THE RISING SUN: OR THE SUN of RIGHTEOUSNESS, Shining upon the SONS of UNRIGHTEOUSNESS. A Theological Sun-Dyal, Wherein Is to be seen, the Rising, Motion, Influence, and manifold Operations of Christ upon the Soul, under that clear & glorious resemblance of the Sun. As also, The Description of the true Believer, in whom are to be found but the least measures and sparks of Grace, which are here discovered and cherished. As also the highest degrees and full growth in Grace are here delineated and furthered. By JOHN SHEFFEILD, Preacher of the Gospel at Swithins, London. Jerem, 33. 15, 16. In those days will I cause the branch of Righteousness to grow unto David, and he shall execute Judgement and Righteousness in the Land; in his days Judah shall be saved, and Jerusalem shall dwell safely; and this is the name wherewith she shall be called, The Lord our Righteousness. Isai. 60. 19 The Sun shall be no more thy light by day, neither for brightness shall the Moon give light unto thee, but the Lord shall be to thee an everlasting light, and thy God thy glory. London, Printed by Th. Maxey for SA. GELLIBRAND, at the Golden Ball in Paul's Churchyard, 1654. Superiori, sed Propiori Soli, Soli Justitiae Soli, Mundi conditori, Eccleclesiae Redemptori 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theophilo, & 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Philemoni. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 COeli enarrant Domine jesu, Coeli Coelorum enarrant Gloriam tuam, omnisque eorum exercitus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 illa celeberrima Corona, et 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tot veluti Aquilae Solem spectan●es, tot Parelii Solem circumstantes, tot denique 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Vultu solem versus ●ixo, ●emplū & 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, à tergo relin●uentes, Lunan, Solemque ipsum, & 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sub pe●ibus conculcantes, te Solem justitiae indesi●enter ●anunt, spectant, circumstant, adorant. Inter h●s ●im quasi in Sancto Sanctorum, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, non antea inspiciendam jam resera●am, & spectandam posuisti. Visibiles, insuper & Inferiores hi Coeli, ●lendidumque illud expansum opera manuum ●arum indicant, Praecipue verò inter ignes ille minores, Sol Coelorum decus, terrarum gloria, Pecorumque hominumque Lux, Vita, Deliciae, imo Luminis, Numinisque tui speciosissima Umbella. Hunc enim tibi pro vehiculo deligisti, quoniam in ipso posuisti Tabernaculum tuum. Sanctissima vero tam Prophetarum, quam Apostolorum cohors, eorumque 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Scripta te solum spirant, te Solem praedicant, & sicut stella olim illa 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Visa Orientis Filios (Gentium Primitias) animi dubios, via nescios ad tua rect â anteambulans deduxit Limina, ibique quasi ad Solis Domicilium (verum Bethshemesh) Viatoribus perductis (ut Arcae foederis à Philistaeis Plaustro Imposit● divinitus antea evenerat) constitit; ita h● turbam credentium (te quaerentem) quas● manu prehensa perducunt. In hisce enim posuisti lucernam tuam pedes viatorum in via pacis dirigentem. Quinetiam celeberrimus ille omnium Theologorum chorus, & Pastorum Grex, tot in mundo Lumina, in dextra tua stellae lumen suum à tuo solius Lumine acceptum referentes t● solum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 suspiciunt. Hisce etiam Arcam foederis Gestandam, manibus aliis non contrectandam, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 concredidisti. Innumera denique per orbis totius fines credentium sparsa multitudo, tam Naturae, qua● Scripturae lumine adducti; Prophetarum, Apostolorumque defunctorum, nec non pastorum praesentium testimonio inducti, tantâque insuper Testium nube conducti, te solum insequuntur, quemadmodum sequacior ille populus praecedentem olim ignis columnam; incessus, accessus, discessus, recessus, gressusque tuos omnes observant, tecum aut moventes, aut manentes. Te solum exoptant, te anhelant, in te etiamsi nondum conspectum, fama notum fide certâ nituntur, credentes diligunt, dilectum cordibus excipiunt, excipientes vero gaudent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, & suos quisque Thesauros aperientes pro sua cujusque facultate munera ferentes adorant, tuam tantummodo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ad ipsorum beatitudinem omnibus numeris consummandam praestolantur. Inter hos etiam ignis, nubisque columnam praesentiae tuae symbolum constituisti. In horum ego consortio unus, minimus; inter peccatores (eheu!) primus; inter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 imus (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) inter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, inter Verè Sanctos nisi Gratia illa gratis data, gratumque faciens satis superque abundasset, prorsus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Gratiâ tamen tuâ sum id quod sum; meque tibi, tuaeque gratiae, quae prius electum, dein dilectum facit totum debere agnosco. Inter amicos tamen sponsi siquos habet (habet enim fidissimos, atat paucissimos) unum me asserere ausim, etiamsi inter pronubos, filiosve Thalami haud sim dignus numerari. De te, Pulcherrime hominum, de te quem unicè diligit anima mea, narratura est meditatio & scriptio nostra. Te solum scire, & qui te misit Patrem, haec est vita illa aeterna. Te autem notum facere (te inquam crucifixum) hic vitae praesentis scopus, hoc Ministerii opus. Scire meum nihil est, nisi te cognoscere Christ, Te mihi scire parum, nisi quem scio te sciat alter. Oh Utinam alias mihi concederetur lingua eruditorum, lingua instar Calami scribae peritioris, ubi gregem tuum instruxero▪ at jam calamus in linguam converteretur, linguam scribae cujusdam paratioris ad Regnum Coelorum, qui ex suo omne genus Doctrinae Coelestis refertissimo promptuario, ●am recentiora, quam vetustiora profert. Quod potui feci non quod debui, non quod par est; unguentum quod habui pretiosissimum in caput multo preciosius impendi. Sit nomen tuum sicut unguentum diffusum, & ubicunque terrarum sese S●l longe, lateque visendum exhibuerit, Nomen ibi, regnumque tuum tollantur in astra. Ad me quod attinet, cum Propheta cogor▪ exclamare, Hei mihi homuncioni labiis polluto, qui nec sapientiam didici, nec scientiam Sanctorum degustavi. Valde mihi vereor ne ex turbine mihi respondeas, Quis est iste qui obtenebrat consilium sermonibus inscit is? & in me just â excandescas iracundiâ, quòd non de te rectè uti aequum est locutus sum. Ex fulgore dedi fumum, ex fumo dato lucem. Quis adeo coecus (gemens, tremensque loquor) ut servus tuus? surdus ut nuntius iste tuus? Te tamen memini Thesaurum tuum testaceis istiusmodi Vasculis imposuisse, qu● supereminentia omnis potentiae omnisque efficaci● ex Deo prorsus, ex nobis nequaquam provenisse dignoscatur. Adest itaque mihi gloriatio si quidem in infirmitatibus gloriari concessum; Quoniam in infirmitate humana perfecta est gratia divina. Quod superest, te Patremque tuum, Patrem illum luminum flexis genibus exoratum velim: lucem, ve●itatemque tuam undiquaque splendentem, undique triumphantem caelitus emittas, adeo ut hostibus omnibus debellatis, haeresibus extinctis, schismatibus aut resartis, aut rescissis, dissidiis sopitis, tenebris discussis, Pax, Lux & summa concordia Christianae Reipublicae restituantur. Ecclesia tua non amplius ut vidua marito orbata, hostium vulneribus saucia, natorum jurgiis exacerbata, Lachrymis propriis & cruore emacerata, maesta vultu, maesta veste incedat, sed tandem (ut sponsum decet Altissimi) tuo lumine quasi nuptiali veste induta, in sponsum dilectissimum familiariter reclinans, ex eremo egressura cernatur, Pulchra ut Aurora speciosa ut Luna, clara ut Sol, terribilis ut exercitus cum vexillis. Pro Diademate Coronam duodecem stellarum Doctrinam duodecem Apostolorum sem: per gerens▪ Ministros tuos dextra tua teneas, sinu foveas, Ecclesiam sanguine tuo redemptam Spiritu & Verbo tuo Regas, Veritatem sartam tectam tueare, Universis dona distribuas, Pusillum tuum Gregem protegas; tuum sit dilatatum. Regnum â solis ortu ad occasum usque, ut projectus ille (quondam) lapis in montem tandem excresens mundum universumimpleat. Tuam tibi Domine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 assumas, ut tibi Reges, Regnaque omnia inserviant, fortem illum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Principem, omni sua à tot retro saeculis usurpata tyrannide exuas, ipsumque catena ligatum in Abyssum detrudas, Antichristum illius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 illustri tuo adventu perdas, tua omnia promissa adimpleas, tuamque cum Myriadibus Sanctorum ad finem impietati imponendum reditum acceleres. Interea vero sis nobis in Eremo columna ignis, noctu 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, animo lassis, in tenebris incedentibus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, in fine▪ sine fine, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Sic seipsum, libellumque istum, reliquosque assiduos in nomine tuo susceptos quales, quales conatus tibi tuaeque gratiae, benedictione inde Spirituali locupletandos dedicans, & devovens humillimis ardentissimisque contendit precibus. Servus omnium inutilissimus, qui sua omnia 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 projiciens, hoc solo nomine gloriatur, jehovah Tzidkenu. To the Right Worshipful and other his beloved Friends▪ Inhabitants of SWITHINS LONDON. I Read of a rich silver Globe presented by Ferdinand to Solyman the Magnificent of admirable Workmanship, expressing, besides the passing of each hour, the motions of the Sun, changes of the Moon, etc. and giving a resemblance of the whole frame of the Celestial Orbs, made with much Art by the direction of the most famous Astronomers then in the world. I have nothing of that Art and Rarity to present you with, but a plain Theological (not Astrological) Sun-Dyal, representing not the lower Heavens and their Motion, but the Empyrean and its Rest; and the Essence, Attributes, Properties, Effects, Motion, Influence of the Higher Sun, the Sun of Righteousness. The Subject handled I cannot wish greater or better, there is none before it; the manner of handling I could wish much better, especially for the dignity of the person of whom it treats, as also of yourselves, or whoever may peruse it. But as with him where there is a willing mind, there is acceptance of what little we have; so I doubt not but you will hold it your Honour, in all things to be like minded to Jesus Christ. To many of you I am bound in many bonds of Gratitude, to all in duty; therefore I could not judge any among those whom I am bound to love and honour so fit to have this Discourse inscribed and presented to, as yourselves, who are to me above all others whatsoever, nearest in spiritual relations and 〈…〉 in Christian and cordial affecti 〈…〉▪ To others I owe much, to you myself. Having then dedicated myself, first to him of whom it treats, (w●o●e I am, and whom I serve) your Saviour, my Lord; who can be thought s● f●t to be joined with him as yourselves, whose things next to his I desire most to take care of? The Minister's duty is to divide himself between the Lord and his Church (not the Lord and the world,) for so did Christ divide his love between his Father and his Church; to him he gave himself to express the highest love of pure obedience; for the Church he gave himself, to express the strongest love of benevolence. You have had the sum of this Discourse preached among you, and divers of you have it written in your Note Books, and repeated in your Families. But I would desire rather you might have the Doctrinal part of all Sermons written in your Consciences, and the Use ever repeated in your Conversations. Now that you may, as you have heard of Jesus Christ be taught by him, and as you have received him walk in him, attaining to all the riches of the full Assurance of understanding, to the acknowledgement of the whole Mystery of Christ, in whom are hid all treasures of wisdom and knowledge; and that your conversations may be as becomes the Gospel, that you may be ever found among such as fear his Name, that you may wait for this Sun of Righteousness to rise upon your souls, to heal all your infirmities, to clothe you with his Righteousness, that coming behind in no gift, duty diligence, comfort, experience and growth, you may by him be presented perfect and without spot before God; which as it will be your (that I may not say mine) Joy, Glory, Crown of rejoicing in the day of the Lord Jesus; so it is the prayer of Your daily Remembrancer, and Servant in the Lord, JOHN SHEFFEILD. To the READER. Reader▪ HAving much to say to thee within, I shall not let thee stand at the door, but entreat thee to enter, sit down, and read a while. If thou desirest to know what I have to say, Read on a while and I shall tell thee. If thou must have it in a few words, either turn to the Table in the end, or to the Title in the beginning. And if thou must have it in two words: hark then: Thou hast here a Resemblance of Christ, and of thyself. Of him a dark and dim one, one every way short, such a one as I could make, not such a one as he is, or aught to have been made of him. But of thyself, it may be not such a one as thou art, but what thou oughtest to be, and if this fall short too, though I shall be the less happy, yet art thou the more happy. I have set this Image before thee, that by beholding it with open face, thou mayst by viewing him, and reflecting on thyself be changed into the self same imag●▪ from Grace to Grace, and so from Glo●● to Glory, thou being made more 〈◊〉 by Christ, that he may be 〈◊〉 with thine, (rather his own) ima●● 〈◊〉; and he being more glorious in th● sight, thou mayst in due time be satisfied with his Image. Melius est nihil omnino scire, ne quidem unam causam eorum quae facta sun●, cur factum, & credere Deo & perseverare in ejus dilectione, quae hominem vivificat, nec aliud inquirere ad scientiam nisi jesum Christum Filium Dei qui pro nobis crucifixus est, quam per quaestionum subtilitates, & multiloquium in Impietatem cadere. Irenaeus. Reader, This is thy great work, to know and study Christ and thyself. All is loss and dung to him, and all knowledge is but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a for● of knowledge, or false knowledge to this. To deal plainly with thee, here is no new light which this curious Age gazeth after, no new earth discovered in the Moon, but a new heaven if thou wilt in the Sun; or another Sun rather besides that ordinary one; yet not a Parelius, but an Hyperelius, a Light exceeding that of the Sun, and yet a Light as old as the Scripture, or the Sun either, his ancienter Light; yea, a Light elder then both, as old as the Father of Lights, the ancient of days. His going forth is from the Mitah 5. 2 days of Eternity, saith the Prophet; and he is the same yesterday, to day and for Hebrews 13, 8 ever, saith the Apostle. Who as he is the true Light, God of God, Light of Light, so hath he derived of his own Light into these great Luminaries, the Sun & Scripture; the one being his Chariot, the other his Lantern; from both which our Discourse is lighted: and though there can be nothing added to the light of these two yet if I have brought any Oil to keep the light of the Sanctuary still burning, as Israel was of old commanded, as I account it the only work of a Minister, so I desire thou mayst not shut thy eyes upon it. But if thou art of that Athenian spirit, that thou hast no leisure to hear of jesus, and Resurrection, or other matters of Religion, but only to inquire and discourse of What is the News? or worse: if thou shouldest be of that profane spirit as Duke d'Alva, who being told of a great Eclipse of the Sun, and called to see it, Atheistically answered, He had so much to look after on earth, that he had no leisure to look up to heaven, Than I shall dismiss thee with the words of the Preacher, Walk on in the ways of thy heart, and in the ●ight of thine eyes, but know thou that for all these things God will bring thee into Judgement. Thine, if he cannot further, yet to desire thy Salvation, JOHN SHEFFEILD. Reader, I thought good to let thee know, this reverend Author hath published another excellent Treatise of Conscience, worthy thy perusal, and most useful in these times, wherein so many make shipwreck both of Faith and a good Conscience. Thine SA. GELLIBRAND. MAL. 4. 2. But unto you that fear my name, shall the Sun of righteousness arise with healing in his wings, and ye shall go forth and grow up as Calves of the Stall. THis last Angelical Prophet is Malachi. i. Angelus. purely Evangelicall in his short Prophetic Gospel, describing 1. The Gospel Church in her worship. 2. The head thereof the Messias, and 3. His eminent forerunner John the Baptist. 1. The Gospel Church and her spiritual and holy worship is described, cap. 1. 11. From the rising of the Sun, unto the going down of the same, my Name shall be great among the Gentiles; and in every place Incense shall be offered unto my Name, and a pure offering: and my Name shall be great among the heathen, saith the Lord of hosts. 2. John Baptist Christ his forerunner is described, 1. Under his two Names and Titles. 2. Under his twofold office in relation to those Titles. 1. He is called a Messenger, Mal. 3. 1. Ma●. 1. 2. (Ecce mittam Angelum meum) and his office or errand in that respect, was to make way for Christ as his Herald or Harbinger. 2. He is in a figure called Elias, and so in the Gospel he is called: and his office was Mal. 4. 5. Matth. 11. 14. Luke 116, 17. in that respect, to make ready a People for the Lord, by Turning father and child, as Elias had brought back a halting people from Baal to God. 3. Here is a description of Christ 1. In his Person. 2. His coming. 1. His Person, under sundry denominations. 1. The Lord whom ye seek, shall come 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Adonai is given to God 134 times in the old Testament, signifies that God is he who as a Pillar sustains all. So Christ. Heb. 1. 3. suddenly to his Temple. Adonis, one of the Titles of God, showing his equality with the father, cap. 3. 1. 2. The Angel or messenger of the covenant;] he the Mediator herein distinct from, and inferior to the Father; The Father sending, The Son sent. 3. The Angel in whom ye delight.] Christ is 1. The delight of the father, Isa. 42. 1. 2. The delight and desire of the godly, Hag. 2. 7. 4. A Refiner and Purifier of his Church, with his fire, soap, and fan in his hand, ver. 3. Matth. 3. 11. 5. Here styled the Sun of Righteousness, cap. 4. 2. 2. His coming described, and that 1. In a more Terrible manner, 2. In a more comfortable manner. 1. More Terribly, and that 1. To wicked men, set out in 4. Expressions. 1. His Coming will to them be a scorching coming, and a scouring coming; as fire to scorch, as soap to scour, as refiners fire, and fullers soap, cap. 3. 2. 2. As a Judge] ver. 5. I will come near to you in judgement: He will bring their judgement home to them, lay it close, he will not be slack to repay them to their face, Deut. 7. 10. He will not go behind the door, as we say, to tell them their own, for Conviction and Condemnation. 3. To convince them, he will be both Judge and Evidence, an eye witness, a swift witness, h. e. 1. Ready to depose, and make proof of what he chargeth them withal: or 2. Importunately instant and pressing for Judgement. How sad will it be with wicked men, when Christ shall turn Informer and accuser against them; the Church's Advocate becomes solicitor against them! Intercessor Rom. 11. ●. turn Plaintiff, as Elias interceding against Israel▪ I will come near to you in judgement, and will be a swift witness against the sorcerers, and against the adulterers, and against false swearers, and against those that oppress the hireling in his wages, the widow and the fatherless, and that turn aside the stranger from his right, and fear not me, saith the Lord of hosts, ver. 5. 4. To see execution done. cap. 4. 1. His day of execution shall be as a flaming furnace, or a fiery oven, which shall burn the wicked as stubble. In all which respects, it may well be said, who may abide the day of his coming, and who may stand when he appeareth? cap. 3. 1. 2. To his own people, his first coming is a hot, smart coming, he shall be as fire, and soap in his Temple, even to the Sons of Levi, he shall try, then refine, and scour, and purge them as the fullers cloth, after much washing and beating, or the Gold after much burning. 2. The benefit redounding to them, 1. They shall officiate and minister better; they shall offer an offering to the Lord in Righteousness ver. 3. 2. They shall be better accepted of God, ver. 4. 2. In a more comfortable manner, To be a Sun of Righteousness.] where we have a description, 1. of Christ. 2. Of his people. 1. Of Christ, what he is at least, and to all his Church▪ best, and to his chosen ones. 1. At least and to all his Church, he is a Sun. 2. At best to his chosen; where three things Promised. 1. He will be to them as a Rising Sun, after their long sitting in obscurity, waiting for a joyful morning: and never be to them a departing, declining, or setting Sun when once risen, but as the morning light, shining more and more to perfect day, Prov 4. 18. 2. Above the ordinary Sun, he will be a Sun of Righteousness, imparting not light, but life, John 1. 4. In him was life, and the life was the light of men. The Sun in heaven gives only light, the Sun of Righteousness gives life. 3. He will be a healing Sun to such as are sick, infirm, and sad; amplified by the place and part where this healing virtue resides; not in his Vesture, Touch, Lips, Spittle, all which were healing, but in his wings. For a double Reason. 1. To denote his swiftness, he hath wings; ●e that came to be a swift witness against the wicked, cap. 3. 5. is as swift a Saviour, he comes suddenly and unexpectedly into his Temple. cap. 3. 1. 2. Under his wings, to denote the warmer, closer embraces which his servants shall be cheered and healed withal, as tender chickens under the Hen. And this answereth to that cap. 3. 5. As he there came near in Judgement to wicked ones, so he comes near in mercy (with healing mercy) to his chosen ones. 2. His people described, and that 1. What they are at least, and worst before this Sun rising and healing them, h. e. before any extraordinary and sensible manifestation of Christ to them. They are such as fear his Name, that is all they can say for themselves. 2. What they are at best, when the Sun hath risen and healed them: they shall go forth with life, strength, and cheerfulness, as the fatted calves of the stall. Calves are noted to be lively, lightsome, skipping creatures Psal. 29. 6. Christ is compared to a fatted Calf, Luke 15. The Calves sacrificed, were Heb. 9 Host 14. 2. Heb. 13. 15. 1. Types of Christ and his blood. 2. Of ourselves, and our sacrifice of praises. The words thus far opened, we come now to the Doctrines therein contained, whereof the first is this, viz. CHAP. I. 1. Christ is to his Church, what the Sun is to Doct. 1. the world. Christ is set forth under many resemblances, of a Rock, a Spring, the Brazen Serpent, a Lamb, Morning Star, Bread, Water, Light, Garments, Gold, Pearl, of a King, Prophet, Priest, Husband, Head, Root, etc. because no one good thing can set out Christ fully, for all can set him out but partially: and because what ever good is in any or all of these, that is Christ and more, and better; and that when we behold and use any of these, we might be put in mind of Christ. This is as High, and fit, and full a resemblance of him as any one thing can be, if I could as fitly and fully pursue it. Psal. 84. 10. The Lord God is a Sun and shield to his people: But especially Christ is so often called, John 1. 12. Ego sum Lux mundi, what is that? But I am the Sun, I am the light of the world. John 1. 4. In him was life, which life was the light of men; and ver. 9 This is the true light etc. John Baptist was a light, john. 5. 35. burning and shining: but not The Light. A Star of the first magnitude, but not the true light; but Christ only the true Light, as the true Vine, john 15. 1. That is, 1. The great Luminare, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 2. The Universal light, giving light to all that come into the world. 3. The Original uncreated light, that had his light from himself, all others from him. In him was light. Rev. 1. 16. and 10. 1. Christ is described, having his countenance shining, as the Sun in his strength. And Rev. 12. 1. The Church in relation to him, and conjunction with him, clothed with the Sun; that is, his Righteousness. Cant. 6. 10. fair as the Moon, clear as the Sun; (that is,) full of Christ. The Moon is fair, not clear from spots when at full; the Sun is always full, always clear. The Church hath not only her own imperfect, spotted Righteousness inherent to make her fair; but Christ's perfect, Sunlike, imputed to make her clear without spot or wrinkle, or any such thing. In which regard, the Church is called upon, and encouraged to clear up, Isa. 60. 1. Parelius est reflexio radiorum solis in nube densa et aequabili, quae ad latus solis existit, et lanquam speculum solis radios recipit, coloremque ejus inde r●fert. Arise, shine, for thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee. The Church is the only Halo or Corona, on which this Sun makes his Impression. And the Church Militant and the Triumphant, are the two right Parelii, on either side of this Sun, near to him, and full of his Lustre and Glory. This is a deep and rich Mine▪ I am digging into, I dare not promise to bring up all the treasures hid in it; I shall show you what I can get up, and yourselves may go and get much more. No Artist can draw all the Sun's light into one room, were his house all Crystal; no labour can get all the water of the Sea into one vessel. Some abler Pen, or larger heart, may as a larger window, let in more of this light. I shall but draw the Curtain, and set open my narrow Casement, to let in what I have received. There is in many things a likeness unlikeness between Christ and the Sun. CHAP. 2. The Likeness between Christ and the Sun. THeir Likeness is seen in many Particulars, and because so many, I shall not defer the Application of all, till I have spoke of each, as usually we do, but as we go along, apply each particular, to free your memories from the greater burden, and myself from needless repetitions. Alike they are, 1. In their Essence. 2. Attributes. 3. Properties. 4. Effects. 5. Accidents. 1. In their Essence much alike; who knows the essence and nature of the Sun? what is that light unaccessible which it inhabits, what is the matter of it, and what and whence that heat? The weary Philosopher astonished with long admiration, and tired with deep contemplation of this lower, and lesser Suns light and glory, gave over, seriously wishing himself out of this body, that he might behold the Body of the Sun, and know his Essence. Inquire not after the name, essence and generation of Christ: His Name is Wonderful, Secret. He dwells in light unaccessible; Isa. 9 6. well may we at death, come to a clear view of these two Suns, and they are worth a death to come to a full view of them, especially the Sun of righteousness, which we shall then see as he is 1 Joh 3. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, with open face; the sight of perfect vision: here we are said only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, John 1. 14. attentè, consideratè spectare, contemplari. It is but a speculative Theory we have here. The Sun's essence is a Quintessence, or rather a Sextessence, (a glorious essence indeed, or none such) being not of a gross, mixed, but pure, simple, heavenly essence. The heaven is a Quintessence purer far than earth or the other elements; but the Stars are purer than those heavens, and the Sun as much purer than all the stars put together. There is a Confluence and Treasure of light put together in the Sun. So is it with Christ. 1. His Divine Nature is Job. 15, 15. the purest essence, heaven not Pure in his sight; The Angels far below him, they hide their faces in his presence, Isa 6. 2. as the lesser stars their heads before the Sun. 2. In his humane nature, There dwells the fullness of the Godhead bodily, Col. 3. 9 All treasures of wisdom, and knowledge, of grace and glory, more in Christ by far, then in all the Angels: as Saul above all Israel for Stature, higher from the shoulders and 1 Sam. 10. 23. 2 Sam. 14. 25. upwards, and Absalon above all Israel to be praised for his beauty, from his feet and upwards no blemish in him; so is Christ fairer than the children of men from the feet and upwards, and higher than the highest Angel from the shoulders and upwards. 1. This may check the pride and blasphemy Applicat. of those proud spirits, and self anointing Cherubs, or new Christ's, who call themselves not so low as Apostles, but are not, but Christ's, and are not Apostles; who say, Naturam non vocat ipsam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, sed cer●as (ut ita loquar) qualitates, quas Dei virtus in nobis efficit. Ergo Impii et Ridiculi sunt qui ex ●oc loco transfu sionem Divina essentiae in nos imaginantur ut Impius ille Ser●etus prafractè ad mortem usque defendit. Bez Ann in. lo●um. God is as much in them, as ever he was in Christ, because misunderstanding the sense of that 2 Pet. 1. 3. made partakers of the Divine nature. There is but one Sun, a many Stars, which partake of the nature and light of the Sun: cannot these Stars partake of the Sun's light, but they must be so many Suns, ceasing to be Stars? The divine nature we are said to be Partakers of, is the communication of Divine or holy (God like) qualifications, such whereof we are capable, excluding the perfections of Christ, which are not communicable to the creature. Like as Christ is said to partake of our humane nature, being in all things like to us excluding only these imperfections of sin, whereof his Divine nature was not capable, nor were suitable to him. The water cold by nature, when boiling on the fire, is made partaker of the nature of the fire, yet is water still; the waters coldness is not incapable of the fires heat; the fires heat expels not the waters moisture; there is fire and water both, water in nature; as fire in quality. The cold and rusty Iron in the fire, loseth both his coldness and colour; of cold becomes fire hot, of rusty fire-red; It partakes of the nature of the fire, yet is but Iron still. Or as Judas may be said, when Satan entered into him, to partake of the nature of the devil, He was a devil; he lived not, but Satan lived in him, (that is) he Joh. 6. 70. was full of all sin, hypocrisy, treason, impudence, malice, Impenitence, despair, as if he had been a very devil rather than a man; yet was Judas judas still, a man, not transformed (at least not trasubstantiated) into a Devil. So when Christ enters into us, we are so acted by him, that we seem not to live, but Christ in us, Gal. 2. 20. And so that other place, as much misunderstood, 1 Joh. 5. 17. As he is, so are we in this world, is to be taken; not as if there were no difference at all between Christ and us; but there is 1. a sicut similitudinis, as is the father begetting, so is the young infant begotten; Ora. oculique, manusque eadem; an As of likeness. And there is a 2d Sicut Aequalitatis, As of Equality: As is God the Father, suc● is the Son; Coessential, coeternal; not a● [as] of equality, but of similitude between Christ and us, we receiving of his fullness grace for grace, the same grace, not the same fullness. 2. Then give unto Christ the Glory due unto his name, suitable to his nature, Divine glory. Worship this rising Sun; it is not idolatry, but Purest Religion, not base Policy, but truest P●ety. The Sun was idolatrously worshipped with a forbidden worship among the Persians of old, and by some of the Atheistical Jews, Ezek 8. 16. But it is commanded that this Sun should be worshipped both by men and Angels, Heb. 1. 6. When he bringeth in his first be gotten into the world, he saith, l●t all the Angels of God worship him, Joh. 5. 23. that all men should honour the Son, as they honour the Father. Fear not then to give the same divine honour, religious worship to the Son, as to the Father, to believe in, place hope on, and make thy prayer to the Son of God. The creature Sun is to be admired for his Brightness; it is a shadow of the Deity, not to be adored. The Sun Heb. 1. 3. the Creator is to be adored, he being the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The brightness of his glory, and the express image of his Person, who upholdeth all things by the word of his Power. CHAP. III. Christ and the Sun alike in their Attributes. Unity the first. THe Attributes of the Sun and of Christ, wherein they are alike, are either 1 Incommunicable, 2. Communicable. The first incommunicable Attribute of Ci●●●. both is their Unity; Sol quasi solus. Next to the glorious Essence, Unity is the highest perfection of God, and his first Incommunicable Attribute. The Sun among the Creatures is matchless in his glory, because of his Unity. In heaven God hath planted thousands of lesser Lights, whom he calls all by their names; in earth thousands of other creatures, but one Sun for both. In heaven, thousands of fixed Stars, which never fell; in earth, thousands of less lights, whom the Father of lights knows, and calls every one by his name: But as the same Sun gives light to the Stars above, and to the creatures below; so one Christ is head to Angels, and Surety for sinners; from him they receive confirming grace, Eph. 1. 10. Col. 1. 1 Tim. 2. ●. Act. 4, 12. Heb. 10, 14. we reconciling. There is one God, & one Sun; one God, and one Mediator; one Blood for Reconciliation, one name for Salvation, one Sacrifice for Universal Redemption, one Righteousness for Justification. There was one Temple, High Priest, Altar of old, one Brazen Serpent, one Rock, one Bread, one Garment of the High Priest, for all his successors; now one spotless, seamlesse garment for us all; One must die for all, and he once for all. Travellers beyond the line, losing their old, find new Stars, no new Sun. They under the Law, had other stars, the Prophets; we on this side the line, other Apostles, Ministers, and ordinances, the same Sun. The Saints departed, having crossed the line, leave all our Stars, Ministers, private Christians and Ordinances, but enjoy the same Sun. Unity is the glory of the visible heavens, one peerless Sun, and of the invisible heavens. 1. The Unity of the Divine Essence in three Persons, I and my Father are one, 1 John 5. 7. Unum sunt viz. Essentiâ, non unus, viz. Personâ. John 10. 30. There are three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Spirit, and these three are one. 2. So in Christ, visible for his humanity, invisible for his Divinity; Unity is the perfection of his person. Only in the former, Unity of Essence, there is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, alius, not aliud; here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, aliud, not alius, in this unity of Person. As in the Creature Sun, there is a conjunction and union of two different Uni● Personalis, non personarum; naturarum, non naturali●. Trel●at. qualities, light and heat; Light, such as is in heaven among the Stars, none such on earth; Heat, such as is in living creatures on earth, none such in the Stars. So in Christ there is an union of an heavenly and earthly nature. 1. Of a Deity, which the other persons have without humanity. 2. Of Humanity, which we have without a Deity. In this one High Priest alone, the Thummim and the Urim, the perfections of God, and the light of men conjoined. 1. Then give unto Christ the glory of this Singular attribute of Unity, in a double Unity. 1. The Unity of faith. 2. Unity of Love. 1. By an Unity of faith, eye Christ only, eye him with a single eye, look up to no other Mediator; go not to glean in any other field, as was said to Ruth: one Sun gives light to all the world, there needs no more. He were a mad man should say, set me up another Sun, or light me a Candle at noon day to help out the Sun: He more irrational who saith, give me somewhat besides Christ, another Mediator. It is looked upon as prodigious in nature to see two or three Suns or Parelii together. There is no such thing, they are but imaginary Suns in a cloud, having a little light, no heat or vigorous Influence. There is but one Sun which gives light to these: so to set up Saints merits, the Virgin Maries Intercession, or our own duties, were prodigious; all have what they have from Christ, and contribute nothing to him. And these Parelii are never seen, but when the Sun is low at morning or evening, never at noon. This flying to the Saints with Papists, or imagined Righteousness with some carnal Protestants, is only a sign of a dim knowledge, and of a weak faith, never of a sound judgement, and a wel-informed mind. How unhandsome is a new piece on an old garment, or the garment part woollen, part linen! Christ will be Solus or nullus. Look to me and be saved, all the ends of the earth, for I am God, and there is none else, Isa. 45. 22. Each man puts out his candle, and opens his window to let in heaven light when the Sun is up; do so for your souls; tread out your sparks, they may burn thee, they cannot lighten thee. Isa. 50. 11. Behold all ye that kindle a fire, that compass yourselves about with sparks, walk in the light of your fire, and in the sparks that ye have kindled: this shall ye have of my hand, ye shall lie down in sorrow. 2. Next look after the other great Unity, The Unity of love, the Unity of the spirit in the bond of Peace. Faith and love are the two great uniting graces, faith to the head, love to the members. As there are two great unions in heaven, the first, of three in one, Trinity in Unity; the other of two in one, two natures in one person; So next to these two most glorious Unions, there are two mysterial Unions in earth, of faith to Christ, where two are one; of love to the Church, where all are one. And as this is God's perfection, so the Churches, according to Christ's last Prayer, John 17. 17. That they may be all one, as Thou Father art in me, and I in thee,— That they may be made perfect in one. It was the glory and beauty of the Wheels, that they were so Artificially joined one within another, that though divers, they seemed one wheel; and they had all one motion; for one Spirit animated Ezek. 1. 20. them. All those innumerable fixed Stars, keep their proper and certain station, are therefore never eclipsed, nor do they eclipse others, but move together uniformly; one motion is common to all. The Planets move in several Orbs, no two together, and they are all eclipsed one by another. Christian's should as Stars in the Firmament, not thwart, cloud, censure, slight, eclipse each other, disparaging this man's Ministry, question that man's sincerity. Oh that the Trumpet might not make an uncertain or different sound, but be all as one, as when the Temple was dedicated, and when Jericho was besieged, all the Priests blew together, all the people gave one shout, thereby should Babylon's walls be finally ruined, 2 Chron. 