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

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joy God poures the golden oyle of comfort into broken Vessels the Mourners heart is emptied of pride and God fills the empty with his blessing the Mourners tears have helped to purge out corruption and after purging physick God gives a Julip The Mourner is ready to faint away under the burden of sin and then the bottle of strong water comes seasonably The Lord would have the incestuous person upon his deep humiliation to be comforted lest he should be swallowed up with over much sorrow 2 Cor. 2.7 This is the Mourners priviledge he shall be comforted the Valley of tears brings the soul into a Paradise of joy a sinners joy brings forth sorrow the mourners sorrow brings forth joy John 16.22 Your sorrow shall be turned into joy The Saints have a wet seed-time but a joyful Harvest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They shall be comforted SECT I. Showing the mourners comforts here NOw to illustrate this I shall show you what the comforts are the mourners shall have These comforts are of a divine infusion and they are two-fold either Here or Hereafter * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost 1. Comforts here 1. COMFORTS HERE They are called the consolations of God Job 15.11 That is Great comforts such as none but God can Give they exceed all other comforts as far as heaven doth earth The root on which these comforts grow is The blessed Spirit he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Comforter John 14.26 and comfort is said to be a fruit of the Spirit Gal. 5.22 Christ did purchase peace the Spirit speaks peace Quest How doth the Spirit comfort Answ Either Mediately or Immediately 1. Mediately By helping us to apply the Promises to ourselves and draw water out of those Wells of salvation we lie as dead children at the breast till the Spirit helps us to suck the breast of a Promise and when the Spirit hath taught Faith this Art now comfort flows in O how sweet is the breast-milk of a Promise 2. The Spirit comforts immediatly The Spirit by a more direct act presents God to the soul as reconciled it sheds his love abroad in the heart from whence flows infinite joy Rom. 5.5 The Spirit secretly whispers Pardon for sin and the sight of a Pardon dilates the heart with joy Matth. 9.2 Be of good chear thy sinnes are forgiven thee That I may speak more fully to this point I shall show you the qualifications and excellencies of these comforts which God gives his mourners 1. These comforts are real comforts the Spirit of God cannot witness to that which is untrue There are many in this age do pretend to comfort but their comforts are meere impostures the body may as well swell with wind as with flesh a man may as well be swelled with false as true comforts * Distinguendum est inter Gaudia Veritatis Vanitatis Aug. The comforts of the Saints are certain they have the seal of the Spirit set to them Ephes 1.13 2 Cor. 1.22 A seal is for confirmation when a Deed is sealed it is firme and unquestionable When a Christian hath the seal of the Spirit stamped upon his heart now he is confirmed in the love of God Quest Wherein do these comforts of the Spirit which are unquestionably sure differ from those which are false and pretended Answ Three ways 1. The comforts of Gods Spirit are laid in deep conviction John 16.7 8 and when he that is the Comforter verse 7. is come he shall reprove or as the Greek word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he shall convince the world of sinne Quest Why doth conviction go before consolation Answ Conviction fits for comfort by conviction the Spirit doth sweetly dispose the heart to these two things 1. To seek after Christ When once the soul is convinced of sin and the hell that follows it now a Saviour is precious When the Spirit hath shot in the arrow of conviction now saith a poor soul where may I meet with Christ In what Ordinance may I come to enjoy Christ saw ye him whom my soul loves All the world for one glimpse of my Saviour 2. The Spirit by conviction makes the heart willing to receive Christ upon his own termes man by nature would article and indent with Christ he would take half Christ he would take him for a Saviour not a Prince he would accept of Christ as he hath an head of gold Cant. 5.11 but not as he hath the government upon his shoulders Isa 9.6 But when God le ts loose the spirit of bondage and convinceth a sinner of his lost undone condition now he is content to have Christ upon any termes When Paul was struck down to the ground by a spirit of conviction he cries out Lord what wilt thou have me to do Acts 9.6 Let God propound what Articles he will the soul will subscribe to them Now when a man is brought to Christs termes to beleeve and obey then he is fit for mercy when the Spirit of God hath been a Spirit of conviction then it becomes a spirit of consolation when the plough of the Law hath gone upon the heart and broken up the fallow ground now God sows the seed of comfort Those who brag of comfort but were never yet convinced nor broken for sin have cause to suspect their comfort to be a delusion of Satan It is like a mad mans joy who fancies himself to be King but it may be said of his laughter it is mad Eccles 2.2 The seed which wanted depth of earth withered Matth. 13. that comfort which wants depth of earth deep humiliation and conviction will soone wither and come to nothing 2. The Spirit of God is a sanctifying before a comforting Spirit as Gods Spirit is called the Comforter so he is called a spirit of grace Zach. 12.10 Grace is the work of the Spirit Comfort is the seal of the Spirit the work of the Spirit goes before the seal the graces of the spirit are compared to water Isa 44.3 and the comforts of the spirit are compared to oyle Isa 61.1 First God pours in the water of the spirit and then comes the oyle of gladnesse The oyle in this sence runs above the water Hereby we shall know whether our comforts are true and genuine Some talk of the comforting spirit who never had the sanctifying Spirit they boast of assurance but never had grace these are spurious joyes these comforts will leave men at death they will end in horror and despair Gods Spirit will never set seal to a Blank First the heart must be an Epistle written with the finger of the Holy Ghost and then it is sealed with the Spirit of Promise 3. The comforts of the Spirit are humbling Lord saith the soul What am I that I should have a smile from heaven and that thou shouldest give me a privy seal of thy love The more water is poured into a Bucket the lower it descends the fuller the ship is laden
with sweet spices the lower it sails the more a Christian is filled with the sweet comforts of the Spirit the lower he fails in humility the fuller a Tree is of fruit the lower the bough hangs the more full we are of the fruits of the Spirit joy and peace Gal. 5.22 the more we bend down in humility St. Paul a chosen Vessel * Acts 9.15 fill'd with the wine of the Spirit * 2 Cor. 5.1 did not more abound in joy than in lowliness of mind Eph. 3.8 Unto me who am less than the least of all Saints is this grace given c. He who was the chief of the Apostles calls himself the least of Saints Those who say they have comfort but are proud they have learned to despise others and are climb'd above Ordinances their comforts are delusions the Divel is able not only to transform himself into an Angel of light 2 Cor. 11.4 but he can transform himself into the Comforter 'T is easie to counterfeit money to silver over brass and put the Kings image upon it the Divel can silver over false comforts and make them look as if they had the stamp of the King of heaven upon them the comforts of God are humbling though they lift the heart up in thankfulness yet they do not puff it up in pride 2. The comforts God gives his Mourners are unmixed they are not tempered with any bitter ingredients worldly comforts are like wine that runs dregs there is that guilt within checks and corrodes in midst of laughter the heart is sad Prov 14.13 Queen Mary once said if she were opened they would find Callis lying at her heart if the breast of a sinner were anatomized and opened you would find a worm gnawing at his heart guilt is a Wolf which feeds in the breast of his comfort a sinner may have a smiling countenance but a chiding conscience his mirth is like the mirth of a man in debt who is every houre in fear of arresting the comforts of wicked men are spiced with bitterness they are worm-wood wine Hi sunt qui trepidant ad omnia fulgura pallent Hor. Cum tonat exanimes primo quoque murmure coelum But spiritual comforts are pure they are not muddied with guilt nor mixed with fear they are the pure wine of the Spirit what the Mourner feels is joy and nothing but joy 3. These comforts God gives his Mourners are sweet Eccles 12.7 Truly the light is sweet so is the light of Gods countenance How sweet are those comforts which bring the Comforter along with them John 14.16 Therefore the love of God shed into the heart is said to be better than wine Cant. 1.2 Wine pleaseth the palate but the love of God chears the conscience the lips of Christ drop sweet smelling myrrhe Cant. 5.13 The comforts God gives are a Christians Musick they are the golden Pot and the Manna the Nectar and Ambrosia of a Christian they are the Saints Festival their banquetting stuffe so sweet are these Divine comforts that the Church had her 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fainting fits for want of them Cant. 2.5 stay me with flagons Metonymia Subjecti pro adjuncto the flagons are put for the wine by these flagons are meant the comforts of the Spirit the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies all variety of delights to show the abundance of delectability and sweetnesse in these comforts of the Spirit Comfort me with Apples Apples are sweet in taste fragrant in smell so sweet and delicious are those Apples which grow upon the tree in Paradise These comforts from above are so sweet that they make all other comforts sweet health estate relations they are like sawce which makes all our earthly possessions and enjoyments come off with a better relish So sweet are these comforts of the Spirit that they do much abate and moderate our joy in worldly things he who hath been drinking spirits of wine or Alkermes will not much thirst after water and that man who hath once tasted how sweet the Lord is Psal 34.8 and hath drunk the cordials of the Spirit will not thirst immoderately after secular delights Those who play with dogs and birds it is a signe they have no children such as are inordinate in their desire and love of the creature declare plainly that they never had better comforts 4. These comforts which God gives his mourners are holy comforts they are call'd the comforts of the holy Ghost Acts 9.31 Every thing propagates in its own kind * Omne agens operatur secundum naturam agens the holy Ghost can no more produce impure joys in the soul than the Sun can prduce darknesse he who hath the comforts of the Spirit looks upon himself as a person engaged to do God more service Hath the Lord looked upon me with a smiling face I can never pray enough I can never love God enough The comforts of the Spirit raise in the heart an holy antipathy against sin the Dove hates every feather that hath grown upon the Hawke so there is an hatred of every motion and temptation to evil he who hath a principle of life in him opposeth every thing that would destroy life he hates poison so he that hath the comforts of the Spirit living in him sets himself against those sins which would murder his comforts divine comforts give the soul more acquaintance with God 1 John 1.4 Our fellowship is with the Father and his Sonne Jesus 5. The comforts reserv'd for the mourners are filling comforts Rom. 15.13 The God of hope fill you with joy John 16.24 Ask that your joy may be full When God pours in the joyes of heaven they fill the heart and make it run over 2 Cor. 7.4 I am exceeding joyful the Greek word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I overflow with joy as a Cup that is filled with wine till it runs over Outward comforts can no more fill the heart than a Triangle can fill a Circle Spiritual joyes are satisfying Psal 63.5 My heart shall be satisfied as with marrow and I will praise thee with ioyful lips Davids heart was full and the joy did break out at his lips Psal 4.7 Thou hast put gladnesse in my heart worldly joyes do put gladnesse into the face 2 Cor. 5.12 they rejoyce 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the face but the Spirit of God puts gladnesse into the heart divine joyes are heart-joyes Zach. 10.7 John 16.22 Your heart shall rejoyce a believer doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luke 1.47 My spirit rejoyceth in God And to show how filling these comforts are which are of an heavenly extraction the Psalmist saith they create greater joy than when wine and cyle encrease Psal 4. Wine and Oyle may delight but not satisfie they have their vacuity and indigence we may say as Zach. 10.2 they comfort in vaine outward comforts do sooner cloy than chear and sooner weary than fill Xerxes offered great rewards to him
that could finde out a new pleasure but the comforts of the Spirit are satisfactory they recruit the heart Psal 94.19 Thy comforts delight my soul There is as much difference between heavenly comforts and earthly as between a banquet that is eaten and one that is painted on the wall 6. The comforts God gives his Mourners in this life are glorious comforts 1 Pet. 1.8 Joy full of glory 1. They are glorious because they are a prelibation and fore-taste of that joy which we shall have in a glorified estate * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys These comforts are an handsel and earnest of glory they put us in heaven before our time Ephes 1.13 14. Ye were sealed with that holy Spirit which is an earnest of the inheritance the earnest is part of the sum behind so the comforts of the Spirit are the earnest the cluster of grapes at Eshcol * Num. 13.23 the first-fruits of the heavenly Canaan 2. The joyes of the Spirit are glorious 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in opposition to other joyes which compared with these are inglorious and vile A carnal mans joy as it is aery and flashy so it is sordid he sucks nothing but dregs Amos 6.13 Ye rejoyce in a thing of naught A carnal spirit rejoyceth because he can say this house is his this estate is his but a gracious spirit rejoyceth because he can say this God is his Psal 48.14 For this God is our God for ever and ever The ground of a Christians joy is glorious he rejoyceth in that he is an heir of the promise the joy of a godly man is made up of that which is the Angels joy he triumphs in the light of Gods countenance his joy is that which is Christs own joy he rejoyceth in the mystical union which is begun here and consummate in heaven Thus the joy of the Saints is a joy full of glory 7. The comforts which God gives his Mourners are infinitely transporting and ravishing so delightful are they and amazing that they cause a jubilation which as some of the Learned speak is so great that it cannot be expressed * Jubiliatio dicitur cum cordis laetitia oris efficacia non expletur of all things joy is the most hard to be deciphered 't is called laetitia inenarrabilis joy unspeakable 1 Pet. 1.8 You may sooner taste honey then tell how sweet it is the most pathetical words can no more set forth the comforts of the Spirit then the most curious Pensil can draw the life and breath of a man the Angels cannot express the joyes they feel some have been so overwhelmed with the sweet raptures of joy that they have not been able to contain but as Moses have dyed * Plurimis mortem attulit gaudium ingens Gell. with a kiss from Gods mouth Thus have we seen the glass oft breaking with the strength of the liquor put into it 8. These comforts of the Spirit are powerful they are strong cordials so the Apostle phraseth it Hebr. 6.18 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 strong consolation Divine comfort 1. Strengthens for duty Nehem. 8.10 The joy of the Lord is your strength Joy whets and sharpens industry a man that is steeled and animated with the comforts of Gods Spirit goes with vigour and alacrity through the exercises of Religion he believes firmly he loves fervently he is carried full sail in duty the joy of the Lord is his strength 2. Divine comfort supports under affliction 1 Thes 1.6 Having received the Word in much affliction 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with joy The wine of the Spirit can sweeten the waters of Marah * Amaritudines mundi dulces reddit Aug. They who are possessed of these heavenly comforts can gather grapes of thorns and fetch honey out of the Lyons carcass They are strong consolations indeed that can stand it out against the fiery tryal and turn the flame into a bed of Roses How powerful is that comfort which can make a Christian glory in tribulation Rom. 5.3 A believer is never so sad but he can rejoyce the Bird of Paradise can sing in Winter 2 Cor. 6.10 As sorrowing yet alwayes rejoycing Let sickness come the sense of pardon takes away the sense of pain The Inhabitant shall not say I am sick Isa 33.24 Let death come a Christian is above it O death where is thy sting 1 Cor. 15.55 At the end of the Rod a Christian tastes honey these are strong consolations 9. The comforts Gods Mourners have are heart-quieting comforts they cause a sweet acquiescence and rest in the soul * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist Ech. The heart of a Christian is in a kind of ataxy and discomposure like the Needle in the Compass it shakes and trembles till the Comforter comes Some creatures cannot live but in the Sun a Christian is even dead in the Nest unless he may have the Sun-light of Gods countenance Psal 143.7 Hide not thy face from me lest I be like them that go down into the pit Nothing but the breast will quiet the child 't is only the breast of consolation quiets the believer 10. The comforts of the Spirit are abiding comforts as they abound in us so they abide with us John 14.16 He shall give you another Comforter that he may abide with you for ever Worldly comforts are still upon the wing ready to flie they are like a land-flood or a flash of lightning Mart. Saepe fluunt imo sic quoque lapsa sinu All things here are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but the comforts with which God feeds his Mourners are immortal 2 Thes 2.16 Who hath loved us and hath given us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 everlasting consolation Though a Christian hath not always a full beam of comfort yet he hath a dawning of it in his soul he hath still a ground of hope and a root of joy there is that within him which bears up his heart and which he would not on any terms part with Use Use Behold the Mourners priviledge he shall be comforted David who was the great Mourner of Israel was the sweet singer of Israel The weeping Dove shall be covered with the golden feathers of comfort O how rare and superlative are these comforts Quest But may not Gods Mourners want these comforts Answ Spiritual Mourners have a title to these comforts yet they may sometimes want them God is a free Agent he will have the timing of our comforts he hath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a self-freedom to do what he will The holy one of Israel will not be limited he will reserve his Prerogative to give or suspend comfort pro libitu and if we are awhile without comfort we must not quarrel with his dispensations for as the Mariner is not to wrangle with Providence because the wind blows out of the East when he desires it to blow out of the West nor is the Husbandman to murmure when God stops the bottles of heaven in
