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A62579 The remaining discourses, on the attributes of God Viz. his Goodness. His mercy. His patience. His long-suffering. His power. His spirituality. His immensity. His eternity. His incomprehensibleness. God the first cause, and last end. By the most reverend Dr. John Tillotson, late Lord Arch-Bishop of Canterbury. Being the seventh volume; published from the originals, by Ralph Barker, D.D. chaplain to his Grace. Tillotson, John, 1630-1694.; Barker, Ralph, 1648-1708, publisher. 1700 (1700) Wing T1216; ESTC R222200 153,719 440

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Church with it and make it a ground of separation from her 3. If God be a Spirit then we should worship him in spirit and in truth This is the Inference of the Text and therefore I shall speak a little more largely of it only I must explain what is meant by worshiping in spirit and in truth and shew you the force of this Consequence how it follows that because God is a Spirit therefore he must be worship'd in spirit and in truth 1 st For the explication of it This word Spirit is sometimes apply'd to the Doctrine of the Gospel and so it is opposed to Letter by which Name the Doctrine of Moses is called 2 Cor. 3.6 Who hath made us able Ministers of the new Testament not of the letter but of the spirit not of the Law which was written in Tables of Stone but which Christ by his Spirit writes in the Hearts of Believers Sometimes to the worship of the Gospel and so it is opposed to the Flesh Gal. 3.3 Having begun in the spirit are ye now made perfect by the flesh that is by the works of the ceremonial Law which is therefore call'd Flesh because the principal ceremony of it Circumcision was made in the Flesh and because their Sacrifices a chief part of their Worship were of the Flesh of Beasts and because the greatest part of their Ordinances as washing and the like related to the Body Hence it is the Apostle calls the worship of the Jews the law of a carnal commandment Heb. 7.16 and Heb. 9.10 Carnal Ordinances speaking of the Service of the Law which saith he stood in meats and drinks and divers washings and carnal ordinances Now in opposition to this carnal and ceremonial Worship we are to worship God in the Spirit The Worship of the Jews was most a bodily service but we are to give God a reasonable service to serve him with the spirit of our minds as the Apostle speaks instead of offering the flesh of bulls and goats we are to consecrate our selves to the service of God this is a holy and acceptable sacrifice or reasonable service And in truth Either in opposition to the false Worship of the Samaritans as in spirit is opposed to the Worship of the Jews as our Saviour tells the Woman that they worship'd they knew not what or which I rather think in opposition to the shadows of the Law and so it is opposed John 1.17 The Law was given by Moses but grace and truth came by Jesus Christ Not that the external Service of God is here excluded not that we are to show no outward reverence to him but that as under the Law the Service of God was chiefly external and corporeal so now it should chiefly be inward and spiritual the Worship of God under the Gospel should chiefly be spiritual and substantial not a carnal and bodily and ceremonious Devotion 2 dly For the force of the Consequence it doth not lie in this that just such as God is such must our Worship of him be for this would exclude all bodily and outward worship our Worship of God must therefore be invisible eternal c. for so is he and besides the Will of God seems rather to be the rule of his Worship than his Nature but the force of it is this God is of a spiritual Nature and this is to be supposed to be his Will that our Worship should be as agreable to the Object of it as the nature of the Creature who is to give it will bear now saith Christ to the Woman the Jews and the Samaritans they limit their Worship to a certain place and it consists chiefly in certain carnal Rites and Ordinances but saith he tho' God have permitted this for a time because of the carnality and hardness of their hearts yet the time is coming when a more spiritual and solid and substantial Worship of God is to be introduced which will be free from all particular Places and Rites not tyed to the Temple or to such external Ceremonies but consisting in the devotion of our Spirits even the inward frame and temper of our Hearts all outward Circumstances excepting those of the two Sacraments which are positive being left by the Gospel to as great a liberty as natural necessity and decency will permit We must worship God and therefore it is naturally necessary that we should do it somewhere in some place now seeing some body must determine this it is most convenient that Authority should determine it according to the conveniency of cohabitation We must not be rude nor do any thing that is naturally undecent in the Worship of God this Authority should restrain but further than this I doubt not but the Gospel hath left us free and to this end that the less we are tied to external Observances the more intent we should be upon the spiritual and substantial parts of Religion the conforming of our selves to the Mind and Will of God endeavouring to be like God and to have our Souls and Spirits ingaged in those Duties we perform to him So that our Saviour's argument is this God is a Spirit that is the most excellent Nature and Being and therefore must be served with the best We consist of Body and Soul 't is true and we must serve him with our whole Man but principally with our Souls which are the most excellent Part of our selves the Service of our Mind and Spirit is the best we can perform and therefore most agreeable to God who is a Spirit and the best and most perfect Being So that the Inference is this that if God be a Spirit we must worship him in spirit and in truth our Religion must be real and inward and sincere and substantial we must not think to put off God with external observances and with bodily reverence and attendance this we must give him but we must principally regard that our Service of him be reasonable that is directed by our Understandings and accompanied with our Affections Our Religion must consist principally in a sincere love and affection to God which expresseth it self in a real conformity of our lives and actions to his Will and when we make our solemn approaches to him in the Duties of his Worship and Service we must perform all acts of outward Worship to God with a pure and sincere Mind whatever we do in the Service of God we must do it heartily as to the Lord. God is a pure Spirit present to our Spirits intimate to our Souls and conscious to the most secret and retired motions of our Hearts now because we serve the Searcher of Hearts we must serve him with our Hearts Indeed if we did worship God only to be seen of Men a pompous and external Worship would be very suitable to such an end but Religion is not intended to please Men but God and therefore it must be spiritual and inward and real And where-ever the external part of Religion