5. 13 Josh. 6. 20. and Jerusalem's fully repaired. Then would it be said, Who is this that looketh forth Cant. 6. 10. as the morning, fair as the Moon, clear as the Sun, terrible as an Army with banners? This Unity of the Spirit would become the bond and cement of our Peace; our bands and beauty, the staff of the Church in her now old age, and bring in those Primitive times again, when after storms The Churches regained rest, and were edified, Act. 9 31. walking in the fear of the Lord; and in the comfort of the Holy Ghost, were multiplied. Why should there not be as one God, one Church; as one Lord, one Baptism; as one Spirit, one Faith; as one Father, one Family; as one Christ, one Hope; as one way, one Heart; as one Bread, one Body; as one Cup, one Lip? Cor unum, via una, Dominus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Act. 4 32. unus, Nomen unum, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 1 Cor. 12. 12. All should be one. How delightful is it to see ten thousand beams streaming from the same Centre of the Sun in heaven, meet and re-center in the same punctulum on earth! What a resplendent light, and piercing heat do they give? So when all the Graces coming from the same head do unite and concentre together, what beauty, light, and heat is there? The Beams dispersed are weakened, united are more burning, as in a Burning glass, where all the Sun seems contracted in so narrow compass. Where is most of Unity, there is most of Christ. And now thou glorious Sun of Righteousness, and blessed Peace maker, who art all Union, and the Fountain of it, in whose Person the Father and Holy Ghost was from eternity united, in whose Incarnation the Humane Nature was united to the Divine; in whose Mediation the Divine was again united to the Humane. In the strength of these two great Unions, produce a third, that union of our Nature with itself, that there may be no more Schisms in the body. Thou that didst slay the enmity between Jew and Gentile, slay that between Christian and Christian: and as thou art the foundation stone of our faith, be also the corner (the coupling) stone of our Love; and the binding stone to hold all the Building together. CHAP. IV. Omniscience the second Incommunicable Attribute. THE next Incommunicable Attribute of Christ is his Omniscience, whereof the Sun's Allseeing Eye is a lively Resemblance. Sol solus Oculus, mundi Ocellus, Dei lumen, visibile numen. The Sun is all eye, hath thousands of beams in every place, looks upon every object with so direct a face, (as a well drawn Picture) as if it beheld none else; filling the largest windows, peeping in at the least crevise or key hole: the heaven above, earth beneath, air between, enlightened all at once with his splendour, vieweth all Regions. The world's great overseer, glanceth into the Dungeon, and shineth with the same beauty on the poorest cottage as on Prince's Palaces; the noisome dunghill, and the delightful Garden, both are alike viewed and observed; there is nothing Psal. 19, 6. hid from the heat thereof; in it hath God placed his tabernacle, it is his Chariot wherein he rides his daily circuit. What can be such an Emblem of God's Omniscience, and of that Visibile Numen, Jesus Christ, who is all eye, whose eyes are as flames of fire, whose face shineth as the Sun in his might, hath his beams, his eyes running to and fro, and Prov. 15. 3. his spies out, watching in every place, beholding the evil and the good? nothing hid from the Sun's heat, nor this Sun's sight. All things are naked and opened to the eyes of Heb. 4. 13. him, with whom we have to do. Whither canst thou go, O sinner, from his presence, and where wilt thou hide thee from his eye? darkness and light are both alike to him, secret thoughts and open acts both alike; the thought afar office can discern, as clear as we can the word spoken in Job. 34. 22. our ears. There is no darkness or shadow of death, where the workers of iniguity may hide themselves from him. 1. What a delightful meditation is this Applicat. 1. to him who is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, whose left hand (neighbour) knows not what his right hand doth; who shuts his doors & prays in secret; shuts up his Trumpet, and giveth Alms in Matth. 6. secret; anoints his face, and fasts in secret; shuts up his lips, and mourns in secret? as being nunquam minus solus quam cum solus, and thinking nullibi tot Testes ubi sine Teste; Thou art never less alone, then when alone; nor hast so many observers, as when there is none to observe. God's sincere ones are his secret ones. The Ark which was close made up on every side, had a window in the Top, Psal. 83. 3. Gen. 6. 16. open only to heaven. Matth. 10. 26. Fear not, nothing is covered that shall not be manifest; what thou speakest in the ears shall be proclaimed on the house top; and what in secret, shall be rewarded openly. Christ spied out Nathaniel lying under the figtree, as well as Zacheus on the Top of his fig tree; heard Paul below in the John 1 4●. Luke 19 4. Luke 18. dungeon, as well as Peter on the house top; and took more notice of the Publican standing a far off out of sight, than the Pharisee in the 1 Cor. 4 5. midst of the Throng. The Lord will bring to light the hidden things of darkness, and make manifest the counsels of the heart, then shall every man have praise of God. The Sun looks as well into thy closet casement, as into the large Church windows. And into that closet especially Christ delights to look and dwell, where as in Solomon's temple, the windows 1 King. 6. 4. are of narrow lights, or as some read it, of windows narrow without, broad within Applicat. 2 2. Is Christ his eye, as the Suns, in every place? what conviction, warning, and terror may this speak to such Atheistical wretches, as say, How shall God see? How Psal. 94 7 and ●●▪ ●●. Job. ●2. 13▪ 14. doth God know? Thick clouds are a covering to him, that he seeth not, and he walketh in the circuit of heaven. Especially such miscreants as in the Chambers of their imaginary conclude, when they have shut out man, they can shut out God too; and having already shut God out of their hearts, conclude, they have shut him out of the world too, Ezek. 8. 12. and 9 9 The Lord seeth us not, the Lord hath forsaken the earth. Shut, oh Atheist, the Sun out of the world if thou canst; shut it out of thy house. It is impossible. Hath the Sun his eye in every place, and hath not God? Understand than ye unwise among the people, Shall not he that made the Sun all eye, be all eye himself? He that made the ear, doth not he hear? D●th Psal. 94. 8, 9 not the Watchmaker know all the wheels, and every Pin in the Watch he made? Doth not the Statuary know all the frame of his image? and is any thing hid from him that made the heart? Turpe quid ausurus, Te sine Teste time. There are three witnesses when thou art alone, who have always their eye on thee; the Sun, thy Conscience, and the Lord Jesus; fear the Sun, but thy conscience more, which is a thousand Suns; fear thy conscience much, but Christ more, who is a thousand consciences. The Lord threatens to search out Zeph. 1. 12. such as are settled on their Lees with Candles; that say in their hearts, The Lord will not do good, neither will he do evil. There are two sorts of candles God useth, 1. Some shining, 2. Some burning. There are four shining Candles wicked men take no notice of: 1. The candle of God's mercies, bounty, patience. 2. The candle of the Sun. 3. Of his Word. 4. Of their own conscience. These are Gods first candles, pleasant and shining lights: if these be put out, or not regarded, God will set up four burning Candles, that shall not be so easily blown out; He will search thee out 1. With the burning candle of affliction, as he did Saul, wheh the Philistines were upon 1 Sam. 28. 15. him; this is lighted at the fire of mercy abused. 2. With the burning candle of a terrifying conscience, lighted at the fire of an enlightened, awakened, galled conscience, which is sadder than the former; this is a searching candle indeed, with which Judas was searchched and lighted down to he●. 3. There is a worse candle than both these, the candle of death, kindled at the wrath of God, wherewith he searches those further, then ever he did yet either by affliction or conscience; the day of death is a day of wrath; then doth God set up a candle that burns till the day of Judgement. The fourth candle is the saddest Prov. 11. 4. of all, the candle of Judgement, lighted from hell, whereby he will search out all the sins of wicked men, and this candle shall never leave burning. 3. Then let thine eye be ever on him, Applicat. whose eye is ever on thee: be an heavenly Heliotropium▪ turn to the Sun of Righteousness; call thy place Beer-la-hai-ro●; I have seen him that ever seeth me: make thy house a Bethel, the house of God, and make thy heart a Beth-shemesh, an house for the Sun. Let thy heart be as the Sun-Dyal, which receiveth the Sun in the morning, and goes along with it all day; only cast no shadow behind thee; in the face of the Sun the Dial's do not: in the face of Christ, how gross is it? Be full of eyes within, without, before, behind, as those living Creatures, Revel. 4. 6. or those living wheels Ezek. 1. 18. Canst thou the secret sympathy behold, Du Barte●. Betwixt the bright Sun and the Marigold, And not consider that we must no less Follow in life the Sun of Righteousness? Let the morning Sun find thee praying with Jacob, Gen 32 24. The noon Sun see thee working; and the evening Sun see thee meditating with Isaak, Gen 24. 63. Let not the Sun when risen, see thee sleeping unrisen; Sun all day moving, behold thee all day standing still; and Sun setting, leave thy Lust and Passion not set. CHAP. V. The Sun's Omnipresence a shadow of Christ. NExt to Christ his Omniscience, consider his Omnipresence, the ground and cause of that Omniscience. In both which respects God may be said to have set his Tabernacle in the Sun, which shadows out both: Christ's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. John 1. 14 Humanity also is called the Tent or Tabernacle of the Divinity. The Sun locally in Heaven, is virtually in earth, his light, heat, influence, every where overspreading the face of the Sea and Land, penetrating the depths of both, to the bottom of the sea, and to those subterraneous minerals in the bosom and secret chambers of the earth. Christ when ascending heaven, left his promise, as Elijah his mantle, with his Disciples, Lo, I Matth. 28. 20. and 18. 20. am with you always to the end of the world. And where ever two or three are gathered together in my name, I am in the midst of them. This may be a sensible Rebuke to the Applicat. blind Atheists; who are not to be dealt with by Scripture or reason; who having pu● out both their own eyes of reason and conscience, would pull out Gods also of Omniscience and Omnipresence: and having shut out the sense of a Deity out of their own thoughts, would dispute the Essence of God out of the world. If thou art not a man of Conscience, art thou of Reason? If not of Reason, art thou of Sense? Then I shall convince thee. Wilt thou believe thy own senses? Darest thou trust thine own eyes? open them, thou seest the light of the Sun; or shut them, if thou wilt, thou feelest the heat of the Sun, which though in Heaven, is not far from thee, but ever round about thee. Doth its light scatter all clouds, and shall any cloud or darkness cover thee? Doth its influence reach the subterraneous caverns, and shall any corner hide thee from the presence of God. This great Apostle (as some have called it) hath preached Heathens out of Atheism, and shall it not Christians? Every beam of the Sun's visible eye, writes upon the heart of a rational man, The invisible eye and presence of God is here. Among all those abominations represented to Ezekiel, the last and most hideous was that posture of faces towards the Sun, and backs towards the Temple, solemn exosculari, Ezek. 8. 12. and 9 9 Deum exoculare: At the same time to see the Sun seeth us, and to say the Lord seeth us not, but hath forsaken the earth, is such brutish reasoning, as Heathens have no such Logic, Hell hath no such bad Divinity. The Heathen by their Logic could see in lumine Numen, in the Sun's light, another Invisible Rom. 1. 20. Sun of greater light. And Hell itself is not so full of darkness, but whatsoever other impieties there remain, there is no room for Atheism. Nullus in Inferno est Atheos', ante fuit. How should this consideration of Christ's continual presence, both awe and cheer the gracious soul? provoking it to faith, patience, fortitude, diligence in the work of God. Christ is ever present, 1. As an Observer: He remembered every of the seven Churches of this in those seven Epistles, I know thy works, etc. Rev. chap. 2, 3. 2. As an Assister: Lo, I am with you always to the end of the world. 3. As a strong supporter: Jer. 1. 18. They shall fight against the●, but shall not prevail, for I am with thee. 4. As a bountiful Rewarder: Therefore as all these Epistles begin with novi opera, I know thy works, they end in vincenti dabo, To him that overcometh will I give, etc. to represent to you continually Christ present as an Observer from the first, as a rich rewarder at the last. Hence let Godly and wicked both learn to reason as godly Jacob and wicked Laban, See, if no man be present, yet God is ever present. Call thy dwelling Mizpah, for wheresoever thou art, God hath his Watch Tower Gen. 31. 49. 50 near thee. CHAP. VI The fourth Incommunicable Attribute, Omni-influence. AFter the Omniscience and Omnipresence of Christ, already touched, let us come to consider that Admirable and Incommunicable Attribute of Omni-influence, wherewith the upper and nether Sun are adorned and enriched. The Sun hath his residence in heaven only, but his Influence is diffused into all the heavenly bodies, and to all these Sublunary Creatures; air, earth, water, and all the host of them; yea, to those subterraneous Metals and Minerals hid from the Vulture's eye. We have the influence and benefit of the Sun in every breath of air, bit of bread, in each dish of flesh, fish, fowl, yea, in each herb used for food or Physic. The Sun hath an universal influence upon the Creature in his Generation, production, vegetation, maturation, etc. So Christ upon the new Creature, and upon all his actions and motions. Sol & homo generat hominem; The Sun and man beget a man; the Sun and seed bring forth corn; the Sun and showers bring on Harvest: But the Sun is one in every thing. So Christ his influence is All in all: In works of Nature, nothing was made without him at first, Joh. 1. 3. In works of Grace nothing is, or can be done without him: John 15. 3. Without me ye can do nothing. Christ in the instruction gives saving knowledge, Christ in the conviction worketh repentance, Christ and the Promise work faith, Christ and the Consolation works peace. Accedat Christus ad Elementum, fiet Sacramentum. Christ and the Element make a Sacrament: Christ in the Sacrament makes a rare Feast. The Sun hath a various and marvellous influence; but our Sun far more. The Sun's influence of light dispels darkness out of the air, Christ out of the soul. The Sun's influence of heat takes off the cold from the Creature, brings in a reviving warmth; but what like the cheering of Christ his love? it takes off deadness, restores the new Creature. Thy Psal. 3●. Cant. 1. 4. favour is better than life, sweeter than wine. The Sun's attractive influence draweth up gross, earthy, and watery vapours, and converteth them into air. Christ in conversion is so attractive, that he draws earth up to Heaven, and turns Corruption into Grace. The Suns dissolving influence again sends down those Vapours, when purged and prepared, in rich and fruitful showers; and Christ, those hearts full of grace and Peace, he had before attracted; turning again air into water, melting heavenly hearts into tears of love. The Sun hath a productive influence, which animates all seeds, and Christ all graces. And a Restrictive influence, sometimes binding the earth with a bar of Iron, that no seed breaks forth; such Christ his restraining hand upon corruption, that though all seeds of it in our nature, it breaks not forth. Again, his mollifying influence dissolveth congealed mountains of snow, and rocks of ice into fluid water; and Christ at work upon the heart, dissolveth Petram in fontem, Petrum in Lachrymas, turneth impenitents into Penitents, unbelief into faith, obstinacy into obedience. Lastly, The Sun's admirable alterative influence, causeth mines and springs of Gold and Silver to grow in the bowels and kidneys of the earth, the proper seat of clods and stones. Christ hath an higher operation in the soul, in that strange alteration made there in the midst of a vile earthly heart, where nothing grew but stone, nothing lay but mire and clods of dust; there he seateth mines of heavenly Treasure, Faith more precious than gold, and Holiness more precious 1 Pet. 1. 7. than Rubies. Instead of the thorn shall come up the Fir tree, in stead of the briar the Myrtle Isai. 55. 13. Tree. And it shall be accounted to the Lord for a Name, and for an everlasting sign that shall not be cut off. And in another place, For Brass will I bring Gold; and for Iron Silver; Isai 60. 17. for wood brass, and for stone iron. Here is a great alteration indeed. 1. This shows what reason the Apostle Applicat. 1. had to use those two great expressions of Eph. 1. 23, and 4. 10. Christ. 1. That he filleth all in all. 2. which is more, That he is all in all. Col. 3. 11. 1. That he fills all; herein he is as the Sun for his influence. All] that is, 1. All Persons, Men, Angels, men of meaner, or more excellent encowments; he fills All, Ministers, Magistrates, etc. 2. All Places: heaven with glory, earth with grace, he● with terror, whole world with wisdom. Power, Providence, omnipresence, omni-influence, prisons with liberty, dungeons with light, crosses with triumph. 3, He filleth all Ordinances: preaching with efficacy, Prayer with prevalency, Sacraments with nourishment, the Sabbath with blessings. 4. Relations: Magistracy withhonour, fear, obedience, from their inferiors; with love, justice, courage, watchfulness, care, fidelity, circumspection towards their inferiors; with zeal, authority, boldness, diligence towards God. Ministry with ability, assistance, Paternal affections, maternal bowels, Nurses care towards their flocks, and with success in their labours. Conjngall relations with love, sweetness, condescension, compliance and mutual delight in each other. 5. All his people's hearts: the ignorant with knowledge, the dead with life, unbelieving with faith, secure with fear, impenitent with repentance, stony with softness, sad with comfort, troubled with peace, unsatisfied with certainty, weak with strength, wavering with stability. 6. All Conditions: riches with thankfulness, poverty with contentedness, mercies with sweetness, afflictions with tolerableness, prisons with comforts, sickness with patience, persecutions with joyfulness, death with peace. 7. All things: (when he saith all, you may imagine more, I cannot name every one;) reproof with terror, conviction with fear, promises with hope, consolations with assurance, Sacraments with comfort, desires with faithfulness, labours with fruitfulness. 8. All in All. In all thy needs, in all thy straits, and in all thy fullness, in all cases, encouragements; dispensations, he fills thy prosperity, thy adversity, thy society, thy solitude, etc. 2. The other expression is far higher; He is All in all; The Sun for light is all in Col 3. 11. all to make day all the world over, sta●s cannot do it; his heat all in all to make summer, his influence all in all to make spring and harvest: So Christ is all in all. Had we the united merits of all the Angels and Saints in heaven, they could not help us being lapsed and fallen; one poor man would beggar them all to set him up; had we the sufferings of all the Martyrs since the beginning of the world, for the benefit and relief of one man, it were too low a price for him. It cost so much, Christ only could bear the charges of it. Christ is all in all, who can cast up the summa Totalis of this reckoning. To be somewhat in some case, is as far as any creature can go, an Angel is somewhat in some case, not all in any thing, not somewhat in all; somewhat in excellency of grace, glory, and many perfections, somewhat to benefit man; nothing to satisfy God's Justice, nothing to Redeem man; but Christ is all, and in all. They are good Ministers to the Saints, bad Mediators for the Saints. The best creatures and graces have but one, and that a finite use; Christ hath many, and infinite. Bread is somewhat to a hungry person, nothing to a sick; Physic somewhat to a sick, not to a person in health; sight to a blind, a pardon to a condemned person, money to a poor man. Of Graces, repentance is somewhat to a guilty soul, knowledge to an ignorant soul, certainty to a doubting, faith to a distrusting, righteousness to a soul conflicting with strong corruptions; but it is only Christ who is all in all, to a poor man, rich man, sick, found, bond, free, living, dying, condemned, pardoned man, he is all in all; to an ignorant, knowing, repenting, believing, righteous man, he is all in all; He is bread, clothing, gold, eyesalve, liberty, pardon, physician, way, truth, light, wisdom, righteousness, sanctification, Redemption, all in all. Especialiy Christ may be said to be all in all in ten respects. 1. His Teaching is All in All in the matter of our Illumination, man's teaching nothing, were it by Paul or Apollo. Who teacheth Job. 36. 32. like him? 2. His Drawing is all in all in the matter of our conversion; not others persuasion, not our own preparation. Draw me, we will run after thee. Cant. 1. 4. 3. His Blood all in all in the matter of our Reconciliation, Col. 1. 20. Rom. 3. 23. 4. His Death all in all in matter of Divine satisfaction, 1 Cor. 15. 3. 5. His Righteousness all in all, in the matter of our Justification, Rom. 3. 22. 6. His Spirit all in all in the matter of Sanctification, 1 Cor. 6. 12. 7. His Intercession all in all in the matter of our Acceptation, Heb. 7. 25. 8. His Grace all in all in the matter of our Supportation against sin and Satan, 2 Cor. 12 9 9 His Peace all in all in the matter of our complete satisfaction and consolation ●ere, joh. 16. 33, and 14. 27. 10. And his Presence all in all to our Glorification, and complete Beautitude hereafter. Phil. ●. 23. Use 2. This informs us what singular benefit Use 2. we have by the influence of Christ upon us, more than if we had his corporal presence; it was expedient that he should go away, John. 16. 7. both for his own glory, and our advantage; the spirit had not descended, nor his Intercession been so prevalent, if he had not departed. The Sun's body, if it were possible to be with us on earth, would not be of that use as now his influence is, though his residence only in heaven. It might astonish and dazzle us, not so cheer us; it is better for us, that Christ is mediating in heaven, than if he were working miracles again on earth. 3. Be ready to acknowledge Christ and his influence in every good, in illumination, conversion, consolation, etc. his attractive, productive, restorative, sin restraining, heart changing, his gracious dissolving, mollifying, and his alterative influence. So in every ordinance, if there be force in the Word, any sweet in the Promise, any life in the Minister, any quickening in the Sermon, any warmth in a Christian, any relish in the Sacrament, any benefit in a Correction; give Christ the glory. Taste Christ in All, as we may the Sun in each morsel of bread, and draught of drink. Again, In every outward good: have we any joy in our enjoyments? any comfort in our wants? It is he that hath sanctified and sweetened all our toil, labour, meat, drink, marriage, poverty, riches, crosses afflictions. He is the tree that hath sweethed the bitter water; he the Salt that hath cured the cursed Ex●d. 1● 25 2 King. 2 21 Gen. 5. 29. and unsavoury waters; he, like Noah, comforts us concerning our toil. He hath restored us to a child like right to, and a blessing in all mercies. In Christ, God hath given us all things, Rom. 8. 32. And in him it is that God hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings, Rom. 5 32 2 Pet. 1. 3 1 Cor. 3 21 Ephes. 1. 3. and hath given unto us all things that pertain to life and Godliness. Therefore all things are yours, saith the Apostle, because Christ is yours. 4. This shows whence it is (if the influence Use 4. of Christ be of that force) that some are called, thereupon converted, changed, sanctified, after that supported, comforted, and to the last preserved; others are not called at all, or not moved when called, but remain blind or deaf as the Adder, are hardened contradict, oppose and ●erish in their unbelief and gainsayings. The Scripture puts it upon this energetical, special, and distinguishing operation of the influence of Christ. To you it is given to kn●w th● mysteries Matth. 13 11 of the Kingdom; too others it is not given; it is revealed to babes, it is hidden from M●th. 11. 25 1 Cor. 1. 26 27 the wise and prudent, the poor, simple, weak, despised are chosen and called, when not many wise, Rich, noble, are called. The father chooseth some and then giveth them to Christ, Joh. 6. 37. 44. then draweth them to Christ, then chargeth Christ with them. Those he keepeth in his John 10. 28, 29 hand none p●ucketh them out. Peter is yet winnowed by Satan, Christ prayeth for him, he recovers his standing though he fell. Luke 22. 31, 32 2 Cor. 12. 8, 9 Paul is buffeted, but Christ assisteth with sufficient sin-resisting Grace, and Paul is upheld Again, whence is it that the same Ministry is effectual in some pl●ce to some persons, not to others? Paul preacheth at Act. 22. 18. Jerusalem, but in vain, They will not receive thy testimony concerring m●: there was no such influence. At Rome he preached and spread the faith: the Reason is given, The Lord who made Peter's Ministry effectual Gal. ●. 8. to the Jews, wrought effectually in Paul's when he came among the Uncircumcised. 5. Lastly, This may satisfy sober men (curiosicy 5. is never satisfied) in clearing Christ, notwithstanding such his influence, from being Author or partner in any sin, or Anomaly. Act. 17. ●8. Col. 1. 1●. In him we live, move, and have our being; yea, even the Devils and wicked men live, move, have their being in and from him: he sustains their persons, governeth their actions, concurreth in their operations, this is not evil. Judas could not betray John. 19 1●. Christ, nor Pilate condemn, nor Soldiers crucify him, if such power had not been given from above. Shimei could not have cursed 2 Sam. 16. 1●. or flung a stone at David, if God by his concurring permission had not said, Shimei, Curse David. The lame horse is ridden by his Owner; that he moves, is from his Master; that he goes faster, slower, this way or that, is from his Master; that he halts, is from his own lameness, not his Master. A Scholar useth an ill made blotting pen, that it writes is from the Scholar, that it writes ill, or blots, is from it self. A Workman lays a straight rule to crooked timber; the Workman and the rule make it not crooked. Object. Why doth not God mend this then? Resp. 1. Stay there, thou piece of clay. Rom. 9 20, 21. 2. Who shall give the Potter Law? he is not bound. 3. He can bring the greatest good out of the greatest evil, Gen. 50. 20. Christ's Garments are always white as wool; when our Rev. 1. 13 Ezek. 18. 29 ways are unequal, his ways equal. Christ is as the Sun: The Sun is the efficient cause of Light, therefore cannot be of darkness; of heat, therefore not of cold: upon his departure follows darkness and coldness, not caused by the Sun (if it be so said, it is improperly, causa deficiens, not efficiens.) God who is the sole Author of good, cannot be an abettor of evil, Jam. 1. 13. The Sun shineth on a Meadow, it brings forth sweet flowers; on the dunghill it shineth, that stinks; the Sun puts not that stink on the dunghill. The word of Christ comes to the Jailor and Lydia, and is a sweet savour Acts 16. and 5. 33 and 7, 54 of life; to the High Priests, they are cut to the heart, and storm, and stink. The Sun shines on Gardens, Herbs, Plants, they yield their fruit to recompense the Dressers pains: But though the weeds also have a common influence of the Sun, they put forth noisome leaves and Flowers, and seeds of their own; that these weeds grow, is from the Sun; that they bear such leaves, flowers, and seed, is from their own nature, and pristine seed. When God in Scripture is said to harden, it is not so to be understood, that he doth it, Infundendo malitiam, sed non infundendo mollitiem; not by provoking unto sin, but by denying or withdrawing his Grace, and the influence of his Spirit. CHAP. VII. Perfection, another Incommunicable Attribute. PErfection is another Attribute of this lesser Sun, much more of Christ the greater and brighter Sun. In the one is a Perfection of Light, Lustre, Beauty, no spot, darkness, or defect in it; in the other, is all Perfection of Wisdom, Righteousness, Sanctification, Redemption: all Treasures of Wisdom and Knowledge, all fullness of the Godhead 1 Cor. 1. 30: Col. 2. 3. 9 bodily. Perfection implieth two things. 1. Perfectum est id cui nihil addi, detra●ive potest. That is Perfect, to which nothing Nunquam novus, nunquam vetus, sempe● agens, sempe● quietus, colligens & non ●gens ●o●tans, & implans & protegens; creans & nutriens & p●●ficiens▪ qu●rens cum nil desit tihi. Reddis debi●a, nulli debens; do●●s omnia nihil perdens, Aug. Conf l. 1. ●. 4 can be added or diminished: both are so. The Sun's light is of that perfection, that all Stars shning, add nothing at all to it: All hid, lessen not the Sun's light. All Angels and Saints add nothing to Christ. Though the Sun enlighten all the Stars, it hath never the less; Christ beggar's not himself at all, by relieving us. The Sun hath the same light, if there were no eye did heed it; Christ had the same glory and blessedness before the world began, when none to observe it. 2. That is perfect, which is not possible to be tainted, corrupted, or prejudiced by any object, opposite, change or chance, whatsoever that may fall out. The Sun beholds all objects, all the works of Nature, many of which have a natural ill savour; all the Acts of men, many which have a wo●se moral noisomeness; but the Sun is not at all tainted, nor his beams defiled by the sight. Christ Jesus is privy (not accessary) to all the Oppressions, Treasons, Murders. Whoredoms, Amas nec aest●as; zelas & s●securus es; poenitette, & non doles; iras●eris & tranquillus es. Aug. ibid. etc. acted under the Sun; an observer of all the damnable Heresies, and pernicious Doctrines that are broached; but his Perfections are not in the least impaired, because he receives no taint, he is no approver of them. 1. This shows us, that God receives Applic. 1. nothing from the Creature. He did not out of any necessity or indigence create the world; we want a house, therefore build; a horse therefore buy; a servant therefore Recipis quod invenis, & non amittis; nunquam inops, et gaudes lucris; nunquam avarus & usuras exigas. Idem hire: but God did not create heaven because he needed a house, or the Angels and men, because he wanted Servants: He had the same perfect blessedness in himself before there was a world or Creature. The Sun receives not his light from our eye, but our eyes from his light. 2. If he be perfect, then cannot wicked ones when they do their worst, hurt or prejudice him; Whoredoms, Heresies reach not him. Look unto the Heavens, and see, Job 35. 5. 6, ●. and behold the clouds which are higher than thou. If thou sinnest, what dost thou against him, or of thy Transgressions be multiplied, what dost thou unto him? Thy wickedness may hurt a man as thou art, and thy Righteousness may profit the son of man. 3. Less doth he need our Duties. If thou be Righteous, what is that to Job 35. 7 him, or what receiveth he at thy hands? Set not up thy rush candle to the Sun, it needs it not, it bears it not, but puts it out: All the Stars in Heaven, and Lights on earth are abashed and appear not in the Sun's presence. Even that which was 2 Cor. 3. 10. made so glorious (that is the face of Moses) had no glory (said the Apostle) in this respect, by reason of the glory (of Christ) that excelleth. But he that put on a Veil when he Exod. 37. 33. came from God to speak to Israel, that he might hide his Glory, needed to put on another Veil when he went in unto God to hide his Imperfections. CHAP. VIII. Unchangeableness the last Incommunicable Attribute. WE are come to the last Incommunicable Attribute, Unchangeableness. All things below are subject to mutations; Kingdoms are changed, and Republics changed; Men, Manners, Cities, Families, Congregations changed. Apparel, Fashions, Opinions daily changed; and which is saddest of all, there are changes in Religion: yea, the Moon is daily changed, but the Sun never: his Essence the same, Light as clear, Heat as cheering, Influence as operative, Motion as swift as ever. Hence the Sun is often in Scripture brought in as a demonstration of the unchangeableness of God's Decrees, Love, and Promises towards his people. Thus saith the Lord, which giveth Jer. 31. 35, 36. the Sun for a light by day, and the Ordinances of the Moon and Stars by night.— If those Ordinances depart from me, saith the Lord, then may the seed of Israel cease, etc. Again, If you can break my Covenant of the Jer. 33. 20, 21 day and of the night, that there should not be day and night in their season, Then may my Covenant be broken with David my servant, &c I suppose it but a dream of the Astronomers, Ferè quart● pars decessit ●ltitudini solis in margin eccentrici, qua res digna est admiratione, dubitari enim potest utrum propter senectam mundi delabatur sol factus languidior paulatim ruente naturá: an verò in senecta natura tanqu● effoeta opu● sit viciniore positu Solis eam foventis. that the Sun is come down lower, and moveth nearer the earth, by one fourth part, than it did in ancient times. But be it so, Christ is the Sun unchanged in his essence, grace, glory, merits, all-sufficiency; unchanging in his purposes, promises, gifts, callings, love, compassion to his people. He is Alpha and Omega, the same yesterday, to day, and for ever; the Lamb slain from the beginning of the world. And if he be at all changed, it is in his Approximation, and nearer approach to the earth in his incarnation, and the other passages of his Humiliation. App. 1. Then is Christ able to save to the utmost, all that come unto the father through him, he hath the same penny for the last, as Nam hoc tempore Sol proprior est Territ quam Ptolomaei temporibu● milliaribus Germanicis novem millibu● non gentis septuaginta sex. Frigius l. 14. Deut. 34. 7. and 8. 4. for the first. His hand not shortened, nor mercy abated. It is remembered of Moses, as that which was not ordinary, that after an hundred and twenty years, his eye was not dim, nor his natural strength abated. And that more strange, that all the Israelites garments waxed not old in forty years' space. But how admirable is it, that the eye of the Sun is not made dim, nor strength abated, nor do his garments wax old after six thousand years. He is as a mighty Giant, as fresh after so great labours, and after so many age's revolution as ever; and as fair as the young Bridegroom, as the Psalmist hath it, Psalm 19 the emblem of this our Sun, and his unchangeableness. He is Lux Perennis, h● is fons perennis; the Sun whose light, th● spring whose water is perpetual; generations pass, the Sun remains; new Traveller's come to the old fountains where their fathers drank; there they are, and as fresh they run; there Abraham drank, an● Rom. 4 22 there do we; He believed, and it was counted to him for righteousness; we believe, an● it is our righteousness: ●here David dran● in his time; he believed and therefore spoke, w● 2 Cor. 4 13 also believe, and therefore speak: there dran● Paul▪ long after, and was revived; he believed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 1 Tim 1 16 and obtained mercy; and was set forth for an example to all after beleivers. It is the most glorious Anthem that ever the Church militant sung, His mercies endure for ever; therefore appointed to be sung in their most Solemn feasts. Besides you have it twenty six times in one Psalm, the burden 1 Chron. 16 41 2 Chron. 7. 3 and 20, 27 Ezra 3 11 Psal. 136 per totum. of every verse, a meditation that can never be oft enough repeated, remembered, studied and believed. 2. Is Christ so unchangeable? then if he hath appeared to thee once, chosen, called, loved thee, his love is an everlasting love, free at first and without cause, firm Jer. 31 3 Rom. 11 29 to the last and without change. His gifts and callings are ' 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, without repentance. The Sun is the faithful witness in heaven; if it did shine into thine house yesterday, it will to morrow, and for ever, as long as the house stands. The Scripture usually comforteth godly ones upon this consideration, God is faithful by wh●m ye are called 1 Cor. 1. 8, 9 into the fellowship of his Son jesus Christ. Therefore he shall confirm you unto the end, that ye may be blameless in the day of our Lord I●sus Christ. Again, faithful is he who calleth 1 Thes. 5 14 you, who also will do it. Hence the godly soul comes to safe Anchor after all storms. My salvation is not in my hands, it is in Gods; my unfaithfulness hazards it, his faithfulness secures it; my unbelief shakes it, his faith settles it; my mutable will and condition endangers all, his immutable decrees and love secures all; my foundation is subverted, my seals canceled; the foundation of God yet 2 Tim. 2 19 Rom. 11 1● abideth sure, and hath his seal— Our happiness is, the root bears the branch, not the branch the root: our faith, love, holiness, is not the ro●t, but branches of the love of God; the branch is broken, the root remains. We are changed, and so sometimes we cannot do as at other times; we think God is changed, he is not. Children in a Boat think the houses and trees remove; it is the boat, not the trees: We measure God's love to us, by ours to him; and so perplex all. But the Scripture puts it out of doubt; our unbelief makes not void God's faithfulness: if Rom. 3 3 2 Tim. 2. 13 we be unfaithful and deny him, he yet abideth faithful and cannot deny himself; if we forget we are children, he cannot forget to be 1 Sam. 15 11 a father. He may repent (it may be) that he gave Saul a Kingdom, or Jeroboam ten Tribes; never reputes of grace given, because this flows from unchanged fatherly love, the other from common providence. 