be swallowed up in victory ver 54. i. e. be so perfectly conquered that it shall never recover the least power any more Innumerable Ages shall never put a period to this ETERNALL LIFE but after they are all past the whole Man shall be as fresh and beautifull without any declension or sign of decay as if it were but newly risen and had just then put on its purest robes of glorious Light There will be as full a Good I mean and as great a strength to enjoy it and as perfect a liking also of it
and true Witness the beginning of the Creation of God iii. 14. By the name of AMEN which he gives himself he would have them understand that by him all the promises made to the Church shall undoubtedly be fulfilled according to that of St. Paul 2 Cor. i. 20. In him all the promises of God are Yea and in him Amen He may be believed for he is a Witness who affirms and testifies nothing but the very truth which can never fail because he is the Efficient cause of all things by whom they were at first created and by whom mankind is now repaired and therefore is the Head of all creatures especially of all Christians who shall rise again from the dead to immortall life So I expound the last words the beginning of the Creation of God as Andreas Caesariensis doth who takes in both senses of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as I have of the word Creation which signifies not onely Principium the beginning or originall but Principatum the principality or dominion which the Son of God hath over all creatures of which he is the Authour What may we not expect from so great a Prince who hath such an absolute command over all things And why should we doubt of his Sovereignty who appeared in such an amazing splendour to St. John and proclaimed in these and other such like Titles the supereminent glory of his Majesty Or why shoul● we question his truth who had approved himself so many ways the true and faithfull Witness especially by sending the Holy Ghost as you shall hear presently to bear witness to him according to his promise We ought to rely upon his word and to fear nothing but lest we should reject or distrust the testimony of a Person so great and so just whose power appeared from his very first entrance into the world to be so far transcending all creatures that the Apostles might see before his ascension to the glory wherein St. John beheld him that as he had the Words of eternall Life so he had that Life in himself which in due time he would bestow upon them For though He had all the passions of a man Greg. Nazianz orat xxxv p. 575. yet he had all the perfections likewise of God that none might be so profanely contumelious as to contemn his Deity because he took upon him the grossness of our Humanity He was born of a woman but she a Virgin that was humane this Divine He was wrapt in swaddling-cloaths when he was an infant but shaked off the cloaths that wrapt him in the sepulchre when he was dead He was laid in a manger but then glorified by Angels pointed to by a Star and worshipped by the Wise men He was driven into Egypt but there drove away the errours of the Egyptians The Jews saw no beauty in him but he shone upon the mountain brighter then the Sun prefiguring the glory to which he should ascend He was baptized and tempted as Man but he took away the Sins of the World and got the victory as God He was hungry but fed many thousands and is himself the heavenly Bread which giveth life He was thirsty but gave the waters of life and made rivers of living waters flow from those that believed on him He was called a Samaritan and they said he had a Devill but he put Devills to flight and tumbled whole legions of them into the deep and made the Prince of Devills fall like lightning from heaven He was sold for thirty pieces of silver but purchased the whole World with the great price of his own bloud He was led as a sheep to the slaughter but was the Shepherd of Israel and now is of all the World He was dumb as a lamb before the shearers but is the WORD preached by the voice of one crying in the wilderness He was wounded and bruised but healed every sickness and all manner of disease He was lifted up on the tree and there fixed but restored us to the tree of life and saved the thief who was crucified with him He laid down his life but had power to take it again and the veil rent the rocks were cleft and the dead were raised He died but he gives life and by death extinguished death He was buried but rose again out of the grave He went down into hell but he brought up Souls with him and ascended into heaven and will come again to judge the quick and the dead and to examine all such discourses as detract from his glory O my Soul for ever praise him and let thy heart rejoyce in his holy Name Love him as thy Life confide in his word depend on his power and expect from him the blessing of Eternall Life For he is the AMEN the faithfull and true witness who cannot lie the beginning of the Creation of God whom all Creatures without a voice confess to be their Lord. The Heavens cry Proclus Orat. xiii 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that it was God who bowed them and came down to be a man for our sakes The Sun cries It was my Lord who was crucified in the flesh at the light of whose Divinity I was afraid and withdrew my beams The Earth cries It was He that formed me who suffered which made me quake and tremble at the horrid fact The Sea cries He was not my fellow-servant who walkt with one of his Disciples upon my back The Temple cries He that was worshipped here is now blasphemed and therefore I rend my garments Nay Hell cries He was not a mere man who descended hither for whom I received as a Captive I found to be the Omnipotent God And if we ask the heavenly powers and desire the Angels and Archangels and the whole host of heaven to tell us Who was he that appeared on earth and was crucified in the flesh they will all answer aloud in the words of the Prophet David The Lord the God of hosts he is the King of Glory To him be glory and dominion for ever and ever Amen CHAP. VIII Concerning the Testimony of the HOLY GHOST the Third Witness in Heaven NOW I proceed to examine the Testimony which the Third Witness in Heaven gave concerning this future state which is the HOLY GHOST the Third Person in the Blessed Trinity Who openly assures us by as many ways and by the same means that we have eternall Life in Christ Jesus as he did that Jesus is the Son of God And that I may not be tedious in a business wherein we have already received such satisfaction let us take but a small taste of those three Testimonies of the Holy Ghost which I alledged in the former Treatise I. And first you know that there was a visible appearance of the HOLY GHOST at our Saviour's Baptism when the Divine Glory came down from heaven and rested on him in the sight of John the Baptist whereby he was persuaded that this was the Messiah the King of
can doe for our Souls in the other World He inspired them with such Understanding by the power of the Holy Ghost that the greatest Doctours in Israel were not able to resist the Wisedom whereby they spake They understood clearly all the ancient Prophecies There was no veil or cloud any longer upon them but the Holy Ghost made them see the whole Mystery which was wrapt up in them It revealed all Types explained all Figures led them into the Sanctuary and Most holy place shew'd them the true meaning of the Mercy-seat and laid all those things which did but obscurely point at ETERNALL LIFE so open and naked that none could chuse but see if he did not shut his eyes they were not the same men that they had been but just before and were made thus learned without any humane helps of instruction A convincing argument of his power to raise our Minds when we depart this World and have not the clouds of this Body before our eyes to as great a pitch of knowledge as I discoursed of in the beginning of this Treatise And the suddenness of this change was as clear an argument that he can doe it without difficulty and that there is not so great a distance between this present state and that which we expect but he can presently translate us to it And 4. this Knowledge you may consider farther being accompanied with a mighty Power whereby the Holy Ghost inabled them not onely to give eyes to the blind feet to the lame health to the sick but life also to the dead as was very well known in those days was an undoubted testimony that He from whom it came is able also to change these vile bodies and make them like to his own most glorious body For it is visible he hath a power whereby he can subdue all things to himself To take away life you may think is no such great matter that we should take any notice of it yet to doe even this with a word for lying to the HOLY GHOST was an argument of a mighty power residing in the Apostles And when Abarbinell speaks of the power of the Messiah to work Miracles from that Prophecy of Isaiah xi he alledges these words to prove it vers 4. He shall smite the earth with the rod of his mouth and with the breath of his lips shall he slay the wicked Which was never literally fulfilled during our Saviour's stay on Earth where he did nothing but good to men but was made good after he went to Heaven by his power in his Ministers who smote that wicked couple mentioned Act. v. without any hands merely with the breath of their mouth What shall we think then of their restoring men to life after they were dead for which they were more notorious We cannot but look on this as a great witness of the wonderfull power of Jesus in them and consequently of the life and glory he intended to bestow on sinfull dust and ashes He would not have filled them thus full of his Spirit if he had not meant thereby to raise their expectations above all that even by its power they at present felt Had it not been his design to make them hereafter like to God he would not have preferred them to such a resemblance of his Wisedom and Power here in this World They that could raise others from the dead had no reason to doubt of being raised up themselves When they saw themselves made the conveyers of such great blessings to all mankind they must needs stand fair they could not but conclude for a very large portion of his favour to their own persons For the truth is 5. these gifts which were then given to men proclaimed aloud the marvellous bounty of our Saviour as well as his power and would not let them doubt of a far more glorious exercise of it in the other World then they saw and were the instruments of in this And if any imagine that though this might be a testimony to them of Eternall Life yet it is none to us the contrary will soon be evident if you do but consider 6. that our Lord having made a promise of Eternall Life not onely to his Apostles but to all that believe on his Name the HOLY GHOST puts us in strong hope of it by demonstrating his faithfulness to his word For the Effusion of it was the performance of a promise which he had frequently made when he was with them both before his death xiv Joh. 16. I will pray the Father and he shall give you another Comforter and after his Resurrection xxiv Luk. 49. Behold I send the promise of my Father upon you c. i. Act. 4 5. Being assembled together with them he commanded them not to depart from Jerusalem but wait for the promise of the Father which said he you have heard of me For you shall be baptized with the Holy Ghost not many days hence And therefore we have great reason to look for the promise of Eternall Life with much confidence because He who made it was so faithfull and just in fulfilling his former promise at the time appointed Especially since he thereby demonstrated that he hath sufficient power to doe for us according to his word For he who made such an extraordinary change in them on the day of Pentecost that they were able in an instant to speak all languages to prophesy and understand the secret counsels of God can change us we need not question from glory to glory and at last transform us so perfectly as to make us like to himself And I may adde to strengthen this consideration 7. that our Lord declared he would send the HOLY GHOST for this very purpose that they might believe the rest of his holy promises particularly this great one of Eternall Life Which is the meaning of that which you reade in xiv Joh. 12. where after he had told them ver 9 10 11. that God appeared to them and shew'd himself in the Works that He did which demonstrated that the Father dwelt in him and consequently that he would go and prepare a place for them and take them up to himself he adds these remarkable words Verily verily I say unto you He that believeth in me the works that I doe shall he doe also and greater works then these shall he doe because I go unto my Father As if he had said Mark now what I farther declare to you and rely upon it as a certain truth The works that I have done are sufficient to convince you but for a greater confirmation of your faith that I am going to the Father and am the Way the Truth and the Life I tell you that after I am departed these wonderfull things shall be repeated before the eyes of the world by those that believe on me Nay some things shall be done which your eyes have not yet seen because I go to my Father i. e. have power in the Heavens