time of drought so neither is any man to dispute or quarrel with God when he stops the sweet influence of comfort but ought rather to acquiesce in his sacred will But though the Lord might by vertue of his Soveraignty with-hold comfort from the Mourner yet there may be many pregnant causes assigned why Mourners want comfort 1. In regard of God 2. In regard of themselves 1. In regard of God He sees it fit to with-hold comfort 1. That he may raise the value of grace We are apt to esteem comfort above grace therefore God locks up our comforts for a time that he may inhance the price of grace when farthings go better than gold the King will call in farthings that the price of gold may be the more raised 2. God would have his people learn to serve him for himself and not for comfort only it is amor Meretricius an Harlot love to love the husbands money and tokens more than his person such as serve God only for comfort do not so much serve God as serve themselves of him 2. That Gods Mourners want comfort it is most frequently in regard of themselves 1. Through mistake which is two-fold 1. They go not to the right spring for comfort they go to their tears when they should go to Christs blood it is a kind of Idolatry to make our tears the ground of comfort Mourning is not meritorious it is the way to joy not the cause Jacob got the blessing in the garments of his elder brother true comfort flows out of Christs sides our tears are stained till they are washed in the blood of Christ John 16. ult In me peace 2. Mistake is that Mourners are priviledged persons and may take more liberty they may slacken the strings of duty and let loose the reins to sin Christ hath indeed purchased a liberty for his people but an holy liberty not a liberty for sin but from sin 1 Pet. 2.16 Ye are a Royal Priesthood a peculiar people ye are not in a state of slavery but Royalty What follows do not make Christian liberty a cloak for sin Ver. 16. As free and not using your liberty for a cloak of maliciousness If we quench the sanctifying Spirit God will quench the comforting Spirit sin is compared to a cloud Isa 44.22 This cloud intercepts the light of Gods countenance 2. Gods Mourners sometimes want comfort through discontent and peevishness David makes his disquiet the cause of his sadness Psal 43.5 Why art thou cast down O my soul why art thou disquieted within me A disquieted heart like a rough Sea is not easily calmed 't is hard to make a troubled spirit receive comfort this disquiet ariseth from various causes sometimes from outward sorrow and melancholy sometimes from a kind of envy Gods people are troubled to see others have comfort and they want it and now in a pet they refuse comfort and like a froward child put away the breast Psal 77.2 My soul refused to be comforted Indeed a disquieted spirit is no more fit for comfort than a distracted man is fit for counsel and whence is the Mourners discontent but pride as if God had not dealt well with him in stopping the influences of comfort O Christian thy spirit must be more humbled and broken before God empty out his golden oyle of joy 3. The Mourner is without comfort for want of applying the promises he looks at that sin which may humble him but not at that Word which may comfort him The Mourners eyes are so full of tears that he cannot see the promise the vertue and comfort of a medicine is in the applying when the promises are applied by faith they bring comfort Hosea 2.19 Isa 49.15 16. Faith milks the breast of a promise That Satan may hinder us of comfort it is his policy either to keep the promise from us that we may not know it or to keep us from the promise that we may not apply it Never a promise in the Bible but belongs to the Mourner had he but the skill and dexterity of faith to lay hold on it 4. The Mourner may want comfort through too much earthly-mindedness by feeding immoderately on earthly comforts we miss of heavenly comforts Isa 57.17 For the iniquity of his covetousness was I wroth and I hid me The earth puts out the fire earthliness extinguisheth the flame of divine joy in the soul an Eclipse is per interpositionem corporis Lunaris when the Moon which is a dense body comes between the Moon is an Emblem of the world Rev. 12.1 when this comes between then there is an Eclipse in the light of Gods face Such as dig in Mines say there is such a damp comes from the earth as puts out the light of a candle earthly comforts send forth such a damp as puts out the light of spiritual joy 5. Perhaps the Mourner hath had comfort and lost it Adams Rib was taken from him when he was asleep Gen. 2.21 Our comforts are taken away when we fall asleep in security the Spouse lost her beloved when she lay upon the bed of sloath Cant. 5.2 6. For these Reasons Gods Mourners may want comfort but that the spiritual Mourner may not be too much dejected I shall reach forth the cup of consolation Jer. 16.7 and speak a few words that may comfort the Mourner in the want of comfort 1. Jesus Christ was without comfort therefore no wonder if we are our comforts are not better than his he who was the Son of Gods love was without the sense of Gods love 2. The Mourner hath a seed of comfort 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Psal 97.11 Light is sown for the righteous Light is a Metaphor put for comfort and it is sown Though a child of God hath not comfort alwayes in the flowre yet he hath in the seed though he doth not feel comfort from God yet he takes comfort in God 3. A Christian may be high in grace and low in comfort the high Mountains are without flowres the Mines of gold have little or no corn growing on them a Christians heart may be a rich Mine of grace though it be barren of comfort 4. The Mourner is heir to comfort and though for a small moment God may forsake his people Isa 54.7 yet there is a time shortly coming when the Mourner shall have all tears wiped away and shall be brim-full of comfort this joy is reserved for heaven and this brings me to the second particular SECT 2. Showing the mourners comforts hereafter 2. COMFORTS HEREAFTER 2. Comforts hereafter They shall be comforted Though in this life some interviews and love-tokens passe between God and the mourner yet the great comforts are kept in reversion in Gods presence is fulnes of joy There is a time coming the day-star is ready to appear when the Saints shall bathe themselves in the river of life when they shall never see a wrinkle on Gods brow more but his face shall shine his
promise should not be fulfilled 3. God will fill the hungry soul because he himself hath excited and stirred up this hunger he plants holy desires in us and will not he satisfie those desires which he himself hath wrought in us as in case of prayer when God prepares the heart to pray he prepares his ear to hear Psal 17.10 So in case of spiritual hunger when God prepares the heart to hunger he will prepare his hand to fill it is not rational to imagine that God should deny to satisfie that hunger which he himself hath caused Nature doth nothing in vain Should the Lord inflame the desire after righteousness and not fill it he might seem to do something in vain 4. God will fill the hungry from those sweet Relations he stands unto them they are his children we cannot deny our children when they are hungry we will rather spare it from our selves Luke 11.13 When he that is born of God shall come and say Father I hunger give me Christ Father I thirst refresh me with the living streams of thy Spirit can God deny Doth God hear the Raven when it cries and will he not hear the righteous when they cry when the Earth opens its mouth and thirsts God doth satisfie it Psal 65.9 10. Doth the Lord satisfie the thirsty Earth with showres and will he not satisfie the thirsty soul with grace 5. God will satisfie the hungry because the hungry soul is most thankful for mercy when the restless desire hath been drawn out after God and God fills it how thankful is a Christian The Lord loves to bestow his mercy where he may have most praise we delight to give to them that are thankful Musitians love to play where there is the best sound God loves to bestow his mercies where he may hear of them again The hungry soul sets the Crown of praise upon the head of free-grace Psal 50.23 Who so offereth praise glorifies me 3. How God fills the hungry soul Answ There is a three fold filling 1. With Grace 2. With Peace 3. With Bliss 1. God fills the hungry soul with Grace Grace is filling because sutable to the soul Stephen full of the Holy Ghost Acts 7.55 This fulness of Grace is in respect of parts not of degrees There is something of every Grace though not perfection in any Grace 2. God fills the hungry soul with peace Rom. 15.13 The God of hope fill you with joy and peace this flows from Christ Israel had honey out of the Rock this honey of peace comes out of the Rock Christ John 16. ult that in me ye might have peace So filling is this peace that it sets the soul a longing after heaven this Cluster of Grapes quickens the appetite and pursuit after the full Crop 3. God fills the hungry soul with bliss Glory is a filling thing Psal 17. ult When I awake I shall be satisfied with thy image When a Christian awakes out of the sleep of death then he shall be satisfied having the glorious beams of Gods image shining upon him then shall the soul be filled brim-full the glory of heaven is so sweet that the soul shall still thirst yet so infinite that it shall be filled Qui te Christe bibent dulci torrente refecti Non sitient ultra sed tamen sitient Use What an Encouragement is this to hunger after righteousness such shall be filled Use God chargeth us to fill the hungry Isa 58.10 He blames those who do not fill the hungry Isa 32.6 And do we think he will be slack in that which he blames us for not doing Oh come with hungrings after Christ and be assured of satisfaction God keeps open house for hungry sinners he invites his Guests and bids them come without money Isa 55.1 2. Gods Nature inclines him and his Promise obligeth him to fill the hungry Consider Why did Christ receive the Spirit without measure John 3.34 It was not for himself he was infinitely full before but he was filled with the holy unction for this end that he might distill his grace upon the hungry soul Art thou ignorant Christ was filled with wisdom that he might teach thee Art thou polluted Christ was filled with grace that he might cleanse thee Shall not the soul then come to Christ who was filled on purpose to fill the hungry we love to knock at a rich mans door in our Fathers house there is bread enough come with desire and you shall go away with comfort you shall have the vertues of Christs blood the influences of his Spirit the communications of his love Here are two Objections made against this Object 1 1. The carnal mans Objection I have saith he hungred after righteousness yet am not filled Answ 1 Answ 1. Thou sayst thou hungerest and art not satisfied perhaps God is not satisfied with thy hunger thou hast opened thy mouth wide * Psal 81.10 but hast not opened thine ear * Psal 40.9 When God hath called thee to Family-prayer and mortification of sin thou hast like the deaf Adder stopped thine ear against God Zach. 7.11 No wonder then thou hast not that comfortable filling as thou desirest though thou hast opened thy mouth yet thou hast stopped thine ear the child that will not hear his parent is made to do pennance by fasting 2. Perhaps thou thirstest as much after a tentation as after righteousness At a Sacrament thou seemest to be inflamed with desire after Christ but the next tentation that comes either to drunkenness or lasciviousness thou fallest in and closest with the tentation Satan doth but becken to thee and thou comest thou openest faster to the Tempter than to Christ and dost thou wonder thou art not filled with the fat things of Gods house 3. Perhaps thou hungerest more after the world than after righteousness The young man in the Gospel would have Christ but the world lay nearer his heart than Christ hypocrites pant more after the dust of the Earth * Amos 2.7 than the water of life Israel had no Manna while their Dough lasted such as feed immoderately upon the Dough of earthly things must not think to be fill'd with Manna from heaven if your money be your god never look to receive another God in the Sacrament 2. The godly mans Objection I have had unfeigned Object 2 desires after God but are not filled Answ 1. Thou mayst have a filling of grace Answ 1 though not of comfort if God doth not fill thee with gladness yet with goodness Psal 107.11 Look into thy heart and see the distillations of the Spirit the dew may fall though the honey-comb doth not drop 2. Wait a while and thou shalt be filled the Gospel is a spiritual Banquet it feasts the soul with grace and comfort none eat of this Banquet but such as wait at the Table Isa 25.6 9. In this Mountain shall the Lord of Hosts make unto all people a Feast of fat things a Feast of wines on
Therefore I answer 1. In time of desertion God leaves in his children a seed of comfort 1 John 3.9 his seed remaineth in him Answ 1 This seed of God is a seed of comfort Though Gods children in desertion want the seale of the Spirit yet they have the Unction of the Spirit 1 John 2.27 Though they want the Sun yet they have a day-star in their hearts as the tree in winter though it hath lost its leaves and fruit yet there is sap in the root So in the winter of desertion there is the sap of grace in the root of the heart as it is with the Sun masking it self with a cloud when it denies light to the earth yet it gives forth its influence so though Gods dear adopted ones may lose the light of his countenance yet they have the influence of his grace Quest What grace appears in the time of desertion Ans 1. An high prizing of Gods ove If God should say to the deserted soul what wilt thou and it shall be granted to half of the Kingdom he would reply Lord that I might see thee as I was wont in the Sanctuary That I may have one golden beam of thy love the deserted soul slights all other things in comparison it is not gardens or orchards or the most delicious Objects that can give him contentment they are like musick to a sad heart he desires as Absalom to see the Kings face 2. A lamenting after the Lord. 