3. Then are the promises firm, which Christ hath made, He is the Amen, Rev. 3. 14. And all his Promises are yea and Amen▪ 2 Cor. 1. 20 As the Sun's motion is certain, varyeth not a minute, hence Eclipses can be so long foretold by Artists, and every Countryman can tell you where the Sun will be, and of what length the days seven years hence. If ever therefore there was a promise to a believer, to justify the ungodly, to count faith Rom. 4. 5, 24 & 14. 4 for righteousness, it will as well reach us, as Abraham, as the Apostle reasons. The Sun moves constantly with in his Tropics, and comes sooner or later to all such climates as are within his bounds; Christ doth as certainly meet those that wait for him in his way. Isa. 64. 5. 4. Terror to wicked ones: If Christ his love, and promises firm, than his threats, his truth, justice, jealousy, hatred of sin, is as much as ever: If he ever hated an ungodly person, he loves not thee. He shows mercy to thousands, but by no means clears th● guilty. Exod. 34, 7. His garments are white as wool, but his eyes red as flames of fire, and he hath a sharp two edged sword in his mouth. Rev. 1. 13 Woe to them who walk in the way of Cain, Balaam, or Corah, their damnation slumbers not, though their conscience slumber. The Sun never goes an inch beyond his Tropic, but returns; nor will Christ the Son of peace ever come to such as are out of the way of peace, but return back again. Luke 10. 6 CHAP. IX. communicativeness a Communicable Attribute. HAving spoken of the Incommunicable Attributes, I shall descend to some communicable ones, and that this discourse may not swell beyond intention, I shall the more contract myself. I might name many Attributes of this sort, as communicativeness, Greatness, Glory, etc. of which other creatures also do participate, yet are they most eminent in the Sun. I shall speak of communicativeness under this head, and refer the rest to the next. communicativeness is an excellent Attribute in the Sun. The Moon, Stars, Air Seas, earth, are all communicative of their several benefits to man: But the Sun most of all, and they enabled by the Sun. It buries not his light, shuts not up his influence, shines not to itself, is as free and liberal to the poor as rich, to the beggar as to the King; The Lord hath divided it and the stars, De●t. 4. 19 (saith Moses) to all nations under the whole heaven. They under the Poles have their share, as well as they under the Line. So hath Christ received of the Father, Eph. 4 8 John 1 16 Matth. 28 19 Mark 16. 15 gifts to be communicated unto men; of his fullness all receive▪ his merits are of largest extent, his Gospel to be preached to all nations, and to every creature. 1 Then is here provision for the poorest Applicat. 1. Christian who hath nothing to buy with▪ the Sun sells not, but gives his light freely, it is God's light, it is the poor man's friend, his candle, fuel, raiment. Diogen●s hath as good a propriety in ●t as Alexander; Christ is the poor man's friend, Advocate, Physician, Saviour and Master of that Corporation. The●e are his Guests, Disciples, Bride. He entertains none of other quality, but those in poverty. Come, he that hath no bread, nor m●ny. He calls all thirsty to come drink freely an● Isa. 55 1, 2 without price. We love to match into Estates, great Families, marry with Nobility, Beauty, Preferments: Christ loves to bestow himself on poor, undone, helpless persons; he matcheth with misery, beggary, infamy, base b●irth, humility, deformity. Ahasuerus thought the Crown better s●t on esther's head, than Vashtyes, or al● the Princely Esther 2 Ladies of the Court. And Christ his grace and favour, is conferred still on the humble soul; the highest Crown was set on the lowest handmaid. Poor Mary became Deipara, she was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, All begraced, highly Luke 1 2●. honoured, and she got the name from the first and greatest of women, as her Son from the highest and first of men; she became Chavah, the only mother of the Living, and which is stranger, her Son the Adam and Parent of the world. 2. Then is Christ's not a scant, but plenteous Psal. 130. 7. Redemption, not from one, but infinite Transgressions; not of one or a few, but of infinite persons. He showeth mercy to thousands; his Sealed Book contains an innumerable Heb. 12. 22. 23 company of Angels; and the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, General Assembly, and Church of the first born, Rev. 7, 9 whose names are written in Heaven contains so many Myriad as no man can number, of all Kindred's, Nations, Tongues and people. They are not a few, but a world who 1 John 2. 2 2 Peter 2. 5 are redeemed. The whole world of the Elect, severed from the world of the Ungodly. 3. Then there is just ground for our hopes, prayers, endeavours for the calling of the Gentiles who at present sit in darkness, and live without God in the world; without Covenant, Ephes. 2. 12. Promise and Gospel. And for the Jews also, who shall be grafted in again, if Rom. 11. 23 they abide not still in unbelief, who are also at present without God, and King, and Teraphim, Host 3. 4, 3 and Prophet, and Priest, and hope too, as much as the uncalled Gentiles; but there are promises for both. The ends of the earth are the Father's Advowson, and the Son is ordained by him to be the Ecumenical Bishop of the habitable world. He shall Isai. 53. 1● Psal. 72 ● sprinkle many Nations, inherit all Lands, rule from Sea to Sea, to the utmost Indies. The Sun moves sometimes North, sometimes South, is sometimes in the East, and sometimes in the West, but ere the year goes about and ends, hath viewed all Climes; so shall the Gospel be preached to all Nations, before the end of the World. The Church is as the Sea, which if it lose in one place, gets as much in another. The Gospel is as the Sun, which when it goes from one place, goes to another. 4. Is Christ so communicative? then what an encouragement is this to poor souls to go to Christ? 1. For his freeness. He keeps open house to all comers; as Titu● scent none away sad, he none empty that come to him, upbraiding James 1. 5 Luke 7, 42. none, rejecting none, giving liberally, forgiving universally. The Sun is as free of his light as thou of thy sight; it is free cost. Christ is as free in giving as we can be in ask. Ask on, my Mother, said Solomon. Ask again, my Queen, said Ahasuerus, Ask half 1 Kings 2. 20 Esther 7. 2. a Kingdom. Ask all, Ask a whole Kingdom, ●aith Christ, I shall not deny thee. The mother is as well pleased when her breast is drawn, as is the Infant. And Mercy is not more pleasing to us to receive, then to God to impart it. Who is a God like unto thee, that pardoneth Mic●● 7 1● iniquity, and passeth by the Transgressions of the remnant of his heritage? he retaineth not anger for ever, because he delightet in Mercy. 2. For his Fullness: In the Sun is mo● of light than thou canst need; in Christ much more than thou canst carry: when you come to him, you are as the poor hunger famished 2 Kings 7. 8 Lepers, coming to the Syrians Tents, where they might eat their fill, load themselves, and leave more behind them then they could carry, and mayst call in others to partake of thy riches as they did. You 1 Sam. 14. 26 come into a wood dropping with honey. Christ's merits are not only as the widows Cruse, which wasted not; but as the loaves he blessed, the more was eaten, the more was left; and when the more fed of fewer loaves, more baskets remained then when few of more. To the five thousand remained Mark 8. 19, 20 twelve of five loaves; to the four thousand seven of seven. While there was a Vessel empty, the Oil 2 Kings 4. 6 stayed not. There is more want of empty Vessels, then filling liquor. In the Father's house the returning son knew Luke 15 17 there was bread enough for every servant he kept, and to spare. At the King's Sons marriage, Luke 14. 22 much company, and room for more. Who then need want? None perish through necessity, but of carelessness or wilfulness. Consider that Parable, All are invited, all are entertained; the Refusers only refused. Object. 1. Say not then, They must be so and so qualified who come to Christ; the Rich, Noble, etc. or the Righteous, Innocent, strong Believers. Answ. The Instruction was to call the poor, maimed, halt, blind, the unworthy, the unlikely, Luke 14. 21. Ob. 2. But they were such poor as had lain all their life at the Pools side, or had been daily praying for an Alms at the Temple Gate. Answ. They were such as were in the road to Hell, and lay in the Highways (being very Hedge birds) such as were set by the Devil's fire side, as Saul was, such as are quite Heb. 5. 2 out of the way, Luke 14. 23. Obj. 3. But then they were such as were very forward, and came running. Answ. So backward, that they must be called, entreated, drawn, driven, and compelled to come in. Luke 14. 23. Object. But there can be no room for Scorners, Scoffers, Despisers of his former Grace, and forsakers of their own mercy. Answ, There is yet room for such, the door of hope is not yet shut; Christ in the open Concourse calls out to the open Scorner. Prov. 1 21 22 He will open a door of Mercy to such as have shut the door of Duty against him; he will receive such as have refused him; and stretcheth out his hand all day to such as Rom. 10 21 have stopped their ears many a day at him. See then, there is no impossibility of attaining Salvation to any; God is no austeer Master, that denyeth reaping to such as sow, or demandeth reaping where he hath not sowed. Perditio tua ex te, Israel would none of Host 13 9 me, that is God's complaint. They who sin Psal. 81 11 Prov. 8 36 wilfully against me, wrong their own souls, they hate me, and love death. Salvation is offered on easy terms; If you cannot say, Have patience, and I will pay all; say, Have patience, and he will forgive all. Patience is no pay; forbearance is no acquittance with men, with God it is; his forbearance is our discharge, our submission his satisfaction. Indulgentia tua justitia mea. Bern. The Debtors 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Prodigals peceavi, and the Publicans miserere, are the best plea, and do always speed. Here is a community: All is common in the Church, as Sun and Air, which none can challenge a Propriety in to exclude another: it is for me, it is for thee; no meum and tuum here. A carnal community abominable in Families; Secular community destructive to Republics. But spiritual community we preach to all Believers: All have a like right to Christ, and his common Salvation. For the Righteousness of God, which is by faith in jesus Christ is to all, and upon all that believe: for there is no difference, Rom. 3. 22. Obj. Is there then an universal Salvation and Redemption? Answ. As much the one as the other: but there is neither. 1. No universal Salvation; for broad Matth. 7 13 is the way that leadeth to destruction, and many go in it. 2. No universal Redemption; for this is of the same latitude with Election and Salvation. Ephes. 17 Col. 1 14 Ephes. 5 25 John 10 15 Ephes. 5 23 All that have Redemption, have also Remission of sins, as the Apostle in divers places affirmeth. Christ is said to have loved his Church, laid down his life for his Sheep: he is the Saviour of his body. Yet 1. True it is there are some common benefits all mankind have by Christ, life, Sol non omnes quos calefacit, illuminat. breath, reason, and comforts of this life; as the Sun affordeth some common benefits to all creatures, who live, grow, increase by virtue of his influence, though they see not his glorious light. 2. There is also a sufficiency in Christ as in the Sun; if there were ten thousands of men more that had eyes to see, they should not want for light; but if all see not, it is not the Sun's defect but their own. There be several sorts of men that have no benefit by the Sun's light. 1. Some there be who are by nature uncapable till God give them sight as by a Miracle, being born blind. 2. Some lose their sight accidentally. 3 Some see not, being fast asleep, who open not their eyes. 4. Some wilfully close their eyes, and shut their windows to keep out the light. 5. Some have weak eyes, and take offence, therefore eat the light. 6. Some are judicially blinded. as the Sodomites, Syrians, Elymas. That none of these have benefit by the Sun, who offers his light to all, is not his fault. So when Christ is offered to all, all have not benefit. 1. We are all born blind as he, John 9 1. nor can nature make us see, till we have been at Siloam. 2. Satan the God of this world, and Mammon that God the world, blind the eyes of many. 2 Cor. 4. 4. 3. Some fall a sleep again after illumination, and it is as dark as midnight with them, whom the Apostle calls aloud unto, that he 1 Cor. 15. 34. Ephes. 5. 14. may awake them; Awake to righteousness and sin not. Awake thou that sleepest, stand up from the dead, and Christ shall give the● light. 4. Some wilfully close their eyes, and who so Matth. 13. 15. blind as he who will not see? Their eyes they have closed. 5. Others are much offended at Christ. Blessed is he whosoever is not offended in Matth. 11. 6. him. 6. Others are judicially blinded. He hath John 9 blinded their eyes, and hardened their heart, that they should not see with their eyes, and understand with their heart, and be converted, and I should heal them. Again, God hath given Job. 12. 40. Rom. 11. 8. them the Spirit of slumber, eyes that they should not see, and ears that they should not hear, unto this day. Cernitur ●●imorato contemplatore Deus, just● sed occulte suo judicio reprobcrum, nec diluen● mala, nec acceptans bona; insuper et corda indurans, ne forte doleant, et recipiscant, et convertantur, et sanet eos: et hoc non absque certa et aeterna ratione quod tanto formidolosius, quanto immobilius fixum erat in aeternitate. Bern. Isa. 42. 8. Isa. 14. 12. 13. Gen. 3, 6. Ezek, 28. 2, 3. Matth. 5. 48. So that it is as much a mercy to have an eye to see, as the Sun to give us light; and the same cause to bless God for giving an eye, or ear, as for the Gospel, and for giving faith as well as giving Christ. Christ without faith profiteth no more than the Sun without an eye, or meat without a mouth. This being a communicable Attribute, it gives us an imitable example, the Uncommunicable Attributes of God, are Un-imitable. To aspire to be equal to God in glory, (which he will not give to another) was the Pride of Lucifer; in Omniscience, was the sacrilege of Adam; in Power, was the insolence of Babylon; in wisdom and Policy, the ambition of Tyre; they all perished in such attempts: but to affect to be like God in holiness, purity, mercy, forbearance &c, is a Gospel duty. So to affect to be like the Sun in his splendour, glory, to move in a higher orb, that we might shine alone, and all others be eclipsed by our fame and glory, were to say with Lucifer, I will walk among the stars. But to be as like the Sun as may be in communicativeness, will be our glory. There is to be a communicativeness 1. In Spiritual. 2. Civil matters. 1. In Spiritual things, and that 1. By the Est lucere Vanum ardere parum, ardere et lucere perfectum. Vae nobis si solum Lux erimus Dominus f●rvorem ab omnibus, splendorem non ita ●xigit Bern. Heb. 3. Ministers, who must be as the lights of heaven, and the Salt of the earth, go about as Christ himself, doing good. He must be eyes to the blind, warmth to the cold. The Sun when gotten higher, gives more heat than when it was lower, you must be more useful than when you were private Christians. 2. By private Christians, who must exhort one another, speak one to another. As you have received a gift, minister the same as good stewards of the manifold grace of God. The manifestation of the Spirit is given to every one to profit withal. Yet God 1 Pet. 4. 10. 2 Cor. 12. 7. being the God of order, not confusion, intended not that all should become public teachers, to extinguish the calling of the Ministry; they are to be Stars in private, not Suns; it were to be wished indeed, that the Isa. 30. 26. light of the Moon were like the light of the Sun, and that the hearers were almost and altogether such as the Preacher; that all the Lords people were Prophets: but not that the Sun should be pulled down, and the Moon and Stars which are to give light only by the night, in absence, and defect of Ministers, should rule by day, and openly teach in the sight of the Sun. It went of old for a fable: I fear as this age hath turned many truths into fables, so it will some fables into truths; and it may prove too true, that our Phaeton's in the Chariot of Phoebus, will set all on fire. It is twice noted in sacred history, that 1 King. 13. 33, the lowest of the people were made Priests, and both times ominous; In Jeroboam's time, whose house sunk with it; and in Hosheah's Reign, when the ten Tribes were finally cut 2 King. 17. 32. off. But both times it was but to officiate to Calves, and the Images in the high Places, never to the true God: Wooden Priests and Golden Calves may go well together; as was said of Caligula, who would himself be adored as a God, and would have his Horse consecrated for his Priest; there was like God, like Priest, as the Historian observed. As for the Church of Christ, she is described to be clothed with the Sun, the Moon under her feet, Rev. 12. 1. and a crown of Stars on her head: It is a sad change, that now she should be stripped of the Sun, clothed with the Moon, and have the Stars trod under her feet. 2 In Civil things: 1 All rich persons should remember their charge: To be rich in good works, ready to distribute, willing to communicate, thereby laying up in store for themselves a good foundation against the time to 1 Tim. 6. 18, 18 Rom. 12. 13. come; that they may lay hold on eternal life. Again, Distributing to the necessity of the saints, given to Hospitality: propounding to themselves that example of him, who when he was rich became poor, that we through his 2 Cor. 8. 9 poverty might be made rich. Or this of the lower Sun, who is liberal to the poor, and shines not only on the fertile pastures, but on the barren rocks, and sandy wildernesses, whence no fruit can be expected. 2. But especially the Magistrate, who was wont to be emblem'd with a Sword in one hand, Balances in the other, turns closed, to be without respect of persons in administering justice, and by a fountain, to denote their communicativeness. He should not (as Lucifer) affect a higher orb, and climb unduly to that place to which he is not called. Such prove prodigies, not stars, and are as the blazing stars (the astonishment of the world) made up of fiery and malignant matter, which after they have caused terror in the Land of the Living, consume themselves, and appear no more. The Sun is not placed in the highest, but in the middle Sphere; there more safe, there more useful. Saturn is far higher and Mars also is above him, but both of malignant Aspect. The Sun is the Earth's Patron and Benefactor. The Sun is more full of lively heat and influence when gotten higher; a warning to those exalted to Higher Places, to grow better as they are grown greater. Prodesse magi● quam praeesse. Yet it is commonly observed in the Heavens, That the Sun moves slower when it is at the Highest, swifter when lower, and we ordinarily find men with their Advancement to lose much of their activity and usefulness. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Plut. Yet it was the grave advice of Plutarch, That Magistrates should herein also resemble the Sun, moving when at highest more slowly as to violence, not to activity; but more deliberately and with Moderation, for the benefit of the Commonwealth, and their own particular security. CHAP. X Of several Properties of the Sun, whereof first his Greatness. THE third thing wherein the resemblance holds between these two Suns is their like Properties, whereof there be many; we shall begin with that of Greatness. Who knoweth or will believe the stupendious magnitude Paeraeus in Gen. 1. 16 of the Sun! All the Etherial Bodies far exceed these Earthly in their Greatness. The la●e Annotations of the Bible in loc. The Sun especially, which though the ignorant Country man believes, as Epicurus taught, that it is but Bipedalis, or of the bigness Du Bartas. Sith the least Star that we perceive to shine Abov● dispersed in the Arch Crystalline, (If at the least Star-Clarks be credit worth) Is eighteen times bigger than all the Earth. of a Bushel, the Learned know, that of necessity it must be far bigger than the whole Globe of the Earth and Seas; One hundred and sixty times bigger, the Learned say (although by conjecture rather than certainty, to be exactly so and no more.) The fixed Stars are said to be of six Magnitudes, the least whereof are held to be eighteen times bigger than the Earth, and those of the first Magnitude an hundred and seven times greater. The Moon, however it seem to us, is the very lest of all (but Mercury,) and is Quadragesima pars terrae; the Earth being thirty nine times bigger, and the Sun seven thousand times or thereabout, as is conceived. Should all the earth and seas be supposed to be where the Sun is, it would be as a Mathematical Point, no bigger than a Diamond or a spark. But who can compute the Greatness of the higher Sun, Christ jesus? Job 117 8 Canst thou by searching find out God? Canst thou find out the Almighty unto perfection? It is higher than Heaven, what canst thou do? deeper than Hell, what canst thou know? The Sun's Body can be measured, his Diameter is taken to be so many thousand miles, his motion observed to be so many hundred miles each hour. But Christ his greatness unsearchable; the Sun to him an Atom or spark, the Heavens a span, the earth as the dust of the Balance, the sea a drop of a bucket, Isaiah 40 15 Revel. 10 5 Isaiah 40 12 and all the Isles a little nothing, and man less than nothing. With the sole of his foot he covereth the earth and sea, in the hollow of his hand holds all the deep. 1. What high thoughts should this beget Applicat. Isai. 40 23 25 in us of Christ? To whom will you liken him, or can you equal him? Regum timendorum in proprios greges, Reges in ipsos Imperium Christi. He bringeth Princes to nothing, He can crush them as a moth, and with his looks or frowns can undo them and their projects, yea, command them into Hell. God looked on Pharaoh, and he never looked up after it. His wheels moved no more. Ahasuerus looked displeasedly, haman's face was covered, and he was presently led to Execution. Esther 7 Fear him, fear him. 2. But let the poor Believers rejoice. We have a great Savionr, whose Grace, Mercy, Wisdom, Merits are infinite. He is many times bigger than the earth. All sins of the world before his Merits no more than a cloud before the Sun. I shall speak two great words. 1. The one this, That if all sins of all Believers were all laid on one person, they were nothing to countervail his Meritorious satisfaction. 2. The other a greater, yet as true, That if all sins of unbelievers since the world was, were upon the account of one man; that if you could suppose one man to be guilty of cain's Murder, Phara●●s Obstinacy, Ahabs Impiety, Saul's Rage, Ahitophels' Treason, Absoloms' Parricide and Incest, and Judas his Christicide and despair too, and Saul's blasphemy withal; yet this man flying to Christ Jesus, should have all these sins done away as a cloud, and should be as safe as Abel the Righteous. The latter Act of turning Tamar 2 Sam. 13 16 out of doors, was more shameful than the former in deflowering her. To turn Christ out of doors, after all other Contumelies and abuses is the foulest sin. Any were admitted to the Feast but they who slighted the Invitation, and had abused Mercy. He who despised Moses Law, died without Mercy; ●eb. 10 2● yet there is a sorer punishment for such as trample under foot the blood of Christ, and despite the Spirit of Grace. Can any thing be sorer than to die without Mercy you'll say? Yes, this, 1. They died without Mercy at man's hands, might find Mercy at Gods: These without God's Mercy. 2. They died Temporally, these Eternally. 3. They, if they went to Hell also, have a more tolerable Hell (there are several Dungeons there, as Mansions in Heaven,) then those who have so much abused Grace. What weight may a weak man swim with upon his back, who hath bladders under his arms? What sin can sink him that hath Christ in his arms. Thou mayst sink with all Duties without Christ; and be safe after all thy sins with Christ. Thy sins are many, great, only less than infinite: Christ is great and infinite, and more than one way infinite; his Person, Blood, Obedience, Intercession, Grace, Power, so many Infinites. Should I tell an ignorant person, That the Sun is One hundred sixty and six times bigger than the Earth, he would laugh at it, and not believe me; yet so it is, though he believe it not. So should I say, Christ his Grace, Mercy, and Merits, are One hundred sixty and six times more than all our sins put together, to an Unbeliever, he would not assent, yet so it is. The Apostle calls them the unsearchable Riches of Christ. Ephes. 3. ● A little of sins Poison (one drop of Pride) may corrupt all our Righteousness. A spoonful of Poison may infect a whole Vessel of Wine. All Poisons cannot infect the Air, the sea, the Sun much less, which will dissipate and correct all Malignity. A little sin may mar all our Box of Duty, and mar a man's, yea, Angel's Righteousness, and make us past recovery by Duties of the Law, o● help of Angels, but not past Christ's help. The Stars of the first Magnitude, are One hundred and seven times bigger than the Earth, yet show nothing to the Sun. The Angels are one hundred times more pure than we, yet they need Christ, and are nothing to him. Oh Unbeliever, cast not thyself and hope, and safety, wilfully away. The Sun with one look dispels all darkness from the one Hemisphere, and at another the darkness of the other: Two looks enlighten the whole world. What can two drops of the blood of Christ do, and two of his looks! He looked and prayed for the sins of all those before his coming, they were done away; he looked again up to his Father for all these since his coming, and they are gone. Thus this one Lamb taketh away the sins of the world. But as it sometime falls out with an over carfulf woman, riding over water, a good horse under her, her Husband before her to hold by, yet betrayed by her causeless fears, she lets all go and casts herself down, and is either drowned or well washed. So do often we when we have Christ to hold by, and are as safe as he himself, we cast away our confidence, and disquiet ourselves with unnecessary fears, Lord carest tho● not that we perish? Let the Great ones of the world, who are as the Sun in these lower heavens, many times greater than other men, Resemble this great Pattern, who is not so much greater than the other Stars, as it exceeds them all in Glory, Beauty, Light, Influence, cherishing the inferior Orbs with his beams and presence. It affecteth not the highest Sphere but the most convenient; is well content others should be above it in place, so it may be more for common benefit. He that ruleth over men must be just, ruling in the fear 2 Sam. 23. 3, 4 of God- And he shall be as the light of the morning when the Sun ariseth; even a morning without clouds, as the tender grass springing out of the earth by clear shining after rain. It is observed how all Creatures thrive and mend when removed into a better Soyl. Plants or Beasts taken out of a hard soil ever do, man only made worse by such removes. Man cannot abide in Honour▪ Man when exalted, is corrupted. The lowest and darkest Cellars keep our Beer fresh, Wine quick, meat sweet, which would corrupt in upper rooms or in the Sun. Jeroboam in the dust more industrious than any other; in the Throne more impious than any that ever came after, they all might go to him to learn. And he that before had been in the Garden of Eden, and was looked on as a holy Angel, the Anointed Cherub; (to Ezek, 28. 13, 14, 15. whom Daniel and all the Men of God were as no body) had the most iniquity found in him, after he was perfect in his ways, and had by his Policy made all fit to his hand, as he would have it. Good men when Great, resemble God, with whom Mercy is sweetly matched with Majesty, and Grace with Glory. But the wicked are like Satan, who when ever he gaineth more power, employs it to do more mischief. He rises up (saith Job) and no man is sure Job 24, 22 of his life. No man can say what he hath, and what is his own, speaking of the wicked man armed with Power. 4. How great is the folly of the sons of men, who toil, sweat, fret▪ sue, go to Law, go to War, yea▪ venture to go to Hell to get these earthly things! and when they have done, what have they got but their labour for their pains in this life, and after this worse pains for their labour? Why dost thou set thine eye on that which is not? What are P●ov. 23. 5 these to Heaven? The Sun is nothing in comparison of the Heaven of Heavens; the Earth nothing to the Sun, thy Farm or Lordship nothing to the Earth, thy Cottage or Manner is nothing to England, and England itself an inconsiderable nothing to the Earth. Thy Lordship is not mentioned, nor to be found in the Map of the Earth; and if by seeking it thou losest heaven too, how miserable art thou? They are begged for fools, who have a fair estate befallen them, and sport themselves with Rattles. How many wise Worldlings may be begged for Fools! We count it childishness to see our boys to run after painted Butterflies, wrangle for a Top, and fight for a Ball: We are the more children who pant (as if Amo● 3. 7 out of breath) for the dust of the Earth. The Philosopher on this Meditation of the Heaven's Magnitude, and Earth's meanness, breaks out into a Passion, That men like children strive for an atom: And hereupon Du Bartas excellently. For though a King by wile or war had won All the round earth to his subjection. Lo here the guerdon of his glorious pains; A needle point, a mote, a mite he gains, A nit, a nothing did he all possess, Or if then nothing, any thing be less. O Lord, (said Austin) Thou art, and Tu eras & aliud nihil, and fecisti C●lum, & terram; duo quaedam, unum prope te, alterum prope nihil. Unum quo superior tu esses, alterum quo inferius nihil esset Aug. Conf. lib. 12 besides thee nothing, of which nothing thou hast made Heaven and Earth; those two, the one of which is next to thee, the other next to very nothing. The highest heaven yet thou art higher; the Earth so low, as nothing lower. Heaven is great, but Earth little. CHAP. XI. The Glory of the Sun the second Property. THe Sun is the most glorious Body in the World, from whose Glory light is borrowed to set out the greatest Glory whatsoever. 1. The Church Militant in her greatest Glory, and richest Robes is described to be Rev. 12, 1 clothed with the Sun. 2. And which is far higher, the Saints Triumphant in that great day of God's greatest glory and man's, when Christ shall be glorified Matth 13 43. in the Saints, and the Saints in him, shall have their glorified Bodies shining as the Sun. 3. Yea, which is more then either, when Christ himself had that great promise fulfilled, That the Kingdom of Heaven should come with power, and was transfigured, His face then shined as the Sun. That was a glorious Matth. 17 2. day when two Suns shone together But what will that be (said famous Mr Bolton) when there shall be so many Saints, so many Suns? There is one glory of the Stars, another of the Moon, but a far other of the Sun, said the 1 Cor. 15. 41 Apostle. There is one Glory of Saints, another of Angels, but another far greater of this Sun. Moses had much glory in his countenance, 2 Cor. 3. 7. such as Israel could not behold till his Veil was on, but he needeth a Veil when he comes into the presence of this Sun to hide his defects. Solomon's glory was such, that the fame astonished a Queen, but the ●ight dazzled and struck her dead. There was no more spirit in her, it is said. Angels have a far greater measure of glory. 1 King. 10. 5. Daniel the greatly beloved Prophet, and Mary the greatly beloved Virgin could Dan. 10. 17. Luke 1. 29, 30 not stand before it. He fainted, she feared. But Christ is above all: Thus saith the Lord, the Redeemer of Israel, and his Holy One, to him whom man despiseth, to him whom the Nation abhorreth, to a servant of Rulers; Kings shall see and arise, Princes also shall worship, because of Isa. 49. 7. the Lord that is faithful, and the Holy Ore of of Israel, and he shall choose thee. Yea the Angels themselves cover not their feet only, but their faces, when they Isa. 6. 2. come before Christ. The Sun is exceeding glorious, though it dwelleth in that Light accessible, so that his glory doth superare visum, our eye is so weak, we cannot see and see: but Christ who dwelleth in that Light Inaccessible, his glory doth superare Intellectum, we cannot see and live. 1. Therefore admire and adore this glorious Applicat. 1. Sun of righteousness: This is no creature worship, to worship Christ; it is the John 19 Col. 1 19 Eph. 1 21 1 Pet. 1. 12 Father's will, the same Divine Honour should be given to the Son as to himself. Worship this Rising, this Warming, this Healing Sun; Angels, Principalities, and Powers, stoop and submit themselves to him. Do to Christ, as the Philosopher, who Discendi ●am fuit cupidus, ut mori fuit ipsi suave: modo ex dubiis questionibus in quibus sibi sa●isfacere non poterat se posset expedare. M●●. Adam. viewed and gazed on the Sun as long as he was able, than not able to comprehend his glory, could have wished himself with the Sun, that he might know it perfectly. If Erastus was so in love with Learning, that he could gladly have died to have his questions resolved, which he could not satisfy himself in. Why should not the Christian desire to be with Christ, in whom though he doth believe, and joy with joy unspeakable, and glorious, yet hath he never seen him, nor can he know him as he is? 1 Pet. 1. 8. S●l●m qui vid●●di 〈◊〉 causa est, ●●●ucri non p●ssamus; radas acies submovetur; obtatus in●uentis hebetatur; et si diutius inspicias omnis visus extinguitur. Qui ipsum solis Artific●m, illum 〈◊〉 fontem poss●s sustinere, cum ●e an ejus ●alg●rib●● 〈◊〉, à fulminibus abscondas. Minute. Faelix. Act. 36. 13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Just. Mart. Exp. fid. 2. Pry not then into the Ark, nor press beyond those bounds, set us below at the foot of the Mount, to comprehend those unconceivable mysteries of Christ his Deity, Personality, Hypostatical Union, which the busy wits of the world studying to reach by their humane reason, have fallen into the most monstrous heresies of the world. Faith must begin where Reason ends. What vessel can contain the Sea? or what visible eye can see ●n ●nvisible Deity? The Sun's beams in reflection, are delightful, but the Sun directly looked upon, doth blind thee; it must be an Eagle-eye can endure it. It is no wonder if Paul lost his sight when Christ appeared and shone round about him with a light far greater than the Sun. CHAP. XII. The third Property, Light. THe next great Property of the Sun, is his Light, which must not be forgotten, Jer. 31. 35. Thus saith the Lord which giveth the Sun for a light by day etc. He speaks as John 1 4 9 & 8 12, & 9 5 & 12, 35 Isa 426 if it was chiefly created for this purpose. Light is the glory of his glory and greatness. Herein an eminent resemblance of Jesus Christ, who is so often called a Light, the True Light, the Light of the world. As in nature are to be seen several lights, so the Scripture mentions many sorts of Lights. 1 Some good. 2 Some b●d. 1. Some good. 1. Divine and Uncreated. 2. Created. 1. Divine and Uncreated. Light is so excellent a thing, that God hath not disdained to be described by it, entitled to it, clothed with it. 1. Take God Essentially, he is a Light, 1 Joh. 1. 4. clothed with Light, Ps●l. 104. 2. 2. Consider God Personally, 1. The father is called the Father of Lights, as he is Ja●. ● 17 the father of Christ, h. e. the Original of increated Light. He hath communicated the Light of Divine nature to Christ, who is God of God, Light of Light; into whom the Father hath put all fullness. 2. Christ as God inhabiteth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Col. 1. 19 1 Tim. 6. 16. Light Inaccessible. 3. The Holy Spirit is a like coequal, and coeternal Light, whose proper work is illumination; and his first work in the new Eph. 1, 18. creature is answerable to that first word in the old Creation, let there be Light, and there was light. So here the spirit of God moves upon the heart, and brings it out of darkness into a marvellous Light. 4. Christ jesus as Mediator is the Sun, into whom the God head hath plentifully imparted all fullness of Divine Light (as the light of heaven is cumulatively aggregated and embodied in the Sun) to be the standing treasury of the Church, as the Sun is of the world. Thus those phrases are to be understood, that he is the true Light, and Light of the world, viz as he is God-Man, and Mediator. 2. There are many Created Lights. 1. The Ancientest, the Angels who were at first all of them Angels of Light by creation, (though since many of them are fallen Stars) these the Lord calls the Morning stars who Job. 38. 7. sang together, when all the Sons of God sung for joy; glorifying God for the excellency of his work as they were created. These are Heavenly Lights. 2. There be other Lights in earth, whereof the first and chief are the holy Scriptures, Psal. 119. 105. given to be a light to our feet, and a Lantern to our paths, to which we must attend and follow as a light shining in a dark place. Our Cynosura and Pole Star they are, as we are 2 Pet. 1. Mariners; our Pillar of fire, as we are Travellers; our Sun, as Mr. Brightman interprets all along in the Apocalypse. 2. Next to these are Religious and godly Magistrates, Stars of the first magnitude in the inferior orbs; these come in place and dignity next to the Angels in Principality, power, and Influence, and when they come nearest to Scripture Rules and Precedents, they are of most sweet aspect, as Gods on earth, Gods set over us in the likeness of men; and these are not as the lesser stars, but as the greatest Sun; when they rule in the fear of God (as David saith.) 2 Sam. 23. 304 they shall be as the light of the morning when the Sun ariseth, as a morning without clouds. 3. After these follow the godly and Est lucere Parum est ardere parum, ardere et lucere perfectum. Vae n●bis filuxerim●● tantum. Matth 5 1● exemplary Ministers, who are the Stars in the hand of Christ, Rev. 2. 