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A64687 Twenty sermons preached at Oxford before His Majesty, and elsewhere by the most Reverend James Usher ...; Sermons. Selections Ussher, James, 1581-1656. 1678 (1678) Wing U227; ESTC R13437 263,159 200

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testifie I answer In this place our Spirit is as it were an evidence of God from heaven as a loud token given assuring me upon good grounds that I have not mis-applyed the promises but though God do write bitter things against me yet that I love him still and cleave unto him that for all this I know that I still hunger and thirst after Righteousness that I will not be beaten off nor receive an ill report of my Lord and Saviour that I rest wait fear and trust in him still When thus our valour and faith is tryed then comes the same spirit and seals with our spirit that we are the children of God When our seal is first put then God seals with our spirit the same thing by his spirit To this effect is that in 1 Joh. 3.8 we read three Witnesses are set down the Spirit the Water aand the Blood and these three agree in one These three witness that we have everlasting life and that our names are written in heaven How do these three agree with these two Witnesses very well St. John he ranks them according to the order of their clearest evidence first the Spirit then the Water then the Blood the Apostle here he ranks them according to their natural being first our spirit in Justification and Sanctification and then God's spirit For the spirit of all other this is the clearest evidence and when this is bright and manifest there needs no more the thing is sealed So the Testimony of Water is a clear evidence whereby is meant Sanctification this is put next unto the Spirit for when the Spirit is silent yet this may speak for though I have many wants and imperfections in me yet if my spirit can testifie unto me that I have a desire to please God in all things that I resolve upon and set up his service as the pitch of all my utmost endeavours that with allowance I willingly cherish no corruption but set my self against all sin this Water will comfort and hold up a man from sinking as we see in all the sore tryals of Job Job 28.2 Still he stood upon the integrity of his own spirit and would not let that go though he were sore beaten of the Almighty and slandered for a wicked person But the water may be muddy and the strugling of the flesh and spirit so strong that we happily shall not be able to judge which is master What then Then faith lays hold of the blood in Justification which though it be the darkest testimony yet is as sure as any of the other Now in comparing of these witnesses together in St. John and in my text I rank the water and the blood with the testimony of our spirit And the Spirit mentioned in St. John and in my Text to be all one not as though we wrought them but we believe them to be so If a man ask how I know that I am sanctified the answer must be I believe and know it to be so the work producing these things in me comes of God but for the work of discerning this is certain how our affections stand in this case it comes of us but yet to come nearer the matter The testimony of our spirit I conceive to be when a man hath taken a survey of those excellent things belonging unto Justification and Sanctification when according to the substantial truths which I know in the Word I observe and follow as fast as I can what is there commanded when I take the Candle of the Word and with the bright burning lamp search into the Word what is there to be done and so bring it home to my self thereby mortifying my corruptions this is the ground-work of the witness of our Spirit First as in the blood with my spirit I must see what is needful to be done in order unto Justification what free promises of invitation belong thereunto I must see how God justifies a sinner what conditions on our part are required in Justification I must see what footings and grounds for life and what way of hope there is for a graceless man to be saved yea even for the worst person that may be In this case a man must not look for any thing in himself as a cause Christ must not be had by exchange but received as free gift as the Apostle speaks Rom. 4.16 Therefore it is of faith that it may be by grace to the end the promise might be sure to all the seed I must there bring unto the receiving of Christ a bare hand It must be of grace God for this cause will make us let fall every thing before we shall take hold of him Though qualified with humiliations I must let all fall not trusting unto it as to make me the worthier to receive Christ as some think When thus at first for my Justification I received Christ I must let any thing I have fall to lay hold of him that then he may find us thus naked as it were in our blood and in this sort God will take us that all may be of mere grace Another thing the Apostle adds and that is that the promise may be sure If any thing in us might be as a cause or help to our Justification a man should never be sure therefore it is all of