unsearchable are his Judgments and his ways past finding out These are the Instances on the part of the Object 2. On the part of the Subject or the persons capable of knowing God in any measure The perfect knowledge of God is above a finite Creature 's understanding Wicked men they are ignorant of God and full of false apprehensions of him the Scripture gives this description of them they are those that know not God 2 Thess 1. Wicked men are so far from knowing God to Perfection that they have hardly any true knowledge of him for as the man himself is so will God seem to be to him the Idea and Notion which men have of God is but the picture of their own complexion To a true knowledge there is required likeness a Man's mind must be like the thing he would understand therefore the Apostle tells us the natural or animal man doth not receive the things of God he is not capable of them because his mind is unsuitable to them he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 full of body and he cannot relish spiritual things even those Natural notions which wicked men have of God they are strangely tinctur'd and obscured by the temper of the man they are lux sepulta in opacâ materiâ light buried and hid in matter and darkness in the blackness of a soul and impure heart so that there is no question of them whither they comprehend God or not But good men they cannot find out God they have some false apprehensions of him all their apprehensions are dark have much of obscurity in them they know God to Salvation but not to Perfection in this life we do but know God in part that is in comparison of the knowledge which our natures are capable of But I will instance yet higher the Angels and the Spirits of just men made perfect tho' they have true apprehensions of God yet they do not arrive to perfect knowledge of him they cannot pervestigare ultima know the utmost of God the Cherubims themselves are continually looking at the Mercy Seat To which the Apostle alludes 1 Pet. 1.12 when he tells us the Mystery of God's mercy in the Gospel was a thing which the Angels desired to pry into In Heaven that which is in part shall be done away that is our knowledge shall be perfect as our Natures are capable but it shall be finite When we shall see God face to face that is have an immediate vision of him and see him as he is that is not having our understandings tinctur'd by any lust or passion that may darken our mind or misrepresent the Object for the Apostle tells us we shall see him because we shall be like him yet then we shall have short and unadequate apprehensions of him we shall still retain our limited Natures and finite understandings II. By way of Conviction Dost thou know perfectly the nature of a finite Spirit the Perfection and the Power of an Angel how being immaterial they can act upon matter and move that which can make no resistance to a Spirit Dost thou know how they can move themselves to a great distance in a moment and dart themselves from one part of the World to another Dost thou know how man is formed in the lowest parts of the earth as the Psalmist expresseth it and the curious Frame of our Bodies is wrought from such rude Principles in so dark a Shop Canst thou give an account how the Soul is united to the Body by what bands or holds a Spirit is so closely and intimately conjoyned to Matter Dost thou know how thy self understandest any thing and canst retain the distinct Ideas and Notions of so many Objects without confusion Dost thou know the least parts of Matter how they are knit together and by what Cement they cleave so fast to one another that they can hardly be separated Now if the Creatures be so unsearchable and the knowledge of these be too hard for thee is not the Creator of them much more Incomprehensible who possesseth all these Perfections which he communicates and many which cannot be communicated to a Creature If in Natural and Sensible Things maxima pars eorum quae scimus est minima pars eorum quae nescimus how much more is it true of God that our ignorance is more than our knowledge when the whole Earth and all the Creatures bear no proportion to him Isa 40.15 17. Behold all the Nations of the earth are as the drop of the bucket and as the small dust of the ballance all nations before him are nothing and are accounted to him less than nothing III. By shewing you the clear Reason of it which is this the disproportion between the Faculty and the Object the finiteness of our understandings and the Infiniteness of the Divine Nature and Perfections God is greater than our hearts and therefore as he knows more than we do as the Apostle reasons 1 John 3.20 so he is more than can be known by us he is too vast an Object for our understanding to entertain for our minds to receive Thou may'st as well mete out the Heaven with a span and measure the Waters in the hollow of thy hand and comprehend the dust of the earth in a little Urn and weigh the Mountains in some Scales and the hills in a little Ballance as think to circumscribe God in the narrow limits of thy thoughts or to bring that which is infinite within the compass of that which is finite And there is not only the vastness and greatness of the Object but the Glory and Resplendency of it does so dazle our sight that we cannot perfectly see it 1 Tim. 6.16 He dwelleth in light which no man can approach unto whom no man hath seen nor can see As God is too big so he is too bright an Object for our understandings the presence of his Glory overpowers our minds and bears down our Faculties and conquers our understandings I come now to apply this Doctrine of the Incomprehensibleness of the Divine Nature If the Nature and Perfections and Ways and Works of God be Incomprehensible and past finding out I. It calls for our Admiration and Veneration and Reverence These are the best apprehensions of him that is Incomprehensible a silent Veneration of his Excellencies is the best acknowledgment of them We must admire what we cannot apprehend or express Zach. 9.17 How great is his goodness and how great is his beauty The best way to celebrate the praises of God is that which Nehemiah useth Nehem. 9.5 And blessed be thy glorious name which is exalted above all blessing and praise When ever we speak or think of God we necessarily detract from his Perfections but even this necessity is glorious to him and this speaks his Perfection that the highest finite understanding must have imperfect thoughts of him We should make up in Reverence and Veneration what we fall short of in knowledge Reverence is an acknowledgment of