and have reserved something peculiar to be given as a testimony of it over and above what I have done my self And that was their speaking with all tongues on a sudden and their prophesying whereby they were inabled to preach to all Nations as he had done to the Jews alone and work the same wonders among the heathen which he had wrought onely in that Country A marvellous evidence this was of the power and glory of Christ to give eternall life in that being absent he did those things by his Apostles which were not performed whilst he was present with them And therefore 8. upon this account the HOLY GHOST thus given to the Apostles and those that believed by their word is called the earnest of the inheritance in their hearts untill the redemption of the purchased possession 2 Cor. i. 22. i. Eph. 14. It was something given them in hand before his second appearing for full redemption to assure them they should as certainly receive all that was behind as they had already received this pawn and pledge of his mighty love And indeed we have all much reason to think that he will doe very great things for us when he appears in his own person as the Holy Ghost assures us he will iii. Act. 19 20. since he hath done so much good to the world by the Apostles his Deputies who were men like to our selves If his Servants brought such blessings to men then what will the Lord himself bring with him at his coming If his Ministers restored dead men to life again the Master sure will bestow a life as much excelling that which they restored as he excells his Officers In short if the people lookt so earnestly on two poor Fisher-men when they had cured a man lame from his mother's womb iii. Act. 12. much more will the Lord of glory draw the eyes of the world to him by doing astonishing things for his people when he shall come as the Apostle speaks 2 Thess i. 10. to be glorified in his Saints and to be admired in all them that believe He will give such a glory to us as will be much for his own credit and reflect glory on himself He will not so much consult what is fit for us to receive as what is fit for such a Prince as he to give He will cloath us with such honour and glory that it will be an honour to him to have his followers appear in such rich and shining liveries It will set men into admiration to behold the bounty of his royall favour to them and much advance the greatness of this Prince to see such subjects attend him the meanest of which are Kings Nor do we strain our fancies and exalt our hopes above what we can reasonably expect when we look for such high dignities for that we shall be admitted into his heavenly Court and be thus sumptuously apparell'd and magnificently entertained by Angels to wait upon us and carry us to him we are assured by the testimony of the HOLY GHOST which cloathed poor men here with a power greater then the most absolute Monarch on earth ever enjoyed and enabled them to deal greater and richer gifts to men yea to scatter them abroad every day as they past along the streets or did but spred their shadow over them then Kings and Emperours could doe at their Coronation or Conquerours at their most magnificent Triumphs III. And as a farther proof of this we must observe once more that the HOLY GHOST gave its testimony of the Life that is in Jesus and shall be given to us when it fell down upon the common sort of believers as it had done upon the Apostles who were not desirous to keep the miraculous gifts of it to themselves alone but readily communicated them to others It was a great wonder to hear the Apostles speak with tongues and prophesy to see them cure the lame and restore the blind to their sight nay raise the dead to life onely by bidding them live and be well in the Name of Jesus things which no Potentates on Earth as I said before could bestow though they were forward to take to themselves the name of Gods and affected Divine honours But it was a greater wonder to see other illiterate Christians receive the same gifts by the laying on of their hands and invocation of the Name of the Lord Jesus who presently filled them with the HOLY GHOST This was a thing so strange that they could not but look upon it as a token of the most extraordinary Love of God to mankind from whence they might expect as much happiness as the word ETERNALL LIFE I told you imports For 1. nothing ever discovered the capacity of humane Souls so much as this effusion of the HOLY GHOST which shew'd how large and wide they are and how much they can contain and to what degree of excellence they may be improved and raised and that on a sudden by the power of God This gave them a strong tast of what was to come and both made them relish immortall life above all other things and also put them in hope to attain it by the favour of that person who had promoted them to such a sight of it in this vast measure of wisedom and love wherewith they were indued For 2. it could argue nothing less they might very well think then that they who wore such eminent marks of his favour as to have a Crown of life and glory set upon their heads in this world should be raised to far greater honours in the next when they should be more capable of his kindness and nearer to himself And indeed 3. since hereby he dwelt in them and they became the Temples of the Holy Ghost they might be confident he would not suffer so holy a place to be pulled down but in order to the building of it better And since the Holy Ghost also 4. wonderfully inlarged their hearts and made them exceeding desirous as well as instrumentall in conveying such exceeding great benefits to others they could not but look upon it as an undeniable argument of the most bounteous goodness of God who is far more inclinable to doe good then Men can be and more ready to reward our services then we can be to doe our work And considering moreover 5. the promise he had made of ETERNALL LIFE the gift of the Holy Ghost was a marvellous earnest of it and a kind of beginning of it in their Souls What shall an ignorant Sea-man be made a Prophet and speak with all tongues a poor Tent-maker unlock Mysteries and indite spirituall Songs and Hymns a man that yesterday could mend nothing but his Nets now cure a man of a bloudy-flux or mend a lame leg a rude Souldier command Devils and storm his strong holds more easily then a town without walls Lord what light is this might they justly say which shines in our dungeon what power is this wherewith we see frail
much as he desired and when they had done there were twelve baskets of fragments which remained over and above to them that had eaten This Miracle made the multitude conclude that certainly He was the Prophet who should come into the world and therefore they purposed whether he would or no to come and make him their King ver 14 15. And when he avoided it by crossing the sea privately ver 16 17 c. they also took shipping to follow after him and never rested till they had found him ver 24 25. Whereupon our Lord takes occasion to tell them how sorry he was to see them so industriously pursue the food of their bodies and not mind the food of their Souls to which his late Miracle led them and in plain terms tell them that Spirituall food was himself who was the Bread of life they should hunger after more then for the loaves wherewith they had been filled and that if they did eat of him they should have everlasting life and he would raise them up at the last day ver 26 27. and 35 c. This they might easily have believed if they had considered the Miracle of the loaves which was a token from God that he could support them eternally For why should not he be able to give life who so strangely preserved it and out of a little dust make a body as he had out of a few crums made so many loaves If their desires had been fixed upon this Eternall Life which he preached as much as upon the present they would as naturally have taken this Miracle for the Seal whereby God noted him to be the giver of it as they took it to be a mark that he could thus fill their bellies every day and save them the labour of seeking food after the manner that Moses fed their Fathers with Manna in the Wilderness V. And next to this if you consider how he dispossessed Devils which was a Wonder as frequent as any if told the world plainly that He was come to destroy the works of the Devil to overthrow his kingdom and devest him of his power unless they would still uphold him in it By Sin he held his Throne this gave him all the power he had over men and made them his vassals and slaves Who being so often rescued out of his hands and he so openly foiled it was a sign that Jesus was come to take away the sins of the world and thereby disarm him of the power of death and restore men again to that everlasting Life out of which the Devil had before thrown mankind as our Saviour now threw him out of them All this the Jews themselves confess shall be the work of the Messiah According to what we reade in the Authour of the Book concerning the Service of the Sanctuary who saith that the King Messiah shall restore all things to their first estate so that the intention of God shall be fulfilled which he had in the Creation of the World for the World shall return to that naturall perfection which it had before rebellious Adam sinned The Prophets are faithfull witnesses of this as it is written lxv Isa 19. I will rejoyce in Jerusalem and joy in my people and the voice of weeping shall be no more heard in her nor the voice of crying And so he speaks also in another place of that Book xxv 8. He will swallow up death in victory and the Lord God will wipe away tears from all faces The Authour also of Baal Hatturim as I find him cited by Hackspan * Cabala Judaica Sect. 72. confesses as much in his Notes upon xix Num. where he saith In the times of Salvation or the days of Christ there shall be no use of the Ashes of the red heifer according to that He will swallow up death in victory Which words are cited by St. Paul 1 Cor. xv 54. as the other part of that verse is by the voice St. John heard from heaven xxi Rev. 4. when he is treating of the Resurrection of the dead as the great comfort of Christian people Who may well expect it and all the blessings that attend upon it from our Lord Jesus the true Messiah if to all that hath been said we adde the consideration of what follows VI. That he raised even dead men to life again which was the greatest Miracle of all and at that time the greatest witness of the SPIRIT to him This shew'd that indeed he had Life in himself and would bestow it upon us as I have already noted for he raised them on purpose to declare what he was and what they might expect from him viz. a perfect victory over death and the grave Which appeared most remarkably in the resurrection of Lazarus who was the most famous instance of this power residing in him For the Miracle wrought on him was not so little as the recovering one who drew his last breath which was the case of the Centurion's Servant nor the restoring one to life who was newly dead as in the case of the Ruler of the Synagogue's daughter nor the raising a young man who was carried out towards his grave as the Widow's son was but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Greg. Nyssen speaks * De Hominis opifici● cap. xxv his Wonder-working proceeds to something more sublime A man of grown years not onely dead but musty already putrid and in a dissolution as he describes his condition so far gone toward corruption that his own friends thought it not fit our Lord should go to uncover his tomb because of the ill smell which might be expected this man I say with one word of our Lord's was restored again to life firm and compacted and though he was bound hand and foot with grave-cloaths it did not hinder his coming out of his grave which as Theophanes thinks was a Miracle little less then his Resurrection Who can chuse but look on this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to use the same St. Gregory's words as the beginning the little Mysteries as I may call them of the Vniversall Resurrection into which Christ now initiated his Disciples For it is apparent by this He is the Lord of Life who can raise a putrid rotten carkass as well as those who are but newly departed the world And this was no private business transacted onely between him and his Disciples but a thing so notorious that the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the multitude who were there present bare record of it xii Joh. 17. That is they affirmed it to be no vain report but told those of Jerusalem whither our Saviour was then going who had not seen the Miracle done that it was a certain Truth upon their knowledge Which they might affirm with the greater assurance because as Theophanes * Archiepis Taurom Hom. xxv observes they were confirmed in this belief by the testimony of all their senses By their own voice which shewed him the Tomb