grace that the promise might be sure As though God should say I care for nothing else bring me my Son and shew me him and then all is well And in this case you see he doth not name hope or love or any other grace but faith for the nature of faith is to let fall all things in laying hold on Christ In Justification faith is a sufferer only but in Sanctification it works and purgeth the whole man and so witnesses the certainty and truth of our Sanctification and so the assurance of Salvation Hence from the nature hereof in this work the Apostle in 2 Pet. 1.1 writes to them who had obtained like precious faith In this case it is alike to all in vertue in this work whatsoever the measure be And I may liken it thus St. Paul you know writes With these hands I get my living Now though strong hands may work more than weak hands and so earn a great deal more yet a beggar who holds out his hand may receive more than he or any other could earn So faith justifies only receiving not working as we may see Joh. 1.12 But to as many as received him to them gave he power to become the Sons of God even to them that believe in his Name Received him that is believe in him How Come and take him How as it is in Rev. 22. And let him that is athirst come and whosoever will let him come and take of the water of life freely Now when I see that God keeps open house come who will without denying entertainment to any and when God's spirit hath wrought the will in me what lets me now to receive
will die It will quickly perish by famin So it is here unless Christ be pleased to nourish that life which he hath breathed into me in baptisme and by his Ordinances ●o give me anew supply and addition of grace I am a dead man I am gone for ever upon this ground that I receive not the never perishing food that endureth as Christ who is himself that meat teacheth us unto Everlasting life Joh. 6.27 Therefore upon examination being conscious and privy to the weakness of my faith to the manifold imperfections of my spirit to my want of knowledge the frailty of my memony my often doubtings the dangers of relapsing and falling back in my Christian progress I cannot but apprehend that it is no needless thing for me to come both often and preparedly to the Lords Table 2. The next action requisite before my coming to the Sacrament is the whetting of my appetite and preparing of my stomach I must come with an hungry desire as a man that comes to his meat that would live and be strong We think meat very ill bestowed on him that hath no stomach Unless we eat Christs body and drink his blood we can have no spiritual life All the question and the main business is whether I come hungry thirsty or not as an hungry and thirsty man with an Appetite after his meat and liquor longing after Christ as the Hart after the water brooks Psal. 42.1 When a man comes dully and as Children that play with their meat cares not whether he eats or not when a man comes I say without an appetite its time for God to take it away from him It s an unworthy comming to come with an unprepared stomach and without whetting our faith to feed on Christ Jesus crucified 3. The third action requisite to a worthy Comer is cleansing of himself I would fain come may a man say to the Lords Table having such need of it as I have and having such an appetite and desire to feed on Christ but I am to come before a great King therefore I must wash mine hands in innocency Psal. 26.6 In the Gospel according to Saint Mark the Jews found fault with Christs Disciples because they came with unclean or common hands For so the word signifies and is so used by the Apostles as equivalent thereunto I have learned to call nothing common or unclean Rom. 14.14 Now when I come to meet the Lord in his Ordinances I must put off my feet for the place where I stand is holy Exod. 3.5 Wash your hands you sinners and purifie your hearts you double minded Jam. 4.8 The purifying of the soul is that which is required of every worthy Communicant We come now not to receive life but strength and that it may strengthen us we must of necessity cleanse our selves A stomach over-clogged with choler whatever meat be taken into it it turns it into i●s own nature so is it here unless the vessel be clean Quodcunque infundis acescit Christ Jesus the purest thing in the world is to come into my soul as into a sanctuary and shall not I fit trim and garnish it to receive him but leave it as a Pig●sty Know therefore that thou comest unworthily when thou comest with unwashed hands The people were to be sanctified when they came to receive the Law Exod. 19.10 And so must we if we will receive the benefit from the business in hand But I cannot stand on all I pas● from this therefore to the second thing I proposed and that was 2. Those things which were required of us in the action And there we have the acts of the Minister in the administration I must not look on these as idle Ceremonies but as real Representations otherwise we take God's name in vain I must look upon the Minister who represents the person of Christ and by the eyes of faith see Christ himself offered for