so our Saviour declares to us the particular Providence of God towards those Creatures Matth. 6.26 Behold the fowls of the air for they sow not neither do they reap nor gather into barns yet your heavenly Father feedeth them V. 28.29 Consider the lillies of the field how they grow they toyl not neither do they spin And yet I say unto you that Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these And tho' all the Creatures below man being without understanding can take no notice of this bounty of God to them nor make any acknowledgments to him for it yet man who is the Priest of the visible Creation and placed here in this great Temple of the World to offer up Sacrifices of praise and thanksgiving to God for his universal goodness to all his Creatures ought to bless God in their behalf and to sing praises to him in the name of all the inferiour Creatures which are subjected to his Dominion and Use because they are all as it were his Family his Servants and Utensils and if God should neglect any of them and suffer them to perish and miscarry 't is we that should find the inconvenience and want of them and therefore we should on their behalf celebrate the Praises of God as we find David often does in the Psalms calling upon the inanimate and the brute Creatures to praise the Lord. 4. The universal Goodness of God doth yet further appear in providing so abundantly for the Welfare and Happiness of all his Creatures so far as they are capable and sensible of it He doth not only support and preserve his Creatures in Being but takes care that they should all enjoy that happiness and pleasure which their natures are capable of The Creatures endowed with Sense and Reason which only are capable of pleasure and happiness God hath taken care to satisfie the several Appetites and Inclinations which he hath planted in them and according as Nature hath enlarged their desires and capacities so he enlargeth his Bounty towards them he openeth his hand and satisfieth the desire of every living thing God doth not immediately bring Meat to the Creatures when they are hungry but it is near to them commonly in the Elements wherein they are bred or within their reach and he hath planted Inclinations in them to hunt after it and to lead and direct them to it and to encourage self-preservation and to oblige and instigate them to it and that they might not be melancholy and weary of Life he hath so ordered the nature of living Creatures that Hunger and Thirst are most implacable desires exceeding painful and even intolerable and likewise that the satisfaction of these Appetites should be a mighty pleasure to them And for those Creatures that are young and not able to provide for themselves God hath planted in all Creatures a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a natural Affection towards their young ones which will effectually put them upon seeking Provisions for them and cherishing them with that care and tenderness which their weak and helpless condition doth require and reason is not more powerful and effectual in mankind to this purpose than this natural instinct is in brute Creatures which shews what care God hath taken and what provision he hath made in the natural Frame of all his Creatures for the satisfaction of the inclinations and appetites which he hath planted in them the satisfaction whereof is their pleasure and happiness And thus I have done with the First head I proposed the universal extent of God's goodness to his Creatures let us now proceed in the II. place To consider more particularly the goodness of God to men which we are more especially concerned to take notice of and to be affected with it And we need go no further than our own observation and experience to prove the goodness of God every day of our lives we see and taste that the Lord is good all that we are and all the good that we enjoy and all that we expect and hope for is from the divine goodness every good and perfect gift descends from above from the Father of lights Jam. 1.17 And the best and most perfect of his gifts he bestows on the Sons of men What is said of the wisdom of God Prov. 8. may be applyed to his goodness the goodness of God shines forth in all the works of Creation in the Heavens and Clouds above and in the Fountains of the great deep in the Earth and the Fields but its delight is with the Sons of men Such is the goodness of God to man that it is represented to us in Scripture under the Notion of love God is good to all his Creatures but he is only said to love the sons of men More particularly the goodness of God to man appears 1. That he hath given us such noble and excellent Beings and placed us in so high a rank and order of his Creatures We owe to him that we are and what we are we do not only partake of that effect of his goodness which is common to us with all other Creatures that we have received our being from him but we are peculiarly obliged to him for his more especial goodness that he hath made us reasonable Creatures of that Kind which we should have chosen to have been of if we could suppose that before we were it had been referr'd to us and put to our choice what part we would be of this visible World But we did not contrive and chuse this Condition for our selves we are no ways accessary to the dignity and excellency of our Beings but God chose this condition for us and made us what we are So that we may say with David Psal 100.3 4 5. 'T is he that hath made us and not we our selves O enter then into his gates with thanksgiving and into his courts with praise be thankful unto him and speak good of his name for the Lord is good The goodness of God is the Spring and Fountain of our Beings but for that we had been nothing and but for his farther goodness we might have been any thing of the lowest and meanest rank of his Creatures But the goodness of God hath been pleased to advance us to be the Top and Perfection of the visible Creation he hath been pleased to endow us with Mind and Understanding and made us capable of happiness in the knowledge and love and enjoyment of himself He hath curiously and wonderfully wrought the Frame of our Bodies so as to make them fit Habitations for reasonable Souls and immortal Spirits he hath made our very Bodies Vessels of Honour when of the very same Clay he hath made innumerable other Creatures of a much lower rank and condition so that tho' man in respect of his Body be a-kin to the Earth yet in regard of his Soul he is allied to Heaven of a divine Original and descended from above Of all the Creatures in
stir up in us shame and sorrow for Sin The Judgments of God may break us but the consideration of God's Mercy should rather melt and dissolve us into Tears Luke 7.47 The Woman that washed Christ's Feet with her Tears and wiped them with her Hair the account that our Saviour gives of the great Affection that she expressed to him was she Loved much because much was forgiven her and she grieved much because much was forgiven her Especially we should sorrow for those Sins which have been committed by us after God's Mercies received Mercies after Sins should touch our Hearts and make us relent It should grieve us that we should offend and provoke a God so Gracious and Merciful so slow to anger and so ready to forgive But Sin against Mercies and after we have received them is attended with one of the greatest Aggravations of Sin And as Mercy raises the guilt of our Sins so it should raise our sorrow for them No Consideration is more apt to work upon human Nature than that of kindness and the greater Mercy has been shewed to us the greater our sins and the greater cause of sorrow for them contraries do illustrate and set off one another in the great Goodness and Mercy of God to us we see the great Evil of our Sins against him Every Sin has the Nature of Rebellion and Disobedience but sins against Mercy have Ingratitude in them When ever we break the Laws of God we rebel against our Soveraign but as we sin against the Mercies of God we injure our Benefactor This makes our sin to be horrid and astonishing Isa 1.2 Hear O heavens and give ear O earth I have nourished and brought up children and they have rebelled against me All the Mercies of God are aggravations of our sins 2 Sam. 12.7 8 9. And Nathan said to David thus saith the Lord God of Israel I anointed thee king over Israel and delivered thee out of the hands of Saul and I gave thee thy masters house and thy masters wives into thy bosom and gave