1. are to be burning and shining lights in grace, and doctrine; then are worthy to be looked upon, and followed as the light of the world. You are the light of the world, said our Saviour to his Disciples, lesser lights in the lesser world; these are to be as so many earthly Angels. (To the Angels of the seven Churches.) Paul was called by chrysostom, Angelus Terrestris, and these are to receive their light of grace from the Sun of Righteousness in heaven, and their light of doctrine from the Sun of scripture in earth, that they may be as men of God throughly furnished to every good work. 4. Each private Christian is so to hold Phil. 2 15 16 forth the word of life, that they may be as so many lights shining in the world. Yet Christ and all these lights differ much, 1. He is the great and true light: John Baptist John 1 John 15 ● John 6 32 was a burning and shining light, Joh▪ 5. 35. but he was not that light, that true Light. Christ is the true Light, as he is the true Vine, the true Bread; that is the great and excellent Light. 2. Christ is perfect Light, in him no darkness at all. In the Angels there hath been a defection of Light, there are now many of them in chains of darkness. In Scripture is some obscurity; in Ministers, Magistrates, Best Christians are many defects, as spots in the Moon; there is smoke in our best elementary fire, and a black steam in our purest wax candles; no smoke or steam in the Sun. 3. He the fountain of Light (as the Sun to stars and creatures, having before been furnished and called to that office) he having received all fullness from the Father, freely imparts his light to Angels, Scriptures, Magistrates, Ministers, other Christians, yea to Every man that cometh in●● ●he world, as the Evangelist speaketh: which John 1. 9 is to be understood 1. of the light of common understanding and natural Reason, (not that higher light of supernatural Grace; this is not given to all, but hid to many:) for this, as other common mercies, and universal preservation, floweth from God's rich benignity, as a fruit of Christ's interposing. Or 2. If you will understand it of saving knowledge, He enlightens every one that cometh into the world, than it must be understood of all, and only those that are of that number; none have such light but from him. So in many places of Scripture the word Every is to be taken (which, if well considered, would discover the unsoundness of Pelagian Doctrines, and Arminian Conclusions.) The Apostle saith, as God hath dealt to every man the measure of faith. The Rom. 12 3 1 Cor. 12 7 Eph. 4 7 1 Cor. 4 5 Luke 16 16 2 Thes. 3 ●. manifestation of the spirit is given to every one to profit withal; not that every man hath faith, (the same Apostle saith, all have not faith) or that every man hath the spirit; but he speaks only of such as are of that number, the Elect, called, and godly. 4. He the most eminent light, out shining all them, he present they silent, and draw in their light, as the Stars before the Sun. So Angels, Ministers, Scriptures, Ordinances, yea the Sun itself are silent, and of no more use to the Church in that heavenly Jerusalem, where the Lamb is the Sun, and Rev. 21 23 Temple, and Bible, and all. 5. In him all fullness, as in the Sun of Light, in Sea of water; all receive all from him, yet all cannot receive all; their all they have, his all they can never have. The Seas treasure cannot be exhausted, when all Rivers, Springs, and other vessels are filled. We have but our measure, no fullness: Rom. 12 3. He no measure, the Father giveth not the spirit by measure to him. But all fullness, of Joh. 3. 34. whose fullness we all receive, and grace for grace. Ob. Are not the godly said to be full? Stevenful of faith, Paul of the Holy Ghost, the Acts 6 Acts 13. 10. Rom. 15. 14. Romans of all goodness? Answ. Christ hath his fullness, and the Saints their kind of fullness, but with great Plenitudo multiplex. 1 Alia fontis, alia vasis. 2. Alia capitis, alia membri. 3, Alia divinitatis, alia creaturae. 4. Alia maris alia fluminis. 5. Alia permaneus, alia tran●iens. difference; theirs the fullness of a small vessel, his of a fountain; theirs of a member, his of a head; theirs of men, and manhood, his the fullness of the Godhead; theirs of a Rive●; his of the Sea; theirs of a Brook or River after much rain, causing a land-flood, his an abiding undecaying fullness. Such a land-flood was that fullness, Acts 4. 31. after they had prayed, the place was shaken, and they were all filled with the Holy Ghost, etc. 2. As there are these good and pleasing lights, so are there other sad and uncomfortable lights. 1. Such as were the old false Apostles, who did put themselves into the form of 2 Cor. 11. 13. Angels of light, pretending to more communion with God, insight into his Word and Worship, more choice revelations, extraordinary Holiness, Mortification, purely Spiritual, perfect enemies to Antichrist, and all received forms, that would bring in a new Christ, and a new Creed into the world. These much troubled the Apostles and obstructed the spreading of the Gospel at first, and this Age seeth the sad effect of such new Angels of Light, pretending to new Truths, new Light. These would purge out in their Reformation all the Old leaven, not only that of the Pharisee and of Antichrist, but that of the Matth. 13. 33 Gospel and of Christ (for the Kingdom of Heaven hath his leaven too) because all old things must pass away, and all things must become new. But is the new Wine better Luke 5. 39 Jerem. 6. 16 than the old? Can any new light be so good as the old Sun? Are not the old paths, the good paths? All Truth's hairs are as Christ's, white. Truth's glory is to be as ancient as God himself; God's glory to Daniel 7. 22. be the ancient of days, yet a God not changed. 2. There are others who are as prodigious, blazing Stars, who draw the gazing multitude after them. New lights these are indeed, but true Stars they are not; a while they blaze, but are ever of malignant Aspect: The Vulgar looks upon them with admiration, the Judicious with horror. They outshine in appearance the fixed Stars for the present, but after a while they are extinct, being not made up of Heavenly, but combustible matter, and are ominous forerunners of sad calamities. Such are those whom Judas and Peter described in their Epistles, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Judas v. 11, 12, 13, 16 who would make their way by new coined phrases, speaking Great, high sounding, swelling words of vanity, yet are but wells without water, clouds without rain, trees without fruit, full of rage (at what they know not) till they foam again; Raging waves of the Sea, foaming out their own shame; 2 Pet. 2. 17, 18 walking in the ways, and treading in the very steps of Cain, Balaam and Corah, eminent for all Impiety, Uncleanness and Opposition. 3. There are others who are as Wand'ring Stars, as Saint Judas terms them. God's Judas v. 12 Ministers are fixed Stars, Satan's are H●ra●i●k unfixt, wand'ring. 1. They have no steadiness in their Doctrines, of one opinion to day, another to morrow, as they receive new light they say, changing their faith and leaving their Congregations, as oft as the Nomads and Tartars their Pastures. 2. Unfixt in their Orb and Stations, of one Calling to day, another to morrow. Heri catechumenus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Heri Sa. crilegi, hodie Sacrifici. Hierom. hodie Pontifex, heri in Amphitheatro, hodie in Ecclesia; vesperi in Circo, mane in Altari. Yesterday Tradesmen, Swordmen, to day Churchmen; at a Play house, Tavern, Quarrel overnight, in the Pulpit next morning. 3. Most of all wand'ring in their Practices, began Religiously, end Impiously, repent of their repenting, praying, hearing, ●ast off Duties, Holiness, Morality, and ●re translated into Swine that return after outside washing to wallow in the mire. 2 Pet. 2. 22. Luth●r wittily compares these ignorant Teachers to unskilful Physicians; and saith, The Opus est juvene medico novo coemiterio, novo Theologo, novo inferno. Luth. new Doctor sends his Patient a new way to the Church yard, and these new Teachers their followers a new way to hell. 4. There are others who are called falling Stars, of which sort divers are foretold, who shall arise and fall in the last days, Matth. 24. 22. Before the coming of Christ, there shall be putting out of the lights; the Sun Matth. 24, 29 Rev. 8. 10 and 9 1 shall be darkened, and many Stars shall fall from Heaven (from their former profession) Godly Ministers and Professors are fixed Stars never shall fall. Non est quae cecidit stella, cometa fuit, But these never were fixed in the Firmament of Election or sound Profession, were but blazing Stars or Planets at the best. These may fall and prove woeful Apostates, and which is worse, one falls and fills all with Rev. 8 1● wormwood, occasions bitter (wormwood) divisions, Separations, Censures, at last bitter Persecutions. Waters once turned into Marah, easily are after turned into Blood. Another Rev. 9 ● Star falls, and he hath the Key of the Bottomless pit given him, none so fit to be trusted with Hell's Keys to let out those multiformed Locusts, and to give a free toleration to all Satan's Agents and Emissaris as a fallen Star. Fixed Stars have Keys of Heaven, fallen Stars of Hell. 5. There is another foolish light, ignis fatuus, which sometimes appearing to the simple Country man affrights him, leads him out of his way into bogs and pits, and a● length he is conceited it is some ill Spirit Such are those Imps of Hell, the Fortune-telling ginger, etc. who mutters and peeps, saith 8▪ 19 for he will deliver nothing plainly. A man of such an age, statute, hair, (saith he) hath stole your Horse, Money, Plate, etc. Why doth he not name the man, and bring you to the Goods lost? but he mutters and peeps, that is all the Wizard and Familiar Spirit do. Yet do the simple people go from the living to the dead, from God, af●er Satan, by these. These pick the ●redutous Vulgars' purse, lead him into a world o●●Errors, destroy his dependence upon God▪ he undertakes nothing but he first enquire● of Baalzebub, Shall I recover of this sickness? Shall I go up and prosper? 6. The last of these ill Lights is the e●● Magistrate, (who as the good Magistrate ●● deservedly put in the first place, so these, ●● they be not put out of all place, deserve the lowest,) that suffers all those forenamed dangerous Lights in Church and State t● so wtheir Seeds while he connives or sleeps The good Magistrate beareth God's Sword, which hath two edges, with one wounding Disturbers of Civil Peace, with the other Corrupters of Religion. The evil Magistrate beareth Satan's Buckler, who protects all, wounds none. But to return: There are many Lights we see, such as they are, some better, some worse: But Christ is the Light, the true light, the Sun; in divers respects: 1. The Sun's light is the only day light; All Reas. 1. other Lights of Moon, Stars, Fire, Candle are but night lights when all is done, somewhat they relieve in the Sun's absence; Christ makes the perfect day; in his Light eternal Light to be seen, without Ministers, Rev. 21. 2● Scriptures, Ordinances, which are of use only till we come to heaven. 2. Sun's light at first appearance drives away the night's darkness, and Christ his first Work is to deliver out of ignorance, and from the darkness of Error and ungodliness: If we say we have fellowship with Christ 1 John 1. 6 and walk in darkness, we lie, and do not the Truth. And the first effects of Christ's influence upon the Minister's labour, is to open Acts 26. 1● men's eyes, and to turn them from darkness to light, etc. 3. Light discovers every thing that was 3 Eph. 5. 13 hid. That which maketh manifest is light, and discovers things in their right shape and colours, be they beauties or deformities. Christ is this light, whose appearance chaseth darkness, and maketh a new discovery of an unknown world of sin in the heart, before hid and swept behind the door,— I was alive before the Law once. Concupiscence Rom. 7 9 I had▪ but knew it not before the Law came, then sin revived, and I died. Christ appearing, the deformity of sin, loathsomeness of Nature, defects and spots of Duties and Righteousness, are discovered, never seen before; and the beauty of Grace, excellency of Holiness is laid open to enamour the soul. Christ is the only light that discovers to us the deep things of God, hid in darkness till he revealed them; and the deep things in men, both the hidden mysteries of unknown wickedness, and the great mysteries of Grace and Godliness. 4. The Light directs us how to walk and 4 keep our ways, and keeps from stumbling and falling into danger. If any man walk in the day he stumbleth not, because he seeth the John 11. 9 Light of this world. But if a man walk in the night he stumbleth, because there is no light in him. And Solomon, The way of the wicked is as darkness, they know not at what they stumble. Prov. 4. 19 When Israel followed the Pillar of fire they took no hurt. When Judas and Peter followed the Light, kept near to Christ, they stumbled not; but Peter leaving Christ, dashed his foot against a stone, in Petram scandali, a stumbling stone, and bruised himself; but Judas into a Precipice, and broke his neck. 5 The Sun is sent to call us out of our 5 beds, and to invite man to go out to his labour. The Sun ariseth, and man goeth forth Psa. 104. 22, 2. to his work, and to his labour until the Evening. And this Sun is sent, not that we should play out our Damnation with negligence and security, but work out our Salvation Phil. 2. 12. with fear and trembling. Yet a little John 12. 35. while the light is with you, walk while ye have the light, lest darkness come upon you; for he that walketh in darkness knoweth not whither he goeth. 6. How sweet is light to the sight, and how 6 Eccles. 11. 7 pleasant it is for the eyes to behold the Sun? No sight so delightful as the Light, and the Sun is the heart-cheering light: But no Totus di●ideratissimus. Jun. Totus di●ideria. Montanus. Totus dulcedines. Heb. sight of the Sun itself so cheering the soul as the light and sight of Jesus Christ. His countenance is as Lebanon, excellent as the Cedars. His mouth is most sweet, yea, he is altogether lovely. This is my Beloved, saith the Church, ravished with his beauty, Cant. 5. 15, 16. 1. If Christ be the light of the world, what Applicat. 1 cause have we to bless God for Christ. We are excited to praise God again and again by the Psalmist, that God made the great lights, and to say, His Mercy endures for ever. Psal. 139. 7, 8, 9 The Sun to rule by day, and the Moon and Stars by night. But what praise is to be given for Christ; who hath delivered us Col. 1, 13 from the powers of darkness. The world had been a dungeon, if it had not been for the Sun; and the Church a Hell without Christ. 2. See what need we stand in of Christ, much more than of the Sun. Satius solem non lucere (quam Chrysostomum non d●cere) quam Christum non lucere. Better not see the Sun, than not know Christ. Better without eyes then without faith Can we not walk but stumble without light? nor rise to work till Sun riseth, that we may go forth to labour? We can neither walk, nor work, nor pray, without Christ: Without me ye can John 15: Psal, 104. 20. do nothing but err, wander, stumble, fall, perish. Doth Sun withdraw, and darkness follow? Darkness come, and Beasts of Prey come forth of their Dens? What darkness follows when Christ withdraws? and than are we assaulted with Satan and his Temptations. Do we open our windows to let in Sun light? open thine eyes and Christ shall give thee light? Is this light cheerful to the Traveller? Lord, what is the light of thy countenance? Blessed are they that know thy joyful sound. They shall Phil. 89. 15 walk in the light of thy countenance all the day long. Do we daily need the renewed light of the Sun, and do we not daily need a fresh supply of the Spirit of Jesus Phil. 1. 19 Christ! None but the blind undervalue the benefit of light; none but of weak eyes are offended at it; none but Thiefs and Murderers Job 24. 17. hate and fly it. None but very ignorant, or very wicked, take offence at Christ, and are weary of him. 3. This may sadly warn us, who yet a 3 little while have the light amongst us, to John 12. 35 walk as children of light, lest darkness come upon us, God either taking away his Gospel from us, or us from it, or his blessing from it and us both. The longest day hath his night, and the brightest day of Gospel grace abused, ends in the grossest darkness. The children of the Kingdom are above all others Matth. 8. 12 cast into utter darkness. They who were lifted up highest to heaven, by enjoying most light, are thrown lowest into Hell for abuse of Light, and this Title of condemnation written over their heads, These loved darkness John 3. 19 better than light, because their deeds were evil. Was it not sad the Egyptians should follow the Cloud and Pillar of Fire into the deep and perish? How many go loaden with Mercies, and lighted with Sermons into the Chambers of Hell? How sad, the Samaritans should be led blindfold into their enemy's hands! More sad, if we will go with open eyes into Perdition, and with the Decii, leap headlong into the gaping Gulf at noon day! But much more sad, those Samaritans should be stricken blind by the Prophet, sent of God to be a Seer, and to make the blind to see! How sad was it that the Sodomites should be stricken with blindness by an Angel of Light! Sad if Satan the God of the World blind thee; but nothing so sad as when Christ shall take away thy sight, and God shall blind thine eyes. For this great judgement came I into the world, that they who see not may see, and that they John 6 39 who will not see (when they see) should be made blind. The case of none so sad, as those who go to hell with Balaam, after their eyes are opened, and wilfully perish, as did that obstinate thief in the presence of a Saviour. 4. Though Christ be the great light and Sun, yet remember that Ministers, Scriptures and Ordinances,, are not to be cast aside. God created the Stars, and placed them in their orbs, as well as the Sun; they have their measure of light, and place for use, though all of them united, equal not the Sun's light, and he present, they of little use. Christ holds the Stars in his right hand, both to present and preserve them; the Church takes them as from Christ's hand, and sets them on her head to honour them. They are Christ's charge, and the Church's Crown; in vain is the Arrow shot against the Sun or Stars, it may recoil and wound the shooter, it cannot reach those lights of heaven. Wicked men may be used as God's snuffers to top (and overtop) his lights (the Ministers) but shall not extinguish them, God hath set them up to give light to his house, he will not suffer them to be buried under a Bushel. It is our duty therefore, still to attend to the Scriptures, and to the Ministry of the Word. 2 Pet. 1. 9 1. To attend to the Scriptures; we have also a more sure word of Prophecy, (said the Apostle) whereunto ye do well that you take heed, as to a light that shineth in a dark place. Here the Apostle calls Scripture-Light, our most sure rule to walk by. The most extraordinary Revelations are not to be equalled to them. The most solemn, clear, and infallible Revelations are less than Scripture. We, saith the Apostle, were with Christ on the Mount, and were eye witnesses of the glorious transfiguration, and were ear witnesses of that Divine testimony, Thou art my beloved Son. Yet you that have none of these Revelations have that which is as sure (more sure, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) the holy Scriptures, whereto ye do well to attend, etc. Obj. But the Antiscripturist objects▪ that we must attend to this light of the written word, till the day star arise, and the day dawn in our hearts; but when we have once the spirits teaching, we need no more the Letter of the Scripture. Obs●urus locus est, Tota vita Homints. Dies autem est p●●●a cognitio Christi, vel vita illa ●●ata p●●● ha●●. Qamdiu ig●tur his sumus. Summ● utilitatis est Scriptura. A●●●. in loc. Answ. Here this Scripture is mis-applyed, upon a double mistake. 1. Of what is the meaning of the day dawning, and day star arising in your hearts, which is to be understood of the state of glory, when we shall no more see in a glass darkly; but while we are here we are in the dark, and in comparison of clear and perfect vision, we may say, now it is night, and then day. This is the first mistake. 2. If you understand it of the Revelation of Christ here, who is the daystar, whose discovery of himself by his spirit to the believers soul, is the day dawning; then is there another mistake in the word Till, it is not a till of termination, but of provocation rather, and so of continuation still, Till I ● Tim 4 13. come, give attendance to Reading. Did Paul mean Timothy should read no more after his coming to him? The leaven is put into the Meal, and it sours the Dough till all is Matth. 13 33. leavened; but doth the woman take it out, or doth the sourness cease, when all is leavened? It still continues. Attend to the Scripture, searching till the day star arise, and then you will see much more of the use and excellency of the Scripture, than you now imagine. And very observable it is, that our Saviour at his departure after his Resurrection, having breathed on his Apostles, and given them his spirit, bids them not be above Scripture, and lay it by. But he opened their understandings that they might understand Luke 24 45 the Scriptures. 2. To attend on the Ministry of the Word, for Christ hath given not only Apostles, Prophets, and Evangelists (extraordinary officers) but Pastors and Teachers to perfect the Saints, to work in the Ministry to build up the body of Christ, till we come Eph. 4, 11, 12, 13. to a state of perfection, and the whole Church be completely gathered and made one perfect man (or body) in Jesus Christ, viz. to the end of the world. Heb. 8 11 Ob. Is it not said, they shall not teach every man his neighbour, and every man his brother? therefore there is an end of the calling of the Ministry. Answ. 1. Therefore there is a bar to the teaching of the uncalled Artificer. They shall not teach every man his neighbour, that have no more call then any of his neighbours. It is no where said, that the Minister shall not teach his neighbours. 2. This is meant, there shall be so much of heavenly knowledge by means of the Scripture, Ministers, and Ordinances, when the spirit of God goes along, that they shall not need every man to teach his neighbour; not so much need, his meaning is. Not teach at all, he means not, for he bids them in this Epistle to Exhort one another, Provoke one another, Heb. 3 13 Heb. 10 24 Heb. 13 22 and suffer the words of exhortation. All which, he would not have done, if there needed not one man to teach his neighbour at all. The Particle (not) is in many places not to be taken absolutely, but comparatively; not negatively, but diminutively: we wrestle Eph. 5 John 6 27 not against flesh and blood, saith the Apostle; not only, not so much, he meaneth; labour not for the meat that perisheth. He means not we should not labour at all; but not only, or not so much, as for that which endureth to eternal lise. To conclude, This place of Heb. 8. 11. is best opened by considering such a place as that of Christ. At that day, ye shall ask in my Name, and I say John 16 26 not unto yo●, that I will pray the Father for you, for the Father loveth you. He meaneth not, that he will forbear his Intercession; but besides it, they shall find the Father bearing a particular propensity of good will to them. So here they shall not need to teach one another, as if that was all, but God will give in his spirit, so that it shall become more effectual; they shall all know me, from the least to the greatest. Obj. 3. Against Scripture and Ministry both, 1 John 2. 27. But the anointing which ye have received of him abideth in you, and ye need not that any man teach you, but as the same anointing teacheth you of all things, etc. Ans. The same answer to this, that to the former. You may with comfort attend on Scriptures, and Ministry of the word, because you have the spirit to anoint your eyes with eyesalve, and lead you into all truth, and to teach you all things, (not all things simply, or all things by inspiration, without use of means) but all written things, all necessary things. But he meaneth not, they should upon pretending the spirit, either 1. 'Slight the Scriptures; for then why did he write this Epistle to them, if they needed none to teach them? 2. Or slight the Ministers? for why doth he himself preach and write to them? 3. Or Rely on the anointing, as if it was the only Bible and Light, when he tells them notwithstanding the anointing they might be, and were some of them seduced. These things have I written concerning them that seduce 1 John 2 26 you. 5. If thou wantest light then, this directs us where to seek it. Go to Christ for it. And for that end, 1. Come out of the earth; live not as worms and moles under ground, God bereaveth such of sight; they would not esteem the light, but despise it. The darkness comprehendeth not the light; nor can an earthy heart discern spiritual things. Damps arising from the earth, put out all lights; and those of earthly spirits, cannot savour the things of God, but only those of John 1 5 Luke 16 14 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. the world. The Pharisees who were covetous, when they heard Christ, derided him, saith St. Luke. 2. Live not in th●se climes where the Gospel Sun comes not; follow the light (of Ordinances) as the wise men the Star. Our countrymen go not to Groenland till the Sun have been there, and stay not when the Sun is withdrawing. The Christian, as the Swallow, must follow the motion of the Sun Christ, and of the Gospel his Chariot. 3. Close not thine eyes by wilful frowardness, lest God seals them up with judiciary excoecation, Matth. 13. 13. 15. Do nothing against the truth, but for it, 2 Cor. 13. 8. The Pharisees, because they stood in their own light, and said, they saw (better than our Saviour) their sin remained; and professing themselves wise, were made fools, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and because they saw they were Rom. 1 21 John 9 40 41 made blind. 4 Op●n thy doors and windows stand up from the dead, and Christ shall give thee light; Eph. 5 4 do what in thee is, that thou receivest not grace in vain. We cannot make the Sun rise before God's appointed time, and before that hour, it is in vain to open all doors and windows; these drive not away the night, but the Sun. But when the Sun is up, we may stop it out or let it in. We cannot by digging cause springs run, where God denyeth them; but where he placeth them, we may by digging make a well to receive them, or we may stop them up that they run not to us. We can by no means procure a blast of wind at Sea, than all sails cannot put on the ship▪ but the wind blowing fair, we hoist up the sail, and have the benefit of it. Nature without grace cannot, grace without endeavour will not save us. 5. Go to thy Minister. The Greeks made their way by Philip, to a sight of Jesus; John 12 21 John 1 35 & 40 compared. and the first Disciples that Jesus called were John's Disciples formerly. The Magistrate may take civil Marriages out of the Ministers hands, if it be his pleasure; but spiritual and sacred marriages he cannot; they are to espouse believers to their husband, and to present them as chaste Virgins unto Christ, 2 Cor. 11. 2. 6. Pray much to Christ; Lord, that mine ●yes may be opened; those blind men had not Matth. ●233 power to see, but they had power to be sensible. Lord I cannot see thy light, I can only see my own darkness; I cannot pray, or believe, but I can cry. Thou givest both light and sight, light where sight, sight where was no sight, and eyesalve to mend the bad sight. O Lord, who is so blind as thy Isa. 42 19 2● servant? and who so deaf? Seeing many things, but observing nothing? Take off the scales from these eyes, the veil from this heart, that I may come out of my darkness, into thy marvellous light. CHAP. XIII. Warmth the fourth Property. THe fourth Property, which I may call the highest in the Sun, is his most comfortable warmth, which is that that crowns all the former. His greatness is commended by his glory, glory by his light, and light by this we now speak of, warmth. It is a shining and a burning light, of whose heat we read oft in Scripture, Exod. 16. 21. When the Sun waxed hot. 1 Sam. 11. 9 By that time the Sun be hot. which Property makes this creature ● great resemblance of our Sun of Righteousness in many particulars. 1. It is the sole property of the Sun (of all the Heavenly Bodies) to give heat. The Moon and Stars have their Glory, give their measure of Light, give not the least heat, That is the Sun's work. Christ is the Garden enclosed, and the Well sealed, of Grace to quicken, of comfort to revi●e the soul. No Angel, minister, Ordinances can; they are of use, and can give light. The Law and Knowledge of God came by Moses, and the Prophets; but Grace and Peace comes only John 1. 17. by Jesus Christ. 2. The Sun's light is of more large extent than is his warmth, that many see, who feel Sol non omnes quibus lucet etiam ●alefacit. not this; that reacheth those who are far off and lie in the shade: This, those only who are nearer, whom it taketh into closer embraces (it is in his wings, not Beams) and beholdeth with a direct face, and who are a longer space under it. Christ may impart common illumination to those who are far off; but his Grace, and Peace, and Love he imparts to them only who are nearer to him, more dearly embraced, whom he setteth his eyes and heart upon, spreading his skirt and wings over them. Thus doth he manifest John 14. 22 himself to them otherwise then to the world. Many there are enlightened as by a winter Sun, who have also tasted of the Word of God, but Hebrews 6. 4. were never warmed at the heart with the Love and Spirit of Christ, who therefore fall away, and as the stony ground, for lack of root and m●●●●ure, hold not out. 3. The Sun's warmth is another kind of Heavenly (and Divine) heat, then is in all the Creatures again; fire, clothes, warm, but not as the Sun. Warm water in Winter will not make trees to grow: let the Husbandman graft, plant, cut, prune, dig, dung, water, no fruit comes of it till the Sun's warmth brings it out. The Prophet's 2 Kings 4. 31 staff laid on the child's face, or if it had been broken on his back, brings no heat. But the Prophet laying face to face, and stretching himself on the dead child, his warmth brought in warmth and life into that child before dead. The hen's wing hath another heat to form, bring forth and hatch the chicken at first, and to recover it when drooping, than any other heat can have. Now, as they are alike for these Properties in their Heat, so in their Operations. 1. The Sun's warmth, (not light) dries up the rain, dries the Fens and Highways overf●owen with water, dissolves Rocks of Ice, thaws Mountains of snow; turns Mare congelatum, into Mare Pacificum; Mare clausum, into Mare Liberum, which no fire or Engine on Earth, or all the light in heaven could not do. It is Christ his approach dries up the dirt and mends our ways. At his approach Fens and Floods of Ungodliness are dried up, as when he once went through the red sea and Jordan. He breaks the hardest heart, which no Tool, Art, Paines, Terrors and Fire of Hell, and Light of Heaven could do. Zacheus as a Mountain of snow melted, and the Thief on the Cross as a Rock of ice dissolved, when this Sun breaks out upon them: Therefore Isai. 64, 1, 2, 3 the Church prayeth, Oh that thou wouldst rend the Heavens▪ that thou wouldst come down, that the Mountains might flow down at thy presence, as when the melting fire burneth, the fire causeth the waters to boil.— Thou camest down, the Mountains flowed at thy presence. The Sun's heat hath a dissolving and mollifying virtue. 2. The Sun's heat (not light) at spring produceth various Creatures, which are not engendered by propagation, but owe their being wholly and immediately to the Sun; neither do they live longer than the Suns a biding in those Climes in his strength and vigour. All our Graces in their first Production in the new Creature, owe their very ess●▪ and afterward their conservari to Christ: Nature hath no hand in this Work. And a●● our comforts depend only on Christ his approach and abode with us. Without me ye can do nothing. The Sun hath also a Creating and vis formativa in it, 3. As the Sun produceth some new, so it reduceth, recovereth and restoreth by a redeeming kind of Virtue, others of the Creatures. To the withered grass, to the seeds, herbs, plants, trees it gives a new Resurrection. To the Fields another face, to the Earth another Garment. The Sun's warmth makes Fish, Fowle, Beasts breed and multiply. Christ by his return recovereth decayed Grace, Peace, and Comfort, and causeth a new and rich increase of Spiritual life. It hath a redeeming and recovering virtue also. 4. The heat (not light) of the Sun makes the Creatures grow; trees shoot at the Spring. Rain falls all Winter in vain till the Sun's approach, which then maketh good use of all the winter rain, frosts and snow, for the good of the Creatures. All pains, Instructions, Corrections, Reproofs, Terrors, Judgements, Mercies, Ordinances are in vain till Christ himself approach, he can make good use of all. It hath a fructifying virtue we see. 5. The Spring-Sun's warmth gives growth. The Summer-Suns greater and longer continuing heat▪ gives ripeness and perfection to the fruits and seeds sown; Christ his nearer coming and making his abode with us, is John 14. 23. that which brings Judgement unto Victory, Grace unto Perfection, Peace unto completeness, and brings in the full Harvest of Joy to the waiting Christian. Rain falls in Winter, fills the earth, fowls the ways; but without fruit, for want of this enlivening heat. But the Summer Sun converts the falling showers into fruitfulness, and his Gleams causeth them to ripen the fruits and hasten Harvest. How untoward are we under all Ordinances, and Dispensations left to ourselves? But how doth Christ convert the crossest providences, coldest storms and soaking showers of affliction into a means to ripen and better us. Thus it hath a ripening virtue. 6. By reason of this warmth the Creatures are refreshed and delighted. They sport and lie beaking themselves in the Sun; they leap and play. The colder Creatures, as Swallows and the like, feeling the benefit of the Sun, and knowing their want, observe the Sun's motion, come and go with it, stay not behind it, because cannot live without it. So do the godly joy at the presence, know not whether to go in the absence of Christ, after him they seek, with him stay, Num. 9 22, 23 he departing as at the cloud removing, they pack up and follow. Herein the Christian resembling that admirable Sun●loving Flower Lotos; whereof our English Duke Bartas thus. For lo, so soon as in the Western Seas Apollo●inks ●inks in silver Euphrates, The Lotos dives deeper and deeper, ay Till midnight, then remounteth toward day, But not above the water till the Sun Do re-ascend above the Horizon. So ever true to Titan's radiant flame, That rise he, fall he, it is still the same. It hath an Exhilarating and Reviving Virtue. 7. It is the Light of the Sun which dispels darkness, but i● is his warmth that disperseth mists, chaseth fogs, and draws up the Vapours. It may be common illumination may drive away ignorance, and fill the mind with some general knowledge; but Christ his love is that which breaketh through the interposing fogs to the heart, and draweth up those Earthy affections toward himself. It hath an Attractive Virtue. 8. The Sun's light causeth only an outward alteration in the face of the Air, and superficies of the Earth; but it is the strength of his heat which penetrates the heart of the Earth, and the depths of the Sea; and in the one engendereth those Pearls, in the other those precious Stones, Jewels, and Mines of Gold and Silver. So may the bare light of the Gospel make an overly change in the face, speech, and outward carriage of a Hypocrite. But the heat and strength of the piercing beams of Christ his Grace and Spirit worketh that inward and mighty change, and breedeth those rich Mines of Grace, Faith, Love, Sincerity, etc. in the hidden man of the heart, and turneth clods of Earth into Gold and Rubies, as we said before. Behold the Alterative Virtue of Christ and the Sun. 9 The Sun's warmth and heat hath an excellent clarifying and purifying virtue in it; therefore we set out in May, and in the Summer Sun many things to be purged and brought to their perfection. And how doth it purge and clarify the spirit, to be under the warm beams of Christ his presence and favour! and how admirably is the impurity of the heart extracted, and the heart refined by this heat! It is full of clarifying and refining Virtue. 1. This informs what a vast difference Applicat. 1 Sol non omnes calefacit quibus lucet: ibi instruimur, hîc afficimur. Instructio facit doctiores, affectio sanctiore●. Bernard. there is between Christ's reaching, and man's, as much as between the Sun and Stars. They give light, he heat: Man persuades, Christ draws. As between Winter and Summer showers; they drown and foul the Earth, and make it frieze, these make it fruitful. Moses Ethiopissam duxit, Ethiopissam non mutavit. Moses made an Ethiopian his wife, but could not make his wife not to be an Ethiopian when he had done. Man's teaching is like man's hewing a stone; he may smooth it, but he cannot make it soft. Christ's teaching turns stone into fl●sh. Man by Education or better Instruction may take a thorn out of the Field, where it was noisome, and set it in the hedge where it is of use (men may make men useful for Societies) Christ turns this Thorn into a Isaiah 55. ult. Myrtle. Hence see the difference to be found among so many Hearers; the difference is not in the ground, nor in the seed, but in the Sun and Seeds man. Many are called, few chosen. All with Paul saw the light, Paul only heard the voice. All were stricken down, he only converted. All Israel saw the fire, heard the same voice of words and thunder that Moses did, His face only shone; he had nearer approaches of God unto his soul; Then did the Disciples hearts burn within Luke 24. 32 them when this Sun was so near and gave light to the darker Scriptures. It was the Sun, not the Wind, which got off the Traveller's Cloak: It is the love of Hosea 11. 4 Deut. 33. 14 Aurum optimum ac gemmas pre●iosissimas ad O●●um & Meridi●m nasci▪ Cardan. Oriens & Africa minio & Argento vivo caret. Christ, not Laws Terror, that maketh sin to be laid by. His Love is cords, his love is chains, his love constrains and draws, I drew them with cords of a man, with bands of Love. M●ses speaks of the precious fruits brought forth by the Sun. Where the Sun's heat is most predominant, there are the richest Metals, the sweetest spices, the rarest fruits, the most precious Jewels. There is not in the East and In s●ptentrione ferrum in ipsa superficie terrae, ita anrum ad Meridiem in agris & arena pura reperitur. Africa any Quicksilver, very little Iron; but these meaner Metals of Brass, Iron, Led, are only in the Northern Countries; they have Gold as naturally and abundantly as in our Country's Lead and Iron. Where this Sun is near and vertical, what fruitfulness is here over all others? What precious things doth this Sun bring forth? For Brass I will bring Gold, and for Iron Silver, and for Wood Brass, and for stones iron, Isaiah 60. 