me when I see the bread broken the wine poured out Whosoever therefore thou art who wouldst worthily partake of Christ at the holy Table behold him offered to thee when the Minister bids thee take and eat take and drink And when the Minister bids thee take know that in as good earnest as the Minister offers thee the bread and wine the Lord of●●rs thee his Son Christ Jesus Take Christ my Son dead and crucified for thee Consider when thou seest the Minister set the bread and wine apart how God from all eternity set apart his Son for us If we have not done this we must do it Exod. 12.3 See the manner of the setting apart of the Lamb which was a type of Christ In the tenth day of the month they shall take unto them every man a Lamb according to the house of their Fathers This Lamb was to be set apart and taken out of the flock And in the fifth verse It must be a lamb without blemish then you shall keep it until the fourteenth day of the same month From the tenth day to the fourteenth it was to be kept This typified that Lamb of God that was so set apart Then was the Lamb to be killed by whom Vers. 6. by all the Congregation of Israel And thus was Christ to be singled out and to be slain Every mother's son had a hand in killing this Lamb of God He is set apart to suffer for sinners picked out as a singled deer which being designed to the game the hounds will follow only and no other Thus was Christ hunted to death by one sorrow after another till he gave up the Ghost upon the Cross. In the Gospel according to St. John we read how the people took branches of Palm trees and went forth to meet Christ cap. 12.12 13. and that was the day the Lamb was set apart and he was so set apart till the Jew's Passover This concerns me saith Christ. Christ saw himself typified in the Lamb that was set apart Observe then on that very day Father sath he Deliver me from that hour On that very day in the Lamb he saw himself to be sacrificed by all the Congregation of Israel We were all of us actors in the business not one here but had a hand in the offering up of the Son of God in killing Christ Jesus Thus for these actions of the Minister the setting apart of the bread and of the wine Then follows the breaking of the bread and the pouring out of the wine At the breaking of the bread consider Christ's flesh torn asunder all the lashes which made such scratches in his flesh the ruptures which were made by the nails and the spear that pierced his side The breaking of him by his Father the word signifies crushing him to powder God would break him saith the Prophet even to powder Isa. 53.10 At the consideration hereof how should our faith be stirred and set awake Thou takest God's name in vain if with a dull eye thou canst see things and not take it to heart
it was part of his Priest-hood to offer up himself The Sacrifices in the old Law that typified him were only sufferers The poor beasts were only passive but our Saviour he must be an Actor in the business He was active in all that he suffered He did it in obedience to his Fathers Will yet he was an Agent in all his Passions John 11.43 He groaned in Spirit and was troubled the Greek is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or as it is in the Margent He troubled himself With us in our Passions it is otherwise we are meer sufferers Our Saviour was a Conqueror over all his passions and therefore unless he would trouble himself none else could trouble him unless he would lay down his life none could take it from him unless he would give his cheek to be smitten the Jews had no power to smite it Isa. 50.6 I gave my back to the smiters and my cheeks to them that pluckt off the hair and hid not my face from shame and spitting In all these we should consider our Saviour not as a Sacrifice only but a Sacrificer also an Actor in all this business their wicked hands were not more ready to smite then he was to give his face to be smitten and all to shew that it was a voluntary Sacrifice He did all himself He humbled himself unto the death Phil. 2.8 And now by all this we see what we have gotten we have gotten a remedy and satisfaction for sins That precious blood of that immaculate Lamb takes away the sins of the world because it is the Lamb of God under which else the World would have eternally groaned Object But doth this Lamb of God take away all the sins of the world Sol. It doth not actually take away all the sins of the world but virtually It hath power to do it if it be rightly applyed the Sacrifice hath such vertue in it that if all the World would take it and apply it it would expiate and remove the sins of the whole World but it is here as with medicines they do not help being prepared but being applied Rhubarb purgeth choler yet not unless applied c. Exod. 39.38 there is mention made of a Golden Altar Christ is this Golden Altar to shew that his blood is most precious We are not redeemed with silver and gold but with the precious blood of Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 1.18 19. Rev. 8.3 9.13 He is that golden Alter mentioned in the Revelation which stands before the Throne He