thee the house of Isreal and of Judah and if that had been too little I would moreover have given thee such and such things Wherefore hast thou despised the commandment of the Lord to do evil in his sight God reckons up all his Mercies and from them aggravates David's sin 1 Kings 11.9 He takes notice of all the unkind returns that we make to his Mercy and 't is the worst temper in the World not to be wrought upon by kindness not to be melted by Mercy no greater evidence of a wicked Heart than that the Mercies of God have no effect upon it Esay 26.10 Let favour be shewn to the wicked yet will he not learn righteousness Vse 3. Let us imitate the merciful Nature of God This branch of God's goodness is very proper for our imitation The general Exhortation of our Saviour Matt. 5.48 Be ye therefore perfect as your Father which is in heaven is perfect is more particularly expressed by St. Luke Luke 6.30 Be ye therefore merciful as your Father which is in heaven is merciful Men affect to make Images and impossible Representations of God but as Seneca saith Crede Deòs cùm propitii essent fictiles fuisse We may draw this Image and likeness of God we may be gracious and merciful as he is Christ who was the express image of his Father his whole life and undertaking was a continued work of mercy he went about doing good to the Souls of Men by Preaching the Gospel to them and to the Bodies of Men in healing all manner of Diseases There is nothing that he recommends more to us in his Gospel than this Spirit and Temper Mat. 5.7 Blessed are the merciful for they shall obtain mercy How many Parables doth he use to set forth the mercy of God to us with a design to draw us to the imitation of it The Parable of the Prodigal of the good Samaritan of the Servant to whom he forgave 10000 Talents We should imitate God in this in being tender and compassionate to those that are in misery This is a piece of natural indispensable Religion to which positive and instituted Religion must give way Amos 6.6 I desired mercy and not sacrifice which is twice cited and used by our Saviour Micah 6.8 He hath shewed thee O Man what it is that the Lord thy God requires of thee to do justice and love mercy and to walk humbly with thy God This is always one part of the description of a good Man that he is apt to pity the miseries and necessities of others Psal 37.26 He is ever merciful and lendeth He is far from cruelty not only to Men but even to the brute Creatures Prov. 12.10 A righteous man regardeth the life of his beast There is nothing more contrary to the nature of God than a cruel and savage disposition not to be affected with the miseries and sufferings of others how unlike is this to the father of mercies and the God of consolation When we can see Cruelty exercised and our Bowels not be stirred within us nor our hearts be pricked how unlike is this to God who is very pitiful and of tender mercies But to rejoyce at the miseries of others this is inhumane and barbarous Hear how God threatens Edom for rejoycing at the miseries of his Brother Jacob Obadiah 10 11 12 13 14. But to delight to make others miserable and to aggravate their sufferings this is devilish this is the temper of Hell and the very spirit of the Destroyer It becomes Man above all other Creatures to be merciful who hath had such ample and happy experience of God's mercy to him and doth still continually stand in need of mercy from God God hath been very merciful to us Had it not been for the tender Mercies of God to us we had all of us long since been miserable Now as we have receiv'd mercy from God we should shew it to others The Apostle useth this as an Argument why we should relieve those that are in misery and want because we have had such experience of the mercy and love of God to us 1 John 3.16 17. Hereby perceive we the love of God because he laid down his life for us But whoso hath this worlds goods and seeth his brother have need c. how dwelleth the love of God in him That Man hath no sense of the mercy of God abiding upon his Heart that is not merciful to his Brother And 't is an Argument why we should forgive one another Eph. 4.32 Be ye kind one to another tender hearted forgiving one another even as God for Christ's sake hath forgiven you Chap. 5.1 Be ye therefore followers of God as dear Children Col. 3.12 13. Put on therefore as the elect of God holy and beloved bowels of mercies kindness humbleness of mind meekness long-suffering forbearing one another and forgiving one another if any man have a quarrel against
done here below nor concern himself in humane Affairs sinners are as safe and free to do what they please as if there were no God and upon this ground the Scripture tells us many encourage themselves in their wickedness Psal 64.5 They encourage themselves in an evil matter they commune of laying snares privately for they say Who shall see them And more expresly Psal 94.4 5 6 7. How long shall the workers of iniquity boast themselves They break in pieces thy People O Lord and afflict thine heritage and slay the widow and the stranger and murder the fatherless and yet they say The Lord shall not see neither shall the God of Jacob regard it And if this were so well might they encourage themselves If it were true which Epicurus saith That God takes no knowledge of the Actions of Men that he is far removed from us and contented with himself and not at all concerned in what we do If this were true the Inference which Lucretius makes were very just Quare relligio pedibus subjecta vicissim Obteritur Men might trample Religion under their Feet and live without any regard to the Laws of it But let us see how they infer this from the long-suffering of God that he neglects the Affairs of the World and hath no consideration of the Actions of Men because they see the ungodly to prosper in the World equally with others that are strictly devout and virtuous yea many times to be in a more prosperous and flourishing condition they are not in trouble like other men neither are they plagued like other men So that if there be a God it seems say they that he connives at the Crimes of Men and looks on upon them that deal treacherously and holds his peace whilst the wicked devoureth the man that is more righteous than himself as the Prophet expresseth it Hab. 1.13 For answer to this I shall only give this reasonable and credible Account of the long-suffering of God and the impunity of wicked Men in this Life which not only the Scripture gives us but the Heathen were able to give from the light of Nature and is agreeable to the common Sense of Mankind namely That this Life is a state of probation and tryal wherein God suffers men to walk in their own ways without any visible check and restraint and does not usually inflict present and remarkable punishments upon them for their evil deeds because this being a state of tryal of the dispositions and manners of Men is rather the proper season of Patience than of punishments and rewards and therefore it is very reasonable to suppose that God reserves sinners for a solemn and publick Tryal at the great Assises of the World when he will openly vindicate the honour of his Justice upon the despisers of his Patience and long-suffering when he will make his judgment to break forth as the light and his righteousness as the noon day In the mean time the providence of God when he sees it fit gives some