17. 2. It lets us see what difference between the comforts of Christ's giving, and those which flow from the Creature. He that leaveth this Fountain to go drink of those Cisterns, goeth from God's blessing into the warm Sun (as we say): but he that hath drunk of those, and after tastes of this, finds he is come from the freezing shady side, into the cheering Sun side. The Sun's is Calor Coelestis, the most kindly heat, Christ's the most kindly comforts. The fire in Winter heats for a while, afterwards makes more i'll. Strong Water at present warms, but after leaves the stomach cooler. The end of carnal joy is heaviness, P●●v. 14. 13 The Sun's is the cheering and the lasting heat; it heats and altars the air without, and it altars the temper of our bodies, that we need less fire, apparel, and strong drinks. The comfort had from Creatures is presently gone; Christ's altars the temper of our spirits, and abides much longer. The greatest inward heater is Wine, and the greatest outward is fire. Christ his love and comfort warms more than both. Thy Love is better than Wine, Cant. 1. 2. The coals of Love are coals of fire which hath a most vehement flame, Cant. 8. 6. There are nine differences observable between the comforts of Christ's giving, and other comforts. 1. His are soul purifying, whereas others defile it. Carnal mirth lets out all the spirits into looseness. They sat down to eat and drink, and rose up to play. They did eat Exod. 32. Judg. 9 27 and drink, and curse. But Godly and spiritual comfort makes the heart serious, savoury, dilates the heart to receive more Graces, expelleth what is noisome, and is of the same operation with godly sorrow; whose sadness Eccles. 7. 3 Act. 9 31 of countenance makes the heart better. Walking in the fear of the Lord, and in the comfort of the Holy Ghost, are joined. 2. Soul pacifying: his comfort and presence gives richest peace: first, his Love lets in Joy, and Joy brings in Peace; these three sit down together; and this Trinity of Blessings, make up the Unity and Perfection of Blessedness, the Love of the Father, the Joy Gal. 5. 22 of the Son, the Peace of the Holy Ghost. Other Joy corrodes and gnaws the heart, hath an ill farewell, and leaveth it in sadness. 3. Soul satisfying. Corn, Wine, Oil, Lands, Moneys satisfy not the narrow eyes, much less the enlarged heart. He still cries with the Horseleech, Give, give, give more, give better. The Christians life consists not in these; the Beasts, and the more brutish Worldlings do, who drink both in the same Trough, and feed on the same husks. Theirs is a hungry Joy, this a filling; His strength shall be hunger bitten, Job 18. 12. but John 16. 24. Your joy shall be full.— In thy presence fullness of joy: and the heart full of this Job 20. 22 Joy saith not with Esau in a bravado, I have enough, but with Jacob and Paul, I have all, and abound, I am full, etc. Phillip 4. 18. Though as having nothing, yet I possess more than all things. 4. Soul quickening, making the soul active, vigilant, fit to pray, sing, praise, fit for Duty, suffering, dying. Godly men are never so fit for duty, never so prepared to die as with these comforts. The Martyrs have gone singing and dancing with these to the flames. When Judas was gone out to fetch the Officers to apprehend Christ, then did Christ rejoice, Now is the Son of Man glorified, Job. 13. 31, 32 now shall God be glorified in him. God shall first be glorified in him, than straightway glorify him in himself. This puts 1 Peter 4, 14 that Spirit of Glory, and of God upon the Saints. The wicked man's Joy is intoxicating, stupifying, besotting, as haman's, Belshazzers, Benhadad's; they eat, drink, feast, and fleshed with fleshly delights, they run desperately Judg. 9 27, 39 upon danger, as Benhadad, or Gaal the son of Ebed; much like the horse rushing into the Battle, and crying, Aha at the sound of the Trumpet; or else besotted; they eat, Job 21, 13 drink, sleep, spend their days in peace, and in a moment go down quick into Hell. like Solomens Ox, who is going to the slaughter, or Prov. 7. 22 like Jeremyes Lambs (those who die like Lambs) In their heat I will make their feasts, Jer. 51. 39, 40 and make them drunken, that they may rejoice and sleep a perpetual sleep, and not awake, saith the Lord. I will bring them down like Lambs to the slaughter, like Rams with he Goats. Danger is never nearer than when the wicked cry, Peace, peace. Never is he less fit for death, nor dies so miserably, as when overcharged with his Joys. 5. Soul raising to God, towards heaven, in thankfulness, love, praise, dependence, submission, total resignation of self: these give Wings. Christ is now higher, Grace, the Promise, Salvation is sweeter, Glory and Eternity more precious; and Earthly Pleasures, Profits, Honours fall lower in his esteem. Whereas worldly joys, as worldly sorrows, are heart-sinking, debasing, depressing. 6. Soul strengthening: The joy of the Nehem. 8. 10 Lord is your strength. This strengthens a soul in Grace, and to Duty, in faith, patience, waiting, and in Prayer. Carnal Joy sets men far off from God; they never depart further, and never say to God, depart from us, so much as then. In sorrow they are less desperate; Pharaoh, Ahab, jehoiakim (such wild Asses) may be taken in their month: I spoke to thee in thy prosperity, and thou Jer. 2. 24. and 22. 21, 23 wouldst not hear; this hath been thy manner from thy youth.— But how gracious wilt thou be when pangs come upon thee? Look how much Spiritual sorrow brings men nearer to God then carnal joy; so doth Spiritual joy as much more than Spiritual sorrow: therefore in Heaven there shall be all Graces, yet no spiritual sorrow, but all Spiritual joy, because there all is ripe: sorrow here is but the seed, joy is the ripe fruit. 7. This solid: not a flash, as the fire of Thorns, but joys maintained with joys, joy leading to joy, a standing boundless joy, an ending endless Joy; whereas the wicked man's joy is brewed with sorrow, compassed with it, tends to it, and ends in it, but hath itself no end. 8. Unmixed. others muddy, impure, mixed with sin, guilt, gripes of conscience; and when ready to run over, cooled with the hand-writing upon the wall, the remembrance of his sin, the apprehension of God's wrath. But Spiritual joy is the purest thing in the world; as the light of the Sun, light without darkness; as his warmth, pure without smell or smoke. 9 Permanent; never eclipsed, not by any disease or danger threatening death. 2 Cor. 1. 12. not any distress. 2 Cor. 16. 10. as sorrowing, but always rejoicing. John 16. 22. Your joy shall no man take from you. They must needs swim in Joy whom Christ holds up by the chin. And as joseph's bow, so the Christians Gen. 49. 22 joy must needs abide in strength when he hath such a wall at his back, and such a well at his foot. At this Beer-la-hai-roi Hagar Gen. 16 may fill her empty bottle as oft as she will, and thirst no more. 3. This directs what to do when we complain we cannot profit, and do not thrive, The heart yields not, the sin decays not. Go to Christ, desire to be under the direct beams of the Sun. Trees thrive not in the shady side. Cry, Blow, O Cant. 4. 16. North wind, and breath O South wind, distil O rain, and look out thou Sun upon my Garden that the Spices thereof may flow out. Let my Beloved come into his Garden and eat his pleasant fruits. Hast thou a heart that will not yield under Judgements? his Love can melt it. The Manna dissolved by the Sun's Numb. 11. ●. gentle heat, that was hardened and dried in the Oven or boiling pot. Whom the furnace of Judgements burn, and the Oven heated with wrath doth bake and harden, the melting love of Christ doth mollify. The last and ●orest Vyal upon sin, which ends the mystery of iniquity, and finisheth Satan's Kingdom, is poured from the Sun. The brightness of Christ's appearing is the destruction of Antichrist, and is that which alone distroyes the works of the Devil in the heart. Cry out therefore with the Church, Oh that thou wouldst rend the Heavens and come, and make this Mountain melt and this rock flow at thy presence, as when the melting fire burneth, the fire causeth the waters to boil. As thou didst of old at Mount Sinai, when thou didst terrible things that we looked not for. Is my heart harder than the rock, higher than Mount Sinai; break this Rock, cast down this Mountain. Though I have had my part of Terrors, and been brayed with the pestle of afflictions, though I have not wanted for light, yet my heart yields not, my heart freezeth in the shade, in midst of noon day light, as in the depth of Winter. There is one thing only remains, and the work is done. Shine out thou Sun of Righteousness, and with the warm beams of thy favour melt those Rocks of Ice, and bring down these Mountains of snow. Thou causest thy Spirit and warmer breath to blow, and the waters flow, Psal. 147. 18. 4. Comfort to them that have Christ near to them. They are like those Countries near the Line, they shall have a perpetual Spring, no Autumn; A constant Summer, no Winter in their year, but a renewed and successive harvest. These shall never want Grace sufficient, and peace necessary. Their tree casteth not leaf, nor loseth fruit. Christ will be both Sun and Shield: he will go with you in trouble. In the fire go with you, and be a Shield to keep you from burning; in the water be a Sun to warm you, and keep you from shaking. So he was to Jacob, Sun by day burnt him not, and frost by night starved him not. The Lord will create upon every Isaiah 4, 5. 6. dwelling place in Mount Zion, and upon her Assemblies, a cloud and smoke by day, and the shining of a flaming fire by night; for upon all the glory shall be a defence; and there shall be a Tabernacle in the day time for a shadow from the heat, and for a place of Refuge, and for a covert from storm and from rain. When the worldlings heart is cold in his belly, as Nabal, who became as cold as a stone; and when like old David thy native heat is decayed so far, that no clothes nor fire can keep thee warm, Christ the Shunamite shall lie in thy bosom and cheer thy heart, that thou shalt say for joy, Aha, I am warm, the world is well amended with me, The Winter Cant. 2, 11, 12 is past, the rain is over and gone, the Flowers appear on the earth, the singing of Birds is heard in the air, and the voice of the Turtle soundeth, and the Spring is come. CHAP. XIIII. The Sun's Regency. ANother Property of the Sun is his Regency; herein a shadow of Christ and his Regal Office. The Lord gave the Sun to Gen. 1. 16. Psal. 136. 8. rule by day. 1 His Rule is Monarchical. The Sun hath no Peer, but is an absolute Monarch. So is Isaiah 33. 22 James 4. 12. Christ the sole King and Lawgiver in his Church, who will admit of no Compartners in his Government. 2. His Dominion is the largest. Christ and the Sun (no third) both the universal Monarches of the World, whose Dominion is Psalm 72. without bounds, from Sea to Sea, and from East to West. 3. The Sun's Dominion is the most ancient we read of; began before man's. The Suns the fourth day, man's not till the sixth. Christ is the everlasting Father, who had a Kingdom in Heaven before there was man on Earth: Our ancient Families are but of yester day to him. The Princes of Zoan are Isa●ah 19 11 Fools, the Counsellors of Pharaoh are brutish. How say ye to Pharaoh, I am the son of the Wise, the son of ancient Kings? Egypt above other Nations had ever gloried in her Antiquity. 4. For Duration: both shall continue to the world's end. These two Monarches have out lasted all others; have seen the fatal dissolutions of royal Families, and the Translation of all other Monarchies. And both shall determine together: when the Sun resigneth his, then shall Christ also resign his Kingdom into the Father's hands. 1 Cor. 15. 5. For Power the greatest Potentates. Other Kings and Commanders are only titular many times, these have uncontrollable commands. The Sun hath power over all Creatures, the earth, air, seas, it raiseth storms, and doth allay them; giveth Law to day and night, the world's first subdividers; to winter and summer, le's in both frost and snow by his withdrawing, and by his looking out dissolves them. The Sun of Righteousness hath like, but greater power, hath all nations, times, seasons in his dispose. He hath for the nations an Iron rod, for Antichrist his Vyals, and for his Church sharp storms sometimes; he permits heretics, le's lose persecutors, and at his pleasure bindeth them up. The Dragon he let loose three hundred years, the Beast one thousand two hundred and sixty, and at his pleasure, can put his hook into their nostrils, and his bridle into their jaws. 6 The most sweet and pleasant Government to their Subjects. 1. Both ever present, commit not (as did the Persian Kings) the managing of state affairs to others, while they sat still pursuing their pleasures, and taking their ease. But both are daily overlooking their charge. Lo, I am with you always. 2. The government of both, is the government of the day, not of the night; Satan is the ruler of the darkness of this world; as much difference between Christ's and other governments, as between day and night; day and night divide the world between them, so Christ and Satan; he who is not of Christ's Kingdom, is under the Prince of darkness. Christ's government is full of 1. Light; we know whom we worship, our service is a reasonable service. No Altar to an unknown God or Saint, in Christ his Temple. 2. Full of delight; He the Prince of peace, under 1 King 4. whose protection his people sit, as of old under Solomon, eating, drinking, making merry, Ad aquilonem positi corpore majores a● robustiores; ad Meridiem imbecilliores, aliis tamen ingenio praestant. not secured by Armies, but by Solomon's wisdom. 7. Other Governors and Prince; may usurp a power over the lives and states of their subjects, none ever attempted upon their minds and bodies, to form the constitution Sub tropicis supra modum atri, sub Arcto fusco sunt colore. Post ad gradum 60 rubicundi, ad 45 candidi, ad 30 flavescunt, australes nigros, Septentrionales glaucos habent oculos. Frigius de nat. Popul. Caerula quis stupuit Germani lumina, flavam Caesariem? J●venal. of them, or to alter an hair of their head, from black to white. But these two have a Dominion over both the Bodies and Spirits of men. The difference of saces, colour, complexion, skin, hair, eyes, voice, beauty, is from the force of the Sun; the difference of stature, tallness, strength and constitution of their bodies to hard●nesse, or effeminateness and delicacy, is from the Sun: yea the difference of disposition of mind for courage, prowess, chastity, sobriety, Temperance; whereas other nations are vicious, false, treacherous, luxurious, is attributed to the Sun, making that difference between clime and climb: the difference that is between nation and nation, Christ hath made it, that some have better laws, more love to God, abhorrence of evil, and that difference between person and person, Christ only hath put. Here is 1. an encouragement to pray and hope for the bringing in of the Gentiles yet uncalled, God having promised, That from Malach, 1. 11 the rising of the Sun to the going down thereof, his name should be great among the Gentiles, and in every place Incense and a pure Offering should be offered unto his Name. And that Psal. 72. 8 Christ shall have dominion from sea to sea, and from the river to, the ends of the earth. 2. This may support the Church's faith in all changes. Let enemies rage, Heresies arise, spread, prevail; let persecutions and errors unite and gather as a snow-bal, This Sun can scatter them as darkness, melt them as snow, can cast the burning Mountain into Rev. 8 the sea. When the whole world became Arian, it was but for him to say again, Let there be light, and it was so. When that Arch Apostate julian endeavoured to bury Christianity in oblivion, and had opened the widest door of toleration to all Religions (but the True) that ever was, great Athanasius cried out, Nubecula, nubecula cito transitura. The bubble broke, the Malignant vapour was dissolved, and his mischievous plots fell upon his own pate, and died with him. We are afraid of storms and clouds, and very shadows; look up to the Sun, it doth rule, it will arise, break out and scatter all. If the Ordinances and Dominion of the Sun should cease, or if it could be pulled out of Heaven, or stayed in his course; if all mists, darkness could put out the light of it, than might we fear. But the Church's comfort is, The Lord reigneth, therefore let the Earth rejoice, let the multitude of the Isles be glad thereof, Psal. 97. 1. 3. If the Sun rule the day not the night, then must we be children of the light, and of the day, not of darkness and night as others. Christ will own no such subjects, but send them packing to the Prince of darkness, to whom they belong. 4. Take notice of the cause of that difference between men and men. (The Stars make not men wise, simple, rich, poor, virtuous, vicious.) Christ makes it. Some are chaste, sober, zealous, valiant for the Truth, others not. To them it is given, to others not given. God did often sever between Israel and the Egyptians: Israel had the pillar of fire, Egyptians cloud of darkness; Israel had the Sun in Goshen, Egypt no Sun for three days: Jacob is loved, not Esau; Isaak had the Promise, not Ishmael. Peter is prayed for and kept, Judas only admonished, not kept nor prayed for. The reason is hi● Sovereign Dominion. He doth according to his will in the Army of Heaven, and among the Inhabitants of the Earth, and none can stay his hand, or say unto him, What dost thou? Dan. 4. 35. Grace goes not by Planets (● we say showers sometimes do) but by the wise and free dispose of this gre● Sun. Object. If the Sun be given to rule, and t●● Sun and Moon be set for signs, at the Scripture saith, doth not this warrant the Astrologers Art of judiciary Calculation, and people's consulting them? Answ. What consequence is here, God set them for signs, therefore we may erect a figure, and foretell events, whom we shall marry, when we shall, what death, what success of this or that undertaking? God hath called them signs, he must (men may not) make the signification. He calls the Rainbow a sign (is it to calculate by?) he gives the signification to confirm the general Creature Covenant, that there shall be no universal destruction by another Flood. He calls the Passover, Circumcission, Sabbath, yea, his Prophets Isaiah and Ezekiel signs, he tells the signification; where have these Astrologers these signs interpreted to foretell such events? Signa sunt Luminaria Coelestiapartim naturalia temporum & tempestatum, partim morali●, sive perfectionis Creatoris, sive officii Creaturae, partim oeconomica, in variis rei oeconomicae partibus obeundis Spanhem. in dubiis. 1. They are signs for Natural things. showing seasons of the year, for Summer, winter, heat, cold. 2. Civil and Oeconomical signs (as Sphanhemius calls them) to direct when to plant, low, sail, etc. 3. They are Prodigious and terrifying sometimes when the Sun is eclipsed, or turned into darkness, Moon into blood; when the stars fall, warning the secure world of the judgement of God drawing near. But never signs of fortuitous and causal events, or of voluntary actions. The madness of the deceiving Prophet Vide Paraeum in Gen. 1. 14. is not here more to be condemned, than the blindness of the deceived people who run after them, and with open hands carry to them the rewards of their lying Divination, is to be pitied. Wicked Ahab gives more credit to Zedekiahs' signs (the Iron horns) then to Micajahs Sermons. The Socerer he loves, the Prophet he hates, and so he prospers: God saith of such, Take them Satan; Go, 1 Kings 22. 22 entice, persuade, prevail, and take them when thou hast done. Who ever prospered less than they who forsaking their own Mercy, went Jonah 2. 8 to them? Who died more miserably than such as made use of them? Balak, Ahab, jezabel, Ahaziah, Haman, Belshazzar, and that great Nabuchadnezzar, who at every turn called in Astrologers, Chaldeans, Magicians, Dream-mongers to advise with, was turned out of his Kingdom, yea turned out of Man, after all these dismal consultations with those of Satan's Cabinet Council. Nay, the greatest Artists in this black Art, have not only wilfully plunged their souls into eternal perdition, but notwithstanding all their Star skill, and their Covenants with Hell to prevent it, the dreadful judgements of God have fallen most remarkably on their own heads. Their great Grandfather Balaam Vide Spanhem. inter Dubia Evang. Dub. 33 in cap. 2. Mat. de Astrologia judiciaria. slain by the sword, Jezabel their Grandmother torn in pieces by dogs; the like befell Asclaterion a famous Mathematician, who took upon him to foretell Domitian the Emperor, both his and his own death. What became of Dr. Lamb in our remembrance? Stories are full of examples. Why did not these foresee those ends? if they did foresee, why did they not by all their Art prevent them? Yet what a reproach is it to Christian Religion, that such a generation of men should be suffered? Not only Christian Emperors by their Edicts have punished, but even Ab Augusto talc Urbe, à Tiberio primum, post à Claudio, Italia, à Vitellio Orb & vita, à Domiti●no bis Urbe & Italia●jecti ●jecti & interdi●ti, ut hominum genus potentibus infidum, sp●rantibus fallax. Idem▪ Quam multa Pompei●, quam multa Crasso, quam multa Cae●ari à Caldaeis dicta, memini? Neminem corum nisi domi, nisi Senectut●, nisi cum claritate moriturum Heathen States; Augustus banished them Rome, Tiberius and Claudius out of Italy, Vitellius put them to death, Domitian made two Acts to banish them out of City and Country. The Primitive Heathens left these Arts, and became Christians, we set up these Arts and become Heathens. They burned those curious Art Books and took up the Bible; do thou burn the Bible if thou resolve to meddle in these Books, full of nothing but Vanity, Uncertainty, Lying. Falsehood and Impiety. 1. Of Lying. Said Tully, How many things did these Astrologers say to Pompey, Crassus, and to Cae●ar, in my remembrance, that each of them should ●y in Peace, Age, Honour? that I wonder (saith he) that any will yet believe them, whose former Predictions all prove false. It is a notable story of Galeacius Prince of Milan; an ginger told him he should die suddenly, and himself live long; the Duke commanded him to be presently hanged to prove him a Liar, and himself lived long after. 2. Of Impiety: To give you the relation of a Papist, and a famous Jesuit of the Practices of Rome, and the doleful effects Cornelius à L●pide in Act, 19 thereof. In those few years (saith he) I was at Rome, I saw many great men undone by these Astrologers, who promised one should die a Cardinal, another a Pope, who were all deceived not only of their hope, but of their salvation. For when (saith he) they dreamt not of dying till they came to these promotions, they never prepared for it: yea, being stricken by death and admonished by their Physicians, they yet regarded not; which (saith the Learned Jesuit) is the only Fraud of the Devil, who by these baits ●ayeth wait for poor souls, as a wolf for the sheep, that he may devour them. CHAP. XV. The Sun's Activity and Motion, the last Property. WE are now come to the last Property of the Sun, his Activity and Motion, herein a further Resemblance of Christ. The Motion of bo●h is 1. Restless and perpetual. The Sun never stands still, what ever the other Creatures do; it is not an idle spectator of humane affairs, but is itself most active. When dressed in his glory, sits not as our Ladies to be looked on; or as the Persian Emperors in a Chair of State to be worshipped. But as Job in his splendour, who led others in their Job 29. 25 way, and sat chief, as the King in the Army. The Sun always is in motion, Christ always in action, vigilant, sleeps not. The Sun makes night to others by withdrawing, itself never had yet one night of Rest, or one day of Sabbath. 1. Then behold the great care and pains Applic. 1 Psal. 19 Isa. 63 of Christ, who travels as a Giant. His life was nothing but labour; he went about doing good. The Sun walketh to day and to morrow. The Father worketh hitherto and John 5 17. still worketh, and I work saith the Son. The Sons work in his Humiliation was hard work, in his Exaltation he worketh still (not so hard) but higher work. Who knoweth the care of a Master of a Family, of a General in an Army, of a Public Magistrate? Moses was tired out with the encumbrance of his weighty Office, and of the oversight of Israel all day from morning to night. 2. Be like these two great Lights, stand not still. The Sun hath but an imaginary solstice twice per annum; let not thy whole year be a Solstice, or pingue Otium. Heavens are always in motion. Earth only stands still; let heavenly minds be moving. Tempus est mensura motus, motus Temporis. Let not time be the measure of thy life, but motion and action. Let it not be said, he lived so many years, but did so many memorable actions; he saw so many days, but the days saw him doing so many good acts; that there may be Latitude in our lives as well as longitude. 1. In God's work be not negligent. To do Gods work negligently, and the worlds over diligently, both are accursed. Not slothful Rom. 12. 11 in business, fervent in prayer, serving the Lord. The Oxen and Farm have A must in Luke 14. 18 the World's sense: the Christian saith, no must for the world, Must is only for God's work. I must work the works of him that sent John 9 1 Luke 2. 49. me. Again, Witted ye not that I must be about my Father's business? Take heed of being early in the shop, late in the closet: busy at the Farm, idle in the Vineyard; awake at the Exchange, asleep at Church. That the Christian be not drowned in the good Husband. 2. In thy honest Calling. All things are Eccles. 1 full of labour, and man born to it. Heaven's always moving, winds blowing, sea flowing, springs running, earth moves not, yet rests not neither, is always bearing fruits, trees, seeds; in Winter, if it bears not, yet only lies in, after hard labour, to get strength for new births. No Creatures made to be idle: the mighty Elephant, Warlike horse, painful Ox, yea, the little Ant and Bee. The Christian is not exempted: when the Talon of Grace is given, it is with this charge, Occupy till I come, Angels have their Luke 19 13 charge; Adam in his Innocency, had his Employment; the second Adam, all whose life was a state of Innocency, yet had his work. If the Master be up at work, a shame for the Servant to be in bed. If Caesar say Eamus, the soldier marches after. The Sun looks into thy Chamber and saith, up sluggard, I rested not all night, wilt thou rest all day? The little Ant, to work sluggard, or to begging; I have no Master to compel me to labour, but I hate idleness. The idle person is a Monster in nature, a briar in the field, a weed in the Garden, a Drone in the hive, a thief in the candle. What wretches they, whose life is but a long vacation, whose work is to eat, drink, play? they rise, dress, dine half their day's work is done; they play, sup, undress, and there is the other half. The soul in such Drones is but as salt to keep the body from putrefaction, Animam pros●le. as the Proverb is. Idleness is as Babylon, the Mother of Fornications; the cage of Uncleanness; it is Ezek. 16. 49 Sodomy, or the mother of it; it was the sin of Sodom, it fills the body with diseases, the soul with sins. It is a crying sin. Sodom's idleness cried. It fills streets with Beggars, Highways with Robbers, The Gallows with condemned bodies, Hell with condemned souls. Hence that German Proverb, Hell is paved with the Crests of Gallants, and skulls of Monks, (the two most idle Societies or Fraternities.) Idleness clothes the body with rags, soul with foul sins, it fills the body with hunger, and back with vermin. God made no man to be as the Leviathan, to play in the waters, and no woman to be clothed as the Lilies in the field, or as Solomon in his glory, yet neither to toil nor spin. The Heathens dedicated Horses to the Sun, whom they worshipped, as you read 2 King 23. 11. An active Christian is fit to be dedicated to Christ. But the Ass (a sluggish and dull Brute) was not to be sacrificed, but redeemed, or his neck broke, if the Firstling. God would have no Dullard either for Priest Exod. 13. 13 or Sacrifice. 2. Swift. The Sun is said, 1. to run (not go.) 2. In a Race (the swiftest running.) 3. As a Giant, or man of strength Psal. 19 (the swiftest runner.) This Giant is never weary, in an hour he runs thousands of miles, more than we do in many days or weeks. One hour is as much to Christ as an Age to us; one day as a thousand years. Christ is said to have wings here in the Text, he comes not creeping, but flying. The winds are his wings, the Cherubims his Chariots, or his Chariot horses, and he hath twenty thousand of them in a Chariot, who Psal. 68 17 have six wings a piece: If a Chariot drawn with six horses make such riddance, what speed will Christ make! The Poets in their fictions to set out the Sun's swift motion, feigned his chariot to be drawn with winged horses; Christ's is with winged Angels. What comfort may this be to the Church Applic. ● Malach. 3. 1 2 Pet. 3. 9 Mal. 8. 5 or believing souls! The Lord whom ye think long, will come suddenly to his Temple, He will awake as one out of sleep, and will not be slack, as men count slackness, to deliver his Church: and he will be a swift Witness against the enemies. I tell you, he will avenge Luke 18. 8 his own Elect, and that speedily, said our Saviour of his Father; and his Apostle of him, Yet a little while, and he that shall come, will Heb. 10 37 come, and will not tarry. 2. What Terror is this, or will it be to the wicked, who say, Where is the promise of 2 Pet. 3 4 Isaiah 5 19 his coming? Let him make speed that we may see it. He can bring the flying Role into the Grand child's house soon enough. How sudpenly are the wicked cut off! Sodom's Sun set in the rising, Nebuchadnezars at noon, Psal. 64. 8 as sudden as an arrow or bullet, that is at the mark, before you hear the noise. Babylon Rev. 18 shall be destroyed in one hour, no hand shall stay upon it. When I shall visit, I will visit Exod. 32, 34 1 Sam. 3. 12 their sin upon them, said the Lord by Moses, and when I begin, I will also make an end, and not be long about it. 3. The Sun's motion is steady, certain, constant, to a minute; hath not for this six thousand years' space altered his course; we know where to have it every day, month, year; it keeps his Solstices, and Aequinoxes as at first. Christ is as stable, he Ye● and Amen: he the same to believing souls now, that ever, in his love, care, faithfulness. And to wicked ones, the same enemy, Oven, Furnace, consuming fire: He varyeth not a minute in his constant and unchangeable affection, love and hatred to both. 1. See then if there be diversity of carriage Applic. 1 in God to some over others. There is no irregularity, no anomaly in God's actions o● affections. The Sun moves by Rule and Line, and so do all Gods proceedings; as David 2 Sam. 8. 2 had two Measuring Lines, one to save alive, another to put to death. So doth God in the way of his Judgements and Mercies, he proceeds by Rule and Line. 2. Let a Believer have his Faith established in the steadfastness of such a Saviour and such Affections and Promises. O Lord, I will Isaiah 25. 1 exalt thee (saith the Church) thy counsels of old are Faithfulness and Truth. His Actions are founded on his Affections, his Affections in Council, his Council in Faithfulness, therefore change not. In sapientum decretis nulla est litura, the wise man is a certain man; he saith, Quod scripsi, scripsi; quod dixi, Jndg, 11. 35 dixi; I have opened my mouth and I cannot go back. How unlike are we to him? we yea and nay: Amantes tanquam osuri. Amnon now loves, anon hates Tamar; neither his love nor hatred was founded in counsel and reason; but his love founded in lust, his lust in folly; therefore could not hold. Ahasuer●s now dotes on Haman, to morrow hangs him up out of the way. Such is the favour of Princes, such the certainty of worldly things. But Christ whom he loves, he loves to John 13. 1. Exod. 33. 19 the end; where he showeth mercy, he will show mercy; because he is God, not man, that changeth not, neither repenteth. We may be unfaithful and deny him, and call all in question. He abideth faithful, and cannot deny himself; our unbelief shakes not his 2 Tim. 2. 13 Rom. 3 faithfulness. When the Boat moves in the water, the child thinks the houses move on the land; such is our folly, we are apt to conceive so of God; we are changed, therefore he is changed. 3. Then woe to the wicked, it shall be ill with Isaiah 3. 11. him. Heaven's Almanac foretells thy ruin, the Sun erects an ominous figure for thee. If God be not changed, thou art undone, unless thou be changed. God hath spoken evil against 1 Kings 22. 23 thee, was ahab's ruin. It had been better for him, if his four hundred false Prophets, and so many lying Astrologers more, had foretold his Destiny. That terrible 1 Sam, 15 threat of Samuel alive, to Saul, the Lord hath rejected thee, was more sad and certain, then that of the witch, and the conjured spirit, when Samuel was dead. Sun and Stars Prognosticate thy ruin: if they certain, because made and moved by the word of God; then his word certain, and thy ruin certain. The Sun never goes beyond his Tropic, but returns. If Christ should give salvation to any but such as repent, believe, live holily, it would be such a thing as never was yet seen, he should go beyond his tropic. But ever where the Sun of Righteousness Luke 10, 6. comes and finds not the Son of Peace, thence he returns. We expect not that the Sun should leave his wont course, and stand still as in Joshuahs' time, or go back, as in Hezekiahs; expect not then that God should create some new thing, and that heaven should open (against his decrees) to swallow thee up alive in thy sins, and that a sinful Ahab should be carried up to heaven in Elias' Chariot. 4. His motion, as it is certain and steady so it is uniform, equal, not Tardior et velocior, not uneven, sometime slower, sometime swifter; but it ever keeps the same pace. So is it with God, his way is perfect, Psal. 18. 30. His ways are equal, Ezek. 18. 29. Let ours be so. Evenness of the way commends Applicat. 1 the way; of the thread the cloth. Josiah was an even walker, kept his way without 2 Chron. 34. 2 deviation or turning to the right hand or to the left all his days. Caleb kept on going, slacked not his pace, but fulfilled to follow Num. 14. 22. the Lord. Wicked men are like a land-flood Josh. 3. 15. (or as Jordan in the time of harvest) that overflows all his banks at sometimes, afterwards all is dry land. Godly men are like a fountain, that runs not so impetuously, but is always running. Pharaoh once sent for Exod. 10. 16. Exod. 12. 31. Exod. 8. 9 Moses in haste, another time by night; too violent to hold long; his usual answer was Tomorrow. The heavy weight of judgement made this wheel move so fast; when it was taken off, he stands stock still. You see Saul on a sudden rapture prophesying, There is a morning cloud; Ahab humbling himself, there is an early dew. But true grace moves not per saltum, is not a fit, flash, a start, and stop, and Retrograde, hot, cold, feverish, (as he who was acted by the evil spirit) now in the fire, anon in the water. Grace is not a morning cloud, an evening dew; some noon ●eat drops, but a set rain; a morning-Sun, that shines more and more to a perfect day. Not he that labours in his calling, and sometimes is idle, and spending at the Alehouse, is the good husband, but he who is still at his Gen. 26. 13. business, and keeps doing. Isaac grew great and went forward, (the Hebrew is, he went going) and grew till he became very great and rich. He went on getting and gathering every day, and became a great man at last. So Job. 17. 9 saith Job, the righteous shall hold on his way, and he that hath clan hands, shall be stronger and stronger. 5. Irresistible. The Sun is not to be stayed or diverted in his course; this Giant breaks all the opposition of clouds, which vanish in his sight; they strive in vain who would make it stand, or go back. 1. Then vain is the force of persecutors, who arm themselves against Christ and his members. Christum regem occidire nolite, timere bonum est. Betray, kill, crucify, bury, seal the stone, set a watch, he will rise: slay the Witnesses, they will rise again. This little stone must become a great mountain, and shall Dan. 235 fill the earth; he that falls against this stone, shall be broken, but on whom it shall fall, it will Matth. 21 44 grind him to powder. They who would oppose the Gospel, solemn sistunt, Deo resistunt. they say to the heavens, move not, to the Sun shine not, and kick against the Pricks. The Beast indeed hath his seven heads and ten Rev, 131 horns, (much craft, more malice;) The Lamb hath seven eyes and seven horns (much wisdom Rev. 56 as much power); with the breath of his nostrils he will make the man of sin, the son of perdition. When Antichrist is in the saddle, and Satan or the Jesuit holds the stirrup; yet the Church's comfort is, Christ holds the Bridle, (I'll put my Bridle into thy jaws:) And saith, so far shalt thou go, no further. 2 Kings 19 28 2. As vain is the crafty attempt of the Heretic and Impostor. The three great enemies of the Christian name shall far alike; Rev, 16 13 14 the three unclean spirits, the Dragon, Beast, and false Prophet, who take their turns one after another: The Dragon the first 300 years making wa●re upon the Saints, under the heathen Emperors. Then the Beast (by name a Christian, and hating the Dragon) yet indeed that great Antichrist, who alone exalteth himself above all that is called God, and worshipped, (or every one who is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 2 Thes. 2. 4. a God, and worshipful, every Authority, Degree, not only Sacerdotal, or Ecclesiastical, but Regal and Imperial) a more dangerous and Saint-bloud-drinking enemy for a greater space of 1260 years. In the end and tail of whom comes the false Prophet (under the name of a Saint, defying both the former, detesting Idols more than uncleanness, and hating the Antichristian Garment and name more than the Nicolaitans nakedness or deeds. The most dangerous enemy of all the three. The uncleanest frog of all the fry, who under the name of a separated Saint, or another Christ, or a better inspired spirit, hath his Prophecies, Revelations, new discoveries, new heavens, but hateth the old Saint, Ministry, Baptism, Supper, Belief, Prayer, Doctrine, Holiness, as Antichristian. This also is of the Three, and goeth into perdition. 