was likewise to be a brazen altar for so much was to be put upon him that unless he were of brass and had infinite strength he would have sunk under the burden Its Jobs Metaphor Job in his passion saith Is my strength the strength of stones or is my flesh brass Job 6.12 If Christs flesh had not been brass if he had not been this brazen Altar he could never have gone through these now he is prepared for us a sacrifice for sin Rom. 8.3 For what the Law could not do in that it was weak through the flesh God sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and for sin for sin make a stop there condemned sin in the flesh This same for sin hath not reference to condemned To condemn sin for sin is not good sense but the words depend on this God sent his Son that is God sent his Son to be a Sacrifice for sin 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the word is translated Heb. 10.6 a sacrifice for sin It was impossible the Law should save us not because of any imperfection or failing in the Law but because our weakness is such as that we could not perform the conditions therefore God was not tyed to promises by reason then of the weakness of our flesh rather than we should perish God sent his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and in that flesh of his condemned all our sins we need not look that sin should be condemned in us when he bare our sins on the tree then were our sins condemned therefore it 's said Isai. 53. When he had made his soul an offering for sin that is in the Original when he had made his soul sin then he saw his seed Isa. 57. We come now to the second thing if Christ be offered for us yet unless he offer him to us unless any man may have interest in him it 's nothing worth Here then stands the Mystery of the Gospel Christ when he comes to offer himself to us he finds not a whit in us that is to be respected nothing And that is the ground of all disturbance to ignorant consciences for there is naturally in men pride and ignorance they think they may not meddle with Christ through Gods Mercy unless they bring something unless they have something of their own to lay down This is to buy Christ to barter betwixt Christ and the soul but salvation is a free gift of God As the Apostle speaks Christ is freely given unto thee when thou hadst nothing of worth in thee Faith when it comes empties thee of all that is in thee To whom is the Gospel preached to the dead Now before Christ quicken thee thou art stark dead rotting in thy sins Here 's the point then when there is no manner of goodness in thee in the world In me saith St. Paul that is in my flesh there is no good thing When I have been the most outragious sinner I may lay hold on Christ. Christ comes and offers himself to thee Now when Christ offers the other part of the relation holds we may take We have an interest to accept what he proffers Consider it by an example If one give me a million and I receive it not I am never the richer and so if God offer me his Son and with him all things I am nothing the better if I receive him not That he is born and given what is that to us unless we can say To us a child is born to us a Son is given Isa. 9.6 Faith comes with a naked hand to receive that which is given we must empty our selves of what is in us Consider thy estate the Lord sets dow● how it is with us when he comes to look upon us Ezek. 16.6 And when I passed by thee and saw thee polluted in thy blood I said unto thee when thou w●rt in thy blood live Why is this ●et down It 's to shew how God finds nothing in us when he comes to shew Mercy He finds nothing in us that is lovely when he comes to bestow his Son upon us For it is said Rev 1.5 That Christ loved us and washed us from our sins in his own blood He doth first cast his eyes upon us when we are unwashed as I may say unwashed and unblessed When no eye pittied thee and thou wast cast out in the open fi●ld when thou wast in thy blood I said unto thee live when he comes
to making up of the match vers 9. Then I washed thee with water yea I throughly washed away thy blood from thee and I anointed thee with oyl I cloathed thee also with embroidered work and shod thee with badgers skins c. That is when Christ comes to cast his affections on us and to wed us unto himself he finds us polluted and naked not with a rag on us Full of filth just nothing have we he takes us with nothing nay we are worse than nothing So that here is the point what ground is there whereby a man that is dead and hath no goodness in him m●ke him as ill as can be imagined what ground hath he to receive Chri●t Yes To as many as received him to them he gave the power to become the sons of God First The receiving of Christ and then comes Believing It is the receiving of this gift that is the means whereby Christ is offered to us The Apostle joyning the first and second Adam together makes the benefit we have by the second to lye in the point of receiving Rom. 5.17 Object If it be a free gift why is faith required Sol. Because faith takes away nothing from the gift If a man give a beggar an Alms and he reach out his hand to