remarkable Instances of his Justice upon great and notorious Offenders in this life as a pledge and earnest of a future Judgment and these sometimes more general as in the destruction of the old World by an universal Deluge when he saw the wickedness of men to be great upon the earth And such was that terrible Vengeance which was poured down upon Sodom and Gomorrah and the Cities about them which as St. Jude tells us are set forth for an example suffering the vengeance of eternal fire that is of a perpetual destruction by Fire 3 dly Another gross and Atheistical Inference which Men are apt to make from the delay of punishment is that there is no such difference of good and evil as is pretended because they do not see the good and bad Actions of Men differenced in their rewards because Divine Justice doth not presently manifest it self and every transgression and disobedience doth not immediately receive a just recompence of reward therefore they cannot believe that the difference between good and evil is so great and evident For answer to this Not to insist upon the difference which the Providence of God sometimes makes between them in this life I appeal to the Consciences of Men whether they do not secretly and inwardly acknowledge a clear difference between good and evil Are not the worst of Men apt to conceive better hopes of success when they are about a just and honest undertaking than when they are ingaged in a wicked design Do not bad Men feel a secret shame and horror when no Eye sees them and the wickedness they are about to commit doth not fall under the cognisance and censure of any human Court or Tribunal Have they not many checks and rebukes in their own Spirits much disturbance and confusion of Mind when they are enterprising a wicked thing And does not this plainly argue that they are guilty to themselves that they are about something which they ought not to do 'T is very true that most Men are more sensible of the Evil of an Action when they feel the ill effects and consequences of it and suffer the punishment that is due to it but yet the sense of good and evil is so deeply imprest upon humane Nature that I think no Man remaining a Man can quite deface and blot out the difference of good and evil So that if Men will but attend to the natural dictates and suggestions of their own Minds they cannot possibly infer from the delay of punishment that there is no difference of good and evil But because those who argue thus are but few in comparison there being not many in the World arrived to that degree of blindness and height of impiety as to disbelieve a God and a Providence and I think none have attained to that perfect conquest of Conscience as to have lost all sense of good and evil therefore I shall rather insist II. Upon those kind of Reasonings which are more ordinary and common among bad Men and whereby they cheat themselves into everlasting Perdition and they are such as these 1. Because sentence against an evil work is not speedily executed therefore Sin is not so great an Evil. 2. Therefore God is not so highly offended and provoked by it Or 3. God is not so severe in his own Nature as he is commonly represented 4. Therefore the punishment of sin is not so certain 5. Or however it is at a distance and may be prevented time enough by a future Repentance in our old Age or at the hour of Death by some such false reasonings as these which Men think may probably be collected from the Patience and long-suffering of God they harden and encourage themselves in an evil course 1. Because the punishment of sin is deferr'd therefore they conclude it is not so great an Evil they do not feel the ill Effects of it at present all things go well and prosperously with them no less
of it Psal 29.1 Give unto the Lord O ye mighty give unto the Lord glory and strength So likewise it should take Men off from relying upon their own strength which at the best is but an arm of flesh as the Scripture calls it for the weakness of it Do we not see that many times the battel is not to the strong That things are not done by might and by power but by the spirit of the Lord. When he appears against the most potent their hearts melt within them and there is no more spirit left in them as 't is said of the mighty Inhabitants of Canaan Josh 5.1 Thirdly We should make this Omnipotence of God the Object of our trust and confidence This is the most proper use we can make of this Doctrine as David does in this Psalm and this was used for a form of blessing the People in the Name of God Psal 136.3 The Lord that made heaven and earth bless thee And David when he magnifies God's deliverance of his People from the multitude of their Enemies resolves it into this Our help standeth in the name of the Lord who made heaven and earth Thus did the great Pattern and Example of Faith incourage and support his confidence in God in a very difficult tryal he staggered not at it because he believed God who quickeneth the dead and calleth those things that be not as tho' they were therefore against hope he believed in hope c. Rom. 4.17 c. This gives life to all our Devotion to be perswaded that God is able to do for us exceedingly above what we can ask or think and that his is the Kingdom the Power and the Glory I shall only caution two things as to our relyance on the Power of God I. Labour to be such Persons to whom God hath promised that he will engage and imploy his Omnipotence for their good If we hope for any good from the Almighty we must walk before him and be perfect as he said to Abraham Good Men have a peculiar interest in God's Power hence he is called the strength of Israel and the mighty one of Israel If we do what God requires of us we may expect that he will put forth his Power and exert his Arm for us but if we disobey we must expect he will manifest his Power against us Ez. 8.22 When we do well we may commit the keeping of our souls to him 1 Pet. 4.19 II. Our expectations from the Omnipotence of God must be with submission to his Pleasure and Goodness and Wisdom we must not expect that God will manifest his Power when we think there is occasion for it but when it seems best to him he will so imploy his Omnipotence as to manifest his Goodness and Wisdom And with these two Cautions we may rely upon him in all our Wants both Spiritual and Temporal for his Divine Power can give us all things that pertain to life and godliness 2 Pet. 1.3 We may trust him at all times for the Omnipotent God neither slumbereth nor sleepeth the Almighty fainteth not neither is he weary trust ye in the Lord for ever for in the Lord Jehovah is everlasting strength SERMON XI Vol. VII· The Spirituality of the Divine Nature JOHN IV. 24 God is a Spirit and they that worship him must worship him in Spirit and in truth THese are the words of our Saviour to the Woman of Samaria who was speaking to him of the difference between the Samaritans and the Jews concerning Religion v. 20. Our Fathers worshipped in this mountain but ye say that in Jerusalem is the place where men ought to worship Christ tells her The time was coming when the worshippers of God should neither be confined to that mountain nor to Jerusalem but men should worship the Father in spirit and in truth when this carnal and ceremonial and typical Worship of God should be exalted into a more spiritual a more real and true and substantial Religion which should