'T is the saddest day with him when the Sun of righteousnesse is eclipsed a child of God can better bear the worlds stroak than Gods absence he is even melted into tears the clouds of desertion produce spiritual rain and whence is this weeping but from love 3. Willingnesse to suffer any thing so he may have a sight of God A child of God could be content with Simon of Cyrene to carry the Crosse if he were sure Christ were upon it he could willingly die if with Simeon he might die with Christ in his armes Behold here the seed of God in a believer the work of sanctification when he wants the wine of consolation Answ 2 Answ 2. I answer God hath a design of mercy in hiding his face from his adopted ones First it is for the trial of grace and there are two graces brought to trial in time of desertion 1. Faith 1. When we can believe against sence and feeling when we want an experience yet can trust to a ptomise when we have not the kisses of Gods mouth yet can cleave to the word of his mouth this is faith indeed here is the sparkling of the Diamond 2. Love When God smiles upon us it is not much to love him but when he seems to put us away in anger * Psal 27.9 now to love him and be as the Lime the more water is thrown upon it the hotter it burns this is love indeed That love sure is strong as death * Cant. 8.6 which the waters of desertion cannot quench Secondly It is for the exercise of grace we are all for comfort if it might be put to our choice we would be ever upon Mount Tabor looking into Canaan we are loth to be in trials agonies desertions as if God could not love us except he had us in his armes 'T is hard to lie long in the lap of spiritual joy and not fall asleep Too much Sun-shine causeth a drought in our graces oftentimes when God lets down comfort into the heart we begin to let down care As it is with Musitians before they have money they will play you many a sweet lesson but as soon as you throw them down money they are gone you hear no more of them Before joy and assurance O the sweet musick of prayer and repentance but when God throws down the comforts of his Spirit we either leave off duty or at least slacken the strings of our Viol and grow remisse in it Thou art taken with the money but God is taken with the musick Grace is better than comfort Rachel is more fair but Leah is more fruitful Comfort is fair to look on but grace hath the fruitful womb now the only way to exercise grace and make it more vigorous and lively is sometimes to walk in darknesse and have no light Isa 50.10 Faith is a star that shines brightest in the night of desertion I said I am cast out of thy sight yet will I look again toward thy holy Temple Jonah 2.4 Grace usually puts forth its most heroical acts at such a time 3. I answer God may forsake his children in regard Answ 3 of Vision but not in regard of Union Thus it was with Jesus Christ when he cryed out my God my God There was not a separation of the Union between him and his Father only a suspension of the Vision * Non suit divulsio unionis sed tantum suspensio visionis Gods love through the interposition of our sins may be darkned and eclipsed but still he is a Father The Sun may be hid in a cloud but it is not out of the firmament The Promises in time of desertion may be as it were sequestred we have not that comfort from them as formerly but still the believers title holds good in Law Answ 4 4. I answer when God hides his face from his child his heart may be towards him as Joseph when he spake roughly to his brethren and made them believe he would take them for Spies still his heart was towards them and he was as full of love as ever he could hold he was faine to go aside and weep So God is full of love to his children even when he seems to look strange And as Moses his Mother when she put her child into the ark of bulrushes and went away a little from it yet still her eye was toward it the babe wept I and the mother wept too So God when he goes aside as if he had forsaken his children yet he is full of sympathy and love towards them God may change his countenance but not break his covenant It is onething for God to desert another thing to disinherit Hosea 8.11 How shall I give thee up O Ephraim c. 'T is a Metaphor taken from a father going to disinherit his son and while he is setting his hand to the Deed his bowels begin to melt and to yearn over him and he thinks thus within himself Though he be a prodigal child yet he is a child I will not cut off the entail So saith God How shall I give thee up though Ephraim hath been a rebellious son yet he is a son I will not disinherit him Gods thoughts may be full of love when there is a vail upon his face the Lord may change his dispensation towards his children but not his disposition he may have the look of an enemy but the heart of a Father So that the beliver may say I am adopted and let God do what
God Wilt thou repine and be sad when thou art blessed Esau wept because he wanted the blessing Gen. 27.38 Bless me even me also O my Father and Esau lift up his voice and wept But shall a child of God be immoderately cast down when he hath the blessing Adam sin'd in the midst of Paradise how evil is it to be blessed and yet murmure Branch 4 Branch 4. What an encouragement is this to godliness we are all ambitious of a blessing then let us espouse Religion Psal 112.1 Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord. But you will say this way is everywhere spoken against 't is no matter seeing this is the way to get a blessing Suppose a Rich man should adopt another for his heir and others should reproach him he cares not as long as he is heir to the Estate So what though others may reproach thee for thy Religion as long as it entails a blessing upon thee the same day thou becomest godly thou becomest blessed CHAP. IV. MATTH 5. ● Blessed are the Poor in Spirit HAving spoken of the general notion of blessedness I come next to consider the Subjects of this blessedness and these our Saviour hath decyphered to be the Poor in Spirit the mourners c. But before I touch upon these I shall a little Preface or Paraphrase upon this Sermon of the Beatitudes 1. Observe the Divinity in this Sermon which goes beyond all Philosophy The Philosophers use to say contrarium contrarium expellit one contrary expels another but here one contrary begets another poverty useth to expel riches but here poverty begets riches for how rich are they that have a Kingdom mourning useth to expel joy but behold here mourning begets joy They shall be comforted Water useth to quench the flame but the water of tears kindles the flame of joy Persecution useth to expel happiness but here it makes happy Blessed are they that are persecuted These are the sacred Paradoxes in our Saviours Sermon * Evangelicam Philosophiam à Parado●is inchoavit Dominus ●nd Cl●● 2. Observe how Christs Doctrine and the opinion of carnal men differ They think beati divites blessed are the rich The world would count him blessed who could have Midas wish that all he touch'd might be turn'd into gold But Christ saith Beati pauperes blessed are the poor in spirit The world thinks Blessed are they on the Pinacle but Christ pronounceth them blessed who are in the Valley Christs reckonings and the worlds do not agree 3. Observe the nature of true Religion Poverty leads the Van and Persecution brings up the Reare Christianus quasi Crucianus Every true Saint saith Luther is heire to the Crosse Some there are who would be thought religious displaying Christs Colours by a glorious profession but to be poor in spirit and persecuted durus hic sermo they cannot take down this bitter pill they would weare Christs Jewels but wave his Crosse these are strangers to Religion 4. Observe the certain connexion between grace and its reward they who are poor in spirit shall have the kingdom of God They are as sure to go to heaven as if they were in heaven already Our Saviour would encourage men to Religion by sweetning Commands with Promises he ties duty and reward together As in the body the veines carry the blood and the arteries the spirits so one part of these Verses carries Duty and the other part carries reward As that Scholar of Apelles painted Helena richly drawn in costly and glorious apparel hung all over with orient pearl and precious stones So our Lord Christ having set down several qualifications of a Christian poor in spirit pure in heart c. draws these heavenly vertues in their fair colours of blessednesse and sets the magnificent crown of reward upon them that by this oriency he might the more set forth their unparallel'd beauty and entice holy love 5. Observe hence the concatenation of the graces poor in spirit meek merciful c. where there is one grace there is all As they say of the Cardinal vertues virtutes sunt inter se connexae the vertues are chained together so we may say of the graces of the Spirit they are link'd and chain'd together he that hath poverty of Spirit is a mourner he that is a mourner is meek he that is meek is merciful c. The Spirit of God plants in the heart an habit of all the graces the new creature hath all the parts and lineaments as in the body there is a composition of all the Elements and a mixture of all the humours The graces of the Spirit are like a Row of pearl which hang together upon the string of Religion and serve to adorn Christs Bride This I note to shew you a difference between an hypocrite and a true child of God The hypocrite flatters himself with a pretence of grace but in the mean time he hath not an habit of all the graces he hath not poverty of spirit nor purity of heart whereas a child of God hath all the graces in his heart at least radically though not gradually These things being premised I come in particular to those heavenly dispositions of soul to which Christ hath affixed blessedness And the first is POVERTY of SPIRIT Blessed are the Poor in Spirit Chrysostom and Theophylact are of opinion that this was the first Sermon that ever Christ made therefore it may challenge our best attention Blessed are the Poor in Spirit Our Lord Christ being to raise an high and stately Fabrick of blessedness lays the foundation of it low in poverty of Spirit but all poverty is not blessed * Non omnis paupertas beata B●ugensis I shall use a four-fold distinction 1. I distinguish between Poor in Estate and Poor in Spirit there are the Divels poor poor and wicked whose cloaths are not more torn than their conscience There are some whose poverty is their sin who through Improvidence or Excess have brought themselves to want these may be poor in Estate but not poor in Spirit 2. I distinguish between spiritually Poor and Poor in spirit he who is without grace is spiritually poor but he is not poor in Spirit he knows not his own beggery Rev. 3.17 Thou knowest not that thou art Poor He is in the worst sense poor who hath no sense of his poverty 3. I distinguish between Poor-spirited and Poor in spirit They are said to be poor-spirited who have mean base spirits who act below themselves 1. As they are men such are those Misers which having great Estates yet can hardly afford themselves bread who live sneakingly and are ready to wish their own throats cut because they are forced to spend something in satisfying Natures demands This Solomon calls an evil under the Sun Eccles 6.2 There is an evil which I have seen under the Sun a man to whom God hath given Riches so that he wants nothing for his soul of all that he desireth yet
God giveth him not power to eat thereof Religion makes no man a Niggard though it teacheth prudence yet not sordidness 2. Who act below themselves as they are Christians while they sinfully comply and prostitute themselves to the humours of others a base kind of mettle that will take any stamp they will for a piece of silver part with the jewel of a good conscience they will be of the State-Religion they will dance to the Divels Pipe if their Superiour commands them These are Poor-spirited but not Poor in Spirit 4. I distinguish between Poor in an Evangelical sense and in a Popish sense the Papists give a wrong gloss upon the Text by Poor in spirit they understand those who renouncing their Estates vow a voluntary poverty living retiredly in their Monasteries * Monasteriis Caenobii● Pauperes Bellarm. but Christ never meant these he doth not pronounce them blessed who make themselves poor leaving their Estates and their Callings but such as are Evangelically poor Well then what are we to understand by Poor in spirit the Greek word for Poor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is not only taken in a strict sense for those who live upon Alms * Ad extremam inopiam reducti Beza quibus nihil superest but in a more large sense for those who are destitute as well of inward as outward comfort Poor in spirit then signifies those who are brought to the sense of their sins and seeing no goodness in themselves despair in themselves and sue wholly to the mercy of God in Christ * Qui serio cordis affectu pauperiem suam agnoscunt spem fiduciam in una miserecordia Dei propter Christum repositam habent Paraeus Poverty of spirit is a kind of self-annihilation such an expression I find in Calvin The poor in spirit saith he are they who see nothing in themselves but flie to mercy for Sanctuary such an one was the Publican Luk. 18.13 God be merciful to me a sinner of this temper was Saint Paul Phil. 3.9 That I may he found in Christ not having mine own righteousness these are the poor which are invited as Guests to Wisdoms Banquet Prov. 7.3 4. Here several Questions may be propounded 1. Why doth Christ here begin with poverty of spirit Quest 1 why is this put in the fore-front I answer Answ Christ doth it to shew that poverty of spirit is the very basis and foundation of all the other graces that follow * Totius a ●ificii fundamen Avendanus You may as well expect fruit to grow without a root as the other graces without this till a man be Poor in spirit he cannot mourn Poverty of spirit is like the fire under the Still which makes the water drop from the eyes when a man sees his own defects and deformities and looks upon himself as undone then he mourns after Christ the springs run in the vallies Psal 104.10 When the heart becomes a valley and lies low by poverty of spirit now the springs of holy mourning run there Till a man be Poor in spirit he cannot hunger and thirst after righteousness he must first be sensible of want before he can hunger therefore Christ begins with poverty of spirit because this ushers in all the rest Quest 2 2. The second Question is What is the difference between poverty of spirit and humility Answ These are so like that they have been taken one for the other Chrysostom by poverty of spirit understands humility * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost in loc yet I think there is some difference they differ as the cause and the effect Tertullian saith none are poor in spirit but the humble * Nulli pauperes spiritu nisi hamiles Tert. he seems to make humility the cause of poverty of spirit I rather think poverty of spirit is the cause of humility for when a man sees his want of Christ and how he lives on the Alms of free-grace this makes him humble he that is sensible of his own vacuity and indigence with the Violet hangs down his head in humility humility is the sweet spice that grows from poverty of spirit Quest 3 3. What is the difference between poverty of spirit and self-denial I answer in some things they agree in some things they differ In some things they agree for the Poor in spirit is an absolute self-denier he renounceth all opinion of himself he acknowledgeth his dependance on Christ and free-grace but in some things they differ the self-denier parts with the world for Christ the poor in spirit parts with himself for Christ i. e. his own righteousness the poor in spirit sees himself nothing without Christ the self-denier will leave himself nothing for Christ And thus I have shewed what poverty of spirit is The words thus opened present us with this truth Doctr. That Christians must be poor in spirit or thus Doctr. Poverty of spirit is the jewel which Christians must wear As the best creature was made out of nothing namely light so when a man sees himself nothing out of this nothing God makes a most beautiful creature it is Gods usual method to make a man poor in spirit and then fill him with the graces of the Spirit as we deal with a Watch we take it first in pieces and then set all the wheels and pins in order So the Lord doth first take a man all in pieces shews him his undone condition and then sets him in frame The Reasons are 1. Till we are poor in spirit we are not capable of receiving Reason 1 grace he who is swell'd with an opinion of self-excellency and self-sufficiency is not fit for Christ he is full already intus existens prohibet extraneum if the hand be full of pebbles it cannot receive gold the glass is first emptied before you poure in wine God doth first empty a man of himself before he poures in the precious wine of his grace none but the poor in spirit are within Christs Commission Isa 61.1 The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me he hath sent me to bind up the broken-hearted that is such as are broken in the sense of their unworthiness 2. Till we are poor in spirit Christ is never precious Reason 2 before we see our own wants we never see Christs worth poverty of spirit is sal condimentum the sawce which makes Christ relish sweet to the soul mercy is most welcome to the poor in spirit he who sees himself clad in filthy rags Zach. 3.4 5. what will he give for change of rayment the righteousness of Christ what will he give to have the fair Mitre of salvation set upon his head when a man sees himself almost wounded to death how precious will the balm of Christs blood be to him when he sees himself deep in Arrears with God and is so far from paying the debt that he cannot sum up the debt how glad would he be of a surety the Pearle