6. Unwearied. But after almost six thousand years restless motion is as fresh and lively as the Bridegroom,— Mobilitate viget, viresque acquirit eundo. An emblem of Christ, whose arm is not shortened, but is able to save to the ut most, all that come still unto him. Hast thou not heard that the Creator. Heb 7. 25 of the ends of the earth fainteth not? The Isa. 40. 28, 29. youths may faint and be weary; the young men Judg. 15. 18. may utterly fail. Samson after a great victory may faint for thirst. Eliazar the Son of Dodo, the second of the Worthies, his hand clavae to the sword after a great slaughter, he 2 Sam. 23. 10. could not now open his hand again; he needs some rest. But Christ is the same, his motion, care, might, the same; and as the Sun that hath lightened the world now so many ages, is as able for that service still as ever. So Christ who hath governed the world, and preserved his Church for this six thousand years, his skill, power, and care, is not now to be questioned. But as old Caleb said, he Josh. 14 11. was as strong when he was fourscore and five years old, as when but forty: A●my strength was then, so is it now for war, both to go out and to come in. So years and time make no impression on the Captain of our salvation, who is the same yesterday, to day, and for ever. Heb. 13. 8. 7. This motion is twofold. 1, Ordinary, and Quotidian, every day doth rise, run, set keep his course, scattering the darkness and removing the cold of the night past, and giving light for the present use of that day; yesterday light serveth not for to day, but there is the same need every day of the Su● continued, or renewed light, as there was the first day of his creation, to dispel the darkness which was upon the face of the unformed world. And do not we daily need the fresh supply, and the renewed influence of the spirit of Christ, as we did at first conversion? Sun is not set one hour, but darkness comes; Christ leaves not one hour, but then comes on the power of darkness. Auxiliary grace is as necessary as Habitual, Subsequent as Preventing: While the spirit moved, the wheels moved, no longer. Go then to Christ daily, in him are our fresh springs; beg to be anointed with new oil Ezek, 1. from this Olive branch, which through the two Golden Pipes of his Spirit and his Ordinances, empties his oil of grace into the hearts Zech: 4. 12. his people. 2. Extraordinary and Anniversary; if the Sun see thee not every day, as the remoter parts, yet will it ere the year go about; if it hath ever shined in that clime. So if Christ gives thee not a daily visit, stay thou, at the appointed time, the Vision will speak. Hab. 2. The Redeemer will return out of Zion. If thou hast ever tasted that the Lord is gracious, or canst say, thou hast feared the name of the Lord, then though thou walkest in darkness, Isa. 50. 10. and hast no light, yet trust in the name of the Lord, and stay thyself on thy God. Say with the Church, in hope of his coming, when I fall I shall rise again, though I sit in darkness, Mich. 7. 8. the Lord shall be a light unto me; and with the Prophet, I will wait upon the Lord who Isa. 8, 19 hideth his face from the house of Jacob, and I will look for him. CHAP. XVI. The fourth thing wherein there is a likeness between Christ and the, Sun is their effects. AMong the many like effects, I shall content myself to name a few. (Having among the Properties touched on divers already, and finding this discourse, begin to swell beyond my first intention) 1. The Sun's appearance makes the day, puts an end to night, not all the sta●s conjoined; so it is Christ his appearance which makes the Christians day; when he appeared to Saul and Silas at midnight in the dungeon, they could see to sing & Acts 16. 25. praise God; and when to Paul before at midday; his eyes were dazzled, not with the Suns, but with that light (of Christ appearing) far above the brightness of the Sun. 2. The Sun's first appearance bringeth day, Acts 26. 13. his nearer approach the spring, his hotter beams the Summer, his longer continuance brings on the harvest. So is it with the Soul, to whom after the first day of grace caused by Christ his first appearance, the nearer approach of his Vernal rising, with his Healing-wings-embrace, causeth the growth or spring. The walking in the light of his countenance all the day long, makes the long summer's day, and his abiding with us makes ou● Psal. 8915. harvest and our joy to be full. 3. The Sun departing, night comes on, his longer absence brings on winter; in the one so much darkness, in the other so much of cold, wet, and dirt, as if it been never had either day or Summer. What a night of darkness came upon Lot and Peter (Christ's back once turned) but what a longer winter for cold, and mire, and dirty ways on David, upon that sad dereliction! The actings of Saints in such cases differing little from the most vile actings of graceless men, if they were to be judged by such single exorbitances. But Sun ariseth and returneth, those than awake by repentance, and come to themselves again. 4. It is the Sun which makes that difference in climes and countries, makes one more sweet and delightful, another more sad, and not inhabitable, (those near both Poles;) makes one more fertile, others more barren. And what is it but Christ's presence, which makes the Church differ from the rest of the world? he makes it a Goshen, whereas they have a perpetual night and winter. What was it wherein Israel might glory above all other nations, but this? they had God so near to them, in all which they called to him for; His cloud and pillar was continually among them. 5. The Sun is the great Restorer of the world, Redintegrates the Universe once in the year (at the Spring, as some conceive, at Autumn as others) puts the world into the same condition wherein it was created. Herein a great Resemblance of Christ, who is the world's great Restorer and Renewer, who hath put lost mankind into the same condition of happiness wherein he was at first created, as if he had never fallen or sinned. Behold I make all things new, saith Rev. 21, 5 Christ. 6. I might further also speak of the Productive, and as it were the Creating effects of the Sun in bringing forth new Creatures yearly, as well as of his reductive, reviving, and redeeming the plants and herbs before dead and gone, as also of his nutritive and augmentative effects on all Vegetables, his admirable Alterative virtue and operation on Metals and Minerals, his Conservative, Maturative and Consummative Virtue and Effects on the Fruits and living Creatures; but I have touched on them already. Herein is Christ his vigorous operations fully represented; who besides his redeeming lost man, maketh the new Creature, createth grace de novo where none was, recovereth what was lost, reviveth what was decayed; nourisheth what is weak, increaseth what is small, conserveth what is wrought, hath a more admirable alterative force in an earthly or stony heart, than the Sun in causing Gold and Silver to grow in the earth, making flesh to grow where stone was, spirit where flesh was, grace where sin, Heaven where Hell was; turning a Swine-sty into an holy Temple: and besides, he ripeneth, perfecteth, consummateth whatever work of grace he hath wrought already. 7. Sun rising man goes forth cheerfully to Psal. 104 his labour; but setting, man comes home and gives over work. What may not a weak man undertake, Christ present and assisting? I can do all things through Christ strengthening me, Phil. 4. 1● said the Apostle; but what ca● the strongest do without him? Without me (saith the Lord) Isaiah 10 4 they shall bow down under the Prisoners, and fall under the slain. The Chariot, though it have four wheels, and they all oiled, yet moves not a step till drawn. Our Will, though very active naturally, and oiled with all the skill Art can use, or with all the force Arguments can make, st●rs not in any gracious manner till assisted by Grace, and acted by Christ; Draw me, we will run after Cant. 1. 4 and 6. 12 thee; and my soul shall be as the Chariots of Aminadib. 8. The Sun present, we see our way, the John 11. 9 Traveller stumbles not; but when withdrawn, he loseth his way, stumbles, or falls into a pit, gropeth as if blind, is full of perplexed doubts and sadness of heart. While Christ was with his Disciples, he kept them (though they were as sheep among wolves) not one of them was lost; but when he was seized on, (their light was taken away) the same night they were all scandalised and fell. Judas, while he kept Christ's company, stumbled not; Christ departed, he fell into a pit and broke his neck; Peter stumbled and got a foul fall. When we follow the light of Christ his holy example, or have the light of his Grace following us, we never fall; but when we leave his example, or his spirit leaves us, we presently miscarry. 9 Let me add one more. We see all the Creatures how they are delighted with the presence of the Sun. When the Sun approacheth, the Elements change their habit and temper, the Air grows more mild, warm, and pleasant, and all those numerous tenants (those daughters of Music) do warble and echo out their cheerful notes to the praise of the Sun; they build, they breed, they rejoice (many of them come, stay, return with this their great Leader and Commander.) The waters wax warm and temperate; there the fishes leap, play, breed and multiply. But the Earth especially decked as a Bride to meet this Bridegroom, clotheth herself, and all her family in new and divers coloured apparel, and with their several New years Gifts present the world's Benefactor with their Best, that he may not come in vain to any of their dwellings. Oh that we were the Creatures Scholars, or School-fellowes in this respect, to acknowledge the benefits, admire the perfections, sing out the praises of this Sun of Righteousness, and with our best Presents of Thankfulness and Fruitfulness: show we are loath to receive so much grace in vain. CHAP. XVII. The likeness of both in sundry Accidents. WE are now come to the last thing wherein the agreement holds between these two Suns, viz. certain Accidents; whereof 1. one greater; 2. many less. The greatest is that of the Eclipses, which these two great Luminaryes are subject to. The less●r Luminary, the Sun sometimes loseth his light and Lustre; and this greater Luminary hath sometimes lost the glory and brightness of his Godhead in his Exinanition, and in that self emptying abasement of his Passion. The Sun's Eclipse is often and ordinary, but this was extraordinary, preternatural, and but once. 2. The Sun is never totally Eclipsed; in part often. (His body being so many times bigger than the Moon's interposed, seven thousand times bigger, cannot lose all his light.) So Christ might be in his Person eclipsed to the unbelieving Jews by his poverty, Cross and afflictions (whereby he was made lower than Heb. 2 9 the Angels) when some others (even then) saw his glory, as the glory of the Only Begotten John 2, 14 of God, full of Grace and Truth. 2. In his Truth, by Heretics and prevailing Errors. 3. In his Regal Power, when persecuting enemies and Tyrants encroach on his Church's Liberty, and his Prerogative, breaking his bonds and the Church's hedge. But he is never totally eclipsed, because his power and grace doth more than seven thousand or ten thousand times exceed all Tyrant's power, Heretics Policy, persecuters rage, and Satan's malice. 3. Yet was there once (never but once) a total Eclipse of the Sun; extraordinary it was, viz. at the time of Christ his Passion. Christ never had the light of his Father's countenance wholly suspended, but then in Articulo Passionis, when he cried out, Eli-Eli-Lama-sabactani. Such an Eclipse never did▪ nor can happen again: then did it appear Christ set his Tabernacle in the Sun; that was his Chariot or Apostle. The Sun's darkness than enlightened the world, and There was darkness over all the earth from the sixth to the ninth hour, that is, from twelve a Clock to three Matth. 27. 45 made the Philosopher cry out, Deus naturae patitur, aut mundi Machina dissolvitur. Either the God of Nature is now suffering, or the frame of the world is dissolving; then both Suns suffered, and were eclipsed together, and went down at noon day; the Sun of the Lord, and that Lord of the Sun. 4. The Sun's Eclipse is only caused by the interposition of the Moons dark body, which hath all her light from the Sun. The Sun is then obscured, and the new changed Moon (never else seen by day) then dare show herself. It is the only interposing the Churches dark body of sin and guilt, made this Sun obscured. She hath no light of her own, but borroweth of him, and he was content to lose all his glory protempore, that his Church and every new changed (converted) soul may appear before God with boldness, not otherwise able to abide the trial of his presence. 5. It is a sight sad to behold when the Sun is Eclipsed: and it was the saddest day and hour of darkness that ever was in the world, when Christ was put to death. 6. The Sun as to us seemeth, to lose his light; but as to Heaven, gives more. And Christ never shined more bright in Heaven, never gave like satisfaction to God, more Joy to Angels, Glory to Saints, then in his Passion. Then did the pleasure of the Lord prosper Isaia● 53. 2 in his hand. He that was before pleased in his Person, was now more pleased in his Passion. In this only expiatory sacrifice did God smell a savour of rest. This was to our Saviour a day of Triumph, his Cross was the Trophy of his Victory and success, whereon he was lifted up and exalted: then was sin, death, hell swallowed up in Victory. The dread of this Cross, triumphed over Hell, spoiling all those principalities, and thereby leading captivity captive. The blood of this Cross triumphed in Heaven: Having made peace ●● the blood of his Cross, Col. 1. 20. And th● Merit of his Cross triumphed in the Church which ever since hath taken up those Angelical Hymns, Glory to God on high, on earth Rev. 5. 12 and 7. 10 peace, good will towards men. Salvation 〈◊〉 ascribed to the Lamb that was slain, and glory to the Sun that was obscured. This w●● the day wherein ou● great High Priest we● in his richest Robes into the Holy of Holies with his own blood (but bearing all o●● Names in his breast, and all our iniquities o● his shoulder) and hath made an everlasting atonement or expiation, and the greatest Holy day the world ever saw. 7. The Sun eclipsed hath the same light in itself, is only hid from us for a while, b●● recovers itself presently, and shines again 〈◊〉 gloriously as before. There may be mis● and darkness interposing between us and God, between Christ and the Father none between the Sun and the earth the Moon▪ between the Sun and heaven no Moon to interpose: And changes there may seem to b● between us and God; between Christ and the Father all is well. Satan might bruise his heel, Herod, jews▪ Pilate might reproach, condemn, crucify bury, set a guard about the Sepulchre. But if it be said, Who shall bind the influences of the Pleyades? with what bonds of death 〈◊〉 〈…〉 t then possible to hold the Prince of life prisoner? 8. Some great Scholars have said, The Sun's Eclipse bodes much ill to this lower world, and that the sad effects thereof are such, that the world is the worse for it seven years after, ere it recover itself. The truth whereof I'll not dispute: but certain I am, the sad effects of this Eclipse upon the Land of judea, where it was most visible, are not yet ●●ased, but for this One thousand six hundred years it hath felt the miseries which followed on their Crucifying the Lord of Glory. 9 Lastly, The Sun's Eclipse is said to Prognostic great changes, downfall of Kingdoms, and deaths of Tyrants, etc. Sure I am, that this Eclipse did not foretell as a Prognostic, but produce as the immediate cause, the greatest changes in heaven and earth. Then was Satan ruined; this Eclipse was his bane. When the Vyal of God's wrath was poured on this Sun, and he had John 19 30 cried, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, It is finished, then was Satan's Kingdom darkened, divided, destroyed, then was the Prince of this world judged and cast out; and then was there nothing but gnawing of tongues all the Kingdom of the Dragon over. 2. There are many less Accidents. 1. The Sun is sometimes present, sometimes absent, respectu nostri, but always present in heaven, Christ sometimes leading his Beloved, sometimes leaving his Beloved; always interceding and giving light in heaven, when his light shineth not on us. 2. Sometimes it hides itself, sometimes shows itself; but his light is intrinsically the same without change. So there may be changes in us, mists about us, storms above us; none in Heaven. Amas nec estuas; z●las Austin, Conf. l. 1. & securus es; Poenitet te & non doles; irasceris & tranquillus es; opera mutas, ●●c mutas consilium. God is not changed when we are changed; we are angry and sin, repent Vult mutationem, non mutat voluntatem. and change our mind. He is angry without Passion, jealous without affection, reputes without grieving, changeth his dispensation, not his disposition. 3. Sometimes Sun riseth early, shines out at first rising gloriously, yet a stormy day follows, and again clears up at even, and all ends well. Some in first Conversion have much peace and comfort, as Job, Solomon, the Wise men, had the Star at first setting out, afterwards sad storms, desertions and trials; but all ended well. 4. Sometimes at Sun rise the morning is grey, dark, duskish, and the day the fairer. What storms were at the Conversion of the Jailor and of Paul? yet all fair after. 5. Sometimes the Sun not seen all day, but showers from morning till almost Sunset, than Sun breaks out and sets serevely, and promiseth a fair day following. Some true Christians have not a good day after their Conversion till death, as some mothers between Conception and Delivery ever ill, yet then do well. Christ fulfils that to many which he spoke to his Disciples, They shall see the Kingdom of God in Power before they taste of death, and when seen, die; that setene evening the forerunner of the fair day of Eternity. 6. The un begins with light, then follows heat. Christ his first work on the new Creature is light, therewith Conviction, Consolation after. Grace and Peace are twins, but Grace the elder sister. The Evening Gen. 1 went before the Morning in the first Creation; sorrow goeth before joy in the true Conversion. He that believes before he reputes, must (as Magus was directed) re Acts 8, 22 penned after such believing, and repent of it. Saul the King had many merry signs and much joy before any sorrow, as the stony ground had all his joy at first. Saul the chosen Vessel had a sad beginning with many sorrows, but his joy followed and remained. The Butler had nothing but fears at first, Gen 4● and joys at last. The Baker all hopes and joys, but they ended in sorrows. 7. The Sun sometimes discovers itself by light and heat both (as in Summer;) sometimes as much light but no heat, as in Winter, when it freezeth in the shade. Sometimes the Godly soul hath Grace and Peace together God's love shining in his heart, hi● heart again warm with love to God; sometimes his heart frozen, as to any perception of the love of God to his own apprehension▪ when the by-stander sees it clear day, 〈…〉 to the manifest actings of Grace and Holiness. 8. The Sun when it is hid, it is the mist● from below that do hinder the light of it. Nothing but our sin doth separate between God and Isaiah 69. 2 us, causing his face to be hid. Cold taken i● the feet offendeth the head, and fumes from within the stomach offend the brain. O●● faith is damped, joy eclipsed, soul distempered, yea, Christ the head offended, only by the miscarriages and distempers from those Lusts that war in our Members. 9 We observe that before Sun doth rise, there is nothing but gross darkness; the Sun risen chaseth away that darkness, but the● are seen long shadows which appeared no● before, but as Sun goeth higher, these grow less till Sun withdraw and decline, the● these shadows increase again; but the Sun never shineth so clearly, but that there is a shadow inseparable from the Body. So till Christ arise, nothing but darkness in the soul; at his first arising this darkness scattered, but then long shadows of much corruption appear, (till than not suspected) but Christ shining longer, these grow less● and less; But he withdrawing, these get head again, and we as bad to our thinking as ever; but never any so perfect here as to be free from sin; It doth easily beset us, and we are all Periscii, in this sense; sin is as inseparable from our imperfect nature here, as the shadow from the body. Those under the Line are called, Ascii, Shadowless, where the Sun is Vertical, and directly over their heads. In Heaven we shall be so, when under the direct Rays of Christ his face and presence. Here he beholds us but obliquely, so that if we be not all corruption on both sides, as the Amphiscii, yet we have at least a dark side, and so are Heteroscii. 10, Once more. The Sun, how doth it with his beams alter the native and usual colour of things? rising, it gilds the clouds, enamels the drops of dew, makes them look like so many drops of Pearl; but especially, how doth it adorn that watery melting cloud whereon the Rainbow is set, the reflection of his own face, with all the delightful colours which the eye can behold? So Christ arising and shining upon the black uncomely soul, puts it into another complexion. When thou wast deformed, I made thee comely through my comeliness; and thou wast perfect through my comeliness which I put upon thee, Ezek. 16. 14. Oh how sweetly do young Converts look? who are as the dew of the youth, coming out of the womb of this morning-Sun, Psal. 1 10. 3. But especially, what beauty is that put upon the melting and heart broken Christian! upon him is set the Rainbow of the Covenant, and upon him are put all the Ornaments Christ can bestow upon him; as Religious Mordecai (formerly in sackcloth) advanced by the favour of the King, and going out fro● the presence of the King in Royal Apparel, of blue and white, with a Royal Crown of gold upon his head, with garments of fine linen and purple, Esth. 8. 15. Yet sometimes the Sun arising and appearing, hath represented some things in a more dreadful appearance then before, 2 Kings 3. 22. When the Moabites rose up early in the Morning, and the Sun shone upon the water in the trenches, the Moabites saw the water on the other side as red as blood, and said, This is blood, etc. Nothing represents sin in so horrid and amazing a dress to the ●ouls apprehension, as the breaking out of this Sun. Then break out, thou Sun of Righteousness, upon our watery mourning hearts, and set on thy Rainbow the token of thy Covenant; but let thy shining turn all that standing water in the deep ditches or trenches of corruption in our hearts into so much blood, that we may drink no more of them, but with amazement look upon former, and with fear and horror fly from future sins. 11. Lastly, to name no more. The Sun shining out in his strength, disperseth clouds and mists, but (though it causeth not one, yet) it discovers a world of m●tes, which are never taken away, for they hinder not at all the brightness of the Sun. So when Christ shineth out most gloriously to the soul, it now sees what it could never have seen or imagined before: I have heard of thee by the hearing ●f the ear, but now mine eye hath seen thee, wherefore I abhor myself, and repent in dust and ashes, Job 41. 5, 6. He now saw a world of motes. But as it is the imperfection of our condition Quadam sun● delicta Quotidianae incursionis, quibus omnes sumus objecti, etc. in negotiate, in officiis, in quaestu, in victu, in visu, in auditu, quanta ten●amur, ●t ●i nulla ●it venia istorum, nemini salus competat. Tertul, de Pudicit. here not to be free from such continual Motes, The Lord knoweth the thoughts of men that they are vain, Psal 94. 11. Yea, every man in his best estate is altogether vanity. So it is our comfort and happiness, that these no ways lessen the brightness of Christ his Love and Grace (for then no flesh could be saved.) But as these sins do abound (i. appear) so doth his Grace abound (i. appear) much more. CHAP. XVIII The unlikeness and disagreement between the Sun and Christ. TO make an end of this first point. There is in many things an unlikeness between these two great Lights, between whom hitherto we have noted so many agreements. 1. This is a creature, therefore ●inite in his essence, operation, motion, influence. But Christ every way infinite, being the creating, not created Sun. 2. This lower sun shall suffer many changes, his light shall be turned into darkness, the Moon into blood, and they shall both cease, There shall be no more Sun: but this Sun Acts 2. 20 Rev. 22. 5 Heb. 1, 8 remaineth for ever; Thy Throne, O God, is for ever and ever. When the Sun ceaseth to be the light of the world, the Lamb shall be the light of the Church. 3. This shines on the good and bad alike; but Christ riseth, shineth, warmeth, Matth. 5. 45 healeth, saveth only those that fear his name. 4. The Sun really absents itself for a time, but Christ from the Godly soul never, but in our apprehension. 5. This gives only light to the body, Christ to the soul. 6. This gives only light to us, we must find ●ight ourselves; Christ gives both eyes to see the light, and the light to be seen. The Eye, Eye▪ salve, and Light all are from him; in his light we see light. In any good we do, we are but Instruments or subordinate Agents; he the prime Efficient and chief Agent, without whom nothing. We are but the hearth, the fire is his; we the Lamp, the Oil is his; we the mouth, the tongue is his; w●e the pen, the writing his. What can the hearth, the Lamp, the mouth, the pen do, without the fire, the oil, the tongue, or hand? 7. The Sun moveth naturally and necessarily, keeps a constant course, goeth and cometh again only to those Climes where he ever formerly did. Christ moveth voluntarily and arbitrarily, goes to some at last that never were a people; and when the Gospel Rom. 9 25 is slighted, departeth for ever, never to return again to such as from thenceforth become Lo-Ammi, and Lo-Ruhamah. 8. The Sun makes those more black that are nearer to his Beams. But Christ them of all others most fair and beautiful that are under his Beams. 9 The Sun fills the Moon with his light only in the time of their opposition, But Christ the soul with his light only in conjunction. 10. The Sun's presence is ofttimes the Mother of corruption, his heat the Efficient cause of Putrefaction (as in Summer our meat and drink keep worse.) But this Sun's presence is the only preservative against putrefaction, and the only enemy to corruption in the spirit. CHAP. XIX Containing the second main Proposition, That jesus Christ is the Sun of Righteousness. HAving at large showed, That Jesus Christ is in many respects to his Church what the Sun is to the world. We come now to our second Proposition, to show how in a more special manner, and by way of Excellency he is the Sun of Righteousness. The former sets out his Glory, this his Grace: the former his Person, this his Office: A singular Elegy this, no where in all the Scripture again do we meet with the same expression, though divers like it and to the same effect. He is called, Jesus Christ the Righteous. 1 John 2. 2. 1 Cor. 1. 30 Jer. 33. 23 and 23. 6 Our Righteousness. The branch of Righteousness. Melchizedek the King of Righteousness, and Jehovah-tzidkennu, the Lord our Righteousness. And to show that this is Christ his principal Title or proper cognomen or surname, (as in our common Marriages the wife doth Exuere Parentis, and endure mariti cognomen, changes her own or father's name into that of her husband) the Church is called also, Jehovah-tzidkennu. Compare Jer. 23. 5, 6. (Behold the days come, saith the Lord, that I will raise unto David a righteous branch, etc. And this is the name whereby [He] shall be called▪ The Lord our Righteousness.) with Jer. 33. 15, 16. In those days will I cause the branch of Righteousness to grow up unto David,— In those days shall judah be saved, and jerusalem shall dwell fafely; and this is the name whereby [She] shall be called, The Lord our Righteousness. They have both one name, and this the highest name to both, especially to the Church. This is the new name spoken of Rev. 2. 17. And that other name God promiseth to call his people by, The Lord shall call his people by another Isaiah 65. 15 See Isai. 62. 2 name. Three things shall here be spoken to. 1. How Christ is called the Righteous, or Righteousness. 2. What Righteousness it is we have by and from Christ 3. Why he is called the Sun of Righteousness? 1 Christ Jesus may be said to be the Righteous, or Righteousness, in a double respect. 1. Of his Person. 1 John 2. 2. Jesus Christ the Righteous. Who in respect of his Divine Nature, is as Righteous as the Father, and the Holy Ghost. This is not that which is so much to us; as our Righteousness extendeth not to God, so this personal Righteousness of God Psal. 16. 2 extendeth not to us in this sense. And in his Humane Nature he is Righteous also, who never had spot in his soul, guile in his lips, sin in all his life, but one who perfectly fulfilled all Righteousness. Matth. 3. 15 2. Of his Office; his Mediatory Office. This is the meaning of that before mentioned Scripture, This is the name wherewith he shall be called, The Lord our Righteousness; that is to say, this is his Office and Business. 2. For the second. There is a twofold Righteousness we have by Christ. 1. A common, general, original (as I may call it) or imputed Righteousness, a Righteousness without us, to which we contribute nothing, we only accept. We put on this Righteousness and it clothes us, as a garment made ready to our hands. 2 A particular, personal, inherent, actual Righteousness, which some call imparted (as the other imputed) but not so properly, for both are imparted. As all are under a double unrighteousness, so Believers are under a double Righteousness. 1. One common, imputed unrighteousness, alike in all, without any Magis & minus, good and bad having a like share of guilt and contagion from Adam, his sin imputed, his corruption imparted and derived to us. 2 A personal and particular, which we call actual unrighteousness; and is (besides that imputed guilt and offence,) a particular, vicious disposition of the mind unto evil; and is made up of all those anomalous and sinful actions, which are so many Transgressions of the Law of God. This receiveth a magis and minus in those in whom sin doth not reign, much more in whom sin doth fully reign and command: for among those possessed with Devils one had but one, and another seven, another had a whole Legion of Devils. So is there I say a double Righteousness which Believers have. 1. One common and imputed, which is to speak properly, only Christ his Righteousness personally, but ours relatively: His by operation, ours by imputation. 2 Besides this, they have a personal Righteousness which is made up of those gracious inclinations in the heart to every good, and of those many holy actions they perform in conformity and obedience to the Law and Pattern of Righteousness; of which two (that is, those gracious dispositions and actions) our personal or inherent Righteousness is made up. Now both these Righteousnesses we have from Christ; the matter of the one, viz. imputed Righteousness; and the principle, power and ability whereby we are carried out and enabled to the other. Concerning which twofold Righteousness we shall lay down briefly these few Theses. Thes. 1. These two Righteousnesses are never separated, as those two former Unrighteousnesses are never separated. Thes. 2. Imputed Righteousness goeth before, then followeth actual; as is also in the two Unrighteousnesses forenamed. Thes. 3. Imputed Righteousdesse is alike to all▪ no magis & minus, the strong Believer hath not more, nor the weak Believer less of this: inherent righteousness hath different degrees as actual sin hath. Thes. 4. Imputed Righteousness is simul & semel, made over to the Believer all at once, and once for all; it admits of no magis & magis in the same person, as of no magis & minus in others Believers. Actual Righteousness is gradual and progressive, and admits both of more and less in divers persons, and of more and more in the same godly persons. Thes. 5. Imputed is a righteousness without us, made ready to our hand, inherent is within us: That costs us nothing, is an Alms or act of pure grace; Inherent asketh us cost of pains, prayers, endeavours. Thes. 6. Imputed only is perfect in this life, inherent only perfect in another life. Thes. 7. Imputed is the righteousness of our Surety; inherent of our persons. Thes. 8. Imputed is Righteousness to be pleaded before God; inherent makes us righteous before men, and only to be pleaded before men. If I were righteous (saith job) I would Job 9 15 not answer God so, but make my supplication to my judg. Thes. 9 The one is the Righteousness of justification, the other of Sanctification, which ever agree, confirming not destroying each other. They touch each other with their wings, as the two Cherubims, and with their faces, look upon Christ as their Author. 3. For the third, Christ is called the Sun of Righteousness, 1 Because he is the Spring of it; no light but from the Sun the Fountain; no water from River or Spring, but what comes from the Sea; in which respect it is said, There is none righteous, no not one; h. e, in himself. None righteous, but one; viz. Jesus Christ the Righteous. Jer. 31. 15 Phil. 1. 11 He the branch of Righteousness, upon which all fruits of Righteousness do grow. 2 In Christ, as in the Sun is a plenitude or redundancy of Righteousness: So Beza reads that Rom. 5. 18. Per unam justificationem beneficium redundavit in omnes homines ad justificationem vitae. By one Righteousness the benefit hath redounded to all men, (all Believers) to Justification of life: and the Apostle calls it, ver. 17 The abundance of Grace, and of the gift of Righteousness, which reigneth in life by one jesus Christ. The Oil of Grace, coming from the head of our High Priest, runs down to the skirts of his Vesture, even to the lowest Member of his body. And as that increasing Spring of Oil in the widow's 2 Kings 4 house, which held out till there was no more empty Vessels to receive it, then stopped. 3 He is the Sun of Righteousness, because his Righteousness is perfect and spotless. The Moon hath her Plenilunium, ●ul light, but it is spotted and fading. The Stars are spotless, but their light is finite, though they be far greater than the Moon; such are all the Angels whose Righteousness (so far exceeding man's) is spotless, yet borrowed and finite. Man's best, like the Moon at Full in six Properties: 1. It is the lowest light: 2. The least light: 3. All borrowed light: 4. Spotted. 5. Subject to decay: 6. Without heat; not able to warm the conscience, and cheer the heart before God's Tribunal; but we must say with Austin, Vae etiam laudabili vitae, &c Gal. 3. 10 or with Paul, So many as are of the works of the Law, are under the Curse. But only Christ his garments are seamless, and his Righteousness spotless. Our best tears are foul water, and need washing, sighs unsavoury breath, Prayers Malach. ●. 3 Exod. 28. 38 and Sacrifice are dung, our holy things have their iniquity; our blood tainted blood, needing Christ's to cleanse it. We need to sorrow for our sorrow, to mourn again for former mourning, be ashamed of our shame, and loathe ourselves for our self-loathing, and repent of our repenting (not in the common sense of some now adays, who are above all these) but because all is no better. When thou hast prayed for pardon, pray again for pardon of that Prayer: when thou hast confessed many sins, bewail thy sin in confessing; when thou dost believe most, cry out, Oh my evil heart of unbelief; when thou rejoycest in spirit, be sad in spirit for such poor rejoicing. When thou art got highest, come down with silence as the Larks after they have been out of sight, singing their Lays nearer heaven, or with this in thy mouth, All have sinned, and come short of the glory of God. Man's best is vanity. If all the Righteousness, Graces, Duties, Services, Sufferings of all the Godly from the beginning of the world were in one man, yea if all the holiness of the Angels, were imputed to one man (fallen and defiled with sin) yet it would prove a Garment too narrow to wrap him in, he would need the help of Christ still to make it up. In the day of Expiation (the solemnest Gospel day Israel had in all the year) four things were done: 1. the Trumpet sounded. 2 Every soul was afflicted, and upon hard duty Leu. 16 of Humiliation. 3 Then were Sacrifices offered. 4. But the chief which made it a day of Atonement, was that the High Priest went into the Holy of Holies, and sprinkled the blood of the Sacrifices upon the Mercy Leu. 16. 14 Seat, and this he did seven times. The Holy Ghost hereby shadowed out to them, what was to be done by us in order to an Atonement. 1. The Trumpet soundeth; i. the Gospel is to be proclaimed. 2. When the Gospel is proclaimed, every Israelite is to afflict his soul for sin, that he may partake of the benefit of the Gospel. He must be in bitterness as for an only son dead Zach. 12. 10. 11 yea, killed, (the only Son of God by our sins killed and slain,) and as the mourning of Hadadrimmon in the Valley of Megiddo, (where Josias was slain) bitterly bewailing that our sins have slain the best King, the Only Anointed of the Lord, the very breath of our nostrils. 3. Then are Sacrifices to be offered, divers Sacrifices; i. All thy sins for a whole Burnt Offering, thy Praises for a Peace Offering, thy Heart for a Heave-Offering, thy whole man a Living Sacrifice, holy and acceptable, which is our reasonable Service. Rom. 12. 1 4 But chiefly we must look to our High Priests entrance into the Holy of Holies, and that which is done within the vail (out of our sight) the blood of Sprinkling, so often sprinkled on the Mercy Seat, that is to say, again and again applied to us: to this we are especially to look: So that if I had repent better, mourned more, had a thousand more Duties, and a thousaud times more Righteousness, I would cast away all as dung, Phil. 3. 8, 9 that I might be found in Christ. We read Zach. 3. 1. When joshuah the High Priest stood before the Angel of the Lord, Satan stood at his right hand to resist him; although he was in his Priestly Vestments. The most holy Person, even in the most holy Service, when in the best dress of Legal and personal Righteousness, is clothed with filthy Garments; he needs a Christ to deliver him from Satan, and change of Garments to cover his nakedness. As all unrighteousness cannot sink a soul that is in Christ, so all Righteousness of the world cannot save a soul without Christ. 