not be confined to one Temple but should be universally diffused through the World Now such a Worship as this is most agreeable to the Nature of God for he is a spirit and those who worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth In the words we have First A Proposition laid down God is a spirit Secondly A Corollary or Inference deduced from it they that worship him must worship him in Spirit and in truth I shall speak of the Proposition as that which concerns my present Design and afterward speak something to the Corollary or Inference deduced from it together with some other Inferences drawn from this truth by way of Application First That God is a spirit This expression is singular and not to be parallell'd again in the Scripture indeed we have often mention made in Scripture of the spirit of God and the spirit of the Lord which signifies a Divine Power and Energy and of the holy Spirit signifying the third Person in the Trinity God is call'd the God of the Spirits of all flesh Numb 16.22.27.16 much in the same Sense as he is call'd the Father of Spirits Heb. 12.9 that is the Creator of the Souls of Men but we no where meet with this expression or any other equivalent to it that God is a spirit but only in this place nor had it been used here but to prove that the best Worship of God that which is most proper to him is spiritual so that the thing which our Saviour here intends is not to prove the Spiritual Nature of God but that his Worship ought to be spiritual nor indeed is there any necessity that it should have been any where said in Scripture that God is a spirit it being the natural Notion of a God no more than it is necessary that it should be told us that God is good or that he is infinite and eternal and the like or that the Scripture should prove to us the Being of a God All these are manifest by the Light of Nature and if the Scripture mention them it is ex abundanti and it is usually in order to some further purpose For we are to know that the Scripture supposeth us to be Men and to partake of the common Notions of Human Nature and therefore doth not teach us Philosophy nor solicitously instruct us in those things which are born with us but supposeth the knowledge of these and makes use of these common Principles and Notions which are in us concerning God and the immortality of our Souls and the Life to come to excite us to our Duty and quicken our Endeavours after Happiness For I do not find that the Doctrine of the immortality of the Soul is any where expresly delivered in Scripture but taken for granted in like manner that the Scripture doth not solicitously instruct us in the natural Notions which we have of God but supposeth them known to us and if it mention them it is not so
much in order to knowledge as to practice and therefore we need not wonder that this expression which doth set forth to us the Nature of God is but once used in Scripture and that brought in upon occasion and for another purpose because it is a thing naturally known Plato says that God is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without Body In like manner Tully Nec enim deus ipse qui intelligitur a nobis alio modo intelligi potest nisi mens quaedam soluta libera segregata ab omni concretione mortali we cannot conceive of God but as of a pure Mind intirely free from all mortal composition or mixture And Plutarch after him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God is a Mind an abstract being pure from all matter and disintangled from whatever is passible or capable of suffering So that Natural Light informing us that God is a Spirit there was no need why the Scripture should inculcate this it is an excellent medium or argument to prove that the Worship of God should chiefly be spiritual and altho it was not necessary that it should have been mention'd for it self that is to inform us of a thing which we could not otherwise know yet the Wisdom of God by the express mention of this seems to have provided against an Error which some weaker and grosser Spirits might be subject to You know God is pleased by way of condescention and accommodation of himself to our capacity to represent himself to us in Scripture by human Imperfections and gives such descriptions of himself as if he had a Body and bodily Members now to prevent any error or mistake that might be occasion'd hereby it seems very becoming the Wisdom of God somewhere in Scripture expresly to declare the spiritual Nature of God that none through weakness or wilfulness might entertain gross apprehensions of him In speaking to this Proposition I shall I. Explain what is meant by a Spirit II. Endeavour to prove to you that God is a spirit III. Answer an Objection or two IV. Draw some Inferences or Corollaries from the whole I. For the explication of the Notion of a Spirit I shall not trouble you with the strict Philosophical Notion of it as that it is such a substance as is penetrable that is may be in the same place with a Body and neither keep out the Body nor be kept out by it and that the parts which we imagine in it cannot be divided that is really seperated and torn from one another as the parts of a Body but I will give you a negative description of it A Spirit is not Matter it doth not fall under any of our Senses it is that which we cannot see nor touch it is not a Body not Flesh and Blood and Bones for so we find Spirit in Scripture opposed to Flesh and Body Isa 31.3 Their horses are flesh and not spirit So Luke 24. when Christ appeared to his Disciples after his Resurrection they were terrified and supposed it had been a spirit v. 39. But he said Behold my hands and my feet that it is I my self handle me and see for a spirit hath not flesh and bones as ye see me have The most usual description of a Spirit is by these Negatives it is not a Body hath not Flesh and Bones doth not consist of Matter or of any thing that falls under our Senses that we can see or touch II. For the proof of this Proposition that God is a spirit This is not to be proved by way of demonstration for there is nothing before God or which can be a cause of him but by way of conviction by shewing the absurdity of the contrary The first and most natural Notion that we have of God is that he is a Being every way perfect and from this Notion we must argue concerning the properties which are attributed to God and govern all our Reasonings concerning God by this so that when any thing is said of God the best way to know whether it be to be attributed to him is to enquire whether it be a Perfection or not if it be it belongs to him if it be not it is to be removed from him and if any Man ask why I say God is so or so a Spirit or Good or Just the best reason that can be given is because these are Perfections and the contrary to these are Imperfections So that if I shew that it would be an Imperfection for God to be imagined to be a Body or Matter I prove that he is a Spirit because it is an imperfection that is an absurdity to imagine him any thing else To imagine God to be a Body or Matter doth evidently codtradict four great Perfections of God 1. His Infiniteness or the immensity of his Being Grant me but these two things that there is something in the World besides God some other matter as the Heavens the Air the Earth and all those things which we see and grant me that two Bodies cannot be in the same place at