of price is only precious to the poor in spirit he that wants bread and is ready to starve will have it whatever it cost he will lay his garment to pledge bread he must have or he is undone So to him that is Poor in spirit that sees his want of Christ how precious is a Saviour Christ is Christ and grace is grace to him he will do any thing for the bread of life therefore will God have the soul thus qualified to raise the price of his Market to inhance the value and estimate of the Lord Jesus Reason 3 3. Till we are Poor in spirit we cannot go to heaven Theirs is the Kingdom of heaven this doth tune and prepare us for heaven By nature a man is big with self-confidence and the gate of heaven is so strait that he cannot enter now poverty of spirit doth minorare animam it doth lessen the soul it pares off its superfluity and now he is fit to enter in at the strait gate The great Cable cannot go through the eye of the Needle but let it be untwisted and made into small threads and then it may Poverty of spirit untwists the great Cable it makes a man little in his own eyes and now an entrance shall be made unto him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Richly into the Everlasting Kingdom 2 Pet. 1.11 Through this Temple of Poverty we must go into the Temple of Glory SECT 1. Use 1 Use 1 IT shews wherein a Christians riches do consist namely in poverty of spirit Some think if they can fill their bags with gold then they are rich but they who are poor in spirit are the rich men they are rich in poverty This poverty entitles them to a Kingdom How poor are they that think themselves rich how rich are they that see themselves poor I call it the Jewel of poverty There are some Paradoxes in Religion that the world cannot understand for a man to become a fool that he may be wise 1 Cor. 3.18 to save his life by losing it Matth. 16.25 and by being poor to be rich Reason laughs at it but blessed are the poor for theirs is the Kingdom Then this poverty is to be striven for more than all riches under these rags is hid cloth of gold out of this carcasse comes hony SECT 2. Use 2 IF blessed are the poor in spirit then by the rule of contraries Cursed are the proud in spirit Prov. 16.5 There is a generation of men who do commit idolatry with themselves no such idol as self They admire their own parts moralities self-righteousnesse and upon this stock graft the hope of their salvation There are many are too good to go to heaven they have commodities enough of their own growth and they scorne to live upon the borrow or be beholding to Christ These bladders the Divel hath blown up with pride and they are swell'd in their own conceit but it is like the swelling of a dropsie-man whose bignesse is his disease thus it was with that proud Justiciary Luke 18.11 The Pharisee stood and prayed God I thank thee that I am not as other men are extortioners unjust adulterers or even as this Publican I fast twice in the week I give tythes c. Here was a man setting up the top-sail of pride but the Publican who was poor in spirit he stood a far off and would not lift up so much as his eyes unto heaven but smot upon his brest saying God be merciful to me a sinner This man carried away the Garland I tell you saith Christ this man went down to his house justified rather than the other Saint Paul before his conversion thought himself in a very good condition Touching the Law blamelesse Phil. 3.6 He thought to have built a Tower of his own righteousnesse the top whereof should have reached to heaven but at last God shewed him there was a crack in the foundation and then he gets into the Rock of ages Phil. 3.9 That I may be found in him There is not a more dangerous praecipice than self-righteousnesse this was Laodicea's temper Rev. 3.17 because thou sayest I am rich and have need of nothing and knowest not that thou art wretched and miserable c. She thought she wanted nothing when indeed she had nothing How many doth this damne we see some ships that have scaped the rocks yet are cast away upon the sands so some who have scaped the rocks of grosse sins yet are cast away upon the sands of self-righteousnesse and how hard is it to convince such men of their danger they will not believe but they may be help'd out of the Dungeon with these rotten rags they cannot be perswaded their case is so bad as others would make it Christ tells them they are blind but they are like Seneca's maid who was born blind but she would not beleeve it Ait domum esse coecam The house saith she is dark but I am not blind Christ tells them they are naked and offers his white robes to cover them but they are of a different perswasion and because they are blind they cannot see themselves naked how many have perished by being their own saviours O that this might drive the proud sinner out of himself a man never comes to himself till he comes out of himself and no man can come out till first Christ come in SECT 3. Use 3 IF poverty of spirit be so necessary Trial. How shall I Use 3 know that I am poor in spirit Answ By the blessed effects of this Poverty which are 1. He that is poor in spirit is weaned from himself Psalm 131.2 My soul is even as a weaned child 't is hard for a man to be weaned from himself The Vine catcheth hold of every thing that is near to stay it self upon There is some bough or other a man would be catching hold of to rest upon how hard is it to be brought quite off himself The poor in spirit are divorced from themselves they see they must to hell without Christ My soul is even as a weaned child 2. He that is poor in spirit is a Christ-admirer he hath high thoughts of Christ he sees himself naked and flies to Christ that in his garments he may obtaine the blessing He sees himself wounded and as the wounded Deere runs to the water so he thirsts for Christs blood the water of life Lord saith he give me Christ or I die conscience is turned into a fiery Serpent and hath stung him now all the world for a brazen serpent he sees himself in a state of death and how precious is one leaf of the tree of life which is both for food and medicine The poor in spirit sees all his riches lye in Christ wisdome righteousnesse sanctification c. In every exigence he flies to this magazine and store-house he adores the all-fulnesse in Christ They say of the oyle in Rhemes though they are continually almost spending it yet it never wasts
there of his intercession if sinne should be pardoned before it be committed there are sinnes in the godly of dayly incursion which must be mourned for though sin be pardoned still it rebels though it be covered it is not cured Rom. 7.23 There is that in the best Christian which is contrary to God there is that in him which deserves hell and shall he not mourn A ship that is always leaking must have the water continually pumped out while the soul leaks by sin we must be still pumping at the leak by Repentance Think not O Christian that thy sins are washed away only by Christs blood but by water and blood The brazen Laver Exod. 30.18 that the people of Israel were to wash in might be a fit emblem of this spiritual Laver tears and blood and when holy Mourning is thus qualified this is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 7.11 that sorrowing after a godly sort which makes a Christian eternally blessed SECT 4. Shewing That we must mourn for the sins of others 2. AS we must mourn for our own sins so we must lay to heart the sins of others * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysostom The Poets feign that Biblis was turned into a Fountain thus we should wish with Jeremy that our eyes were a Fountain of tears that we might weep day and night for the iniquity of the times our blessed Saviour mourned for the sins of the Jews Mark 3.5 Being grieved super callo for the hardness or brawniness of their hearts and holy David looking upon the sins of the wicked his heart was turned into a spring and his eyes into Rivers Psal 119.136 Rivers of tears run down mine eyes because they keep not thy Law Lots Righteous soul was vexed with the unclean conversation of the wicked 2 Pet. 2.7 Lot took the sins of Sodom and made spears of them to pierce his own soul Cyprian saith that in the Primitive times when a Virgin who vowed her self to Religion had defiled her chastity shame and grief filled the whole face of the Congregation * Totum Ecclesiae caetum demittere vultus atque crubescere Cyprian Have not we cause to mourn for the sins of others the whole Axle-tree of the Nation is ready to break under the weight of sin what an inundation of wickedness is there amongst us Mourn for the hypocrisie of the times Jehu saith Come see my zeal for the Lord but it was zeal for the Throne This is the hypocrisie of some they intitle God to whatever they do they make bold with God to use his Name to their wickedness as if a Thief should pretend the Kings Warrant for his Robbery Micah 3.11 They build up Sion with blood the heads thereof judge for reward yet will they lean upon the Lord and say Is not the Lord among us Many with a religious kiss smite the Gospel under the fifth rib * Plurimi sub nomine Ecclesiae contra Ecclesiam Militant Calv. Could not Ahab be content to kill and take possession but must he usher it in with Religion and make fasting a Preface to his murder 1 Kings 21.12 The white Divel is worst a burning Torch in the hand of a Ghost is most affrighting to hear the Name of God in the mouths of scandalous hypocrites is enough to affright others from the profession of Religion Mourn for the Errors and Blasphemies of the Nation there is now a free Trade of Error toleration gives men a Patent to sin What cursed opinion that hath been long ago buried in the Church but is now dig'd out of the grave and by some worshipped England is grown as wanton in her Religion as she is antick in her Fashions The Jesuites Exchange is open and every one almost is for an opinion of the newest Cut Did mens faces alter as fast as their judgements we should not know them Mourn for Covenant-violation this sin is a flying Roll against England breach of Covenant is spiritual harlotry and for this God may name us Loammi and give us a bill of Divorce Mourn for the Pride of the Nation ●our condition is low but our hearts are high Mourn for the profaness of the Land England is like that man in the Gospel Luke 4.33 who had a spirit of an unclean Divel Mourn for the removing of Land-Marks * Deut. 27.17 Mourn for the contempt offered to Magistracy the spitting in the face of Authority Mourn that there are so few Mourners surely if we mourn not for the sins of others 't is to be feared we are not sensible of our own sins God looks upon us as guilty of those sins in others which we do not lament our tears may help to quench Gods wrath SECT 5. That we must mourn for the miseries of the Church THE Saints are Members of the body Mystical as well as Political therefore must be sensible of the injuries of Gods Church Psal 137.1 We wept when we remembred Sion The people of Israel being debarred from the place of publick worship sate by the Rivers weeping they laid aside all their Musical Instruments Ver. 2. We hanged our Harps upon the Willows We were as far from joy as those Willows were from fruit Ver. 4. How shall we sing the Lords song in a strange land we were fitter to weep than to sing Non est conveniens luctibus iste sonus When we consider the miseries of many Christians in Germany the Dukedome of Savoy and other Forraign parts who have been driven from their habitations because they would not desert the Protestant and espouse the Popish Religion when instead of a Bible a Crucifix instead of Prayers Masse instead of going to Church they should go on Pilgrimage to some Saint or Relick When we consider these things our eyes should run down Mourn to see Gods Church a bleeding Vine Mourn to see Christs Spouse with garments rolled in blood Methinks I hear Englands Passing bell go let us shed some tears over dying England let us bewail our intestine divisions Englands divisions have been fatal they brought in the Saxons Danes Normans if a Kingdom divided cannot stand how do we stand but by a miracle of free-grace Truth is fallen and peace is fled Englands fine coat of peace is torn and like Josephs coat dipped in blood Peace is the glory of a Nation Some observe if the top of the Beech Tree be taken off the whole Tree withers Peace is the Apex and top of all earthly blessings this top being cut off we may truly say the body of the whole Nation begins to wither apace Mourn for the oppressions of England the people of this Land have laid out their money only to buy Mourning SECT 6. Shewing the seasons of holy Mourning THough we must always keep open the issue of godly sorrow yet there are some seasons wherein our tears should overflow as the water sometimes riseth higher there are three special seasons of extraordinary Mourning when it should be as
put away Our words should be mild like the waters of Siloah which run softly 't is too usual for passionate spirits to break out into opprobrious language the tongues of many are fiered and it is the Divel lights the match therefore they are said in Scripture to be set on fire of hell James 3.6 Men have learned of the old Serpent to spit their venome one at another in disgraceful revilings Matth. 5.22 Whosoever shall say thou fool shall be in danger of hell-fire Under that word fool all vilifying termes are by our Saviour forbidden let us take heed of this it is hateful to God God is not in this fire but in the still small voice * 1 Kings 19.12 Object Object But did not the Apostle Paul call the Galatians fools Gal. 3.1 Answ Paul had an infallible spirit which we have not besides when Paul uttered those words it was not by way of reproach but reproof it was not to defame the Galatians but reclaime them not to vilifie them but to humble them Saint Paul was grieved to see them so soone fall into a relapse well might he say foolish Galatians in an holy zeal because they had suffered so much in the cause of Religion and now made a defection and fell off ver 4. Have ye suffered so many things in vaine but though Saint Paul guided by the Spirit of God did give this Epithite to the Galatians it is no warrant for us when any have wronged us to use disgraceful termes Meekness doth not vent it self in scurrility it doth not retaliate by railing Jude 9. Yet Michael the Arch-angel when contending with the Divel he disputed about the body of Moses durst not bring against him a railing accusation but said The Lord rebuke thee Some understand by Michael Christ but more truly it is meant of one of the chief of the Angels The contest or dispute between the Arch-angel and the Divel was about the body of Moses Some Divines say that when God did dispose of Moses his body he imploy'd the Arch-angel to inter him so secretly that his burying place might not be known 'T is likely if his dead body had been found the Israelites might have been ready in a preposterous zeal to have adored it The Divel opposeth the Arch-angel and contends about the dead body but the Arch-angel durst not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some read it he could not endure to bring a railing accusation it seems the Divel provoked him with evil language would fain have extorted passion from him but the Arch-angel was mild and said only The Lord rebuke thee the Angel would not so much as rail against the Divel we may learn meeknesse of the Arch-angel 1 Pet. 3.9 Not rendring railing for railing Caution Not but that a Christian ought prudentially to clear himself from slanders When the Apostle Paul was charged to be mad he vindicates himself Acts 26.25 I am not mad most noble Festus Though a Christians retorts must not be vulnerating they may be vindicating Though he may not scandalize another yet he may apologize for himself There must be Christian prudence as well as Christian meeknesse it is not mildnesse but weaknesse to part with our integrity Job 27.6 To be silent when we are slanderously traduced is to make our selves appear guilty We must so affect meeknesse as not to lose the honour of innocence 't is lawful to be our own congratulators the fault lies only in this when we retort injuries with reproachful termes which is to pay a man back in the Divels coyne The second Branch of meeknesse is in forgiving of injuries Mark 11.25 and when ye stand praying forgive as if Christ had said It is to little purpose to pray unlesse you forgive a meek spirit is a forgiving spirit This is an Herculean work nothing doth more crosse the stream of corrupt nature men forget kindnesses but remember injuries * Scribit in marmore laesus I once heard of a woman that lived in malice and being requested by some of her neighbours when she lay on her death-bed to forgive she answered I cannot forgive though I go to hell this is cutting against the graine some can rather sacrifice their lives than their lusts but forgive we must and forgive as God forgives 1. Really God doth not make a show of forgivenesse and keeps our sins by him he blots out our debts Isa 43.25 God passeth an act of oblivion Jer. 31.34 he forgives and forgets So the meek spirt doth not only make a show of forgiving his neighbour but he doth it from the heart Mat. 18.35 2. Fully God forgives all our sins he doth not for fourscore write down fifty but he gives a general release Psal 103.3 who forgiveth all thy iniquities Thus a meek-spirited Christian forgives all injuries false hearts passe by some offences but retain others this is but half-forgiving Is this meeknesse Wouldst thou have God deal so with thee Wouldst thou have him forgive thee thy trespasses as thou forgivest others 3. God forgives often we are often peccant we run every day afresh upon the score but God often forgives 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 therefore he is said to multiply to pardon Isa 55.7 So a meek spirit doth reiterate and send one pardon after another Peter asks the question Matth. 18.21 Lord how oft shall my brother sin against me and I forgive him till seven times Christ answers him verse 22. I say not unthee until seven times but until seventy times seven 1. Such an affront hath been offered that flesh and Object 1 blood cannot put up Flesh and blood shall not inherit the Kingdom of God Answ 1 Cor. 15.50 Christians must walk Antipodes to themselves and with the sword of the Spirit fight against the lusts of the flesh Gal. 5.24 2. But if I forgive one injury I shall invite more 1. It argues a divellish nature to be worse for kindnesse Object 2 but suppose we should meet with such monsters yet Answ 1 it is our duty to be ready to forgive Col. 3.13 Shall we cease from doing good because others will not cease from being evil 2. I answer If the more thou forgivest injuries the Answ 2 more injuries thou meetest with this will make thy grace shine the more anothers vice wil be a greater demonstration of thy vertue often forgiving will adde the more to the weight of his sin and the weight of thy glory If any shall say to me I strive to excel in other graces but as for this grace of meeknesse bearing and forgiving of injuries I cannot arrive at it I desire in this to be excused What dost thou talk of other graces where there is one grace there is all * Virtutes sunt inter se connexae if meeknesse be wanting it is but a counterfeit chaine of grace thy faith is a fable thy repentance is a lye thy humility is hypocrisie And whereas thou sayst thou canst not forgive think of 1.