supposed for I shall say no more of it here there is no man can have the face to deny the Resurrection of the body and Life everlasting which Christ our Lord hath promised us There can be no truer reasoning then that of St. Paul 1 Thess iv 14. If we believe that Jesus died and rose again even so them also that sleep in Jesus will God bring with him I. For thus much is evident at first sight and is included in the thing it self that this work of the SPIRIT proves a possibility of the Resurrection of the dead and shews that we mortal creatures who live on the earth may live in the heavens So the same Apostle argues elsewhere against those who denied this Truth 1 Cor. xv 12. If Christ be preached upon such credible testimonies as he mentions in the foregoing verses that he rose from the dead how say some among you that there is no resurrection of the dead It is the grossest absurdity that is to say there can be no such thing as the restoring of a dead body to life when it is so evidently verified in Christ's resurrection Which shews it is so far from being impossible or incredible that it is a thing which hath been done already as is very well attested by Witnesses that cannot with any equity be rejected And by the same reason he proves we ought not to despair of seeing our bodies made glorious and incorruptible For if He be not in his grave as none could shew him there after the third day but is made glorious why may not we partake of the same favour by that power which raised Christ from the dead and set him at God's right hand There is no reason to doubt of it but the greatest reason to hope and be confident that He who raised up the Lord Jesus as St. Paul speaks in the next Epistle 2 Cor. iv 14. will raise up us also by Jesus and set us in his presence in the heavens II. For by his Resurrection the SPIRIT proved the truth of all that the other Witnesses the Water the Bloud and his Miraculous Works too testified Particularly it demonstrated the truth of his Doctrine by which as you have seen life and immortality was brought to light If this had not been true that we shall live for ever by him Jesus would have perished and never have come to life again to deceive the World the second time But seeing God did not leave his Soul in hell nor suffer his Holy i. e. his anointed one to see corruption it is an uncontroulable argument that those who believe on him shall not perish neither but be made alive as he is Because He that said he would rise again the third day said likewise with the same assurance that at the last day he will raise up us also and bestow upon us everlasting Life When God who alone could doe it verified the one and according to his word raised up Jesus the third day He bid us be assured of the other that this Jesus hath Life in himself and will by his power raise up us according to his promise unto a never-dying life This is the Character He had given of himself I am the Resurrection and the Life that is the Authour the Cause of both He that believeth on me shall have everlasting life and I will raise him up at the last day nothing of him shall perish neither his Soul nor his body for even they that are in their graves shall hear his voice and shall rise again to lise This he often preached and proved many ways but after all he sealed it with his bloud and bad them expect a little and they should see it sealed by his resurrection from the dead Which insuing at the time appointed was a perfect demonstration that he said true when he affirmed that He is the Resurrection and the Life by whom we shall receive this inestimable benefit of rising again after death to live for ever with him Of this as well as the former Consideration I may possibly say so much elsewhere that I shall spare any farther pains about them now III. Let us rather remember how severall persons rose from the dead at that very time when he left his grave xxvii Matt. 52 53. which were notable instances of his power to give life and put us in hope that we shall all rise again as they did There is no cause but his Resurrection to be assigned of this Miracle which fell out the same time that he was missing in his grave as the opening of their tombs at that very moment when he died Never was any such thing heard of before or since and therefore it was intended to demonstrate the mighty power of his Resurrection when many bodies of Saints which slept arose and came out of their graves and went into Jerusalem and appeared unto many Whose testimony none have had the confidence to contradict by endeavouring to disprove it but the Jews rather by some concessions of theirs confirm us in the belief of it For it is a common opinion now among their Doctours that the Kingdom of the Messiah shall begin with the Resurrection of the dead Bury me said R. Jeremiah with shoes on my feet and my staff in my hand and lay me on one side that when Christ comes I may be ready But of this conceit we can find no footsteps in the Old Scriptures which makes it probable that they have borrowed this as they have done many other things from the Holy Gospell in which it is recorded that he began his entrance upon his Kingdome with the Resurrection of some pious persons as an earnest of the restoring all the rest to Eternall Life And thus it is likely they have learnt to discourse of the bodies of the just after they are raised concerning which some of them speak so sublimely above the dull and gross conceptions of the rest of their Nation that one can scarce look upon it otherwise then as Christian language When the Soul is in the state of glory Vid. Jo. de Voysin in Pug. fid part iii. dist 2. c. 8. saith the Book Zohar it sustains it self with the light above wherewith it is also cloathed and when it shall return to the body it shall come with the same light and with the body shall shine as with the brightness of heaven More there is in other Authours to the same purpose which say God can give us bodies strong and vigorous like the Angels and that the bodies of the just after the resurrection shall be subtil like the globe of the Moon Vid. eum de Lege Div. in xxii Matt. 3● and so give no impediment to the Soul in its enjoyment of the Splendour of the Divine Majesty But supposing this to be their own language without any tincture they had received from the Christian Doctrine it will be still more remarkable that our Lord Jesus according to their expectations
will reward well-doers with the Crown of Life and be so far from letting their labour be in vain that he will doe for them as his Father hath done for him viz. bring them into his own joy So St. John writes in the very beginning of his Gospel i. 4. that in him was life and the life was the light of men He brought the promise of Eternall Life that is to mankind and can himself bestow it which is the best news the greatest cordiall that can be thought of to revive our spirits like the honey on the top of Jonathan's rod inlightning our eyes and making us live most chearfully and happily if we believe it and prepare our selves for it This they laid as the very ground and foundation of all Christian piety unto which St. Paul saith it was his office to call men in hope of eternall life i. Tit. 1 2 c. which God that cannot lie promised of old but did not manifest till the preaching of the Gospell which was committed to him by the commandment of God our Saviour who authorized him to open this Doctrine more fully then it had been even by our Lord himself while he was on Earth For St. Paul shews that at the last day so often mentioned by our Lord he himself will appear again in person after a visible and glorious manner to consummate all the faithfull whose happiness begins as soon as they depart this life These two weighty Truths are notably asserted by this Apostle I. Who declares by the Word of the Lord that is a speciall revelation from our Saviour the manner of his coming again from heaven with the attendance of his Angels to raise the dead and to lift them up to himself and give them the Crown of righteousness which till that time shall not be bestowed Reade 1 Thess iv 15 16 c. 2 Tim. iv 8. where the splendour of that great day when he will openly appear as the Lord of all is described no less lovely then magnificently as I hope to shew in another place It is the day of rejoycing ii Phil. 16. because he will then most eminently appear as our life iii. Col. 4. as our Salvation 1 Cor. v. 5. ix Heb. 28. to the praise and honour and glory of our fidelity 1 Pet. i. 7. And therefore for this time Christians are said to wait and look 1 Cor. i. 7. ii Tit. 13. as the time that will compleat their felicity which till then the Apostles plainly suppose wants its Crown and perfection And so the Church hath from the beginning understood them Who describe Souls departed as in a state of Expectants waiting for the appearing of our Lord Jesus Christ who will come out of his most holy Temple to perfect those who now stand as they speak 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the porch or entry of it in atriis as the Latin phrase is in the outward Court of the Temple or holy place of God For as the Children of Israel stood in the outward Court which yet was a part of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Temple as we render it expecting the Priest every day to come out of the Sanctuary and the High-priest on the day of expiation to come out of the Holy of holies to give them the blessing In such manner do the Ancients describe the now blessed waiting and looking without though in Heaven of which the Sanctuary was a figure for that blessed hope of our Lord 's coming out of his Most holy place where he now is without sin unto their Salvation And thus the best of the Jews express their happiness saying that pious Souls are in the bundle of life as the most learned Dr. Pocock shews out of Judah Zabara * Not. miscell cap vi p. 176. in the high place in the treasury where they enjoy the splendour of the Divine Majesty being hidden under the throne of glory Which phrases signify a state of imperfection in comparison with that which our Lord Christ with whom saith the Apostle our life is hid and kept in safe custody will bring us unto at the day of his appearing II. But all this time they do not imagine that their Souls lie asleep without any sense of joy and pleasure no more then the Israelites did who were at their Prayers all the time that the Priest was in the Sanctuary desiring God to accept his intercession for them For what good doth it doe them to be in the Garden of Eden or pleasure as the Jews also call the place where they live if they have no taste of its fruits and happy enjoyments They would be as well any-where else as in the Bosome of Abraham by which the same Jews * Vid. Vcy 〈◊〉 de 〈◊〉 bil L. i. c. 16. as well as our Saviour describe this state if they do not feast there as that expression properly signifies and as the Parable of Lazarus supposes he did when it saith that now he was comforted or enjoyed his good things which made a recompence for all the evill he had here suffered The sense of the Christian Church in this matter is admirably expressed by St. Orat. x. p. 173. Greg. Nazianzen Who comforting himself and others for the losse of his Brother Caesarius concludes with these words I am perswaded by the words of the Wise that every Soul that is good and beloved of God when it is loosed from this body to which it is tied straightway 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 conceives a certain wonderfull pleasure and rejoyces exceedingly in the sense and contemplation of the good it expects Which makes it go most chearfully to its Master because being got out of its prison and having shaken off its fetters which pinion'd the wing of the mind 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it already injoys as it were an image of the Blessedness laid up for it And not long after receiving out of the earth from whence it came and where it is deposited its nearly-allied body in such a way as God who tied them together and dissolved them knows it shall together with it inherit the glory there And thus St. Paul also plainly teaches us 1. When he relates how he was transported into the third heaven and into Paradise and for any thing he knew out of his Body 2 Cor. xii 2 3. Which evidently shews he believed that Souls could act without their bodies and that they shall enjoy God and have a sense of heavenly things as soon as they depart this life And so much the Jews themselves well conclude from the Spirit of Prophecy whereby holy men of God were separated for a time from their bodies so as to perceive nothing either by their senses or their minds but onely what God presented to them The phantasms indeed which they had received from this sensible world were commonly used to represent those things which were then offered to them by Divine Revelation but without any assistence of the
motions of the body which lay then as if it was dead while the Soul enjoyed converse and familiar discourse with God In which condition it is manifest St. Paul's mind was so intent to what was communicated unto him that he did not at all observe whether he had a body about him or no. But there is more then this if you mark it in St. Paul's transport into Paradise where God spoke to him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mysteries which he could not declare by any words because no phantasms or images of things he had seen or heard here in this world could express them Which is a sign he conceived them without any motion of his brain merely by his Spirit Of such transports the Hebrews themselves talk who say four men entred into Paradise * Sepher C●sri part 3. § lxv Tzemach David ad An. 498● that is by the spirit of prophecy one of them was too curious and died presently another proved distracted after it a third pluckt up the roots or denied the foundation of Religion saying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I have already touched the mark I am come to perfection and therefore need not mind the work of the Law any longer a fourth entred in peace and came out again in peace Which I recite not as a truth for all these stories are told of men who lived since the spirit of prophecy left them but to shew that they think it not impossible for men to be transported as St. Paul was to whom I imagine they were ambitious to equall some of their Doctours but by the power of the Spirit they might enter while they were inhabitants of this world into Paradise Of the sweet enjoyments of which place therefore they cannot sure be uncapable when they have quite left this body since the Apostle supposes his spirit might go out of it in this rapture when it perceived and understood things without the use of phantasms after the manner of Intelligences 2. Wherewith he was so ravished and so fully assured of future bliss as soon as he died that he desired above all things to be dissolved and to be with Christ which he lookt upon as far better then to stay here any longer i. Phil. 23. This eager longing clearly shews what he expected as soon as he was got loose from this body and that he did not think death would stupefie his Soul and bereave it of all sensation but rather open to it a freer passage