once and then it will evidently follow that where-ever these are God is shut out and consequently God should not be infinite nor in all places and so much as there is of another matter in the World besides God so many breaches there would be in the Divine Nature so many Hiatus 2. The Knowledge and Wisdom of God It cannot be imagined how mere Matter can understand how it can distinctly comprehend such variety of Objects and at one view take in past present and to come Tully speaking of Spirits saith Animorum nulla in terris origo inveniri potest their original cannot be found upon Earth for saith he there is no material or bodily thing Quod vim memoriae mentis cogitationis habeat quod praeterita teneat futura provideat complecti possit praesentia quae sola divina sunt which hath the power of Memory of Vnderstanding of Thought which can retain things past forsee things future and comprehend things present all which Powers are purely Divine 3. Freedom and Liberty For the Laws of matter are necessary nor can we imagine any 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 any arbitrary Principle in it This puzled the Epicureans as we see in Lucretius For if saith he all things move by certain and necessary Laws and there be a connexion of the parts of matter unto each other so that if you move this that must necessarily be moved whence saith he is Liberty Vnde est hec inquam fatis avulsa voluntas Whence is this Principle of Will whose motions are not under any law of necessity 4. Goodness This follows from the former for he is not good who does not know what he does nor does it freely so that take away Understanding and Liberty and you take away Goodness now take away from God Infiniteness and Knowledge and Liberty and Goodness and you divest him of his Glory you take away his most essential Perfections So that these
great absurdities following from the supposing of God to be mere Matter or Body we are to conceive of him as another kind of substance that is a Spirit So that I wonder that the Author of the Leviathan who doth more than once expresly affirm that there can be nothing in the World but what is material and corporeal did not see that the necessary consequence of this Position is to banish God out of the World I would not be uncharitable but I doubt he did see it and was content with the consequence and willing the World should entertain it for it is so evident that by supposing the Divine Essence to consist of Matter the immensity of the Divine Nature is taken away and it is also so utterly unimaginable how mere Matter should understand and be endowed with liberty and consequently with goodness that I cannot but vehemently suspect the Man who denies God to be a Spirit either to have a gross and faulty understanding or a very ill will against God and an evil design to root out of the Minds of Men the belief of a God I come in the III. Place to consider the Objections 1 Obj. Why then is God represented to us so often in Scripture by the Parts and Members of Mens Bodies Ans I shall only say at present that all these descriptions and representations of God are plainly made to comply with our weakness by way of condescention and accomodation to our capacities 2 Obj. How is it said that Man was made after the the Image of God If God be a Spirit of which there can be no likeness nor resemblance Ans Man is not said to be made after the image of God in respect of the outward Shape and Features of his Body but in respect of the Qualities of his Mind as Holiness and Righteousness or of his Faculties as Understanding and Will or which the Text seems most to favour in respect of his Dominion and Soveraignty over the Creatures for in the two former respects the Angels are made after the Image of God Now this seems to be spoken peculiarly of Men Gen. 1.26 Let us make man in our own image after our own likeness and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea and the fowls of the air c. IV. I come now to draw some Inferences or Corollaries from hence and they shall be partly speculative partly practical First Speculative Inferences 1. That God is invisible The proper Object of sight is Colour and that ariseth from the various dispositions of the parts of Matter which cause several reflections of Light now a Spirit hath no Parts nor Matter and therefore is invisible 1 Tim. 1.17 Vnto the eternal immortal invisible the only wise God Heb. 11.27 He endured as seeing him who is invisible as seeing him by an Eye of Faith who is invisible by an Eye of Sense 1 Tim. 6.16 Whom no Man hath seen nor can see When Moses and the Elders of Israel are said to have seen God and Jacob to have seen him face to face Exod. 2.9 Gen. 32.30 it is meant of an Angel covered with divine Glory and Majesty as we shall see if we compare these with other Texts When Moses is said to have spoken to him face to face that is familiarly and so Micaiah 1 Kings 22.19 is said to have seen God upon his throne and all Israel scattered up and down this was in a Vision And it is promised that in Heaven we shall see God that is have a more perfect knowledge of him and full enjoyment as to see good days is to enjoy them Those Texts where it is said No man can see God and live Exod. 33.20 and John 1.18 No man hath seen God at any time do not intimate that God is visible tho' we cannot see him but seeing is metaphorically used for knowing and the meaning is that in this Life we are not capable of a perfect knowledge of God A clear discovery of God to our Understanding would let in joys into our Souls and create desires in us too great for frail Mortality to bear 2. That he is the living God Spirit and Life are often put together in Scripture 3. That God is immortal This the Scripture attributes to him 1 Tim. 1.17 To the King immortal invisible 1 Tim. 6.16 Who only hath immortality This also flows from God's Spirituality a Spiritual Nature hath no principles of Corruption in it nothing that is liable to perish or decay or dye Now this doth so eminently agree to God either because he is purely spiritual and immaterial as possibly no Creature is or else because he is not only immortal in his own Nature but is not liable to be reduced to nothing by any other because he hath an original and independent Immortality and therefore the Apostle doth attribute it to him in such a singular and peculiar manner Who only hath Immortality Secondly Practical Inferences 1. We are not to conceive of God as having a Body or any corporeal Shape or Members This was the gross conceit of the Anthropomorphites of old and of some Socinians of late which they ground upon the gross and literal Interpretation of many figurative Speeches in Scripture concerning God as where it speaks of his Face and Hand and Arm c. But we are very unthankful to God who condescends to represent himself to us according to our Capacities if we abuse this condescention to the blemish and reproach of the Divine Nature If God be pleased to stoop to our weakness we must not therefore level him to our Infirmities 2. If God be a Spirit we are not to worship God by any Image or sensible representation Because God is a Spirit we are not to liken him to any thing that is corporeal we are not to represent him by the likeness of any thing that is in Heaven above that is of any Birds or in the earth beneath that is of any Beast or in the waters under the earth that is of any Fish as it is in the second Commandment For as the Prophet tells us there is nothing that we can liken God to Isa 40 18. To whom will ye liken God or what likeness will ye compare to him We debase his Spiritual and Incorruptible Nature when we compare him to corruptible Creatures Rom. 1.22 23. Speaking of the Heathen Idolatry Who professing themselves wise became fools and changed the glory of the incorruptible God into an image made like to corruptible man and to birds and to fourfooted Beasts and creeping things They became Fools this is the folly of Idolatry to liken a Spirit which hath no bodily shape to things that are corporeal and corruptible So that however some are pleased to mince the matter I cannot see how the Church of Rome which worships God by or toward some Image or sensible representation can be excused from Idolatry and the Church of England doth not without very just cause challenge the Romish