Divel let me tell you God hath charg'd every man not to meddle or have any league of friendship with you Prov. 22.24 Make no friendship with an angry man and with a furious man thou shalt not go What a monster is he among men that every one is warned to beware of and not come near as one who is unfit for humane society make no league saith God with THAT MAN if thou takest him into thy society thou takest a Snake into thy bosome with a furious man thou shalt not go Wilt thou walk with the Divel the furious man is possessed with a wrathful Divel Oh that all this might help to meeken and sweeten Christians spirits Object But it is my nature to be passionate Answ 1. This is sinful arguing it is secretly to lay our sin upon God we learned this from Adam Gen. 3.12 The woman whom thou gavest to be with me she gave me of the tree and I did eate rather than Adam would confesse his sin he would father it upon God the woman thou gavest me as if he had said it thou hadst not given this woman to me I had not eat So saith one it is my nature this is the froward peevish nature God hath given me oh no thou chargest God falsly God gave thee no such nature he made man upright Eccles 7.25 God made thee straight thou madest thy self crooked all thy affections at first thy joy love anger were set in order as the Stars in their right orb but thou didst misplace them and make them move Excentrick at first the affections like several Musick-instruments well-tuned did make a sweet consort but sin was the jarring string that brought all out of tune vain man plead not 't is thy nature to be angry thank thy self for it natures spring was pure till sin poysoned the spring Answ 2. Is it thy nature to be fierce and angry this is so far from being an excuse that it makes it so much the worse it is the nature of a Toad to poyson that makes it the more hateful if a man were indited for stealing and he should say to the Judge Spare me it is my nature to steal were this any excuse the Judge would say Thou deservest the rather to dye Sinner get a new nature flesh and blood cannot enter into the Kingdom of God SECT 3. How to attain this grace of meekness Quest HOW shall I do to be possessed of this excellent grace of meekness Answ 1. Often look upon the meekness of Christ the Scholar that would write well hath his eye often upon the Copy 2. Pray earnestly that God will meeken thy spirit God is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the God of all grace 1 Pet. 5.10 He hath all the graces in his gift Sue to him for this grace of meekness if one were Patron of all the Livings in the Land men would sue to him for a Living God is Patron of all the graces let us sue to him mercy comes in at the door of prayer Ezek. 36.26 37. I will yet for this be enquired of by the house of Israel to do it for them Meekness is the commodity we want let us send prayer as our Factor over to heaven to procure it for us and pray in faith when faith sets prayer on work prayer sets God on work all divine blessings come streaming to us through this golden channel of prayer MATTH 5.6 Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after Righteousness CHAP. XIII Describing the Nature of spiritual hunger WE are now come to the fourth step of blessedness Blessed are they that hunger The words fall into two parts 1. A Duty implied 2. A Promise annexed 1. A Duty implied Blessed are they that hunger 1. The Duty implied Spiritual hunger is a blessed hunger Doctr. Quest 1. What is meant by hunger Answ Hunger is put for desire Isa 26.9 Spiritual hunger is the rational appetite whereby the soul pants after that which it apprehends most sutable and proportionable to it self Quest 2. Whence is this hunger Answ Hunger is from a sense of want he who spiritually hungers hath a real sense of his own indigence he wants righteousness Quest 3. What is meant by righteousness Answ There is a two-fold righteousness 1. Of Imputation 2. Of Implantation 1. Justitia imputativa 1. A righteousness of Imputation viz. Christs righteousness Jer. 23.6 He shall be called the Lord our righteousness This is as truly ours to justifie as it is Christs to bestow by vertue of this righteousness God looks upon us as if we had never sinned Num. 23.21 this is a perfect righteousness Col. 2.10 Ye are compleat in him this doth not only cover but adorn he who hath this righteousness is equal to the most illustrious Saints the weakest believer is justified as much as the strongest this is a Christians triumph when he is defiled in himself he is undefiled in his head in this blessed righteousness we shine brighter than the Angels this righteousness is worth hungring after 2 Justitia implantativa 2. A righteousness of Implantation that is inherent righteousness viz. the graces of the Spirit holiness of heart and life which Cajetan calls universal righteousness this a pious soul hungers after This is a blessed hunger bodily hunger cannot make a man so miserable as spiritual hunger makes him blessed this evidenceth life a dead man cannot hunger hunger proceeds from life the first thing the child doth when it is born is to hunger after the breast spiritual hunger follows upon the new birth 1 Pet. 2.2 Saint Bernard in one of his Soliloquies comforts himself with this that sure he had the truth of grace in him because he had in his heart a strong desire after God * Certus sum per gratiam defiderium ●ui habere me in toto corde Bern. Solil 't is happy when though we have not what we should we desire what we have not the appetite is as well from God as the food SECT I. The Inferences drawn from the Proposition 1. SEE here at what a low price God sets heavenly Use 1 things it is but hungring and thirsting Inform. Isa 55.1 Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters buy Branch 1 without money We are not bid to bring any merits as the Papists would do nor to bring a sum of money to purchase righteousness Rich men would be loth to do that all that is required is to bring an appetite Christ hath fulfilled all righteousness we are only to hunger and thirst after righteousness this is equal and reasonable God requires not Rivers of oyle but sighs and tears the invitation of the Gospel is free if a friend invite Ghuests to his Table he doth not expect they should bring money to pay for their Dinner only come with an appetite so saith God T is not pennance pilgrimage self-righteousness I require only bring a stomack hunger and thirst after righteousness God
proud earthly malitious may say our father which art in hell 't is blasphemy to call God our Father and make the Divel our Pattern Gods children resemble him in meeknesse and holinesse they are his walking pictures As the Seale stamps its print and likenesse upon the Wax so doth God stamp the print and effigies of his own beauty upon his children 3. The third sign of Gods children is they have the Spirit of God 'T is called the Spirit of adoption Rom. 8.15 ye have received the Spirit of adoption c. Quest How shall we know that we have received the Spirit of adoption and so are in the state of adoption Answ The Spirit of God hath a three-fold work in them who are made children 1. A Regenerating work 2. A Supplicating work 3. A Witnessing work 1. A Regenerating work whomsoever the Spirit adopts it regenerates Gods children are said to be born of the Spirit John 3.5 Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit he cannot enter into the kingdom of God we must first be born of the Spirit before we are baptized with this new name of sons and daughters we are not Gods children by creation but renovation not by our first birth but our new-birth This New-birth produced by the Word as the material cause * James 1.18 and by the Spirit as the efficient cause is nothing else but a change of nature Rom. 12.2 which though it be not a perfect change yet is a thorow change 1 Thes 5.23 This change of heart is as necessary * Generatus damnatus nisi regeneratus Austin as salvation Quest How shall we know that we have this regenerating work of the Spirit Answ Two wayes By the pangs By the products 1. By the pangs There are spiritual pangs before the new-birth some bruisings of soul some groanings and cryings out some struglings in the heart between flesh and spirit Acts 2.37 they were prick'd at their heart The child hath sharp throws before the birth so it is in the new-birth I grant the new-birth doth recipere magis minus all have not the same pangs of humiliation yet all have pangs all feel the hammer of the Law upon their heart though some are more bruised with this hammer than others Gods Spirit is a Spirit of bondage before it be a Spirit of adoption Rom. 8.15 What then shall we say to those who are as much to seek about the new-birth as Nicodemus John 3.4 How can a man be born when he is old c The new-birth is ludibrium impiis though it be grande mysterium piis some thank God they never had any trouble of spirit they were alwayes quiet These blesse God for the greatest curse it is a signe they are not Gods children the child of grace is alwayes born with pangs 2. The new-birth is known by the Products which are three 1. Sensibility The infant that is new-born is sensible of the least touch If the Spirit hath regenerated thee thou art sensible of the ebullitions and first risings of sin which before thou didst not perceive Paul cries out of the law in his members Rom. 7.23 The new-born Saint sees sin in the root 2. Circumspection He who is born of the Spirit is careful to preserve grace he plies the breast of Ordinances 1 Pet. 1.2 he is fearful of that which may endanger his spiritual life 1 John 5.18 he lives by faith yet passeth the time of his sojourning in fear 1 Pet. 1.17 This is the first work of the Spirit in them who are made children a regenerating work 3. The Spirit of God hath a supplicating work in the heart The spirit of adoption is a spirit of supplication Rom. 8.15 Ye have received the spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba Father While the child is in the womb it cannot cry while men lie in the womb of their natural estate they cannot pray effectually but when they are born of the Spirit then they cry Abba Father Prayer is nothing else but the souls breathing it self into the bosome of its Father 'T is a sweet and familiar intercourse with God as soon us ever the Spirit of God comes into the heart it sets it a praying no sooner was Paul converted but the next word is behold he prayeth * Implet Spiritus Sanctus organum suum tanquam filia chordarum tangit digitus Dei corda Sanctorum Prosper in Epist Acts 9.11 It is reported in the life of Luther when he prayed it was with so much reverence as if he were praying to God and with so much boldnesse as if he had been speaking to his friend * Theodor. in vit Luth. p. 142. And Eusebius reports of Constantine the Emperour that everyday he used to shut up himself in some secret place in his Palace and there on bended knees did make his devour prayers and soliloquies to God Gods Spirit tunes the strings of the affections and then we make melody in prayer For any to say in derision you pray by the Spirit is a blasphemy against the Spirit it is a main work of the Spirit of God in the hearts of his children to help them to pray Gal. 4.6 Because you are sons God hath sent the spirit of his Son into your hearts Crying Abba Father Quest But many of the children of God have not such abilities to expresse themselves in prayer how then doth the Spirit help their infirmities Answ Though they have not alwayes the gifts of the Spirit in prayer yet they have the groans of the Spirit Rom. 8.26 Gifts are the Ornament of prayer but not the life of prayer A carcass may be hung with jewels Though the Spirit may deny fluency of speech yet it gives fervency of desire and such prayers are most prevalent The prayers which the Spirit indites in the hearts of Gods children have these three-fold qualifications 1. The prayers of Gods children are believing prayers Prayer is the key Faith is the hand that turns it Faith feathers the Arrow of prayer and makes it pierce the Throne of grace Matth. 21.22 Whatever you shall ask in prayer believing ye shall receive Whereupon saith Hierom * Non orarem nisi crederem I would not presume to pray unless I bring faith along with me to pray and not believe is as one saith a kind of jeer offered to God * Irrisio Dei est Pelican as if we thought either he did not hear or he would not grant That Faith may be animated in prayer we must bring Christ in our Arms when we appear before God 1 Sam. 7.9 And Samuel took a sucking Lamb and offered it for a burnt-offering and Samuel cryed unto the Lord for Israel and the Lord heard him this sucking Lamb typified Christ When we come to God in prayer we must bring the Lamb Christ along with us Themistocles carried the Kings son in his Arms and so pacified the King when he was angry * Thucyd.