into that delightfull place whither he had some time been caught up For it would not have been better for him to depart and to be with Christ if he should not have had the favour to enjoy that sweet conversation with him there which was not denied him whilst he was here He tells us indeed that when our Lord shall appear then is the time when we shall appear with him in glory but before this he expected upon his departure to be with Christ though not in so full an injoyment of him as hereafter This made him so confident and well assured in his perpetuall conflicts with so great troubles and calamities because he lookt upon himself in this present bodily state but as a stranger who was absent from his own country and friends to whom he desired to return even in this way through the midst of many afflictions 2 Cor. v. 6. Which he repeats ver 8. We are confident I say and willing rather to be absent from the body and to be at home with the Lord. So we render this phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ver 6. when he speaks of his being in the body From which I conclude that he thought his Soul which while it did 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inhabit the body had such a sense of future happiness as made him resolutely endure all manner of troubles to come at it would much more enjoy a blissfull sense of it when it did 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dwell in its own country with the Lord. 3. Hence you reade that those who were dissolved or rather whose souls were torn out of their bodies by the hand of cruell persecutours cried unto God for vengeance on their murtherers vi Rev. 9. Which argues Souls departed do not sleep and think of nothing that passed here but are so awake as to remember the gracious promises of God which they live in expectation to see fulfilled It may be said indeed that by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Souls we are to understand onely their Bloud as the word is sometimes used in the Holy Scriptures and as I thought when I writ the former Treatise * Vid. Chap. viii p. 501. it might be taken here But upon farther consideration I find reason to correct that mistake For St. John I observe speaks of them as persons ver 11. who had fellow-servants and brethren here upon earth who were to finish their testimony to Christ by laying down their lives for him as they had done Till which time those Martyrs were to rest and acquiesce in what they enjoyed already having obtained very great honour For there was given 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to every one of them white robes Mark the place and you will be satisfied fully that he speaks not of their bloud For St. John saw these Souls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 under or beneath the Altar of incense that is as a Great man hath proved * Mr. Thorndike Rights of the Church p. 95. 310. whereas the bloud of the Sacrifices was poured out at the bottom of the Altar in the outward court They were not without but in the Sanctuary though in the lower part of it beneath the Altar of incense not yet advanced to the higher part of it much less to the Holiest of all They were admitted that is unto a greater nearness to God then others as the Church always believed the Martyrs were though not yet consummated as the Apostle St. Paul supposes himself should not be till the day of Christ's appearing But St. John adds 2. that they had white Robes given them in that place where they were which signifies they were a kind of heavenly Ministers attending on the Divine Majesty or that they had exceeding great honour conferred on them xli Gen. 42. which would have done them no good at all if they had not been sensible of the favour of God therein and lived in great joy and festival pleasures which white raiment also in the holy languages uses to denote ix Eccles. 8. And thus the Jews themselves I observe are apt to speak of this matter making the description of the City and Temple in the latter end of Ezekiel to be a representation of the other World For when it is affirmed by one Doctour in the Talmud * Vid. Coch. exc Gem. Sanhedrin c. xi n. 30. that there were not above six and thirty just men in every Age that behold the face of God and another objects that the Court about the City
called The LORD is there was exceeding great no less then eighteen thousand measures round xlviii Ezek. 35. this Answer is returned that the difficulty is small For some behold the very light of God others onely see it obliquely and have no more but a certain obscure duskish image of it There are but few of the former saith the Glosse there who have the Light in its power but of the other who have a weaker ray obliquely and at a distance there are very great numbers Which agrees with those words of our Saviour In my Father's house are many Mansions as they are expounded by the two St. Gregories Nazianzen and Nyssen and others who by a Mansion understand 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 * Nazianz. Orat. 33. c. the rest and the glory which is laid up there for the blessed but suppose some to be in a higher others in a lower condition proportionable to the vertuous dispositions they carried out of the world with them Which being very different they believed some to see less and others to be like Gorgonia the Sister of St. Greg. Nazianzen whom in the conclusion of his Eleventh Oration he supposes to be in the clear light of the glorious Trinity 4. But it would take up too much room in this Treatise if I should enter into that discourse and therefore I proceed to consider that though they made this difference according as we see in a City to follow the former comparison some are accounted the chief others the more inferiour streets and houses and some are nearer unto others more remote from the royal palace yet they did not imagine those mansions to be dark nor those that were in them to have their eyes shut up with sleep but all to enjoy the light of life They lead as another Jewish Writer * Vid. Jo. de Voysin de Jubilaeo L. i. cap. 16. speaks a most sweet life in that light which is the figure and resemblance of the supreme light to which they shall be admitted at the last Thus Moses and Elias appeared in great splendour at our Saviour's transfiguration on the Holy Mount where they talkt and discoursed with him about his departure that he was to accomplish at Jerusalem Which shews they not onely continued in being but had sense and motion and lived in much happiness and bliss Which we are not to take for a singular privilege indulged to them for the Apostles you may observe again lookt upon our Saviour as the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 exemplar or pattern to which God had determined they should all be conformed viii Rom. 29. And their conformity to him here in this world being so exact that they passed the very same way to bliss that he did through most cruell sufferings they could not doubt but upon their departure the conformity would still hold as exactly That as He when he died immediately went to Paradise where he promised the good Thief should be before his Resurrection so they should enter into the same blessed place immediately upon their death and live there in a joyfull expectation of him to come and change even this vile body that it may be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 conformed to his glorious body iii. Phil. 21. And this is the sense also you may observe once more of the Voice from heaven which commanded St. John to write Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord. xiv Rev. 13. With which the Spirit immediately joyned its testimony saying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Yea i. e. it is certainly true believe what the voice says from henceforth or now at this present I promise them a blessed rest from their labours and their works shall follow with them that is they shall be refreshed with a sweet remembrance of what they have done and suffered for Christ Jesus It is uncertain indeed whether the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be to be referred to the former words Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord or to those that follow Yea saith the Spirit But either way our Church understands it in the same sense as appears by the Funerall office Where referring it to the former sentence the words are thus recited I heard a voice from heaven saying Write From henceforth or Now at this present time blessed are the dead c. They are not onely in expectance of future blessedness but in possession of an happy state already and find inconceivable satisfaction in venturing their very lives for Christ's sake who for this very end as St. Paul observes laid down his life for us that whether we wake or whether we sleep we should live together with him 1 Thess v. 10. There are those who from this word Sleep by which the state of the dead is frequently called in these books there being nothing liker Death then Sleep would inferr the perpetuall motion and operation of the Soul before the Resurrection For it is very busy and active even when all the Senses are lockt up by sleep and hath at that time received very high illuminations from God which is a sign that if the body were quite dead it would not be without them Aristotle I find in Sextus Empiricus * L. viii adv Mathemat p. 312. observes thus much that in Sleep when the Soul is by her self 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 resuming her own nature she prophesies and foretells things to come and declares saith he hereby what she shall be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when by death she shall be separated from all bodily things By which consideration St. Austin tells us that Gennadius a famous Physician in his time and very religious and charitable was wonderfully inlightned when he was in doubt whether there was any life after death God saith he * Epist 100. ad Euodium would by no means desert a mind so well disposed but there appeared one night to him in his sleep a very handsome young man who bid him follow whether he should lead him Which he thought he did till he came to a Citie where on the right side he was saluted with the sweetest voices that ever he heard which the young man upon his inquiry what this meant told him were the hymns of the Blessed and of the Saints What he saw on the left side he did not well remember but awaking he lookt upon this as a dream and thought no farther of it Till some time after the same young man appeared again to him another night and askt if he knew him To which he answering Yes very well he askt him where he had seen him And Gennadius presently related how by his conduct he was once led to hear the hymns and see the sight before mentioned Here the young man askt him whether he saw and heard what he related in his sleep or waking In my sleep said Gennadius True said the other and now thou seest me in thy sleep dost thou not To which he consenting his instructer proceeded to ask
him Where is thy body now In my bed-chamber said Gennadius Dost thou know then replied the young man that thy eyes are now bound up and shut and lie idle in that body so that with them thou seest nothing I know it said Gennadius What eyes then are these said his instructer again wherewith thou seest me Here Gennadius being silent not knowing what to say the young man laid hold of this occasion to open to him the meaning of all these questions saying Those eyes of thy flesh which is asleep and lies in thy bed have no imployment and doe nothing at all and yet thou hast eyes wherewith thou seest me Just so when thou art dead and the eyes of thy flesh are put out and can doe nothing vita tibi inerit quâ vivas sensúsque quo sentias there will be life in thee whereby to live and sense whereby to perceive Beware now hereafter how thou doubtest that life remains after death And thus that faithful man told St. Austin the Providence and mercy of God quite removed his doubt But I shall not insist on such reasons as these my intention being onely to shew what we learn from the Apostles the faithfull Witnesses of Jesus Christ to confute that drowzy conceit of the Sleep of the Soul which like a thistle sprung up first * Euseb Hist Eccles L. vi c. 37. in the wild deserts of Arabia but ought not to be suffered to grow in the Garden of God In which this Doctrine of the Apostles I might shew hath been so deeply rooted that to testify the Churche's belief of it was one great end of the Commemorations and Prayers which were made for the faithfull departed this life So we learn from Epiphanius his confutation of Aerius who did not approve of this practice The very first account he gives of it is that those who were present might believe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Haeres lxxv n. 7. c. that they who were departed live and are not gone out of being but exist and live with the Lord. And they did not suppose I may adde that those whom they remembred in their sacred offices were frying in the flames of hell as the present Roman Church doth but in a state of happiness though imperfect and some more imperfect then other This we learn from the Service of the Church in those days especially at the funeralls of the departed Whensoever they celebrated the dreadfull mysteries together with the holy Martyrs and Confessours and Priests whom they commemorated they prayed for the whole World for which Christ's bloud was an expiation not forgetting those who slept in him whom the Priest desired those who were present to remember For we are all one body saith St. Chrysostome * Hem. xli in 1 Corinth p. 524.20 who reports this though one member be brighter then another and therefore they desired all might have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pardon and consolation Which they hoped they had it is plain from the Funerall Office which in great part was Eucharisticall consisting of Psalms and Hallelujahs So the same great person informs us in his Commentaries on the Epistle to the Hebrews where he takes occasion from those words ii 15. deliver them who through fear of death c. to reprehend the bitter lamentations and wailings of those who mourned for their dead friends as altogether inconsistent with what the Church did at their funeralls Where the bright lamps * H●m i● p. 453 35. 