receive it his reaching out the hand makes the gift never the less because the hand is not a worker but an instrument in receiving the free gift Rom. 5.15 If through the offence of one many be dead much more the grace of God and the gift by grace hath abounded unto many in Jesus Christ. And vers 17. If by one man's offence death raigned by one much more they that receive abundance of grace shall raign in life by one Jesus Christ Here 's the point then God is well pleased and therefore sends to us Wilt thou have my Son with him thou shalt have abundance of Grace and everlasting life and my love too There 's no Creature in this place but this shall be made good unto if he can find in his heart to take Christ thou shalt have a warrant to receive him Now to receive Christ is to believe in his name and to draw near unto him The word Receiving is a taking with the hand with free entertainment as vers 11. immediately before the Text. It 's not so properly Receiving as Entertaining He came to his own and his own received him not they were like the foolish Gaderens that preferred their pigs before Christ they would rather have his room than his company and so when Christ comes and thou hast rather be a free man as thou thinkest and wilt not have him to raign over thee then thy case is lamentable Then self-will self-have T●e only point is whether we come to Christ or he come to us there is a drawing near If thou comest to Christ he will not put thee back if Christ come to thee by any good motion if thou shut not the door against him thou sh●lt 〈…〉 him R●v 3.20 Behold I stand at the door and knock i● a●● man hea● m● v●ice and open the door I will come in unto him and ●up wi●h h●m and he wi●h me Rev. 1.16 The Lord by the knock of his mouth by the sword that comes out of his mouth would fain come in and be familiar with thee If thou wilt not let him in is it not good reason that as in the Canticles Cant. 5.6 he withdraw himself If he see thy sins and would fain come in what an encouragement hast thou to open Joh. 6.37 He that cometh unto me I will in no wise cast out Canst thou have a better word from thy Prince than this When he holdeth out his golden Sceptre if thou takest hold on it thou art safe otherwise thou art a dead man thou canst not have a greater security all the point is Faith is a drawing near unto Christ and Unbelief is a going from him The Gospel is preached to those that are afar off and to those that are near Eph. 2.17 He came to preach peace to you that are afar off and to them that are nigh Who were they that were afar off they were those that had uncircumcision in the flesh without Christ Aliens to the Commonwealth of Israel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those that had no hope to these Christ came these that were afar off by faith drew near that expression is a singular one Heb. 10.38 Now the just shall live by faith What is that but if any man draw back that is if any man be an Unbeli●ver my soul shall have no pleasure in him Faith makes a man come and draw near to Christ. It 's a shame-faced bashfulness that makes a man draw back its unbelief if any draw back and to believe is to go on with boldness We are not of them which draw back unto perdition but of them c. What an excellent encouragement is this to come with boldness unto the Throne of Grace that we may find help in time of need So that now let thy estate be what it will if thou wilt not hold off but dost entertain Christ though thy sins be as red as scarlet be not discouraged they shall be made as white as wool Isa. 1.18 The very sinner against the Holy Ghost is invited and why is that unpardonable Can any sin be so great as to over-top the value of Christ's blood There is not so much wretchedness in the heart of man as there is Grace Goodness and Mercy in Christ But then it is unpardonable Why Because it is the nature of the disease that will not suffer the plaister to stick on It counts the blood of the Covenant wherewith we should be sanctified an unholy thing Heb. 10.29 If this sinner would not pluck off the plaister and tread it under foot he should be saved but this is it when God is liberal and Christ is free we have not the heart to take him at his word and come To open this Word this is the point of all this is the free preaching of the Gospel indeed when a man hath nothing desirable in him but is stark naught and stark dead and is not worth the taking up that yet he may challenge Christ and be sure of all Unless thou hast Christ thou hast nothing by Promise not so much as a bit of bread by Promise if thou hast it it is by Providence All the Promises of God are in him 2 Cor. 1.20 that is Christ yea and Amen Ye are the Children of the Promise in Christ Gal 3.29 and 4.28 but you have nothing till you be in Christ. The Question is What must I do in this case What encouragement shall I have in my rags when I am abominable worth nothing There are certain things that are preparations to a Promise such as are Commands Precepts Entreaties which encourage them to it and then comes a proposition I being a Believer shall have eternal life If Christ