the children of God present Christ in the Arms of their Faith 2. The prayers of Gods children indited by the Spirit are ardent prayers Ye have received the Spirit whereby we cry Abba Father Rom. 8.15 Father that implies Faith we cry that implies fervency The incense was to be laid upon burning coals Lev. 16.12 The incense was a type of prayer the burning coals of ardency in prayer Elias prayed earnestly Jam. 5.17 In the Greek it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Verbis addita verbalia apud Hebraeus vehementiam significant Grot. IN PRAYING HE PRAYED that is he did it with vehemency † in prayer the heart must boyle over with heat of affection Prayer is compared to groans unutterable * Rom. 8.26 it alludes to a woman that is in pangs We should be in pangs when we are travelling for mercy such prayer commands God himself Isa 45.11 3. The prayers of Gods children are heart-cleansing prayers they purge out sin many pray against sin and sin against prayer Gods children do not only pray against sin but pray down sin 3. The Spirit of God hath a witnessing work in the heart Gods children have not only the influence of the Spirit but the witness Rom. 8.16 The Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit that we are the children of God There is a three-fold witness a child of God hath the witness of the Word the witness of Conscience the witness of the Spirit the Word makes the major Proposition He who is in such a manner qualified is a childe of God Conscience makes the minor but Thou art so divinely qualified the Spirit makes the conclusion therefore Thou art a child of God The Spirit joyns with the witness of Conscience Rom. 8.16 The Spirit witnesseth with our spirits The Spirit teacheth Conscience to search the Records of Scripture and finde its evidences for heaven it helps conscience to spell out its name in a promise it bears witness with our spirit Quest Quest But how shall I know the witness of the Spirit from a delusion Answ Answ The Spirit of God always witnesseth according to the Word as the Eccho answers the voyce Enthusiasts speak much of the Spirit but they leave the Word That inspiration which is either without the Word or against it is an imposture The Spirit of God did indite the Word 2 Pet. 1.21 Now if the Sp●rit should witness otherwise than according to the Word the Spirit should be divided against it self it should be a spirit of contradiction witnessing one thing for a truth in the Word and another thing different from it in a mans conscience 4. The fourth sign of Gods children is Zeal for God they are zealous for his Day his Truth his Glory they who are born of God are impatient of his dishonour Moses was cool in his own cause but hot in Gods when the people of Israel had wrought folly in the golden Calf he breaks the Tables When Saint Paul saw the people of Athens given to Idolatry his spirit was stirred in him Acts 17.16 In the Greek it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his spirit was imbittered or as the word may signifie he was in a Paroxysme or burning fit of zeal He could not contain but with this fire of zeal dischargeth against their sin As we shall answer for idle words so for sinful silence it is dangerous in this sense to be possessed with a dumb Divel David saith the zeal of Gods house had eaten him up Psal 69.9 Many Christians whose zeal once had almost eaten them up now they have eaten up their zeal they are grown tepid and neutral the breath of preferment blowing upon them hath cooled their heat I can never believe that he hath the heart of a childe in him that can be patient when Gods glory suffers Can an ingenuous childe endure to hear his father reproached though we should be silent under Gods displeasure yet not under his dishonour When there is an holy fire kindled in the heart it will break forth at the lips zeal tempered with holiness is the white and sanguine which gives the foul its best complexion Of all others let Ministers be impatient when Gods glory is impeached and eclipsed A Minister without zeal is like salt that hath lost its savour Zeal will make men take injuries done to God as done to themselves It is reported of Chrysostom that he reproved any sin against God as if he himself had received a personal wrong * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let not Ministers be either shaken with fear or seduced with flattery God never made Ministers to be as false glasses to make bad faces look fair for want of this fire of zeal they are in danger of another fire even the burning lake Rev. 21.8 into which the fearful shall be cast 5. Those who are Gods children and are born of God are of a more noble and celestial spirit than men of the world they minde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 things above * Col. 3.2 1 John 5.4 Whatsoever is born of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 overcometh the world The children of God live in an higher Region they are compared to Eagles Isa 40.31 in regard of their sublimeness and heavenly-mindedness their souls are fled aloft Christ is in their heart Col. 1.27 and the world is under their feet Rev. 12.1 Men of the world are ever tumbling in thick clay they are terrae filii not Eagles but Earth-worms the Saints are of another spirit they are born of God and walk with God as the childe walks with the father Noah walked with God Gen. 6.9 Gods children shew their high Pedigree in their heavenly Conversation Phil. 3.21 6. Another sign of Adoption is love to them that are children Gods children are knit together with the bond of love as all the members of the body are knit together by several nerves and ligaments If we are born of God then we love the brotherhood 1 Pet. 2.17 Idem est motus animae in imaginem rem he that loves the person loves the picture The children of God are his walking pictures and if we are of God we love those who have his Effigies and Pourtraiture drawn upon their souls If we are born of God we love the Saints notwithstanding their infirmities Children love one another though they have some imperfections of nature a squint-eye or a crooked back We love gold in the Oar though it have some drossiness in it the best Saints have their blemishes We read of the spot of Gods children Deutr. 32.5 A Saint in this life is like a fair face with a scar in it If we are born of God we love his children though they are poor we love to see the image and picture of our father though hung in never so poor a Frame we love to see a rich Christ in a poor man And if we are children of the Highest we shew our love to Gods children 1. By prizing their persons
ashes an unbeliever is like Reuben unstable as water he shall not excel Gen. 49.4 A believer is like Joseph who though the Archers shot at him his Bowe abode in strength Cast a believer upon the waters of affliction he can follow Christ upon the water and not sink cast him into the fire his zeal burns hotter than the flame cast him into prison he is enlarged in spirit Paul and Silas had their prison-songs Psal 91.13 Thou shalt tread upon the Lyon and the Adder A Christian arm'd with faith as a coat of Male can tread upon those persecutions which are fierce as the Lyon and sting as the Adder get faith Quest Quest But how comes faith to be such Armour of proof Answ Answ Six manner of wayes 1. Faith unites the soul to Christ and that blessed head sends forth spirits into the members Phil. 4.13 I can do all things through Christ c. Faith is a grace lives all upon the borrow as when we want water we go to the Well and fetch it when we want gold we go to the Mine so faith goes to Christ and fetcheth his strength into the soul whereby it is enabled both to do and suffer hence it is faith is such a wonder-working grace 2. Faith works in the heart a contempt of the world faith gives a true map of the world Eccles 2.11 Faith shews the world in its night-dress having all its jewels pul'd off faith makes the world appear in an Eclipse the believer sees more Eclipses than the Astronomer faith shews the soul better things than the world it gives a sight of Christ and glory it gives a prospect of heaven as the Mariner in a dark night climbs up to the top of the Mast and cries out stellam video I see a star so faith climbs up above sense and reason into heaven and sees Christ that bright morning star and the soul having once viewed his superlative excellencies becomes crucified to the world oh saith the Christian shall not I suffer the loss of all these things that I may enjoy Jesus Christ 3. Faith gets strength from the promise faith lives in a promise take the fish out of the water and it dies take faith out of a promise and it cannot live the promises are breasts of consolation the childe by sucking the breast gets strength so doth faith by sucking the breast of a promise When a Garrison is besieged and is ready almost to yield to the enemy Auxiliary forces are sent in to relieve it so when faith begins to be weak and is ready to faint in the day of battel then the promises muster their forces together and all come in for faiths relief and now it is able to hold out in the fiery trial 4. Faith gives the soul a right notion of suffering faith draws the true picture of sufferings what is suffering saith faith it is but the suffering of the body that body which must shortly by the course of nature drop into the dust Persecution can but take away my life an Ague or Feaver may do as much now faith giving the soul a right notion of sufferings and taking as it were a just measure of them enables a Christian to prostrate his life at the feet of Christ 5. Faith reconciles providences and promises as it was in Saint Pauls voyage providence did seem to be against him there was a cross winde did arise called Euroclydon Acts 27.14 but God had given him a promise that he would save his life and the lives of all that sailed with him in the Ship Ver. 24. therefore when the winde blew never so contrary Paul believed it would at least blow him to the Haven so when sense saith Here is a cross providence sufferings come I shall be undone then saith faith all things shall work for good to them that love God Rom. 8.28 This providence though bloody shall fulfill the promise affliction shall work for my good it shall heal my corruption and save my soul Thus faith making the winde and tyde go together the winde of a providence with the tyde of the promise enables a Christian to suffer persecution 6. Faith picks sweetness out of the Cross faith shews the soul God reconciled and sin pardoned and then how sweet is every suffering The Bee gathers the sweetest honey from the bitterest herb Saepe tulit lassis succus amarus opem So faith from the sharpest trials gathers the sweetest comforts faith looks upon suffering as Gods love token Afflictions saith Nazianzene are sharp arrows but they are shot from the hand of a loving Father faith can taste honey at the end of the rod faith fetches joy out of suffering John 16.20 Faith gets an honey-comb in the belly of the Lyon it finds a jewel under the cross and thus you see how faith comes to be such Armour of proof above all taking the shield of faith a believer having cast his Anchor in heaven cannot sink in the waters of persecution 2. Suffering grace is love get hearts fired with love to the Lord Jesus love is a grace both active and passive 1. Love is active it layes a Law of constraint upon the soul 2 Cor. 5.14 The love of Christ constrains me love is the wing of the soul that sets it a flying and the weight of the soul that sets it a going love never thinks it can do enough for Christ as he who loves the world never thinks he can take pains enough for it love is never weary it is not tired unless with its own slowness 2. Love is passive it enables to suffer a man that loves his friend will suffer any thing for him rather than he shall be wronged The Curtii laid down their lives for the Romans because they loved them love made our dear Lord suffer for us per vulnera viscera as the Pelican out of her love to her young ones when they are bitten with Serpents feeds them with her own blood to recover them again so when we had been bitten by the old Serpent that Christ might recover us he did feed us with his own blood Jacobs love to Rachel made him almost hazard his life for her Many waters cannot quench love Cant. 8.7 No not the waters of persecution love is strong as death Cant. 8.6 Death makes it way through the greatest oppositions so love will make its way to Christ through the Prison and the Furnace But all pretend love to Christ how shall we know that we have such a love to him as will make us suffer 1. True love is amor amicitiae a love of friendship which is genuine and ingenuous when we love Christ for himself there is a mercenary and meretricious love when we love divine objects propter aliud for something else a man may love the Queen of truth for the jewel at her ear because she brings preferment a man may love Christ for his head of gold * Cant. 5.11 because he enricheth with glory
love Christ in the excess MARY LOVED MUCH Luke 7.47 but not too much if Christ cannot be prized enough he cannot be loved too much the Angels in heaven cannot love Christ to his worth 3. When you love other things you love that which is worse than your selves if you love a fair house a pleasant garden a curious picture these things are worse than your selves if I would love any thing more intensly and ardently it should be something which is better than my self and that is Jesus Christ He who is all let him have all give him your love who desires it most and deserves it best Minus te amat qui aliquid tecum amat 3. Make Christ all in your abilities do all in his strength Ephes 6.10 Be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might When you are to resist a tentation to mortifie a corruption do not go out in your own strength but in the strength of Christ Be strong in the Lord. Some go out to duty in the strength of parts and go out against sin in the strength of resolutions and they come home foiled Alas what are our resolutions but like the green wit hs which did binde Sampson a sinful heart will soon break these do as David when he was to go against Goliah saith he I come to thee in the Name of the Lord. So say to thy Goliah-lust I come to thee in the Name of Christ Then we conquer when the Lyon of the Tribe of Judah marcheth before us Christ is called an horn of salvation Luke 1.69 The strength of a creature lies in his horn so the strength of a believer lies in this horn of salvation Oh make Christ all do all in his strength The Bird may as well flie without wings as we can do any thing prevailing without Christ 1 Sam. 2.9 For by strength shall no man prevail 4. Make Christ all in your aimes do all to his glory 1 Pet. 4.11 Let Christ be the center to which all the lines of your actions are drawn the hypocrite pretends Christ but drives on some self-interest Hos 10.1 He is like one who pretends to woe for his friend but is a sutor for himself Simon Magus would have given money for the gift of the Holy Ghost Acts 8.18 but probably the reason was because he intended to have sold that gift to others how many make the Name of Christ a stirrup to get into the saddle of honour and preferment it is well if some have not made the Crown delinquent for its jewels and the Church for its Lands The squint-ey'd hypocrite is the Divels wind-fall oh make Christ all in your aimes and designs in every action propound this question Will this make for the honour of Christ will this bring any Revenues into his Exchequer how happy were it if it might be said of us as the Angel speaks to the two Maries Matth. 28.5 I know that ye seek Jesus which was crucified If a man doth not take a right aime he can never hit the mark he who doth not aime at Gods glory can never hit the mark of his own salvation 5. Make Christ all in your affiance trust to none but Christ for salvation the Papists make Christ something but not all they trust partly to Christ and partly to their own merits they pray to Christ and Angels to Christ as a Mediator of Redemption and to Angels as Mediators of Intercession they invocate the Virgin Mary for mercy so mingling her milk with Christs blood but what is given to others superstitiously is taken from Christ sacrilegiously they have their Masses Pennance extream unction they confess ind●ed Christs blood doth wholly sati●fie for Original sin but sins after Baptisme committed they have fountains of their own to wash in The Eagles feathers will not mix with other feathers Christ will not endure to have his blood mixed either with the merits of Saints or prayers of Angels Christ will be all in all or nothing at all And is there not naturally a spice of Popery in our hearts we would be grafting happiness upon the stock of our own righteousness every man saith Luther is born with a Pope in his heart How ready are we to Idolize our duties and graces and to draw so much from the stream as to neglect the Spring Oh make Christ all in regard of recumbency let him be your City of refuge to flie to your Ark to trust to It was a good speech of Luther If I could keep the whole Moral Law I would not trust to this for justification I would vail and stoop to Christs merits 6. Make Christ all in your joy Gal. 6.14 God forbid that I should glory save in the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ Luke 1.47 My spirit rejoyceth in God my Saviour The Virgin Mary did not so much rejoyce that she was Christs Mother as that Christ was her Saviour she did not so much rejoyce that Christ was conceived in her womb as that he was formed in her heart how glad was Simeon when he had taken Christ in his arms Luke 2.29 How chearful may that man be who hath taken Christ in the arms of his faith The wise men when they saw the star rejoyced with exceeding great joy Matth. 2.10 O Christian hast thou seen the Lord Jesus hath this morning Star shined into thy heart with its enlightning quickning beams then rejoyce and be exceeding glad Shall others rejoyce in the world and will not you rejoyce in Christ how much better is he than all other things God hath given the men of the world a Crutch to lean on he hath given thee a Christ to lean on oh rejoyce in Christ Shall the Malefactor rejoyce and shall not the Favourite rejoyce it reflects disparagement upon Christ when his Saints are sad and drooping is not Christ yours what would you have more Object 1. But saith one I am low in the World Object 1 and that takes off the Chariot wheels of my joy and makes me drive heavily Answ But hast thou not Christ and is not Christ all Answ Psal 16.5 6. The Lord is the portion of my inheritance and of my cup the lines are fallen unto me in pleasant places yea I have a goodly heritage Christ is omnibus Thesauris opulentior an inexhaustible Treasury Aug. and he who by faith is united to him hath a title to all Christs riches A beggar being married to a Prince she hath a right and title to all his Revenues Object 2. If indeed I knew Christ were mine then I Object 2 could rejoce but how shall I know that Answ 1. Is thy soul fill'd with anhelations and pantings after Christ Answ dost thou desire as well water out of Christs sides to cleanse thee as blood out of his sides to save thee These sighs and groans are stirred up by the Spirit of God by the beating of this pulse judge of the life of faith in thee a wicked man hath