454. 10. they saw burning proclaimed that they attended them as valiant champions and the hymns that were sung glorified God and gave him thanks for crowning him that was departed and for freeing him from his labours and for delivering him from a state of fear that he might have him with himself Are not the hymns saith he for this end is not this the meaning of the singing Psalms 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and all these things are proper to those that rejoyce according to that of St. James Is any well-pleased let him sing Psalms And a little after he bids them mind what they sung at those solemnities Return unto thy rest O my Soul for the Lord hath dealt bountifully with thee and I will fear no evills for thou art with me and again Thou art my refuge from the affliction that compasseth me about This was part of the Funerall-service to which he tells them they did not attend but were drunk with sorrow or else they would not have made such lamentations For to say Return unto thy rest O my Soul for the Lord hath dealt bountifully with thee and yet to weep and lament is a mockery and a stage-play not a serious piece of devotion This and much more that great Man there says to shew how preposterous it was to mix their lamentations with those hymns which supposed the Souls of the deceased to be in rest and peace and to partake liberally of the bounteous goodness of God and therefore ought to have composed and comforted the minds of the living who confessed their Friends had made a blessed change of a troublesome life for one full of quiet and happy repose To which the Order of buriall in our Church which professes to tread in the steps of the first Ages of Christianity is very conformable Where we Sing Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord c. and acknowledge that we ought not to be sorry as men without hope for them that sleep in him because the Spirits of them that depart hence in the Lord do live with God and being delivered from the burthen of the flesh are in joy and felicity Not compleat indeed but we pray him after we have given thanks for delivering our Brother out of the miseries of this sinfull world to hasten his kingdom that we with all those that are departed in the true faith of his holy name may have our PERFECT CONSVMMATION and BLISS both in BODY and SOVL in his eternall and everlasting glory But it is not my business as I said to seek for testimonies to this Truth any lower then from the APOSTLES themselves who as they preached the glad tidings of Eternall Life every-where so they protest most solemnly and they were men you shall hear who taught and practised the strictest truth and honesty that they had a most certain knowledge of it and therefore we may safely rely upon their testimony Those words wherewith St. John begins his first Epistle may serve in stead of all that might be alledged to assert this ver 1 2 3. where he gives an account of the reason they had to publish to the world that WORD OF LIFE Jesus and his Gospell as they had done a long time For they said nothing concerning that Eternall Life which it was in the purpose of God the Father from the beginning to bestow and now was manifested to them but what they had HEARD that is received from his own mouth and been
godliness Rom. vi Col. iii. which they supposed all Christians had already felt these men fansied there was no other affirming the resurrection was past and none to come If they had onely doubted of it the Apostle it is like would not have so sharply punished them no more then he did the Corinthians But they blasphemed as he expresly tells us of Hymeneus 1 Tim. i. 20. that is reproached this Doctrine as a foolish opinion and reviled it is like the Apostles who were the preachers of it And therefore he inflicted on them the most grievous punishment by delivering them up to Satan which was not so little as merely banishing them the Christian Society but turning them over to the power of the Devill 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as unto a publick Executioner to torture and scourge them They are the words of St. Basil * Homil. in princip Proverb p. 439. with whom agree divers others of the ancient Doctours who think the Apostle speaks of surrendring such persons into his hands that he might inflict bodily diseases or pains upon them to humble and bring them down to submit to the Apostolicall doctrine when they felt the miraculous effects of their Authority For that 's the reason this punishment is called delivering up to Satan because it visibly appeared by some plagues on the body that they were faln under his power by being thrown out of the Church He was as a common Galoer and Executioner in a City or Kingdome the Apostles as the Magistrates and Governours as was said before sitting upon thrones to judge and pass sentence on men either by giving the Holy Ghost to those who sincerely believed or by delivering those to be tormented and set on the rack by this Evill spirit who blasphemed the Christian Religion There was then no other power in the Church to correct and punish them for so high a crime and this being done by the power of our Lord Jesus Christ as you reade 1 Cor. v. 4. was a notable testimony of the SPIRIT to the truth of Christianity and bad all men beware how they spake evill of this holy Doctrine especially of this fundamentall part of it that the Lord Jesus will give us everlasting life and raise us up at the last day The terrible execution which they saw done upon those who subverted this foundation of all piety was a great means to confirm all Christian people in the faith and to make them reverence those who had this mighty power either to give men ease or to torment them to restore men to life or to strike them dead to give them as was said before the gifts of the Holy Ghost or to put them into the possession of the Devill There is a great deal of difference it is observed by Tertullian * L. de Pudicitia c. xiii between an Angel of Satan sent to buffet a man and being delivered up or put into the possession of Satan himself To the former St. Paul himself was by the Divine permission obnoxious for his exercise 2 Cor. xii 7. The latter was the punishment of blasphemers and other horrid offenders for their cure But both served to give a testimony to our Saviour and to settle the hope of immortall Life For by the Angel of Satan which buffeted that is disgraced and vexed St. Paul a great many ancient Writers * S. Chrysostom Theodorer Photius apud Oecumen Ambros Theophylact understand those troubles and sore afflictions all sorts of injuries and reproaches which infidels and wicked men by the instinct of some of the Devil's agents tormented the Apostle withall Alexander the Coppersmith saith St. Chrysostom who did St. Paul so much mischief Hymeneus and Philetus all those that set themselves against the Gospell cast him into prison beat him drove him out of their cities were Ministers of Satan 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because they did Satan's business who by such instruments laboured all he could to dishearten the Apostles and hinder the free course of the Gospell Here now appeared the mighty power of Christ which rested as the Apostle speaks or took up its dwelling in them 2 Cor. xii 9. They were never so strong as when they were thus afflicted Then they mightily prevailed and advanced the Kingdom of Christ by whose powerfull grace they endured all hardships and distresses courageously and demonstrated they had a strong and immovable hope of being with him in that blessed place unto which St. Paul was rapt just before this Messenger of Satan as we render it raised such a terrible storm of persecution against him By that glorious sight he was fortified against it and standing as firm as a rock himself confirmed others in that faith which made him so invincible that he gloried and took pleasure in all those infirmities and reproaches and necessities and persecutions and distresses which that Angel of Satan stirred up against him ver 9 10. That was all the Devill got by his ill usage of him which onely gave the Apostle matter of glory For when our Saviour pleased not to grant his desire of having this Angel removed but onely told him his grace should be sufficient for him immediately he adds that he would gladly glory more then ever in his afflictions Which plainly shews both what he meant by that Angel of Satan and how much hereby the Christian Religion was promoted and the Souls of believers strengthened in the faith They might easily believe he had been in the third heavens when they saw him so much superiour to all the power on earth and the powers of the air too who conspired to beat him down and oppress him All the art in the world could not so declare the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the unutterable words St. Paul heard which the impious Cainites and Gnosticks * Epiphan Haeres xxxviii in a Book of theirs called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 concerning St. Paul's ascent pretended to relate as this inexpressible power of Christ residing in him and supporting him under the greatest miseries which declared those words remained still imprinted in his Mind And that other power of Christ whereby the Apostle delivered up high offenders to Satan that he might inflict plagues and diseases or aches and pains on their bodies as evidently shewed what a great Minister he was in Christ's Kingdom and how credible the Doctrine was which he preached to them For he was ready to revenge all disobedience with remarkable punishments and alledges this power as a proof of his authority in the next Chapter 2 Cor. xiii 2 3 4. If I come again I will not spare since you seek a proof of Christ speaking in me He is not weak indeed towards you but is mighty in you having given by me exceeding great demonstrations of his power and my Apostleship xii 12. Yet since you are not convinced it seems by what you have seen already and desire a farther proof that Christ speaks in me you shall
But that we may understand how much we are indebted to him and thereby become more sensible of his wonderfull Love give me leave to shew as briefly as I can how little the world knew before our Saviour came of this Happiness which he hath revealed to us and how much his loving-kindness hath abounded towards us more then to his more peculiar people in former days whose love notwithstanding he expected should be intirely devoted to him and his service It would be very easy to shew were there not danger of making this Treatise too big how weak all the reasonings of the Philosophers were about this matter and in what uncertainty they left men after they had written whole Books on this Subject Among all those who endeavoured by humane argumentations to find it there were but few as St. Augustine truly observes * L. xiii De Trinitate c. 8. 9. that could and they but scarcely arrive at the knowledge of the immortality of the Soul though men of great wit and abounding with leisure and instructed in the most subtill pieces of learning And when they had resolved says he that it was immortall they could not find a settled blessed life for it But many of them thought it returned again to the miseries of this life And they who blusht at this and placed the Soul in immortall blessedness without the body destroyed their own opinion by the revolution which they fansied of all things back again after a certain period of time to that condition wherein they were before As he shews more fully in his Book of the City of God * Lib. xii cap. 20. There is nothing truer then that of St. Paul ii Eph. 12. that they had no hope viz. of the Resurrection and eternall Life For to say nothing of the Resurrection to which they were perfect strangers some of the greatest Philosophers denied the immortality of the Soul Socrates himself the very best of them was not confident of it but left it in doubt as a thing uncertain Nor was Aristotle more assured no nor Tully and Seneca who could not by all their reasonings attain a sure and well-grounded hope of it but were forced to confess after all their disquisitions about the Soul that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 * Aristoteles L. i. de A●ma c. 1. it is one of the most difficult things in the world to receive any belief or certain knowledge about it All that they said was conjecture and very weak very uncertain and sometimes very extravagant Which shews in what a mist they were without the light of Divine revelation which we by God's great grace injoy They themselves seem to be sensible sometimes of the want of an heavenly Guide to conduct them with more certainty to the knowledge of that happiness which they desired as any one may see in Plato's Dialogue * in Phaedone on this Subject Where Socrates his arguments for immortality just before he was going to die have so little force to conclude any thing certainly that Simias had reason to say it is either 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 impossible or a thing extream difficult to know any thing clearly of it in this life But a man must chuse the best reasons he can find which are least liable to exception and he must venture to embark himself in these and sail by them through this life unless