1. This informs us how true and just that Appli●. 1 Col. 1. 18 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. John 1. 9 of the Apostle is, That Christ was in all things to have the Pre-eminence. He is not a light, but the Light, the true light; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Of Lights, not a Star, but the Sun; of Suns, not the lower, but the higher; the Sun, not of Light, but of Righteousness. He is Bread, not common bread, but the true Bread, John 6. 32. The Bread of Li●e, ver 35. Bread from Heaven, ver. 50. Living Bread, ver. 51. The Bread of God, ver. 33. He the Shepherd, but the good Shepherd: He the Vine, but the true Vine; the Pearl, but the only Pearl of great price: He a Lamb, but without spot. He is the chief of the ways of God. 2 This shows us where Righteousness is to be had, and where only. There is but one Sun of Righteousness for the Church, as one Sun for the world; we may seek Righteousness and lose by seeking, Rome 9 31. We may attempt to build a Babel to reach heaven with our own Duties, and God pulls it down. In te stas, & non stas, said St. Austin. But go forth (as David said) in the strength Psalm 71. 16 of the Lord; and make mention of his Righteousness, and his only. The weak Ivy climbing up, and clasping about the Oak, lives and continues green all Winter, stands while the Oak stands, though it hath no stem or stalk of his own to bear it. But we are like to little children which learn to go, who having nothing to hold on, hold on their own clothes, which throws them down. Rely alone on Christ for Righteousness. A house whose foundation stands partly on a rock, and partly on the sands, stands no firmer than if all stood on the sand, that part pulls down the whole. Thou must lose thy own Righteousness, that thou mayst gain Christ. 3. This shows us what a difference there is between Adam and Christ. Adam a Sea of Unrighteousness, Christ a Sea of Righteousness. Adam a falling Star, a blazing Meteor, who fell with Lucifer that bright Morning Star, and suffered a total Eclipse; Christ a Sun, a fixed Sun of Righteousness. The two great Luminaries, the Sun and Moon, are only discernably Eclipsed; so these two great Creatures, Angels and Men. The greater Luminary, suffered a final (not total) eclipse; all the Angelical Nature fell not. The less, a total (not a final.) The greater, contrary to what is in the course of Nature, suffered the greater Eclipse. But adam's was a sad Eclipse; He lost all his Righteousness and Light for the time, as did the Angels: He conveys to us nothing but sin and wrath. We may sadly say, that of the first Adam, which was said of Christ, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, (and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 too) he emptied Phil. 2. 7 himself and us, and became of no reputation. He was as that wormwood Star, that imbittered all. A very pit or lake of mire to defile us, but Christ a fountain of Righteousness opened to cleanse us, and he takes away all unrighteousness. 4 How should this consideration, that Christ is the Sun of Righteousness, endear him to us, and heighten our esteem of him! Who can give unto God the praises due for the benefit of the air we breathe in, and of the Sun whose light we walk in? But for this Sun of Righteousness, by whom we are both Justified and Sanctified, enlightened and enlivened, what praises can be given unto God sufficient for such a Mercy? It was Righteousness we wanted more than light. The Sun had not lost his light, nor Adam his sight by the fall, but all that Righteousness wherewith he was adorned: we needed not a new Sun in the Heaven to lighten the body, but a new Sun of Righteousness to enliven the soul. Clothed with this Sun, Rev. 12. 1: Ephes. 5. 27. the Church may present herself before God, and is without spot or wrinkle or any such defect. One Garment made for the High Priests fitted A●ron, and all his successors, Exo. 29. 29, 30 they had no other. One garment of Righteousness fitteth Christ our High Priest, and all his Members. 5. Yet here is a Caution to be entered. Christ is to all a Sun, not to all the Sun of Righteousness; the light of the world; but the Righteousness of Saints, whose properties Revel. 19 8. we shall here set down. 1. That of the Text, only such as fear his Name, have these promises made to them. 1. That he shall be a Sun of Righteousness to them. 2. Rise and shine upon them. 3. Embrace and cover them with his wings. 4. And therewith heal them. 5. That they shall grow as the thriving, fatted, well attended Calves in the stall. But all these shall be made good to none but such as truly fear him. 2. To such as do believe Christ is a Sun of Righteousness, a stone elect and precious; to such as believe not, he is only a stone of stumbling, and rock of offence. 1 Pet. 2. 7, 8. The righteousness of God which is by faith of Rom. 3. 22 Jesus Christ to all, and upon all that believe, for there is no difference: not between believer and unbeliever, (as if asserting Universal redemption) but between a weak believer and strong believer, as asserting an equal Justification of all true believers. Christ is the end of the Law for righteousness to every Rom. 10. 5 one that believeth. None but such as have the eye of faith, have benefit by this Sun, as only those who looked up to the Serpent received cure. 3. To whom he is made of God, wisdom and Sanctification; to them he is also righteousness and redemption. He is made to us of God, Wisdom, Righteousness, Sanctification 1 Cor. 1. 30 and Redemption. We must not pick and choose, take two, and leave two. As Christ's, so the Christians garment is made up of four quarters; but they must not be divided. Many would be content Christ should be Righteousness to them, who desire not he should be Wisdom; All desire he should be Redemption, few care for his being made Sanctification to them. But Christ will be all or none. As there is a golden chain of Decrees, Rom. 8. 30. Whom God hath predestinated, he hath called, whom called justified, whom justified glorified; so that he that looketh to have benefit by the one, must be sure to hold fast all the other. So there are four other golden chains laid down in Scripture. 1. That golden chain of Graces, 2 Pet. 1. 5 Add to your Faith Virtue, to Virtue Knowledge, to Knowledge Temperance, to Temperance Patience, to Patience Godliness, to Godliness brotherly Kindness, to it Charity. 2. Of Beatitudes. Mat. 5. 3, 4. etc. Blessed are the poor in spirit. Blessed they that mourn, Blessed are the meek, etc. 3. Of Duties; laid down, 1 Thess. 5. 16, 17, 18. Rejoice evermore, pray without ●easing, etc. 4. So of Privileges. 1 Cor. 1. 30. Christ is made to us of God, wisdom, etc. Now in all these golden chains, hold one, hold all; break o● lose one, lose all. 4. Christ is the Sun of Righteousness only to those who disclaim all other Righteousness and stick to his. I count all but loss and dung that I may win Christ, and be found in him, not having mine own Righteousness which Phil. 3. 9 is of the Law; but that which is of the faith of the Son of God, the Righteousness of God by faith. We must make loss of our Righteousness, (durus sermo) or it will lose us; and make dung of our Righteousness (foetidus sermo) defiling the Tophet of our Sacrifices, or it will defile us. Dung might do well in the field, not in the streets; in the streets better than in the house; in the house better than in the Church, and on the Altar. It makes a bad perfume, an ill sacrifice, therefore God Exod. 29. 14▪ Leu. 8. 17 commanded the dung and skin of the beast sacrificed should be carried out of the Sanctuary, and burnt in the field. Our Righteousness and Goodness may extend to men, not to God; may benefit the Commonwealth, but not fit for a Sacrifice: It is all but skin and dung, which we must carry and burn without the Camp. In this sense that may Cave non tantum à malis operibus, sed etiam à ●bonis. 〈…〉. Job 9 30, 31 pass for Orthodox. Bona opera sunt perniciosa ad salutem. If I should wash myself with snow water (said Job) and make my hands never so clean, yet thou shalt plunge me in the ditch, and mine own clothes shall make me be abhorred. Mordecai might not come into the King's Court in sackcloth, nor we into Gods in our own Humiliations; nor the fairest virgins come into the same King's presence, esther 4. 2 2. 12. till besides their own native beauty they had been purified according to the King's appointment. The Priests were to put off their own, and put on the holy Garments, whensoever they came into God's presence. King's suffer no Money to go in their Dominions, but what hath their own Stamp. God will be paid in no Coin but Christ's. He that ran to the City of Refuge, was to leave all houses and Castles of Strength, and only abide in his Sanctuary, if taken out of it, he might die. Over the Ark was the Mercy Seat, over Numb. 35, 26, 27 the Mercy Seat a covering. Law and Works need Mercy, Mercy needs a covering; that God's Mercies which are over all his own works, may cover even our best works. 5 If Christ be the Sun of Righteousness let us (as followers of him) be Stars of Righteousness. Righteousness makes one man more excellent than his neighbour. It is the Prov. 12, 26 glory of God, called oft the Righteous God; of Christ, he called Jesus Christ the Righteous; of the Holy Ghost, whose fruit is in all Goodness, Righteousness, and Truth; It is the paving of God's Church; The Kingdom Rom. 14. 17 of God is Righteousness and Peace. The members of the Church Militant must be all Righteous, Isaiah 60. 21. And all in the Church Triumphant are called the Righteous Mat. 25. 37. Righteousness is God's clothing; our Ornament, the Priest's Vesture, Psal. 132. 9 the Bride's attire, Rev. 19▪ 8. The Christians Armour on the right hand, and on the left, 2 Cor. 6. 7. But we must distinguish here; there is a twofold Righteousness, 1. Dangerous. 2. Safe. 1. There are four kinds of Righteousness which are dangerous. 1. The seeming Righteousness, which is not real, but counterfeit. Simulata Sanctitas▪ duplex iniquitas. Sincerity commends Sanctity, and Truth Righteousness; the one is the warp, the other the woof of the Christians garment; if the plague of Hypocrisy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Ephes. 4. 24. Leu. 13. 32 had taken the warp or the woof, the whole garment or web was to be burnt. 2 Semi-Righteousness, which is partial, not universal. In this sense true Righteousness must not be single, but double; to God and man. Moses came with the two Tables Deut. 9 1● 2 Cor. 6. 7 in his two hands. Our Armour of Righteousness must be an the right hand (to God) and left (to man.) The Pharisees were double hearted and double tongued, and but one handed Professors, paid Tithe Mint, Rue and Matth. 23. 23 Cummin, their petty Tithes, but kept back the greater Tithes; the sheaf of Mercy, Truth, Righteousness. 3▪ The desaying Righteousness, which was as a morning cloud, or the morning dew, growing Hosea 6. 4 less and less till the cloud is vanished, and the dew dried up, not as the morning light which shines more and more to a perfect day. This hath many a terrible Threat denounced against it, more than any unrighteousness. See Ezek. 3. 20. and 18. 24, 26, 27. 4. Thy Self-conceited-Righteousness, or any Righteousness of thy own confided in. Our Saviour in the Parable of the Pharisee and Publican, doth cut down all this Righteousness: He spoke the Parable to such as trusted Luke 18. 9 in themselves, that they were Righteous. They were their own Creed, and their own Saviour's. The like Ezek. 33. 13. When I say to the Righteous, he shall surely live; if he trust in his own Righteousness,— all his Righteousness shall not be remembered. Better no Righteousness at all, then so much as to trust in. Be not righteous overmuch. We Eccles. 7. 16 pity the ignorance of such as make the Creed a Prayer; they are as much to blame who make the Decalogue a Creed. Our best Righteousness makes but a bad Saviour. It may be an evidence of Sanctification, not an Advocate for Justification, not the Surety for our Satisfaction, but our Security for our Sanctification. When the Moon, full of her own light, goes from the Sun, she loseth all; and when in her wain she approacheth the Sun and keepeth following him, she reneweth and increaseth her light again to a fullness. 2. There is a good Righteousness, whereof there be four kinds or degrees. 1. The Philosophical: 2. Pharisaical. 3. Evangelical. 4 Divine, or Righteousness of God. Two of these are External, two Internal, all of them together make perfectly righteous before God and men. 1 The first and lowest Righteousness, is that we call Civil, Moral, or Philosophical. The Righteousness of Nations, taught in their Schools, and practised in their Polities. This alone is enough to make one to become bonus Civis, but is the lowest ingredient, which joined with the other three, makes also the bonus Christianus. This is not to be spoken against; the world is not so full of it. The Prophet complaineth that God had a Controversy with his people for want of moral honesty. There is neither Mercy, nor Truth, nor knowledge of God in the Land, but swearing, Hosea 4. 1, 2 ●ying▪ killing, stealing, and committing Adultery and blood touching blood. Say not this is Heathenish Divinity; it is Christian too; but is their highest point in Divinity and our lowest; where theirs ends, ours is to begin. It is not to be neglected then, but outstripped, neither to be rested in nor laid aside. The Heathen shall sooner be saved with this, than the Christian without it. 2. of Duties, Matth. 5 20. That Philosophical, this Pharisaical; that good, this better; that the effect of the Law unwritten, unless on the stony Table of Man's heart, this of the Law written in Tables of stone. This we call legal Righteousness, or Righteousness of Works, which is not to be spoken against neither, but countenanced. Religion teacheth not to lay aside Holy Duties, but perform them better; not to fail in one▪ but abound in all; not to call any Duty or Commandment little. This was the Righteousness of Zachary and Elizabeth, who walked Matth. 5. 19 Luke 1. 6 in all the Ordinances of God blameless. Of this the Apostle speaketh, He that doth Righteousness 1 John 3. 7 is righteous. 3. The third Righteousness is of Graces: This an inward Righteousness, better than both the former, and that which commends them. This the Evangelical Righteousness, made up of Evangelical Graces, Faith, Love, Repentance, Obedience, good Conscience, etc. This the Righteousness of the Gospel, or Law of Faith. This exceeds the Righteousness of Philosophers, and of Scribes and Pharisees. They had the outward works of the Law, without an inward work of Grace: But this Righteousness Grace advanceth and urgeth, The grace of God which Titus 2. 11, 12 bringeth Salvation, teacheth us, that denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, righteously, and godly in this present evil world. And Rom. 5. ult. Grace doth reign by righteousness to eternal life. Yield your members servants to Righteousness unto Holiness. 4. The fourth and best of all, is the Righteeusness of faith, or the Righteousness of Christ, which commendeth all the former and exceeds them. This is called the Righteousness of God for three Reasons. 1 Wrought by the Son of God. 2. Accepted by the Phil. 3. 9 Father. 3. Applied by the Spirit of God. The Christians garment is made up of these four; the three first insufficient without this. We must not as the Soldiers, make four of one, but one of four; dividing these and take each one of us a part, (the Heathen Civility, Pharisees duty, the Professors Piety, and the Believers imputed Righteousness) but make up a whole garment of these four quarters, Deut. 22. 1● Num●. 15. 39 as the Israelites garment was to be, and bound about with one border or fringe of sincerity. Christ and all his followers are clothed alike; he in white, sitting on a white horse, Revel. 19 11. They so, ver. 14 And the Lamb's wife hath the same garment also; all in white, this difference only, that Christ his Garments are white as snow or wool (native, undied) the purest white; ours of linen, not white naturally, but (made so) by washing. These have washed their garments in the blood of the Lamb, and made them Rev. 7. 14 white. CHAP. XX All the godly are such as fear the name of God. BUt to you that fear my name.] Here we come to the third thing, from the dedescription of Christ to the description of the Christian. 1. When they are at worst, Such as fear his name. 2. When at the best, Such as grow as Calves in the Stall. From the former our Observation is. That it is the constant disposition of every Observat. true Christian (the least of the flock, the meanest in the Kingdom of Heaven) to fear God, and to fear his name. Mal. 3. 16. There they are described to be such as fear the Lord, and thought on his name. Wicked men may fear man, they God; wicked fear death, those sin; they fear God's wrath, these his name. The highest of the Godly can trust in his name, these can but think on it sometimes; The highest Saint can glory in the name of Psalm 44. 8 God and praise it, In God we boast all the day, and praise thy name for ever. All that these poor Saints can do, is to fear, (hardly say they trust in, never yet could say, they glory in) the name of God. Death is to the natural man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, of all terribles most terrible. The Lord is to the Spiritual man, timendorum maximè timendus, styled He that is to be feared. And the name of God Psalm 76. 12 is to the gracious heart 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Of all dreadfulls the most dreadful: That glorious and fearful name, the Lord thy Deut. 28 58 God. The Godly are always men of fear, subject to three sorts of fear. 1. To a natural fear. This a good (at least a lawful) fear. Thus Jacob professed he feared Gen. 32. 11. 2 Chron. 20. 3 Esau; and Jehoshaphat had much of this fear upon him, when he understood of the many enemies that combined against him; this comes from the apprehension of apparent danger, when danger is great, and our help little. Thus may all the godly safely fear death, pain, poverty, shame, prisonment, and fly sin the cause, and all other evil occasions of them; the Wise feareth and departeth Prov. 14. 16 from evil. Grace destroys not nature, but reforms the evil of it. 2 There is an evil fear (inordinate and immoderate fear) which sometimes a Godly man is incident to, and overtaken with; for which they are to be chidden and reproved; Why are ye fearful, O ye of little faith? Matth. 8. 26 Too much fear, and too little faith always go together, when danger is great but the doubts greater. Help is little, and their hopes less▪ Against this the Godly are often encouraged, cautioned, charged to beware of it. This is to be resisted, at least restrained: to be moderated, if it cannot be mortified. 3 Religious fear: Noah's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. By faith, Noah warned of God, was moved with fear: This is a Religious fear, and for its excellency is put for the whole of Religion and Devotion: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, men fearing God, Acts 2. 5 and 8. 2 (translated) Devout men. Therefore whereas we are often charged against the two former, that we have not too much of them, we are as oft charged to get more of this, which we can never have too much of, 1 Sam. 12. 24. Exod. 20. 24. Matth. 10. 28. Fear not; but fear, again I say, fear him. Get a double measure of this holy fear to fortify the heart against these two former fears. This Religious fear hath a twofold object 1. Evil, and is a fear of abhorrence. 2. Good, and is a fear of reverence. 1 Evil is to be feared with fear of Horror. 1 Evil of punishment. 1 Temporary judgements. I am afraid of thy judgement, my flesh Psal. 119. 12● trembleth for fear of thee. Destruction from God was a terror to me (said Job) and so a Job 31. 23▪ curb from sin. The love of God is the only constraint to good; and the fear of God to the Godly the only restraint from evil. 2 Spiritual Judgements. I was afraid (said Deut. 9 19 Moses) of the anger and hot displeasure of God. 3. Most of all, Eternal Judgements.- Knowing 2 Cor. 5. 11 Heb. 10. 31 and 12, 29 the terror of the Lord. How fearful is it, to fall into the hands of the living Lord? Our God is a consuming fire, 2 Evil of sin, yet more than all the former. This is the mother of all these three fatal Sisters. There were no cause to fear Temporal, Spiritual, or Eternal evil, if not for this evil of sin. Sin hath filled earth with briars and thorns, the body with Diseases, the mind with grief, head with cares, soul with Terrors, labours with toil; yea, sin hath put that brimstone into hell, and kindled that fire there, yea, hath carried fire into Heaven, and put wrath into God. This is to be feared with a fear of abhorrence and abomination; a wicked man may forbear sin, the godly fears, flies, hates ●in, He fears an oath. job feared God, and Eccles. 9 2 Job 1. 1 eschewed evil. He feared God much, but sin more; God with fear of Reverence, sin with fear of defiance, both with a Religious fear. This one fear well feared, expels all other fears. The heart full of this holy fear of sin, hath no room to entertain any base tormenting fears, 2 Reverential fear is the fear of God, and is twofold. 1. Of lower Saints, proceeding from more weakness, and arguing less perfection, which fear hath pain. doubt, perplexity, torment, and is that we call the spirit of bondage, that 1 John 4. 18 shuts out confidence and rejoicing. And ariseth from these five causes: 1 From the apprehension of God's infinite holiness, purity, and therefore jealousy and indignation against sin and sinners. 2. From the apprehension of the Law's strictness, rigour, and severity. 3. The dreadful threats of God's wrath against sinners. 4. Then the consideration of their own deep guilt, great frailties, manifold imperfections: lastly, which adds to all the rest, the apprehension of God a● a distance to them, and not yet in 1 Covenant relation. 2 Of the higher Saints, arguing less weakness, and more Perfection: therefore when this entereth, the other endeth, God hath 2 Tim. 1. 7 not given us the spirit of fear, but of power, love, and of a sound mind. This fear argues perfection and the best constitution. Job a perfect man fearing God. This spirit of fear was upon our Saviour. This ariseth from the apprehension of God in relation, and in Covenant with us, as our Isai, 11. 2 God. These fear God 1. As a servant his Master, Malachi 1. ● Leu. 19 3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph. 5. 33 whom he serveth; as a son his father whom he honoureth; as the Wife her Husband whom she loveth. This is a most gracious fear, timor amoris, the fear of Love. 2 They are said to fear his Word, and to tremble at it, Isai. 66. 2. Where God's Word comes, there comes power, and causeth fear, one rebuke thence shaketh and sweth the heart more than a thousand stripes doth a profane fool. This is timor obedentiae, fear of obedience. 3. They fear his name. They count God's name the most holy, reverend, and fearful of all things in the world. That thou mayst fear Deut. 28. 98 that glorious and fearful name, the Lord thy God. Of this the Godly are very tender, Jo● feared God, and therefore feared lest hi● sons might pollute God's name in their hearts. Others would not that their own nam● should suffer, these that Gods. This is timor honoris, the fear of honour. The first Reason of this Point, why it i● Reas. 1. the constant disposition of all the Godly, even the least of them, to fear the name of God, is, Because this fear is the initial grace, the first grace that appears & taketh heaven's Alarm. The fear of the Lord is the beginning Psalm 111. 10 of wisdom. Before knowledge of God, faith in God, acquaintance with God, dependence upon God, delight in him, comes fear. The Spirit in his first approach injects fear as the first seed of Grace. The Spirits business is first to be a spirit of B●ndage, afterwards of Adoption: First, to convince of sin, afterwards Rom. 8. 15- John 16. 8 to discover Righteousness and Judgement. But fear is the holy porch at which all Grace enters. In the first conversion of a stout and secure sinner, God's Spirit falls to undermining his hopes by strong convictions of his sin and misery; then is Fear awakened: Fear taketh the Alarm and calls up Conscience, Conscience awakens Repentance, Repentance Faith, Faith calls up Prayer, Prayer looks after the Promise, Promise runs to Christ and awakens him, as did the Disciples in their storm, Lord, save us, we perish: But Matth. 8. 25. Fear begins. A little more fully to describe this, conceive it thus. Conviction calls upon a sinner, Look well Jonah 1. 6 about thyself, What meanest thou, Oh sleeper? Wilt thou die in a sleep! Up Fear, see the danger, hide thyself, seek to escape for thy life, now deliver thyself as the Roe: Fear saith, I exceedingly quake and tremble, God is angry, I am in great danger, alone I cannot secure myself: Now help Fear all you other Graces; up Conscience. Conscience saith, I am troubled and would relieve Fear, but thou must help me Repentance; bestir thee Repentance, break off sin without delay. Repentance saith, I would ●ase Conscience, and secure Fear; help Faith at a dead lift, or I can do no good. Faith saith, I would help Repentance, but thou must help me Prayer, (as Israel in their fear came to Samuel, entreating him not to 1 Sam. 6. 7, 8 cease to cry to God for them; so) Faith saith, Prayer cry aloud, be not silent, take no repulse, pray not coldly, but plead, entreat, beg for thy life. Prayer saith, How should I help, if the Lord help not out of the floor or Kings 6. 27 ●ine press of the Promises? Now for a Pro●ise to deliver Fear, ease Conscience, secure Repentance, satisfy Faith, and keep up Prayer! Come some precious Promise; how do ● long for a Promise! Promise saith to Christ●s ●s the Gibeonite to Joshuah, Lord, slack Joshuah 10. 6 ●ot thy hand: Lord, remember thy Covenant and Word, wherein thou hast caused thy ser●ant to put his trust. Or as David in another Psalm 119. 49 case to Jonathan, his bosom friend, Thou hast brought thy servant into a Covenant 1 Sam. 20. 8, 9 of the Lord with thee; deal thou kindly therefore with thy servant, deliver me not up to thy Father's displeasure; but mediate for me, hide nothing from me, let me know whether thy Father be angry or pleased. Here is nothing but fear all this while. But then Christ answereth the poor soul in the words of Jonathan, Fear not, far be it from thee: If I knew that evil was determined against thee, I would tell thee. Go in Peace. He that seeketh thy life, seeketh mine, abide 1 Sam. 22. 23 with me, and thou shalt be in safety, as David said to Abiathar. Then is all quiet, and Conscience secure: But you see Fear stands Sentinel and procures this safety. The Spirit of God is the Spring, but holy Fear is the great wheel, or else the weight that sets Sinon curarem non orarem; si non timerem, non crederem. Reas. 2. all a going. No cares, no prayers, said Melancton; no fears, no hopes. The second Reason. As it is the initial first Grace, so it is the last, yea, the lasting and standing Grace. When we can speak but little of Faith, Hope, Love, and nothing at all of Assurance; Yet saith the soul, I cannot deny this: I fear God, said Jonah, though he fled from him: or as the poor Jonah 1. 9 Egyptians in that sore famine, fell down before Joseph, We cannot hide this from thee, we Gen. 47. 19 are ready to perish, our store is gone, money spent, shall we die at thy foot for want of bread? Take our Lands, make us Servants, but let us live. This fear is the lasting Grace; therefore as it is called, The beginning of wisdom, Prov. 1. 7. so the fear of the Lord, (said Job) that is wisdom itself. And Eccles. 12. 13. it is called the sum and final conclusion Job 28. 28 of the whole matter. So that when God promises, his people shall not depart from ●im, he puts his fear into their hearts. Two ●hings make us safe, engaging God and the ●oul reciprocally. His Love to us, that he Jer. 32▪ 40 ●ill not depart from us to do us good; and our ●●ar of him, that we shall not depart from ●im. 3. This is the lowest and the abiding Grace, Reas. 3 ●hen Grace is at the lowest ebb. As Cha●ity in Heaven, so Fear on earth never fail 〈…〉, but when Prophecies fail, and tongues 〈…〉 ace, and faith languisheth, fear remaineth. ●s when the body is in a swoon, there is no 〈…〉 ynt stirs, the eye is shut or set, breathing ●ot discerned, pulse not felt, yet there is 〈…〉 e, because there is yet some warmth, all 〈…〉 not cold and stiff. So when the soul is 〈…〉 he saddest desertion, or under Tempta 〈…〉 on, when there is no motion heavenward 〈…〉 ll to be discerned, no affection, no de 〈…〉 es, no breathing as formerly in Prayer, no 〈…〉 oving of the eye after a Promise, or Christ 〈…〉 it: Meat is refused, Ordinances are un 〈…〉 oury, yet well fare this precious grace of 〈…〉 are, the minimum quod sic, the primum 〈…〉 ns & ultimum moriens of the new Crea●e▪ all is not dead, the case is not desperate; 〈…〉 keeps the soul warm, from being stark cold and stiff in sin. I cannot say, but yet I fear God, I fear sin, and I fear H●●●▪ This is the description of a Christian in the lowest ebb. Who is among you that feareth the Lord, and obeyeth the voice of his Servant, that walketh in darkness and hath no light? let him trust in the name of the Lord, and stay upon his God. 4. This is the constant frame of the new heart, and the stamp of God's workmanship in the new Creature, I will put my fear into their hearts that they shall not depart from me. There grace begins, there it continues, there it increaseth, there it never departs nor ends. This fear is to the soul, as the pulse to the body, Primum movens, ultimum moriens; moves with the first, and to the last. The least Infant, strongest young man, feeblest old man, all have their pulse continually beating. One hath no sight, another no hearing, another is lame, another sleepeth, and all the Senses fast bound, but no living man but hath his pulse ever moving. The godly soul sometimes mourneth, sometimes rejoiceth, sometimes believeth, sometimes doubteth, sometimes prayeth, sometimes cannot pray, but always feareth; and blessed he that feareth always▪ Prov. 28. 14. We may say the same of this Grace o● Fear which the Philosopher of the Sense o● Feeling. 1. It is ortu primus, the fir●● thing that appears. 2. Duratione ultimu 〈…〉 It continues longest, begins with the beginning, and endeth not till the end of life. 3. Usu maximus; sight, hearing, smelling, tasting, not so necessary to life; without them there may be life, but feeling gone, life is gone; so without many other gifts, parts, abilities, and the exercise of other graces, (at present) such may live, never without this fear. 4. Hominis optimus, Man the best Creature, hath the quickest touch, (other Creatures exceed man in the four other Senses) and the best Christian the most fear. 5. Yet as he saith of Tactus, it is usu summus, nobilitate ultimus, it is the sense of the least Nobility. We prefer an eye, ear before it; so this principal Grace of Fear is little esteemed; it careth for us most, we care for it least, and we set it far behind Hope, Joy, Confidence, when it may be better than them all. 1. This informs us, that all Christians Applicat. are not of a stature, nor are all Graces to be always found in every Believer. Some are Cedars in Lebanon, some as the Hyssop by the wall, or as bruised reeds: Some as fatted Calves in the stall, well fed, well liking, fat and fair and full of life and lightsomeness. Some as chickens not fully hatched, or as weak tender chickens, that droop and hang the wing, that need the warmth of the wing to cherish them. Some godly souls are all their their life time subject Hebrews 2. 13 to bondage, and kept low with fears, can never get over the fear of death; yet the Apostle saith, Christ hath delivered these. Some 〈…〉 are shut up long in the Prison of unbelief, y 〈…〉 God shuts them in, and will let them out, a 〈…〉 doth shut them up in Mercy. God should 〈…〉 them all up in unbelief, that he may have mercy Romans 11. 32 on all. Unbelief is God's Prison, Presumption Satan's Palace; better to be bound i● God's prison, then to dwell in Satan's palace. God's people are called his Prisoners Prisoners of hope, his flock a Poor flock, Zachary 9 12 11▪ 7 flock of slaughter (in their own apprehension appointed as sheep for slaughter) yet Go● promiseth to feed them. Those who fe 〈…〉 God most, may have most fear of Hell; a●● though they fear and fly sin, they fear the● shall never fly damnation. They have sometimes failing of eye, and faintings of hear● rottenness in their bones, yet is God th● God of their Salvation. When the wicke● Hab. 3. 16, 17 who make a mock at sin, and sing Peace, Pea 〈…〉 to themselves in life, shall at death cry out Despair, despair. The trembling Believe who cries Fear, fear in his life, shall sin 〈…〉 Prover▪ 14. 32 Hope, hope in his death. There is alw 〈…〉 least fear of their damnation, who fea● damnation most, and sin more, the cause o● it. A thousand times better fear without danger, than security without safety. 2 This secures the state of such poo● Believers, who have only this grace of fe 〈…〉 in them, without the perception of any other at present. I may say to all those, 〈…〉 after another, as Absolom to every Israelite that came near him, yet without falsehood and flattery, See thy matter is good. To 2 Sam. 15. 3 thee this Promise belongs, believe, urge, pray, wait for it, it will not lie: the vision of it is for an appointed time; if it tarry, do thou also tarry. Hab. 2 The Sun shall rise upon thee one day, and thou shalt see the desire of thy heart. Yea the daybreak is passed already where this holy fear is wrought; it is the grey and dark morning foregoing a fair day. The Lord delighteth (that is, is more than ordinary Psal. 147. 10. 11 pleased) in such as fear him, saith the Psalmist. And next to the holy Angel in Heaven, the humble Saint on earth is the fittest Mansion for the High and Lofty one, who Isaiah 57 25 and 66. 2 will dwell with him that is of a contrite heart, and trembleth at his word. Object. But I have so many fears. Answ. The more is thy security. Vis in timore securus esse, securit atem time. Fear Bern nothing but security, and thou hast best security against fear. 2 Thy fears are Religious fears, thou fearest evil with fear of abhorrence, God with fear of Reverence, dreadst his displeasure, art tender of his dishonour, obeyest his Word, ●uest for his favour: fear not, only thus fear still and thou art safe. 3 Christ his method is to kill and make alive, wound and heal; as Joseph, he speaks roughly at the first; he cut down Saul at one blow to make him a chosen Vessel; he darts hell into the conscience. He comes with fire and soap into his Temple, and who Malachi 3. 2, 3 may abide the day of his coming? His eyes are as a flame of fire, in his hand a fan, in his mouth a two edged sword. There are two notable days of the Lords coming, the two saddest days of all others. 1. To the godly here, who in the first appearing of Christ in their Conversion are in bitterness, when they see him whom they have pierced, and they mourn because of him, as with the mourning for an only Son; a sad, unforced, unfeigned, renewed, long lasting, and heart breaking mourning. 2. The other day is more sad, when Christ shall come in the clouds, then shall all Tribes wail because of Revel. 1. 7 him. The wicked that never mourned here penitentially, shall mourn despairingly. But where the first mourning is past, the first woe is past, and the last mourning is prevented. The way to Heaven lies by Hell's Suburbs; and to Salvation by Shen●h and Bozez, nothing 1 Sam. 14. 4 but steep and sharp Rocks on the one side and the other. The whirlwind, earthquake, 1 Kin. 19 11, 12 fire, than the still voice to Elias. The horror of great darkness, the smoking furnace, Genesis 15 the Lamp of fire, than the Covenant to Abraham. The Fuller's soap, Refiners fire, the burning Oven, than the Sun of Righteousness. The Lord hath no readier way then to expel fear by fear, hellish by heavenly; therefore he takes so much pains with his people by Mount Sinai terors, to drive this nail of holy fear deep into their hearts, The Lord is come to prove you that his fear may be in you; fear not. Therefore is the true fear of God oft prescribed as the only remedy against all hurtful fears. Fear not, but fear, 1 Sam 12. 20. 24. Exod, 20. 20. Isai. 8. 12, 13. Mat. 10. 28. Notes of this holy fear are, 1. It must be a fear of Devotion, Act. 2. 5. This makes truly devout, puts upon the exercise of all duties of Holiness. Cornelius Acts 10. 2 his fear, A devout man, one that feared God with all his house, gave much Alms, and prayed always. 2 Of diligence: Work out your salvation Phil. 2. 12 with fear and trembling: Not fear of negligence, as the evil servant feared▪ and hid the Talon. Lot's fear, who feared and fled to the Mountains that he might escape. Moses fear, who was afraid, fell down, fasted, prayed, besought God, would not be put off with any denial. 3 Of dependence on God in the use of Hebrews 11. 7 Means: Noah's fear. He by faith was moved to fear, and thereupon prepared his Ark. True faith increaseth (lesseneth not) religious fear; fear confirms, not infirmes faith. Such as fear God, and hope in his mercy are Psalm 147. 11 joined. 4. Of obedience. That fear the Lord, and Isaiah 50. 10 obey the voice of his servant. This is the fear of the servant (not a servile fear.) The good Ephesians 6, 4 servant must obey his Master with fear and trembling. 5 Or Love; the fi●●al fear: who fear the Lord and his goodness, Hose● 3. 5. 6. A sin-resisting fear, Jobs fear, joh 1, 1. 7 A heart-sanctifying fear, Isa. 8. 12. 3 This informs us, that God is pleased to take notice of every grace, even the least and lowest, and every gracious inclination in any of his Servants. To fear his Name is no great matter, yet these have a promise. To think on his Name less, yet set down in a Malachi 3. 17 Book of remembrance. God se●s down how many good thoughts a poor soul hath had. As Evil thoughts in wicked men are taken notice of; they are the first fruits of the evil heart. Mat. 15. 19 So good thoughtsome they which lie uppermost, and best discover a good heart. A desire is a small matter (especially of the poor man) yet God regards the desire of the poor: And calls a good desire Psalm 10. 17 Prov. 19 22 the greatest kindness; The desire of a man is his kindness. A Tear makes no great noise, yet hath a voice, God hath heard the voice of Psalm 6. 8 56. 8 my weeping. It is no pleasant water, yet God bottles it up. A groan is a poor thing, yet is the best part of a Prayer sometimes, Rom. 8 26. A sigh is less, yet Psalm 12. 