were requisite as none but Christ could give 3. Christ came as a Physitian out of the sweetness of his Nature he is like the good Samaritan who had compassion on the wounded man Luke 10.33 A Physitian may come to the Patient only for gain not so much to help the Patient as to help himself but Christ came purely out of sympathy there was nothing in us to tempt Christ to heal us for we had no desire of a Physitian nor had we any thing to give our Physitian as sin made us sick so it made us poor so that Christ came as a Physitian not out of hope to receive any thing from us but was prompted to it out of his own goodness Hos 14.4 I will heal their back-slidings I will love them Love set Christ awork not only his Fathers Commission but his own Compassion moved him to his spiritual Physick and Chyrurgery King David banished the blinde and lame out of the City 2 Sam. 5.8 Christ comes to the blinde and lame and cures them it is the sounding of his bowels that causeth the healing under his wings 3. The third particular is That Christ is the Only Physitian Acts 4.12 Neither is there salvation in any other c. There 's no other Physitian besides Verinus Non plures medici sed satis unus erit The Papists would have other healers besides Christ they would make Angels their Physitians all the Angels in heaven cannot heal one sick soul indeed they are described by their wings Isa 6.2 but they have no healing under their wings Papists would heal themselves by their own merits Adam did eat that Apple which made him and his posterity sick but he could not finde any herb in Paradise to cure him our merits are rather damning than healing to make use of other Physitians and medicines is as if the Israelites in contempt of that brazen Serpent which Moses set up had erected other brazen Serpents O let us take heed of that turba medicorum Indeed in bodily sickness it is lawful to multiply Physitians when the Patient hath advised with one Physitian he desires to have others joyned with him but the sick soul if it joyns any other Physitian with Christ it surely dies 4. How Christ heals his Patients Answ There are foure things in Christ that are healing 1. His Word is healing Psal 107.20 He sent his Word and healed them His Word in the mouth of his Ministers is healing when the Spirit is wounded in desertion Christ doth create the lips that speak peace Isa 57.19 The Word written is a Myrothecium or Repository in which God hath laid up Soveraign oyles and balsomes to recover sick souls and the Word preached is the pouring out of these oyles and applying them to the sick Patient He sent his Word and healed them We look upon the Word as a weak thing What is the breath of a man to save a soul but the power of the Lord is present to heal Luke 5.17 Christ makes use of his Word as an healing medicine the Receits which his Ministers prescribe he himself applies he makes his Word convincing converting comforting Caution Not that the Word heals all to some it is not an healing but a killing Word 2 Cor. 2.16 To the one we are a savour of death unto death Some dye of their disease two sorts of Patients dye 1. Such as sin presumptuously though they know a thing to be sin yet they will do it Job 24.13 They are of those that rebel against the light this is dangerous * Num. 15 30. David prays Psal 19. Keep back thy servant from presumptuous sins 2. Such as sin maliciously when the disease comes to this head the Patient will dye Hebr. 10.29 But to them who belong to the election of grace the Word is the healing medicine Christ useth He sent his Word and healed them 2. Christs wounds are healing Isa 55.3 With his stripes we are healed Christ made a medicine of his own body and blood the Physitian dyed to cure the Patient * Ille Colaphizatus lauceatus spinis corenatus in cruce suspensus ut per ejus mortem nobis medelam pararet Aug. in Evang. Joh. The Pelican when her young ones are bitten by Serpents feeds them with her own blood to recover them Thus when we were bitten by the old Serpent then Jesus Christ prescribes a Receit of his own blood to heal and restore us Sanguis Christi salus Christiani * Corpus Christi est aegris medicina languorem sanans sanitatem servans Bern. The blood of Christ being the blood of him who was God as well as man had infinite merit to appease God and infinite vertue to heal us This this is the balme of Gilead that recovers a soul which is sick even to death Balm as Naturalists say is a juyce which a little shrub being cut with glass doth weep out This was anciently of very precious esteem the favour of it was odoriferous the vertue of it Soveraign it would cure ulcers and the stinging of Serpents * Pliny This balm may be an emblem of Christs blood it hath a most Soveraign vertue in it it heals the ulcer of sin the stinging of tentation it merits for us justification Rom. 5.9 O how precious is this balm of Gilead by this blood we enter into heaven 3. Christs Spirit is healing the blood of Christ heals the guilt of sin the Spirit of Christ heals the pollution of sin the Spirit is compared to oyle it is call'd the anointing of the Spirit Isa 61. to shew the healing vertue of the Spirit oyle is healing Christ by his Spirit heals the rebellion of the will the stone of the heart though sin be not removed it is subdued 4. Christs rod is healing Isa 27.9 Christ never wounds but to heal the rod of affliction is to recover the sick Patient * Unguento utitur medicus item ferro igue Bern. Davids bones were broken that his soul might be healed God useth affliction as the Chyrurgion doth his Launce to let out the venome and corruption of the soul and make way for a cure Quest But if Christ be a Physitian Quest why are not all healed Answ 1. Because all do not know they are sick they Answ 1 see not the sores and ulcers of their souls and will Christ cure them who see no need of him many ignorant people thank God they have good hearts but that heart can no more be good which wants grace than that body can be found which wants health 2. All are not healed because they love their sickness Answ 2 Psal 52.3 Thou lovest evil many men hug their disease Augustine saith before his conversion he prayed against sin but his heart whispered Non adhuc Domine Not yet Lord he was loth to leave his sin too soon how many love their disease better than their Physitian while sin is loved Christs medicines are loathed 3. All are not
to Christs blood he can cure the greatest sin as well as the least * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys Hast thou a bloody issue of sinne running the issue of blood in Christs sides can heal thine 5. Objection But mine is an old inveterate disease Object 5 and I fear it is incurable Answ Though thy disease be chronical Answ Christ can heal it Christ doth not say if this disease had been taken in time it might have been cured he is good at old sores The Thief on the Cross had an old festring disease but Christ cured it it was well for him his Physitian was so near Zacheus an old sinner a Custome-house man he had wronged many a one in his time but Christ cured him Christ sometimes grafts his grace upon an old Stock we read Christ cured at Sun-setting Luke 4.40 He heals some sinners at the Sun-setting of their lives 6. Objection But after I have been healed my disease Object 6 hath broken forth again I have relapsed into the same sin therefore I fear there 's no healing for me Answ It is rare that the Lord leaves his children to these relapses though through the suspension of grace Answ and the prevalency of tentation it is possible they may fall back into sin these sins of relapse are sad It was an aggravation of Solomons offence that he sinn'd after the Lord had appeared to him twice 1 Kings 11.9 These sins after healing open the mouth of conscience to accuse and stop the mouth of Gods Spirit which should speak peace These sins exclude from the comfort of the promise it is as it were sequestred but if the soul be deeply humbled if the relapsing sinner be a relenting sinner let him not cast away the anchor of hope but have recourse to his soul-physitian Jesus Christ can cure a relapse he healed Davids and Cranmers relapse 1 John 2.1 If any man sinne we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ Christ appears in the Court as the Advocate for the Client As he poured out his blood upon the brazen Altar of the Crosse so he poures out his prayers at the golden Altar in heaven Heb. 7.25 He ever liveth to make intercession for us Christ in the work of intercession presents the merit of his blood to his Father and so obtains our pardon and applies the vertue of his blood to us and so works our cure therefore be not discouraged from going to thy Physitian though thy disease hath broken out again yet Christ hath fresh sprinklings of his blood for thee he can cure a relapse Object 7 7. Objection But there is no healing for me I fear I have sinned the sin against the holy Ghost Answ 1 Answ 1. The fear of sinning it is a signe thou hast not sinned it Answ 2 2. Let me ask Why dost thou think thou hast sinned the sin against the holy Ghost I have grieved the Spirit of God Answ Answ Every grieving the Spirit of God is not that fatal sin We grieve the Spirit when we sin against the illumination of it the Spirit being grieved may depart for a time and carry away all its honey out of the Hive leaving the soul in darkness Isa 50.10 But every grieving the Spirit is not the sin against the Holy Ghost A childe of God when he hath sinned his heart smites him and he whose heart smites him for sin hath not commited the unpardonable sin A childe of God having grieved the Spirit doth as Noah when the Dove did flie out of the Ark he opened the windows of the Ark to let it in again A godly man doth not shut his heart against the Spirit as a wicked man doth Acts 7.51 The Spirit of God would come in he keeps him out but a gracious soul opens his heart to let in the Spirit as Noah opened the door of the Ark to let in the Dove * Intra sancte Spiritus ut habeam te velut signaculum super cor meum Austin Christian is it not so with thee then be of good comfort thou hast not sinned the sin against the Holy Ghost that sin is a malicious despighting the Spirit * Hebr. 10.29 which thou tremblest to think of Therefore laying aside these Argumentations and Disputes whatever the diseases of thy soul are come to Christ for a cure believe in his blood and thou mayst be saved 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 You see what a skilful and able Physitian Christ is what Soveraign oyles and balsomes he hath how willing he is to cure sick souls oh then what remains but that you cast your selves upon his merits to heal and save you of all sins unbelief is the worst because it casts disparagement on Christ as if he were not able to work a cure Oh Christian believe in thy Physitian John 3.15 that whosoever believeth in him should not perish Say as Queen Esther Esther 4.16 I will go in unto the King which is not according to the Law and if I perish I perish So say the Lord Jesus is a Physitian to heal me I will adventure on his blood if I perish I perish Queen Esther ventur'd against Law she had no promise that the King would hold out the golden Scepter but I have a promise which invites me to come to Christ He that comes unto me I will in no wise cast him out John 6.37 Faith is an healing grace We read when the Israelites were burying a man for fear of the Souldiers of the Moabites they cast him for haste into the grave of Elisha now the man as soon he was down and had touched the dead body of the Prophet revived and stood upon his feet 2 King 13.21 so if a man be dead in sin yet let him be but cast into Christs grave and by faith touch Christ who was dead and buried he will revive and his soul will be healed Remember there 's no way for a cure but by believing without faith Christ himself will not avail us Rom. 3.25 Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood Faith is the applying of Christs merit A playster though it be never so rare and excellent yet if it be not applyed to the wound will do no good though the playster be made of Christs own blood yet it will not heal unless applyed by faith The Brazen Serpent was a Soveraign remedy for the cure of those that were stung but if they had not looked upon it they received no benefit So though there bean healing vertue in Christ yet unless we look upon him by the eye of faith we cannot be cured * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost Above all things labour for faith this is the all-healing grace this hand touching Christ fetcheth vertue from him Not that faith hath more worthiness than other graces but only it is influential as it makes us one with Christ If a man had a stone in a Ring that could heal many diseases we