he can be so happy as to be carried safer and with less hazzard 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 * p. 85. in a surer stedfast chariot of some divine word that is or revelation Which is a plain acknowledgement that this onely can give us perfect security and satisfy us so as to take away all doubt And this God hath granted to us Christians to whom he hath spoken in these last days by his Son and given this Record of him that Eternall Life is in him And therefore Lactantius might truly say * L. vii Divin Instit c. 7. Immortales esse animas Pherecydes Plato disputaverunt haec verò propria est in nostra Religione doctrina Pherecydes and Plato disputed that Souls were immortall but it is our Religion onely that teaches this as its proper lesson For to know what is true is in no man's power but his that is taught of God And their arguments he shews in the next Chapter were so weak and so much there was to be said with equall probability on the other side that Tully after all things weighed on both parts concluded he knew not what to say but this Harum igitur sententiarum quae vera sit Deus aliquis viderit Which of these opinions therefore are true God onely knows And in another place Both these opinions have learned Authours but which is certain cannot be divined In the next Chapter also but one he brings another such uncertain resolution of the same great man who says We should go confidently to death in which we know there is either the greatest good or no evill But what this Summum bonum greatest good was they were still to seek When they had supposed their Souls to survive their bodies they had no certain knowledge what the happiness of their future state should be but miserably wandred in the darkness of their imaginations as their severall fancies led them We need onely take the fairest descriptions they have left us of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 country of the pious to satisfy us how little men could know when they had onely their own thoughts to direct them of the state of the other World Gobryas in a Dialogue ascribed to Plato * in Axiocho p. 371. edit Serran says that it is a region where the seasons of the year abound with all manner of fruit the fountains gush out with the purest water the fields are cloathed with all kind of flowers and where there are Schools of Philosophers Theatres of Poets Musick and Dancing-schools in perfection together with the neatest Banquets all sorts of Dainties springing up of themselves a sweet easy life without any mixture of sorrow or grief for neither the winter nor summer are there in excess but a well-tempered air illustrated by the softest beams of the Sun and there they that are initiated in the Mysteries have the preeminence and rightly perform the holy offices Which is not much different from the Paradise which the disciples of Mahomet expect who cannot raise their minds higher then the things they best fansy in this World Which makes them being forbidden by their Law the drinking of wine here to reckon this among the pleasures of the other world that they shall have liberty there to drink as much as ever they will and be in no danger of intoxication For the wine of Paradise the Alcoran * Miscell D. Po●ock c. vii p. 300. says doth not make men drunk as ours doth but passes away all by sweat which smells as sweet as any Musk. Which I mention for no
What pretence is there now for unbelief Why do we not slight all those who by Philosophy and vain deceit set themselves against a simple faith and stick to this naked confession that there will be a resurrection of the body to Eternall Life And to make our holy belief more acceptable to all Christian Souls let me briefly adde That Faith being as certain a way of knowing as any other Believers must needs be the most knowing men in the world Which is a very great motive to Faith whereby we are informed of a great many things and those the most excellent of which other mens minds are perfectly ignorant It gives a new light to the Soul whereby to see things invisible There is no less then a whole world of things that Believers are acquainted withall which are hid from their eyes who remain in darkness by continuing in unbelief While the thoughts of such Souls are confined within the narrow bounds of this visible world and know but little of it neither the Minds of Believers are inlarged beyond the limits of all things seen to behold another and far more glorious world in which Jesus is the Sun and the Angels and Spirits of just men are the Stars and the brightness of the Divine Glory is the Light and splendour In this the ancient Christians justly made their boast And there being a company of vain men who pretended to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Knowers men of intelligence beyond all others but indeed unbelievers Clemens Alexandrinus reproves their folly L. v. Stromar and tells them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We are they who believe that which is incredible to others and therefore are they who know that which is unknown to others None so knowing as they that believe the Gospell and therefore let us not shut this Faith out of our Souls and thereby exclude the greatest Good Nor let us think our selves unhappy because we do not see that which we expect For this would be to complain of our privilege and preeminence above those that depend merely on Sense and will not be wise beyond the narrow confines of their eyes Faith is that divine gift whereby God raises our minds above the pitch of vulgar Souls He brings us acquainted by this means with the most noble and glorious objects and illuminates us with the most comfortable knowledge without which we shall remain notwithstanding all our other wisedom in a sad dull night of ignorance and darkness And if this Faith touch our hearts also it will raise us to as excellent a temper of spirit and make us truly heavenly and divine We shall feel it altering the very frame of our thoughts designs and desires It will lead us to such a pitch of Vertue that we shall adhere to God and goodness whatsoever befalls us and solely depending on his promises trust our selves with him both when all other things fail us and when we have the greatest supports that they can lend us Which is no easie thing to flesh and bloud as Philo * L. Quis rerum Divin haeres p. 493. excellently observes for that inclines us to trust in riches and power and dignity and friends and strength of body and a number of such things but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the work of a great and heavenly Mind which cannot be inticed by any thing on earth to rely upon it An example of which we have in Abraham who believed God and obeyed his voice when he called him from his own country and his father's house and he went out not knowing whither he went Divers such instances there are of the power of divine Faith in him and in others in the xi Chapter of the Epistle to the Hebrews From which we may certainly conclude that nothing can be too hard for the Faith of Christ which is built upon surer grounds and a stronger foundation then theirs was It is of such mighty force I have shewn that one would think there needs no more to be done to make all the World good but onely by such means as I have declared to implant this Faith in all mens hearts But such is the perverseness of humane Nature that our work is not done when the judgement is convineed There must be new arts of insinuation used by those convictions to awaken and ingage the affections The Motives are certain and sure strong and powerfull but Men are weak and impotent careless and unconcerned about their own good After they know how things are they must be made to consider lest a quickning Motive lie in a dead hand or a cold heart which draws forth none of its virtue And there is no way that I can think of to stir them up to consideration but by propounding a few sensibly-affecting Questions to them which shall be part of the business of this last Chapter V. I. Let him therefore that believes this Record that God hath given us Eternall Life in his Son Jesus ask himself what he thinks in his Conscience is the way to this supreme Felicity May we live here just as we list and yet hope hereafter to live with Christ Or can we reasonably think to come to him without any thought about it and to be received up to his heavenly Kingdom though we mind nothing now but what we can get in this World Strange that Christian people should imagine Piety and Vertue to be things superfluous and take the mortifying the lusts of the flesh the lust of the eye and the pride of life to be nothing else but a piece of Monasticall austerity and melancholick devotion a thing which mere black choler and a peevish disposition makes men trouble themselves and the world withall Are we so blind as to think that a carefull endeavour after an inoffensive life towards God and towards men is but a precise Nicety which may be commended in those that have nothing else to doe but is of no necessity to our living eternally with God We cannot sure be so forsaken of our reason No nor think that the business of Religion is onely to hear the word of God and to be frequently on our knees and that we need not be so solicitous how to live and walk in the ways of God's Commandments What man instructed in the Gospell can be so senseless as to think by knocking often at heaven gates to get an entrance though otherwise he stands idle Do the Holy Books inspire us with any such conceits Do they tell us some holy breath will waft us safe over the dangerous Sea of worldly affairs troubles pleasures and temptations of various kinds Needs there no labour at the sails or the oars no wise guidance and steerage of the vessel no guard and defence against pirates but a man may confidently commit himself to the winds and let his vessel run whither they will carry it May he live I mean just as the course of the world hurries him and as he is driven by the
hath so contemned it as to prefer a little of this World before it be used as favourably in hell as if he had never heard of it What doth our Saviour mean then when he saith It shall be more tolerable for Sodom and Gomorrah in the day of judgment then for those places where the Gospell of God's grace was preached This very thing will make the fire more devouring to think for what poor pleasures or gains they set at nought so stupendious a grace and that withall they have lost those things for which they lost Heaven When they see how inconsiderable all their past delights were it will make the madness seem greater and the more distract and torment their inraged Minds to think how dear they now pay for them The miserable Soul will then continually pour upon it self the hottest and most scalding thoughts of its own gross stupidity and senseless negligence It will flame with anger and burning wrath against it self for the frantick choice which it hath made And rolling it self in the fire of its own fretfull and impatient displeasure will take such a furious revenge upon it self as to become its own dreadfull executioner In this misery it will lie frying for ever sibique perpetuum pabulum subministrabit and afford to it self perpetuall fewell to keep alive the boiling rage and fierce displeasure it hath conceived against it self The stings thereof will be sharper and more frequently returning then any pain which we are now sensible of can represent The flashes of Lightning are not so searching and they will be as quick as the thoughts of a Spirit And what the hideous and dolefull groans of a Spirit are we cannot tell especially that lies under the load of this thought that it might have been as happy as now it is miserable You may take a review of what was said in the beginning concerning ETERNALL LIFE and by that make some judgment of the Misery of those who are so unhappy as to lose it They will be deprived of all that Bliss which the Souls and bodies of the just shall injoy and not be able to avoid the sorest pains which even from thence will necessarily arise For the greater you can suppose their knowledge of God to be in the other World which is the Life of pious Souls so mu●● the greater will their sorrow and heaviness be to think that they have lost the favour of the Creatour of the World the Fountain of all Good And when they behold the glory wherein the just appear with our Blessed Lord this will be a new grief to them and most miserably afflict their hearts whensoever they think what praise is given to those holy men whom they despised in what glory they shine and unto what dignity they are preferred and on the other side consider their own shame and reproach and how vilely they lie under a perpetuall curse pronounced against them before Angels and men by the Lord of all And it will increase the torment to consider that they are the cause of all this misery which they have drawn upon themselves Their negligence will come to mind which gave no heed to the Divine illuminations Their contumacy also which resisted the Divine motions Their horrid wickedness into which they ran against the cries even of their own consciences And these considerations they will not be able to avoid nor put off the thoughts of the greatness of their misery But they will stick close to them and perpetually sting them so that all their Knowledge which is so comfortable to others will breed in them the most exquisite grief and sorrow This our Saviour means by outer darkness into which they shall be cast From whence we may guess in what conditions their Wills and their Affections must needs be in which there will be no love of God at all nothing that we can conceive but envy at the glory of the blessed hatred of themselves as the cause of all this mischief vexation of heart to see how great it is and