come to answer Objections against this Doctrine There are two Objections against this 1. From Reason 2. From Scripture 1. Obj. Reason will be ready to suggest that this is a disparagement to the Divine Nature to tye his Presence to this vile Dunghil of the Earth and fordid Sink of Hell This is a gross Apprehension of God and a measuring of him by our selves Indeed if we look upon God as capable of Injury and Suffering and Offence from the Contagion of any thing here below as we are then indeed there were some strength in this Objection but he is a blessed and pure Being Mens segregata ab omni concretione mortali A Mind free from all mortal Composition or Mixture Tully 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 disentangled from every thing passible as Plut. Those things that are nauseous to our Senses do not affect him Darkness is uncomfortable to us but the Darkness and the Light are all one to him Wickedness may hurt a man or the son of man but if we multiply our transgressions we do nothing to God as Elihu speaks Job 35.6 Nothing can disquiet or discompose his happy and blessed Nature but he converseth here in this dark and troubled World with less danger of Disturbance or any impure Contagion than the Sun-beams 2. Obj. Does not the Scripture tell us that God sits in the Heavens and dwells on high that Heaven is his throne and that it is the City of the great God Doth not the Lord's Prayer teach us to say Our Father which art in heaven Is he not said to look down from heaven and to hear in heaven his dwelling-place Is it not said that he doth not dwell in temples made with hands And does not Solomon 1 Kings 8.27 put it as a strange question will God indeed dwell on the earth Is he not said to come down and draw near to us and to be afar off from us Now how does this agree with his Immensity and Omnipresence For answer to this I must distinguish the Presence of God There is 1 st his glorious Presence that is such a Presence of God as is accompanied with an extraordinary manifestation of his Glory and that is especially and chiefly confined to Heaven in respect of which it is called his Seat and Throne and the Habitation of his Glory Some degree of this was in the Temple which is the reason of Solomon's Admiration will God indeed dwell on Earth 2 dly There is his gracious Presence which discovers it self by miraculous effects of his Favour and Goodness and Assistance and thereby he is said to dwell in the hearts of good Men and with them that are of an humble and contrite Spirit Isa 57.15 and in respect of this he is said to draw near to us to look down upon us and in respect of the absence of this to be far from us 3 dly There is his essential Presence which is equally and alike in all Places and this is not excluded by those former Expressions which the Scripture useth to denote to us the glorious and gracious Presence of God Fourthly To make some Inferences I will mention only such as the Scripture here takes notice of speaking of God's Immensity I. Inf. That God is a Spirit This necessarily flows from his Immensity for if the Essence of God be every where diffused the Divine Nature must be spiritual otherwise it could not be in the same place were Body and Matter is but must be shut out of the World But this I spoke more largely to in my Discourse of God's being a Spirit This the Psalmist observes here Where shall I go from thy Spirit If he were not a Spirit we might go from him and hide our selves from his Presence II. Inf. That God is Incomprehensible That which is infinite cannot be measured and comprehended by that which is finite and this also the Psalmist takes notice of in the Verse before my Text Such knowledge is too wonderful for me it is high I cannot attain it III. Inf. That God is Omniscient If God be every where then he knows all things yea even the hidden things of Darkness the Secrets of our Hearts nothing can be hid from an infinite Eye he is present to our Thoughts intimate to our Hearts and Reins this the Psalmist takes notice of 1 2 3 4 and 12 Verses IV. Inf. That God is Omnipotent He can do all things Distance limits the Power of Creatures and makes their hands short but God is every where nothing is out of his reach and this also the Psalmist intimates in the Text v. 10. Even there shall thy hand lead me and thy right hand hold me Fifthly The Use and Improvement I shall make of this shall be 1. To awaken our Fear of him 2. To encourage our Faith and Confidence in him 1. To awaken our Fear of him The Consideration of God's Presence should awaken in us a Fear of Reverence The Presence of an earthly Majesty will awe our Spirits and compose us to Reverence yea the Presence of a wise and good Man how much more should the Presence of the great and glorious the wise and the holy and the just God strike an awe upon our Spirits Wherever we are God is with us we always converse with him and live continually in his Presence now a Heathen could say cum Diis verecunaè agendum We must behave our selves modestly because we are in the presence of God And it should awaken in us a Fear to offend God and a Fear of the divine displeasure for having offended him Fear is the most wakeful Passion in the Soul of man and is the first Principle that is wrought upon in us from the Apprehensions of a Deity it flows immediately from the principle of Self-preservation which God hath planted in every Man's Nature we have a natural Dread and Horror for every thing that can hurt us and endanger our Being or Happiness now the greatest Danger is from the greatest Power for where we are clearly over-match'd we cannot hope to make Opposition nor Resistance with security and success to r●bel with Safety now he that apprehends God to be near him and present to him believes such a Being to stand by him as is possest of an infinite and irresistible Power and will vindicate all Contempt of the Divine Majesty and Violation of his Laws If we believe God to be always present with us Fear will continually take hold of us and we shall say of every place as Jacob did of Bethel surely God is in this place how dreadful is this place When we have at any time provoked God if we believe the just God is at hand to revenge himself and if we believe the power of his anger we shall say with David Psa 76.7 Thou even thou art to be feared and who may stand before thee when thou art angry Psa 119.120 My flesh trembleth because of thee and I am afraid of thy Judgments Sinners consider