heart let thy delight be in them that excell in vertue Psal 16.3 The Saints carry the Lanthorn of the Word along with them it is good to walk with them that carry the light Answ 3 3. If you would keep your heart watch over your passions the heart is ready to be destroyed by its own passion as the Vessel is to be overturned with the Sail the heart doth sometimes sink in sorrow swell with anger and abound excessively with carnal joy Diagoras seeing his three sons in one day crowned Conquerors dyed for joy Passion transports beyond the bounds of reason 't is a kind of phrensie that possesseth Lay the curben-bit of restraint upon your passions or your hearts will run wilde in sin take heed of enflaming your spirits as a man would avoid those wines and strong waters that may heat his blood cut off all occasions that may awaken this FURY take away the fuel that feeds this fire When this viper of passion begins to gather heat pray it down Prayer saith Luther takes down the swelling of the soul and abates the heat of inordinate affections How dangerous are these fiery exhalations Moses in a passion spake unadvisedly with his lips Psal 106.33 A man in a rage is like a ship in a Tempest that hath neither Pilot or Sails or Oars to help it but is exposed to the Waves and Rocks how many have lost their hearts in a storm Answ 4 4. If you would keep your heart keep all the passages to your heart he that would keep a City keeps the Forts and Outworks keep especially the two Portals of the heart fast the eye and the ear 1. Keep the eye the eye oft sets the heart on fire Job did make a Covenant with his eyes Job 31.1 * Voluit reducere speciem sensus externi ad tandem speciem cum inte●o The Serpent sometimes creeps in through the Window or Casement into a Room the old Serpent the Divel creeps through the Casement of the eye into the heart the eye is taster to the appetite First Eve saw the Tree was good for food then she took of the fruit Gen. 3.6 Look to the eye some of the Heathens have pulled out their eyes because they would not be enticed by impure objects I say not pull out the eye only keep the Portal shut the Romans never did let their prisoners go abroad but their Keepers went with them never send thine eyes abroad but send their Keepers with them 2. Keep the ear much sin is conveyed to the heart through the ear the Apostle calls it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 corrupt communication Eph. 4.29 Because impure discourse corrupts and poysons the heart Keep thy ear open to God and shut to sin deafen thy ears to the lies of the slanderer and heretick let not him have thy ear who comes to rob thee of thy heart 5. If you would keep your heart get Christ into your Answ 5 heart Eph. 3.17 That Christ may dwell in your heart Nothing can hurt but sin if Christ be in the heart he will purifie it his Spirit is the refiners fire Mal. 3.2 If Christ be in the heart he will adorn it he will bring in the rich furniture of his graces and so beautifie the hidden man of the heart 1 Pet 3.4 If Christ be in the heart he will defend it the Castle of the heart can never be taken if Christ be in it Let Satan dig his Mines lay his Train of powder shoot his Balls of wilde-fire if the Lord of Hosts pitch his Tent in the heart it can never be taken by storm 6. If you would keep your hearts have a care to keep Answ 6 your thoughts Jer. 4.14 How long shall vain thoughts lodge within thee What though you set a watch before the door of the lips if you let your heart run out in vain impure thoughts the heart is the presence-chamber which is to be kept for God vain thoughts defile the Room and make it unfit for God to come into The thoughts make way for sin while the mind is musing the heart burns David let his heart rove into wanton thoughts and that made way for the act of adultery 2 Sam. 11.4 Thoughts are Purveyers for sin they do first start sin and then the heart hunts it Answ 7 7. If you would keep your heart keep your accounts well bring thy heart often to trial put queries to thy heart O my heart what dost thou whether goest thou see what work lies undone what sin thou hast to bewail what grace to strengthen search thy evidences examine thy title to Christ 2 Cor. 13.5 Traverse things narrowly in thy soul see if there be no sin countenanced search as Israel did for Leven keep a Diary in thy heart see how things go in thy soul be not a stranger at home for want of this p●lying with the heart many are kept in the dark and understand not the true state of their souls they live known to others but dye unknown to themselves O what wisdom is it for a Christian to be much with his own heart he that would keep his Estate must keep his Account-books well Christian redeem time every day to turn over the book of conscience trade with thy own heart it will be stealing out to sin call it often to account Seneca would every night when his candle was out ask himself what he had done that day often reckonings keep God and the conscience friends Answ 8 8. If you would keep your heat set fences about your heart those who would keep fruit or flowers fence them in There are foure Fences we should set about our hearts to keep them Fence 1 1. The fear of God Prov. 23.17 Be thou in the fear of the Lord all the day long As in natural fear the spirits recoil to the heart to keep it so the fear of God preserves the heart fear puts an holy awe upon the soul and keeps it from sinful excursions fear bolts the door of the heart against vanity Prov. 16.6 By the fear of the Lord men depart from evil As a Noble-mans Porter stands at the gate to keep out every thing that is unseemly from being brought into the house so the fear of God stands as an armed man at the gate of the heart to keep out tentations from entrings fear lies sentinel it stands as a Watchman on the Tower and looks every way to see what danger is approaching fear will not admit any thing into the soul which is dishonourable to God 2. Love without fear makes us presume and fear Fence 2 without love makes us despair the love of God is the most forcible Argument to prevail with an ingenious spirit Thus love argues Hath God given me Christ hath he joynted me in the promises hath he setled a Reversion of heaven upon me and shall I walk unworthy of this love shall I voluntarily sin against this God No I will rather dye than sin this made
approaching and gives not warning Ezek. 3 20. 5. Such as poyson souls with Error how dangerous is the leprosie of the head a Frenzy is worse than a Fever what shall we say to such Ministers as give poyson to their people in a golden cup are not these unmerciful others there are unworthy the name of Ministers itineraries the Divels journey men who ride up and down and with Satan compasse the earth to devour souls it would pity ones heart to see poor unstable creatures misled by rude and illiterate men who diet the people with blasphemy and non-sence and make them fitter for Bed-lam than the New Jerusalem all these are unmerciful to souls Let me beseech all that fear God to shew soul-mercy Strengthen the weak reduce the wandring raise up them that are fallen James 5.20 He which converteth the sinner from the error of his way shall save a soul from death SECT 2. Shewing that Christians must be tender of one anothers names 2. WE must be merciful to the names of others A good name is one of the greatest blessings upon earth no chaine of Pearl doth so adorn as this it being so we ought to be very tender of names They are to be accounted in an high degree unmerciful who make no conscience of taking away the good names of their brethren Their throats are open Sepulchres to bury the fame and renown of men Rom. 3.13 'T is a great cruelty to murder a man in his name Cant. 5.7 The keepers of the wall took away my vaile from me some Expositors interpret it of her honour and fame which did cover her as a beautiful vail The ground of this unmercifulnesse to names is 1. Pride Pride is such a thing as cannot endure to be out-shined it loves not to see it self exceeded in parts and eminency therefore will behead another in his good name that he may appear something lower The proud man will be pulling down of others in their reputation and so by their Eclipse he thinks he shall shine the brighter the breath of a proud man causeth a blast or mildew upon fame 2. Envy 1 Pet. 2.1 An envious man maligns the dignity of another therefore seeks to mischief him in his name Religion teacheth us to rejoyce in the esteem and same of others Rom. 1.8 I thank my God for you all that your faith is spoken of throughout the whole world 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is divulged with fame A good report is a credit to Religion Heb. 11.4 If persons professing godliness have not a good name Religion will have no very good name but envy consulting with the Divel lays a Train and fetches fire from hell to blow up the good name of another Quest How many wayes may we be unmerciful to the names of others Quest Answ Divers ways 1. By misreporting them a sin Answ 1 forbidden Exod. 23.1 Thou shalt not raise a false report Eminency is commonly blasted by flander Psal 64.3 Their tongues are as arrows shot out The tongue of a slanderer shoots out words to wound the fame of another and make it bleed to death The Saints of God in all Ages have met with unmerciful men who have fathered things upon them that they have not been guilty of Surius the Jesuite reported of Luther that he learned his Divinity of the Divel and that he dyed drunk but Melancthon who wrote his life affirms that he dyed in a most pious holy manner and made a most excellent prayer before his death It was Davids complaint Psal 35.11 They laid to my charge things which I knew not The Greek word for Divel signifies slanderer 1 Tim. 3.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not slanderers in the Greek it is not Divels Some think it is no great matter to defame and traduce another but know this is to act the part of a Devil O how many unmerciful men are there who indeed go for Christians but play the Divel in venting their lyes and calumnies wicked men in Scripture are called Dogs Psal 22.16 Slanderers are not like those Dogs which licked Lazarus his soars to heal them but like the Dogs which are Jezebel they rend and tear the precious names of men Valentinian the Emperour did decree Capitali sententiae subjugandum that he who was openly convicted of this crime of slander should dye for it And Pope Gregory did decree that such a person should be excommunicate and not have the Communion given him I think it was a just Decree Answ 2 2. We are unmerciful to the names of others when we receive a slander and then report what we hear Lev. 19.16 Thou shalt not go up and down as a Tale-bearer among thy people A good man doth not evil to his Neighbour nor taketh up a reproach against his Neighbour Psal 15.3 We must not only not raise a false report but not take it up To divulge a report before we speak with the party and know the truth of it is unmercifulness and cannot acquit itself of sin The same word in the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to raise a slander signifies to receive it Exod. 23.1 The receiver is even as bad as the Thief it is well if none of us have in this sense received stollen goods when others have stollen away the good names of their Brethren have not we received these stollen goods there would not be so many to broach false rumors but that they see this liquor pleaseth other mens tast Answ 3 3. We deal unmercifully with the names of others when we diminish from their just worth and dignity when we make more of their infirmities and less of their vertues Jam. 4.11 Speak not evil one of another I have read a story of one Idor an Abbot that he was never heard to speak evil of any man Saint Austin could not endure that any should eclipse and lessen the fame of others therefore wrote those two Verses upon his Table Quisquis amat dictis absentum rodere famam Hanc mensam vetitam noverit esse sibi Whosoever loves anothers name to blast This Table is not for him let him fast Wicked men are still paring off the credit of their Neighbours and they make thick parings they pare off all that is good nothing is left but the Kore something that may tend to their disparagement Unmerciful men know how to boile a Quart to a Pint they have a Divellish Art so to extenuate and lessen the merit of others that it is even boiled away to nothing Some though they have not the power of Creation yet they have the power of Annihilation They can sooner annihilate the good which is in others than imitate it 4. We are unmerciful to the names of others when we know them to be calumniated yet do not vindicate Answ 4 them A man may sometimes as well wrong another by silence as slander he who is merciful to his brother is an Advocate to plead in his behalf when he is injuriously traduced
when the Apostles who were filled with the wine of the Spirit were charged with drunkenness Peter vindicated them openly Acts 2.15 A merciful man will take the dead flie out of the box of oyntment 5. They are in an high degree unmerciful to the names Answ 5 of others who bear false witness against them Psal 27.11 Exod. 23.1 Put not thy hand with the wicked to be a false witness Putting the hand is taking an Oath falsly as when a man puts his hand upon the book and swears to a lye so Tostatus expounds it this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 false witness is a two-edged sword the party forsworn wounds anothers name and his own soul A false witness is compared to a Maul or Hammer Prov. 25.18 It is true in this sense because he is hardened 1. In impudency he blusheth at nothing 2. In unmercifulness There is no softness in a Maul or Hammer nor is there any relenting or bowels to be found in a false witness All these wayes men are unmerciful to the names of others Use Exhort Use Let me perswade all Christians as they make conscience of Religion so to shew mercy to the names of others be very chary and tender of mens good name● Consider 1. What a sin it is to defame any man Tit. 3.2 1 Pet. 2.1 Laying aside all envies and evil speakings Envy and evil speaking are put together laying aside 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Putting away as a man would put away a thing from him with indignation as Paul shook off the Viper Acts 28.5 2. The injuriousness of it thou that takest away the good name of another woundest him in that which is most dear to him better take away a mans life than his name by eclipsing his name thou buriest him alive it is an irreparable injury aliquid haerebit A wound in the name is like a flaw in a Diamond or a stain in Azure which will never out no Physician can heal the wounds of the tongue 3. God will require it at mens hands if idle words must be accountable for shall not reproachful slanders God will make inquisition one day as well for names as for blood Let all this perswade to Caution and Circumspection you would be loth to steal the goods of others a mans name is of more worth and he that takes away the good name of another doth sin more than if he had taken the corn out of his Field or the wares out of his Shop Especially take heed of wounding the names of the godly God hath set a Crown of honour on their head and will you take it off Numb 12.8 Wherefore then were you not afraid to speak against my servant Moses To defame the Saints is no less than the defaming God himself they having his picture drawn upon them and being members of Christ Oh think how ill Christ will take this at your hand another day it was under the old Law a sin to defame a Virgin and what is it to calumniate Christs Spouse Are the names of the Saints written in heaven and will you blot them out upon earth Be merciful to the names of others SECT 3. Mercy in some cases to be extended to the Estates of others and that Christians must not take the summum jus 3. BE merciful to the Estates of others If a man be thy debtor and Providence hath frowned upon him that he hath not wherewithal to pay do not crush him when he is sinking but remit something of the rigour of the Law Blessed are the merciful * Justitia sine misericordia non est justitia sed crudelitas The wicked are compared to Beasts of prey that live upon rapine and spoil they care not what mischief they do Psal 10.9 He lyeth in wait secretly as a Lyon in his Den he doth catch the poor when he draweth him into his net Chrysostom saith the drawing into the Net is when the Rich draw the Poor into Bonds and in case of non-payment at the day the Bond being forfeited seize upon all they have 't is not justice but cruelty when others lie at our mercy to be like that hard-hearted Creditor in the Gospel who took his Debtor by the throat saying Pay me what thou owest Matth. 18.28 God made a Law Deutr. 24.6 No man shall take the nether or the upper milstone to pledge for he taketh a mans life to pledge If a man had lent another money he must not take both his milstones for a pawn he must shew mercy and leave the man something to get a livelihood with we should in this imitate God who in midst of anger remembers mercy God doth not take the extremity of the Law upon us but when we have not to pay if we confess the debt he freely forgives Prov. 28.13 Matth. 18.27 Not but that we may justly seek what is our own but if others be brought low and submit we ought in conscience to remit something of the debt Blessed are the merciful SECT 4. Shewing that Christians must be merciful to the offences of others 4. WE must be merciful to the offences of others be ready to shew mercy to them which have injured you Thus Stephen the Proto-martyr Act. 7.60 he kneeled down and cryed with a loud voyce Lord lay not this sin to their charge When he prayed for himself he stood but when he came to pray for his enemies he kneeled down * Pro se orans stat crigitur pro lapidantibus flectit genua Bern. to shew saith Bernard his earnestness in prayer and how greatly he desired that God would forgive them this is a rare kind of mercy Prov. 19.11 It is a mans glory to pass over a transgression Mercy in forgiving injuries as it is the touch-stone so the Crown of Christianity Bishop Cranmer was of a merciful disposition if any who had wronged him came to desire a curtesie of him he would do all that lay in his power for him insomuch that it grew to a Proverb Do Cranmer an injury and he will be your friend as long as he lives To overcome evil with good and answer malice with mercy is truly heroical and renders Religion glorious in the eyes of all But I wave this and proceed SECT 5. That mercy must be extended to the supplying the wants of others WE must be merciful to the wants of others This the text chiefly intends a good man doth not like the Snake twist within himself his motion is direct not circular he is ever merciful and lendeth Psal 37.26 This merciful charity to the wants of others stands in three things 1. A judicious consideration Psal 41.1 Blessed is he that considereth the poor and you must consider four things 1. It might have been your own case you your selves might have stood in need of anothers charity and then how welcom and refreshing would those streams have been to you 2. Consider how sad a condition poverty is Though Chrysostom calls poverty the