desperation of seeing it grow less But I shall pursue it no farther because it would take up too much room in this discourse which already begins to grow too big I shall onely adde that none knows what flames the breath of the Lord will kindle The power of his anger is inconceivable especially when incensed by the slighting of his love And therefore what can we say of the dolours which the fire that never goes out and the worm that never dies when they meet together will cause both in the Souls and bodies of such contemptuous sinners Who will begin then to wish they had never been acquainted with the glad tidings of Salvation that so they might have lain in some more private corner of the miserable World in a bed of softer and more gentle flames and without that open disgrace to which they will be exposed What an ease would they think it if they might but have the favour to houl among the poor Indians and shriek no louder then other wicked Pagans and have no worse Devills to lash them then the leud Mahometans who never had a thought of any thing higher then a fleshly Paradise And yet the Pagans themselves thought their condition would be bad enough if they lived impiously and that it was impossible to escape a just punishment in another world As appears among a number of other records from that discourse I mentioned of Gobryas who saith the first place men come into when they depart this life is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Field of truth So called because there Judges sit to examine how every one hath passed his life and there is no way to evade their sentence by subterfuges or lies as his words are but they will dispose of all men with exact justice according as they deserve What they had some dark fancy of is now plainly and clearly revealed unto us who are instructed that God hath appointed a day in the which he will judge the world in righteousness by that man whom he hath ordained whereof he hath given assurance unto all men in that he hath raised him from the dead xvii Act. 31. And therefore we ought to be afraid of treasuring up unto our selves wrath against the day of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgment of God Who will render to every man according to his deeds To them who by patient continuance in well-doing seek for glory honour and immortality eternall life But unto them that are contentious and do not obey the truth but obey unrighteousness indignation and wrath Tribulation and anguish upon every Soul of man that doeth evill of the Jew we may say Christian first and also of the Gentile ii Romans 5 6 7 8 9. VI. Consider then I beseech you once more which is all the questions I shall ask what you are now resolved to doe Will you put it to the venture whether you be immortally happy or no Is it
and a glory Let us deceive the grave and make that peculiar which is common By death let us make a purchace of life Let none of us faint in our undertaking nor be desirous to live here any longer Let us make the Tyrant despair of moving others by seeing our constancy Let him appoint our sufferings we will put an end to them Let us make it appear that as we are Brethren by birth so we are in all things else not excepting death Such was the resolution saith he of these men who did not serve pleasure nor suffered themselves to be governed by their passions but purified their bodies and their spirits and in this manner were translated 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to that life which is incapable of any passion and free from all the troubles and miseries to which here we are exposed It would be too long to relate the speech of the Mother who likewise gave an illustrious testimony of her faith in God and hath left a rare example to all posterity of constancy and patience under the greatest sufferings The Apostle himself hath perpetuated their Memory in his Epistle to the Hebrews and made it sacred to all generations Where it will stand to our great confusion if we should not learn of those who had so great a Faith under so dark a revelation What would not these persons have done saith the forenamed Father if they had lived in our times who were so courageous before the sufferings of Christ and the glory I may adde that followed after If without example they behaved themselves so undauntedly what rare Souls would they have been with one especially with the example of Christ Jesus Such we ought to strive to be not onely as they were but as we conceive they would have been under our Master Strengthened I mean as St. Paul speaks with all might according to his glorious power unto all patience and long-suffering with joyfulness giving thanks unto the Father which hath made us meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light i. Col. 11 12. And so we shall if the same spirit of faith be in us that was in them For it tells us how Jesus went this way to heaven and that if we overcome we shall shine with him in his glory and sit down with him in his throne and inherit all things There need no more be said to encourage even those Christians who have been most delicately bred or that are of the tenderer Sex to wade through the greatest difficulties Let them but look up unto Jesus and He will inflame them with such ardent love that they will be glad to follow him to his Cross if they must go that way to come where He is This moved Dorotheus and divers other Courtiers who as Eusebius * L. viii Eccles Histor c. 6. reports were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the Emperour's Bedchamber and in such high favour that they were no less beloved then if they had been the Emperour 's own children to prefer the reproaches and pains of piety and the new-devised deaths they were to suffer for its sake before all the glory and delights wherein they lived And St. Peter we are told by Clemens Alexandrinus * L. vii Stromat p. 756. seeing his own Wife led to death rejoyced at the grace to which she was called thinking now she was upon her return home And chearfully exhorting her to proceed to the execution he called her by her name saying onely these few words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 REMEMBER THE LORD That was sufficient he knew to make her constant and courageous It being a faithfull saying an undoubted principle of Christianity on which we may ever safely build For if we be dead with him we shall also live with him if we suffer with him we shall also reign with him 2 Tim. ii 11 12. And it was no less stedfastly believed that they who suffered with him should also reign with him in a greater glory then others as we heard before from St. Paul who saith their afflictions would work for them a most ponderous crown of glory Nay they gave the like encouragement to all those who did any eminent service to our Blessed Lord. They that laboured hard for instance in the Word and Doctrine St. Paul saith were worthy of double honour or reward in this World 1 Tim. v. 17. Which few receiving but quite contrary they were least esteemed as he himself found by experience who took the most pains there was the greater reason to hope to find it in another life when the chief Shepherd appearing they were sure to receive an excellent crown of glory 1 Pet. v. 4. To every Saint our Lord promises a crown of glory as those crowns were wont to be called that they used in times of greatest joy the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 added to it which is never used in any other place of Scripture and is that whereby some of the crowns given to persons of desert in other Nations are called denotes I think something extraordinary in the glory of those good Shepherds who fed the flock of God according to the directions the Apostle had been giving them The Martyrs we are sure expected it who building on this foundation that they who suffer with him shall reign with him gave God thanks when they received the sentence of death and went to the execution singing and expired with hymns in their mouths and exhorted others in the midst of their torments to the like chearfull constancy Of all which I could produce instances out of the Ecclesiasticall story but I shall onely set down that of Liberatus and his Monks Who defending the Christian Faith against the Heresy of Arius when they were condemned to be thrown bound into a ship full of faggots and there to be burnt in the midst of the Sea sang aloud this hymn Victor Uticensis L. iv Vandal Persec Glory be to God in the highest Behold now is the acceptable time Behold now is the day of Salvation in which we suffer punishment for the faith of our God And why should not this faith much more easily comfort us against the death of our dearest Friends when we can reasonably hope they depart from us to go into the eternall Happiness of a better World Their gain is so great which they have made by the exchange that we ought not so heavily as we are wont to take our own loss This Photius represents very handsomely to his Brother Tarasius after he had said a great many other things to stop the tears that he shed immoderately for a daughter who was dead Suppose saith he Epist ccxxxii p. 352. thy Daughter should appear to thee and taking thee by the hand should kiss it with a chearfull and smiling countenance saying My Father why dost thou afflict thy self in this manner why dost thou bemoan me as if I was gone to an evill condition My lot is faln
think of removing to a strange country but confidently rely on his knowledge more then our own Let us remember the words of these Witnesses which say He is the Son of God in whom is Eternall Life Let us trust his judgment who thought it more desirable to go away though upon a Cross then to stay here in the greatest pleasure And since all these Witnesses say He is in heaven let us resolve that we will die looking up to him and saying Lord remember it is the will of the Father that we should have Everlasting Life Thou thy self appearedst to St. Stephen and madest him confident thou wilt receive our Spirit The Holy Ghost which is the Spirit of Truth saith thou art glorified and wilt glorifie us with thy self This thou hast preached to us This thy Bloud hath purchased for us This thou didst rise again to prepare against our coming to thee This thy holy Apostles say thou sentest them to publish to the World This thou hast made us believe and wait for and suffer for and long to enjoy O Dearest Lord and most mercifull Saviour who art the true and faithfull Witness though we miserable sinners deserve to be denied yet deny not thy self let not the price of thy precious Bloud be lost let not the Word of the Father of the Holy Ghost thine own Word fail If thou art not alive I am content to perish But if thou art as thou hast perswaded me then I will not cease to call upon thee I will die with these words in my mouth and be confident thou wilt hear me LORD JESUS RECEIVE MY SPIRIT Thus the blessed Martyr St. Stephen expired looking up stedfastly unto Jesus the Authour and Finisher of our Faith who then appeared in glory to him Whose example all the rest of that Noble Army followed triumphing over death in an assured hope of immortall life Which they had not the least doubt of it is manifest from hence that as Clemens Alexandrinus observes * L. vii Stromat p. 756. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the very extremity of their torments they gave thanks to God who they knew would reward their fidelity having in this very way consecrated Jesus to the highest Office of being the Finisher or Crowner of our Faith Therefore their heart was glad and their glory rejoyced And they sang chearfully with the holy Psalmist but with a far greater confidence God shall redeem my Soul from the power of the grave for he shall receive me xlix Psal 15. And O thou Lord Greg. Naz. Orat. x. in Caesarium fratrem p. 176. and Creatour of all things especially of this thy Workmanship O thou God and Father of thy Men O thou Lord of life and death O thou benefactour of Souls and dispenser of all good things O thou who didst form all things and in due time thou best knowest how in the depth of thy wisedom and administration wilt transform us by that Divine Artificer the WORD Receive me also hereafter when thou seest most convenient in the mean time governing me in this flesh as long as it will be profitable And receive me in thy fear prepared not disturbed nor hanging back at the last day and dragg'd by force from hence like the lovers of the World and the Flesh but chearfully and willingly unto that everlasting and blessed Life which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. And Id. Orat. xlii 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 696. O thou WORD of God! thou Light thou Life and Wisedom and Power for I delight in all thy Names O thou Off-spring and Image of that great Mind O intellectuall WORD and visible Man who upholdest all things by the word of thy power May it now please thee to accept of this Book though not the first-fruits yet the last perhaps that I may be able to offer thee both as a gratefull acknowledgment for all thy benefits and an humble supplication that I may have no other troubles beside the necessary sacred ones of my Charge Stop the fury of any disease which may seize on me or thy sentence if I be removed by thee And if thou art pleased to grant me a dissolution according to my desire and I be received into the Heavenly Tabernacles there I hope to offer acceptable Sacrifices to thee at thy holy Altar O FATHER and WORD and HOLY GHOST for to thee belongs all Glory Honour and Dominion for ever and ever Amen THE END Books written by the Reverend Dr. Patrick and Printed for Richard Royston at the Angel in Amen-corner THE Christian Sacrifice a Treatise shewing the Necessity End and Manner of receiving the holy Communion together with suitable Prayers and Meditations for every Month in the Year and the Principal Festivals in memory of our Blessed Saviour In Four Parts The Third Edition Corrected The Devout Christian instructed how to Pray and give Thanks to God Or a Book of Devotions for Families and particular persons in most of the concerns of Humane life The 2. Edition in Twelves An Advice to a Friend The 2. Edition in Twelves A Friendly Debate between a Conformist and a Non-conformist in Octavo In two Parts The Witnesses to Christianity or The Certainty of our Faith and Hope In a Discourse upon 1 S. John v. 7 8. In two Parts in Octavo new A Sermon Preached before the King on St. Stephen's day Printed by His Majesty's special command
we put our sins into the number of those things we must forsake it is apparent already it would be a trouble to keep them We are required indeed to crucifie the flesh which seems an hard saying But when we have enquired the meaning of it there is no severity to be found in it For it doth not oblige us to destroy or so much as to impair any faculty belonging to us neither to weaken the Understanding nor dull the Apprehension nor overload the Memory no nor consume our spirits nor deform our bodies nor prejudice our healths nor spoil our beauty or any thing else that God hath made There is no true pleasure of which he deprives us unless it be sometimes for a better and more excellent end He onely abridges our unjust liberty and limits the hurtfull excesses of our desires and passions which we are not to gratifie against our reason to the injury of our selves or our neighbours and to the indangering the loss of some better good In brief He allows us to please our selves so that every part of us be pleased our Judgment and Conscience as well as the lower Appetites And what now doth all this amount unto but the doing our selves a reall and intire kindness But in some state of things God will have us forsake all our worldly goods and possessions for the kingdom of heaven's sake as he required the Apostles and the first Disciples to Christianity True But do we not set too high a price upon these things if we value our obedience at a great rate upon this account I will let alone the comparison we ought to make between our loss and our gain Weigh things impartially by themselves and consider what it is we part withall should we suffer all our worldly goods to be taken from us rather then part with our Religion Do we lose any more then a Philosopher hath left of his own accord for the convenience of his study and that he might not be incumbred in his contemplations And while we had them were all those things necessary for us Doth Nature require so much Did not a great many of them lie by us unused What a small matter now does the account come to when we have made this abatement And how little reason is there that the parting with these things should make such a noise as if we had made some exceeding rich present to God's almighty love from whom we received them But let us look upon them again together with the loss of life and consider Are they things which we could have kept very long Do we any more then part with them a little before the time And what difference is there between their leaving us and our leaving them but the advantage we have by living a while after them to give a proof of a little very short patience and of intire trust in God and absolute resignation to his will Let the things we leave for God's sake be rated as high as we please all that can be made of them comes at last to this that in obedience to God we let them go a little before we could not enjoy them And suppose we be required to die it is but to go another way out of the world then we must shortly perhaps presently have done There is no difference at all but onely as much as there is between a sword and an acute disease between the flames of fire and those of a burning fever But we may endure many torments perhaps in the world before we die which are worse then death it self It may be so and there is a possibility it may not be so Now supposing we do not suffer any torments what a small matter is it that God asks that we may go to Heaven where we shall have an Happiness so great that we may well if need be as St. Peter speaks consent to endure something that looks more like self-deniall then any thing I have mentioned to obtain it And yet when that necessity comes this will arise to no great expense It is no more then we may naturally suffer by the stone or the gout or by some such disease which may seize upon us and not carry us to heaven neither And it is likewise considerable that wicked men many times take more pains and endure a great deal more then this comes to to go to hell Do we not see what attendance their lusts require from them and that they make provision for their satisfaction with much solicitude and trouble Nay do not their expences frequently run very high to gratifie some worldly or fleshly desire One man breaks his sleep another pines his body a third consumes his estate a fourth nourishes loathsome and foul diseases a fifth breeds cruell and tormenting pains which set him upon the rack a sixth ventures his life and runs the hazzard of the gallows or of a severer death And all sinners contrive and plot and trouble their brains to find opportunities and are often vexed with disappointments and as often put to shame and always troubled with their desires till they meet with some satisfaction and being never satisfied are always troubled with their restless desires Let all these things be considered soberly and then tell me whether God demands great things of us to obtain Eternall Life and doth not rather wonderfully oblige us in accepting so graciously our poor services nay carries us from the happiness of doing his will here to the happiness of having it rewarded with a most glorious recompence in another world And cast in this consideration also which Clemens Alexandrinus * Admon ad Gentes p. 55. propounds to the Gentiles how much many men would be willing to give if it were set at a price to purchase everlasting Salvation And therefore what account can they give of their unwillingness to accept of that on such easie terms which cannot be bought with all the gold if we had it of the fabulous Pactolus We may purchase this most precious Salvation if we will 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with our own Treasure which we have within our selves viz. Charity and a lively Faith This is its just price saith he which God will gladly accept For we hope in the living God who is the Saviour of all men especially of the Faithfull But it cannot be obtained by any other means For they that stick to this World as weeds do to the rocks in the sea slight immortality and judge themselves unworthy of the other World which at so low a rate offered it self to their Faith and Charity But we have just reason to proceed a great deal farther then all this and supposing a man could alway live here without the least trouble and in the fullest contentment that either his Soul or body can now enjoy I ask again whether a man that believes the Gospell would be willing to have his Eternall life in this World and not rather chuse to go thither
where both Soul and body shall be so wonderfully improved as to be capable of more solid pure and durable pleasures then this Earth can ever afford He that considers how weak humane Nature is in this state and how unable to entertain it self long with any of those things which please our senses will not take much time to resolve this question Should we be furnished with the best delights that Nature can crave in the most perfect health and vigorous strength still we should find either fulness and satiety or lassitude and weariness follow the enjoyment This is a great part of man's vanity in his best Estate that all his fruitions either suppose or make a consumption of his spirits And how short our understandings are and will be while we apprehend by the brain and are forced to spend so much time in serving our bodily necessities we cannot but be sensible and therefore shall always be possessed with desires which cannot here be satisfied and long to know those things of which should we stay never so many Ages here we must remain ignorant Who would not then that hath any hopes in another world freely consent to a dissolution in order to a better conjunction of Soul and body in a state of greater strength and spriteliness to enjoy a fuller good with greater constancy without any weariness or dejection of appetite with perfect satisfaction and an eternall pleasure in enjoying the same again And if we agree to this judge then what reason there is to be exceeding solicitous to attain that heavenly Bliss which so inconceivably transcends all that we can fansy to our selves but are never like to enjoy in this world And judge again how unworthy then this short this troublesome life which is but like a dream full of distracted thoughts and cares and fears is to come into any competition with that Eternall life which we expect And once more how mad they are who prefer a brutall wicked life which mere rationall men have hissed out of the world before that happy state which far exceeds even the life of innocence in a Paradise upon earth VI. And let us hence take occasion to consider again if it be not desirable alway to stay here on this Earth how far distant are they from the happiness of the other World who have their thoughts very rarely there What shall we think of such careless believers as love not to have their minds troubled with the thoughts of Death and of Eternall Life with which they desire to have as little acquaintance as may be till they come thither Are they afraid of believing it too strongly for fear it should spoil all their earthly delights and make them lose the relish they have of bodily pleasures or hinder their business and make them have no list to follow it There is no danger of this for a lively belief of the Life to come heightens all our other joys by making them innocent and furthers our affairs by making us diligent but not too solicitous But some such fancy possesses the hearts of men who have no inclination to entertain any familiarity with Heaven till they think they are shortly to leave this Earth For if we desire them to think often and seriously of Eternall Life they return such an Answer as Antipater made to a man that presented him with a Book concerning Happiness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I am not at leisure Tell me of this when I have nothing else to doe now I have other more weighty imployments This is the sense of mens gross negligence and their seldom retiring to look up unto Jesus Who justly expected not onely that greater multitudes upon the publishing of such an incomparable glory and happiness should become Religious but that their Piety should arrive to a greater height of Vertue by perpetuall contemplation of it Christians one would think should love Vertue more dearly and be more intirely devoted to the study of it now that it hath such a dowry then any Philosophers ever were who loved it for it self and thought it to be its own price and portion And so they would if they did not lay aside all consideration and suffer the thoughts of Eternal Bliss to slip out of their minds It is a saying among the Jews that when God first created Man his stature was so tall that he reached from heaven to earth and could grasp all this world in his arms as a very little thing But post peccatum Deus eum minuit ad centum cubitos after he sinned God took him down to the height of an hundred cubits And still as men grew worse and worse they sunk lower till they dwindled away as we see by our selves almost to Nothing The Morall of it is very true And if the Christian Faith like the breath of life wherewith God inspired Man at the first did throughly possess and renew our Souls we should grow up again to such an excellent pitch as to be above all the Earth and tread it under our feet At the very entrance of it we should be inflamed with a most vehement desire and hope to grow till we be above the heavens and made associates with the Angels and sit down with our Blessed Saviour in his Throne And the lively hope of this will make us presently discharge our selves of all those evill affections which have degraded us and sunk us so low that many men can scarce be discerned from the brutes that perish They can speak indeed but that too is so sottishly unreasonable as it onely serves to proclaim into what a pitifull condition they are faln Out of which nothing but the Christian Faith can raise us which delivered the Gentile world from their Idolatry and purged their hearts when they lay 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Origen often speaks in the most confused mixture of all filthiness and impurity It retains its virtue still did we but inliven it by such affectionate considerations as these Which make us so ashamed to continue wallowing in the mire that they will not suffer us to content our selves with a mean degree of purity but as he which called us is holy so they press us to be holy in all manner of conversation 1 Pet. i. 15. V. And can any man now imagine there is no danger at all in resisting so mighty a motive as this to all well-doing or that a man shall be no more miserable after his neglect of such great Salvation then he would have been if no such proposall had been made to him Where have those men lived what have they been thinking of all their days into whose hearts such a belief can enter that Christians may sin at as easy a rate as heathens What will despite done to such astonishing love of God to men as is manifested to us not at all inflame the reckoning Can a man see the Kingdom of Heaven set open before his eyes and offered to him and after he