5. God is awakened and raised up by it. A look is less than all these, yet this regarded, Jonah 2. 4 Breathing yet less, yet Lam. 3. 56▪ the Church could speak of no more. Panting is less than breathing, when one is spent fo● lack of breath, yet this is all the godly can sometimes boast of, Psal. 42. 1. The description of a godly man is ofttimes made from his least quod sic. Blessed the poor, the meek, they that mourn, and they who hunger and thirst. Never did Hannah pray better, then when she could get out never 1 Sam. 1. 15 a word, but cried, Hard, hard heart. Nor did the Publican, then when he smote his breast and cried, Lord be merciful to me a sinner. Luke 18. 13 7. 37 Nor Mary Magdalen, then when she came behind Christ, sat down, wept, but kept silence. How sweet is Music upon the waters! How fruitful are the lowest Valleys! Mourning hearts are most musical, lowest most fruitful. The good Shepherd ever takes most care of his weak Lambs and feeble Sheep. The father makes most of the least, and the mother looks most after the sick child. How comfortable is that of our Saviour, It is not Matth. 18. 14 the will of your heavenly Father that one of these little ones should perish! And that heaven is not to be entered but by such as are like the little child. Therefore this discovers the sad mistake of such as cry out, I have no Grace, because no Perfection; no Faith, because not Assurance; no Prayers, because such weak expressions, many failings, wander, doubtings. It is as if the foot should say, I am not the head, therefore not of the body. The Sanctuary had his little pins, as well as longer boards: The Temple, small Snuffers of the same gold 1 Kings 7. 26, 38 with the golden Altar, many small Lavers for one vast Sea. The great house hath vessels 2 Tim. 2. 20 of wood and stone, fitter for their use then the finest Crystal and richest gold. But because this is so frequent an Objection, I shall crave leave (if it be a Digression) to speak a little more particularly to it; and first see what may be said by such. 2. What to such. Obj. 1. I have no Grace sure, or as good as none, nothing, nothing; unless I had more, why should I be thankful for this? Answ. 1. The best have always had lowest thoughts of themselves. The chosen vessel calls himself Peccatorum maximum, Apostolorum minimum, the last and the least of the Apostles, the first and greatest of sinners; yea, less than the least of Saints. He wants a Ephesians 3. 8 term diminutive enough, therefore by a kind of Grammatical impropriety or catachresis, he formeth a Comparative of a Superlative. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In another place he makes himself less than the least of men, yea of children; if an Apostle, yet the least; if a Saint, yet less than the least; if a child of God, yet the least and unlikeliest to live, an abortive child, 1 Cor▪ 15. 8 one born out of due time, yet not before the time: But the fear here is of being born and regenerate after their time; repenting when it is too late; yea, he makes himself less than the least of things; I am nothing. How low 2 Cor▪ 12. 11 and small a flower the Violet is, yet how sweet! The groaning horse we say, seldom deceives his Master, but will hold out till he come home. The groaning and complaining Christian seldom deceives his Master; or his Profession, but holds out to the end. 2. The godly man is not always the most equal judge in his own case. The eye se●● every thing but itself. And Conscience spies every more in the eye of any Duty, any defect in Grace, taketh notice of least sins, but seeth not the Pearl that is in his own eye, I mean that precious tenderness, tremulousness and sincerity. It hath sight enough to see all sins, Duties, Truths, wants; but his eyes are holden as Moses from seeing his own beauty. If the wicked might be their own Judges, they would ever justify themselves, being so full of self love: If the Godly; they would often condemn themselves, being as full of felf-suspition. So neither are fit for this work. 3 Possible it is for a godly man to have true Grace, and he not know of it, as I said Exod. 34. 29 of Moses, his face shone but he wist it not, though others saw it. Sometimes others can see more into thee than thou canst into thyself. The Physician sees good Symptoms in his Patient, who concludes his own case desperate. As the wicked man may have more sins than he is aware of, and like Urias, 2 Sam. 11. 14 carry sealed Letters of his own condemnation, when he is not aware what is in them. Go dancing with Agag to the block, and go to their last home, as Jepthab did to his own house, full of joy and triumph. But their joy is turned into bitter mourning when they come to the very threshold, their sin, which as his daughter he least suspected, comes out to Judges 11. 35 meet him. The wicked sometimes loiter when their 2 Peter 2. 3 damnation lingers not. Sisera loitered and stayed, when Barak pursued; and their soul and judgement sleepeth, when their judgement and damnation sleepeth not. Sisera slept secure when Jael was preparing the hammer and the nail. The hungry dreameth, and behold Isaiah 29. 8 he eateth; he awaketh, and behold he fainteth. So on the other side, the godly dreameth with the Butler, of destruction, and the interpretation is deliverance. Joseph's brethren Genesis 40 misconstrue all his intentions, and conclude themselves betrayed and undone, when his purpose and thoughts were of peace and greatest love. Mordecai is stripped of his sackcloth, and adorned in royal robes, when Haman is carried from the Banquet to his Gibbet. 4 It is enough if God spy any grace in Romans 3 thee, whose judgement is according to Truth; thine according to thy misapprehension; his eye is good, when thine evil. Thou notest only thy sins, and as if thou wast a hired Steward to Satan, settest down too much, for fifty an hundred; and for infirmities settest down in thy black bill Presumptions, for unavoidable slips unpardonable sins. God on the other side overlooketh the worst, and beholdeth only the fair side. He saith not, Take thy bill, and for an hundred sit down and blot out twenty, and leave eighty, or for an hundred write fifty, but blot out all, write discharged, Ten thousand Talents remitted: I see he Matth. 18. 24 hath nothing to pay, I frankly forgive him; I see him on his knees, I cannot but pity him. Why should I pursue the stubble, and take him by the throat, who lies humbled at my feet? I have his submission, shall I seek his destruction? What do I desire more than the repentance of a sinner, whose death I could never delight in. Ezek. 33. 11 There are Three (Charites) graces, which where ever God sees, he cancels all hand-writings against such persons, viz. Repentance, Faith, Sincerity. 1. When God sees in one page a thousand bloody crimes written, and on the other side Repentance only, He saith, Deleantur, bloody crimes, Let Repentance stand. 2. When he sees in the same page again written, Horrible guilt, dreadful fears▪ doleful transgressions, on the other side Faith, he saith, blot out guilt, fears, transgressions, let faith stand. 3. So where he seeth after faith and Repentance, a thousand infirmities on the one hand, and only sincerity on the other, he saith, Tegantur infirmities, overlook them, behold sincerity. Charity with men, and sincerity with God, covers a multitude of sins. Sincerity is as Tertia pars grani filum 130 pedum circumambit, in folia adeo tenuia tranfit, ut auri uncia plusquam decem jugera terrae tegere posset. Cardan. gold, a little of it goes a great way: it is almost incredible how much ground a little gold (one ounce) may cover, when beaten thin: But it is more incredible how many frailties sincerity may cover. Sincerity covered all Asa's oversights, and there were five sad ones. 1. The high-places not removed, 2 Chron. 15. 17. 2. Syria relied on after former experiences of Gods miraculous preservation forgotten, chap. 16. 7 3. The Prophet committed, ver. 10. 4. The People oppressed, verse 10. 5. The Physician relied upon in his sickness. Yet is Asa in the white Roll, not black-book, for his heart was perfect all his days. God taketh notice of Jobs patience, and James 5. 11 records it; not of his impatience, but forgets it, You have heard of the patience of job. Sarah spoke but one good word, and that is set down, She called her husband Lord. But 1 Peter 3. 6 Gen. 11. 12, 15 when she showed that reverence to her husband, she showed both unreverence, and untruth, and unbelief to the Angel; she doubted, and laughed, and lied, denying it when she had done. That one word remembered, for than she spoke her heart when she called Abraham, Lord; the other three evils are not so much as mentioned; she was not herself when she laughed and lied, but under a distemper. Therefore how many courses doth the Scripture set out God to take, that he may Id agit tota Scriptura ut Deus misericors esse credatur. Luther. beget good thoughts in his people towards him? It is the whole scope of Scripture to represent God gracious and merciful, and man sinful and miserable. 1. Sometimes God kindly cheereth them: Isaiah 1. 18 Come let us reason together, saith the Lord: Though your sins be as Scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though as crimson, they shall be as wool. 2. Sometimes he takes it unkindly, and challengeth them, Why sayest thou, O jacob, and Isaiah 40. 27 speakest, O Israel, My way is hid from the Lord? and my judgement passed over from my God? 3. Sometimes he encourageth them: Be of Luke 7. 50 and 8. 48 good cheer, thy sins are forgiven: Go in peace. Thy faith hath saved thee: Great is thy Faith, etc. 4. Sometimes excuseth them, and pleadeth their integrity, commending to the most their Graces, and makes the least of their ●ins. Nevertheless I have a few things, or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pauca vel parva; inde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. parva fide. Rev. 2. 14. 20 Cant. 4. 7 Matthew 8. 10 some small things against thee: when he might have said many and great sins. 5. Sometimes commendeth; Thou art all fair, my Love, no spot is in thee. I have not found so great faith in Israel, as in ●he Centurion: nor such love in an Apostle●s ●s in that poor Woman, She loved much, Luke ●. 47. Therefore if you fear not to wrong your ●lves, and charge yourselves foolishly, yet take heed you wrong not God, and charge him foolishly, to say he is an austeer Master, he may reap but will not sow: and you may sow but never reap; he marketh only your offence, not your graces of Repentance, Faith and Sincerity. Object. 2. But I have too much reason for what I say. I have no Grace, because so little. Answ. As there are little sins that are killing, (the small louse were a great plague to the Egyptians) so little graces are saving. Each drop of water is water; each spark of fire hath heat in it. The grain of Mustard seed of Faith is full weight in the scale of the Sanctuary. The penny hath the King's Superscription, as well as the twenty shilling piece of Gold. But consider, 1. There is an infancy in Grace, therefore it is small, not yet grown up. 2 There is an infirmity and time of weakness (as to younger persons when grown) which may cast faith down, and keep every grace under. 3 May be thou hast thy stint, and thy measure is but one Talon; God gives to every Rom. 12. 3 Ephesians 4. 7 one his measure of Faith. He expect● not the like measure of all: Ten Talon must produce more than five. God give●● not to every one Grace, as he did Mann● by the Omer, each man alike. 4. If there be a difference between littl● grace and much, there is a greater between little and none at all. Obj. 3. But were there grace in truth, there would be growth. Answ. And so there is. But here is the mistake, one may grow, and he not be aware (of which in the last point) one grows in affection, when not in knowledge; or in judgement when not so much in affection, and this much better. There is a winter rooting to the trees, as a Summer shooting. If we grow not in confidence, if in conscience; if not in Assurance, if in Repentance; if not to eminency of parts, if in integrity and humility, it is much better. Object. 4. I have no Grace, because no Parts. Answ. This is a gross fallacy; grace and parts are not all one. The empty Vessel makes the greater sound. The wise and prudent know not so much as the babe and simple Surgunt indecti & rapiune regnum coelorum. Aug. one. The little child is the great man in the Kingdom of God. Better lowest parts with as low a heart, than highest parts with as high an heart. Where is the Wise? Where 1 Cor. 1. 8. 5. 20 the Scribe? Where the great Disputer of the World? How doth the Apostle vilify proud parts and unsanctified abilities? He that is Doctor in the Chair in the Sophister's Schools, is no body in the Divinity Schools. Philosophi Tertullian. Haereticorum Patriarchae. The Devil commonly maketh use of the greatest parts, God of the lowest; Satan of the Serpent, God of the Dove. Moses the Man of God Numb. 12. 3 10. 2 was a meek soft man, of slow speech; Corah and his company men of Renown, because of their parts; God had respect to his, not to their Sacrifice. Job a man who abhorred himself in dust and ashes: his friends were the men of parts, with whom when ever they Job 12. 2 died wisdom should die with them; yet though, they thought Job might go to School to them, and was hardly worthy to carry their Books after them: We are more aged than thy Father, Job 15. 8, 9 they tell him; yet God would hear him, not them; they must carry their Sacrifices after Job. They could speak better and Job 42. 8 more plausibly, he could pray better and more holily. The Pharisee was the man of Luke 18. 14 parts and no Grace, the Publican of Grace but no parts, yet he justified, the other condemned. Object. 5. I have no grace because no comfort. Answ. Grace and Peace are Sisters, but not Twins; Grace and Duty are the Seed, Joy and Comfort the Harvest. There must be a patient waiting between sowing in Righteousness, and reaping in Mercy. As there is much unsound joy where Grace never was, so there may be much sound Grace where never yet was much of spiritual Joy. Obj. 6. Can there be any grace, any faith, where so many fears and troubles? Ans. These argue Conscience is awake, and that thy sense not the danger is greater. One sees his house on fire, he leaps out of his bed, cries out, Fire, fire, Water, water, Help, help with all his might; he toils, fears, sweats and saves his house: Another comes dreaming out, & when he sees the fire flame out at the house top▪ he tells his neighbour in his ear he fears there is some danger, there needs a little water; his house is consumed while he looks on. Or as in an house on fire, one is a sleep, you call him, he stirs not; you will not say, how sweetly and sound he sleeps, and dies sleeping, he sleeps the sleep of death; another when called, riseth, flies, leaps out of the flames. The quiet conscience hath the more peace, but the troubled hath the more safety. There is an Bona turbata, mala pacata. evil quiet conscience (saith Bernard) as well as an evil unquiet. Obj. 7. But I am so sore tempted. Answ. Satan sets not on an empty Vessel, brings not his Army to sit down before a Cottage, or storm a Village, where neither resistance will be made, nor Treasure can be had. But it is otherwise with thee; thou hast something to lose it seems; Satan desires to winnow the wheat, not the chaff: He tempted Peter, and found him wheat; he filled Judas his heart, he is carried as chaff driven by the wind; he finds Judas his heart empty, swept, garnished, he enters with a whole Legion; he assaults Peter, makes a breach, thinks to storm the Fort, he is repulsed. There the strong man finds a stronger than he keeping the Castle, who resists and disarms him. Saint James calls him Blessed, who endureth temptation: call not James 1. 12 thou him Blessed who endureth not (but escapeth) temptation. To tempt is sinful, to be tempted is not so. The Tempter God Amat proditum, odit proditorem & proditionem. hates and the Temptation, but the Tempted he loves. Object. 8. But where is so much corruption as I find, what Grace can there be? Answ. Grace and corruption are joined together in this our imperfect state, as the Daniel 2 iron and the clay in the Image. They neither so mix as to agree, nor so disagree as to be parted. This War is not like that of the house of Saul and David, that ends after seven years; but like that between Rehoboam 1 Kings 14. 30 and Jeroboam, which continued all their days. Where the house is divided, Christ never stays, but where the heart is thus divided he never departs. It is a hopeful sign Grace hath abounded where sin is more discovered; but it is a certain sign Grace hath abounded, where sin is lamented, resisted, abhorred. There are many Diseases like the Plague or Leprosy which are not they. There were three cases wherein the party suspected of the Leprosy was to be pronounced clean. 1. He might have a fowl scab, yet if it Leu. 13. 56 did not spread or increase, but stand at a stay, he was not unclean; it is but a scab. There are sad spots which may be the spots of God's people: but they stand at a stay. 2. There was a case wherein if one had a perfect Leprosy that covered all his flesh, yet if it turned white, he was pronounced clean, ver. 13. 3 If no raw flesh did appear, though he were covered with Leprosy, he was also clean, otherwise not. Godly men may have been all covered with foul sins before Conversion, but they are turned white by Repentance: They fall after Conversion into some gross sin; it is a scab, it spreads not: Or they are covered with a world of infirmities, but there is no raw or proud flesh to be seen; these are clean. There are three things I have always judged hard to define. 1. How far an Hypocrite may go in a way of Duty, profession, and in that is good, and yet perish. 2 How far a child of God may go in a way of sin, and yet be safe. 3 How low a child of God may fall in point of Grace, yet be safe. The maximum quod sic of an Hypocrite, and the minimum quod sic of a Saint, are hard to determine. If you look upon the Apostle in the seventh to the Romans; you may see to what sins a renewed Christian is subject, yet do they not destroy Sanctification, nor in the least prejudice Justification, or prevent Salvation. Though such a one look upon himself in such case as carnal, The Law is spiritual, I am carnal. (Denominatione sumptâ à potentiori parte.) There is much of the old Moon we say oftentimes, seen in the new changed Moon; and too much of the old man in the new heart. Eight sins there you find which may stand with true (not perfect) Sanctification: Perfect (if not certain) Justification; Certain and assured Salvation. 1 The sin that a poor soul is sold under, Romans 7. 14 Ephesians 4. 19 Romans 6 ver. 14. The wicked sells himself to work wickedness, as Ahab; or gives himself over, or yields himself servant to unrighteousness. The godly is passive only, not consenting. Sold by an unnatural father, as Joseph by his brethren; Samson by his wife in his bosom: He was bought and sold between the Dalilah in his bosom within, and the Philistims at the door. She could not have hurt him without their force, nor their force without her Treason. So is the soul betrayed by Corruption to Temptation, and by Temptation to Corruption. When Corruption stirs within, if Temptation be kept off, there is less hurt done; when Temptation comes on, if Corruption be kept in, there is no hurt at all; but when a poor soul comes into this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, where these two Seas meet, Acts 27. 41 there is a miserable shipwreck, yet upon the broken planks of repentance and a broken heart he comes safe to Land. 2 Sin not known is not the sin unto death, ver. 15. What I do, I allow not, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, I know not; viz. with approbation. Sin approved, known, consented to, is that which destroys. The Law did appoint Sacrifices to take away sins of ignorance, none for him Numb. 25. 30 Hebr. 10, 26 that did sin presumptuously. If we sin wilfully after we have received the knowledge of the Truth, there remaineth no more Sacrifice for sin. 3 Where the sin is hated, the sinner is loved. What I hate, that I do. No wicked man hates sin, he may leave, but not loathe it; he may fear or forbore, he cannot hate sin. Where sin is loathed, the person is loved; Ezekiel 36. 31 where sin loved, the person loathed. All the godly loath sin, and themselves for it. 4 Where sin is disclaimed (not excused or defended, but) protested against, that sin damns not. It is not I, ver. 17. and 20. h. e. not my whole I, not my better I: for I consent to the Law that forbids it. I join not Verse 16 with sin against the Law, but with the Law against my sin. I delight in the Law as touching Verse 22 my inner man. The Law and I are all one, but sin and I are two. With the wicked it is otherwise; they delight in sin in the inner man, dislike the Law; they wish there were no Law, the godly wish there were no sin. 5 Sin only remaining damns not, sin Romans 7. 17 reigning is the damning sin: Not I, but sin that dwells in me. Sin dwells in the godly, but reigns only in the wicked, To the one it i● as a busy mate, or troublesome inmate, that cannot be got out of doors, which is a continual dropping, and causeth continual disquiet and wrangling. To the other, sin is in the Throne, or in quiet possession, as Master in Exodus 17 the house. The Amalakites and Israelites are together in the Valley fight, sometime the one, sometimes the other prevailing. God left the Canaanites to try his people, and to learn them War. He would not destroy them totally, that the wild Beasts should not Deut. 7. 22 rise up against his people. Better a thorn in the flesh, and a Messenger of Satan buffetting thee to keep thee humble, than a revelation, and a rapture into heaven to puff thee 2 Cor. 12. 7 up. 6 Sin mourned under never damns, but gloried in ever damns. Oh wretched man that I am, saith the godly soul. Pain could never make Paul cry Oh, nor miserable that I am, who shall deliver this body from death▪ But Oh wretched man that I am, who shall deliver this soul from this body of death! He that could glory in all infirmities and distresses, 2 Cor. 11. 30 12. 19 could not glory but mourn under sin. 7. Sin resisted, though it overpower the soul and prevail at present, leading into captivity, damns not. I find a Law in my members Verse 23 warring against the law of my mind, and leading me into captivity, into the law of sin. Samson was a Captive to the Philistims, but his heart was the same, he hated them as much, waited and prayed for new strength to be revenged, and died in the quarrel. The Christian Combat is like that of Joab, a hard charge, the battle before and behind; 2 Sam. 10. ● and we herein in the same distress that the old Britain's when the Romans had drawn oway their Forces to protect them against the Picts, they sent to Aetius the Perfect, crying out, The barbarous enemy beats us to the Sea, and the Sea beats us back to the enemy, between these two kinds of deaths, we are either murdered or drowned. The Christian is often in like extremities; the fear, pit, and Isai. 24. 17, 18 Amos 5. 19 2 Peter 2. 20 snare are before him; the Lion, Bear and Serpent. He no sooner escapes the fear of the world's pollution, but he falls into the snare of Satan's Temptation; and if he escape that, he falls into the pit of bosom corruption. Between these two he is like to be either murdered or drowned. Or as Amos hath it. He that flieth from the devouring Lion, the world's raging persecution, meets with a more savage Bear, Satan's devouring Temptation; and flying both, is in his own house bitten by the Serpent in the wall. Between Corruption and Temptation he is hard put to it, oft foiled and captived, yet fetched off safe at last. Here is nothing but death before him, yet death without damnation. One while he saith, sin betrayed and deceived me, and thereby Romans 7. 11 and 7. 9 and 6. 11 slew me: another time saith, sin revived, temptation revived, and I died. Yet all this dying is but the dying to sin, and the death of sin, not that death in sin. 8 Where sin is as death, it brings not death. It is mortuum, not mortiferum: Where sin lives the soul must die. If Agag be spared, Saul shall not be spared. Who shall deliver me from the body of this death! I may add a few other Notes from other Scriptures. 1 Sin whereby the heart is broken hinders not Salvation, but sin whereby the heart is hardened. Pharaoh and Magus had hearts hardened by sin, Peter was broken with his. 2 Sin fallen into when one is overtaken, damns not, sin continued in is that which damns. David fell, Saul and Jeroboam lay in their sin. 3 Sins of infirmity and inadvertency Gen. 9 21. damn not; such was Noah's. Sins of deliberation destroy Salvation. There was a City of Refuge for him that slew a man unwittingly, and a pardon of course, but wilful Deut. 19 4, 11 Murder had no benefit of Sanctuary. Christ will be no City of Refuge to him whose presumption of pardon is his provocation to sin. 4 Sin against resolution destroys not Salvation, Such was Peter's denial of his Master, into which he fell through too much fear; sin resolved upon damns: Such was Judas his betraying his Master, which he had long plotted, and had watched for an opportunity to effect. 5 Sin confessed and discovered, is ever covered and remitted: sin covered and concealed Proverbs 28 1 John 1 shall be proclaimed on the house top. He that hideth his sin shall not prosper; He that confesseth and forsaketh, findeth mercy. 6 Sin repent of never damns; sin not repent of ever damns. Take the two thiefs for an example: the one died in the presence of a Saviour, his impenitency made him uncapable of Salvation: the other, though in the same condemnation, saved by means of his true, though late repentance. But upon this occasion of this rare (indeed sole) example of the Thief on the Cross, we may use that Proverb, Many talk of Robin Hood who never shot in his bow; so many speak of the Thief on the Cross, who do nothing like him. He confessed Christ among enemies, these deny, revile him among his friends. He believed in him, prayed to him, relied on him; these do none of these. How much grace did appear in that man in so little a time! 1. Zeal for God, he rebuked the profane Thief. 2. Charity to man whom he would reclaim, Dost not thou yet fear God, being in this condemnation? as if he should say, Cast not away thy soul, there is yet hope or possibility of Salvation. 3. His repentanee manifested in that self-condemning and God▪ justifying expression, We suffer justly. 4. His Faith in Christ▪ whom he justified, when the world condemned him, He hath done nothing amiss. 5. His Prayer of faith, Lord remember me when thou comest into thy Kigdom. Verily there was not found so much faith in all Israel, no not among all the Apostles who forsook him and fled. I may call his faith, a faith of Miracles, as well as his Conversion a miraculous Conversion. 7 Sin forsaken never, sin not forsaken ever damns. When Manasseh and the Prodigal returned, they found the gate of Mercy open to entertain them. Cast away your Transgressions, and you shall not be cast away. Electio aut dilectio peccati reprobatio peccatoris. It is that Reprobate sin, that reprobates souls. But sin reprobated and rejected, the soul is elected and beloved. But to return from this Digression, we shall proceed to a fourth Point. CHAP. XXI. That Christ shall certainly and timely arise upon all such as fear his Name. TO you that fear my name shall the Sun of Righteousness arise.] Having spoken of Christ apart, that he is the Sun of Righteousness, and of the godly apart, that they are such as fear his Name; We will now bring them together, (and they are best when together) Christ and they that fear his Name. Doct. What ever the present condition and apprehension of such as fear God's Name may be, there shall be a day when Christ shall rise upon them. They shall come out of the cold shade into the warm Sun, and out of all their darkness into his marvellous light. To the upright ariseth light in darkness, saith David. They Psalm 112. 4 Isaiah 60. 1 shall hear that voice, Arise, shine, for thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee. To speak the least, all the godly shall before they taste of death see this Promise fulfilled, and see the Kingdom of God come into them with power; or when they have tasted of death, they shall enter with power into the Kingdom of God, Mark 9 1. where our Saviour implies, 1 That the godly do but taste or sip of deaths cup. It is a bitter potion to the wicked who drink the dregs. Christ tasted of death himself, Heb. 2. 9 Wicked ones are said to die the death, the godly to taste only; and Christ is their Taster, therefore they need not fear it. 2. Nor shall they so much as taste neither till they have had a taste of Heaven, the Kingdom of God coming with power. Saint John had Revel. 10. 9 honey in his mouth, before the gall in his belly. God will Antidote his servants against the bitterness of death by his cordial Promise; and then death tastes sweet, when heaven is tasted before. This Promise doth imply, 1. That such as belong to God, and have true grace, (fear his name) may have small store of Peace and Comfort, no present sense and taste of the love Isaiah 50. 10 of God, but walk long in darkness, seeing no light at all. 2 That as their condition is sad, their apprehension may be sadder, having nothing but fears, dreadful fears of the Name of God. 3 Or that they may after a short winter day have a long night, without Sun and Stars a long time, as Paul's company in their tedious Sea Voyage. They may cry out with many a longing wish for day, and say with Job 29. 2. 3 Job, Oh that it were with me as in times past, when the candle of God shined upon my head, when by his light I walked through darkness. The Lord is to some of his people as a wayfaring man that turns aside to tarry but one Jer. 14. 8. night. The Lord comes guestwise, as the Angel to Manoahs' wife, who after the first apparition waited long for a second visit, and Judg. 13. 21. having that, never had a third; her busband never had but one. 4. They may be long under sad desertions, Lam. 3. 17. even to forget prosperity, and complain pro tempore, as if God dealt with them as with Saul. I am sore distressed, and the Lord hath 1 Sam. 28. 15 forsaken me, and answereth me no more. 5. They may be also sick withal (which makes long nights seem much longer) soul-sick, their hearts fainting for the salvation of God, as David complained, saying, when Ps. 119. 81, 82 wilt thou comfort me. What need of this sunrising with healing else? 6. They may be also ready to sink under the weight of their own guilt, and God's displeasure. What need of a Sun of Righteousness else? 7. Yet suppose all this, and what more you can, Christ shall arise to purpose on these poor souls as the Sun in his strength, dispelling darkness (as a cloud) dispersing righteousness (as beams of light) curing all the soul distempers with his healing virtue. 1. The reason hereof is partly from somewhat Reas. 1. in God. 2. Partly from somewhat in themselves. 1. On God's part. 1. His Power gives the first hope of it. He can say, Let he re be light, and there shall be light. He who at first commanded light to shine out of darkness, can cause his marvellous light 2 Cor. 4. to shine on those who sit in darkness. 2. His power gives hope, but his promise (this promise here and many others) makes it certain. When God created the first light, there was only power and will set a work, there had been no Promise; here is a promise: God's power makes things possible▪ his promise, things certain. It was only possible there should be these heavens and this earth before Creation; there was no promise. But it is certain there shall be a new heaven 2 Pet. 3. 13. and new earth, because we according to his promise expect it. It was possible that Christ might come to dissolve the works of Satan when Adam fell. But is certain Christ shall come to them that fear him; Here is his promise. 3. His Love backs his promise, as that his Psal. 19 power. He that is for Power a Giant, and for his promise and engagement Sponsor, is for his love as a Bridegroom and Spouse to his Church, whom he hath betrothed to himself in loving kindness, righteousness, mercies Host 2. 19 20. and faithfulness. 4. His glory engageth all the former. There is never more glory given to God then when he maketh good this promise. Great rejoicing there is when she who hath been long barren, hath conceived, as Sarah, Hannah. When he who hath been long in captivity is enlarged, as Joseph; when the exile is returned, when the blind come to see. The privation or want of the mercy sets the higher price upon it when it comes. The desire attained is a tree of life. Here the greatest Prov. 13. 12. joy. Sing Oh barren, thou that didst not bear, Isai. 54. 1. break forth into singing, and cry aloud thou that didst not travel with child▪ Sharon breaketh forth into singing, and Lebanon claps his hands, and all the birds of the wood, and beasts of the field sing and leap for joy. The earth puts on her new clothes to entertain the welcome sun. 2. Partly, from somewhat in them. 1. Their prayers raise this sun (as the Prince of darkness is raised by magic spells, and cursed imprecations,) Christ is raised by invocation. Thus the Disciples made the Sun-rise before day, to still the tempest. What the Poets feigned of the Moons coming down to Endymion, may be spiritually verified of Christ. This Sun of righteousness often comes down to embrace such as fear him, and call him down by prayer. 2. Because of their miseries. In all their Isai. 63. 9 Psal. 12. 5. Isai. 57 18. Ezek. 16. 6. spiritual affliction, he is afflicted, and because of the sighing of the afflicted, he saith, I will up, I will rise and shine upon him; I have looked upon him, and see him in his blood, I will heal him, and say unto him, live. 3. Their prayers move him much, their miseries more. But their grace make his bowels to role, and his repentings kindled within him. I have heard him bemoaning himself, I will surely have mercy on him: I Jer. 31. 18, 19, 20. have spoken against, but I will now remember him. Repentance is such a grace as overcomes God's displeasure; holy fear gains his favour; faith gets his heart; humility gets what grace it would have; he that resists the proud, and departs from the ungodly, He looketh Job 33. 27. upon man, and if any say, I have sinned and perverted that which is right, and it profited me not, He will deliver his soul from going into the pit, and his life shall see the light. So that we may say, Light is sown for the righteous, Psal. 97. 11. and joy for the upright in heart: sown in these two fields, 1. Of God's eternal decree, in his power, promise, grace and love: These are the upper springs. 2. In the field of their graces, and holy duties, these are the nether springs, both which fall into one river, and make glad the City of God, both these fields yield a plentiful harvest of comfort to the godly. Quest. But here the godly soul is oft troubled and saith, when shall this promise be Ezek. 12. 27 fulfilled? this vision is for many days to come. When will this Sun arise? Answ. Though the Sun keep a certain hour of his arising known to all, yet of this day and hour knoweth no man, when this Sun of righteousness will arise. The operation and course of nature is much alike. The dispensations of grace and peace are various & more different than any other actings of God, therefore nothing can be set down certainly as a constant rule. There are four notable days of the coming of Christ, two in this life, two after, all alike unknown. 1. When Christ will come with his fan in his hand, refiners fire, and fullers soap, at conversion to purify an elect unconverted. 2. When with healing under his wings, to cheer and satisfy the Elect converted, yet unsatisfied soul. 3. The third great and notable day of the Lord is at death, when he comes as a Bridegroom, his reward with him to make perfect the elect converted, comforted soul; yet never perfected. And the fourth is the greatest of all when he cometh in the clouds to render to all according to their deeds. None of these four days of the Lord are like the Lords day which is known and kept by all alike, and we know that after every six days another will certainly follow; but as the thief by night, or the lightning (not Lu. 17, 24, 25 27 the sun) by day, come suddenly, unexpected, or as the days of Noah and of Lot were, so shall all these come of the Son of man be. 1. Those days came but once. 2. Came of a sudden. 3. Came to put a mighty difference between them and others, yet had we not need be as the world was then, Eating, drinking, sinning, singing, etc. but as Noah and Lot, fearing, waiting, praying, preparing. Samuel had the Sun breaking out in the morning, (he was called young) and it shined all day to his old grey ●ayres. Abraham had no sun, nor ●ight of heaven Gen. 12. 4. Gen. 15. 1, 12, 18. ●●il he was seventy five years old, and had a sad hour of darkness before the covenant made. The Lord had said he would be a shield to him, before he showed himself to be his Sun. Job had a glorious morning Sun in his younger age. It was sadly overclouded at Noon, but broke out again ere night. Solomon the like or more glorious morning and noon, waded toward evening and set in a cloud. Moses had frequent familiarity with God Num. 12. 7, 8. as a friend, forty days entertained by him as his Guest, and one day above all the rest had into the banqueting house as his only favourite, he saw the similitude of the Lord, heard his Name proclaimed, beheld his glory, and had this superadded, I know thee by thy name, and thou hast found favour in my Exod. 33. 12. sight. Jacob was twenty whole years kept in suspense about his son Joseph, ere he knew what was become of him, and full twenty years it was between his first vision at Bethel; and that at Penuel, where he saw God face to face. Thomas was but eight days under that Joh. 20. 26. uncomfortable fit of incredulity, then full satisfaction. Manoahs' wife had two heavenly Judg. 13. apparitions, not long between the one and the other, no more all her life. Solomon had his two also. The Son of God bade only one transfiguration; and twice that testimony, Luk. 3. & Luk. 9 Thou art my Beloved Son: the rest of his life was all Humiliation. Heman and Ethan haply never saw the sun of righteousness Psal. 77. & 88 shine out all their days, never got higher than faith of Adherence, yet died in faith, not having received the promises. But first, usually the Promise is made good when the Christian is conscientiously attending on Gospel ordinances to meet God in his way: when we wait to receive, God waiteth to bestow grace. 1. The Lord's day is usually the day of the Lord, the desired day Luk. 17. 22 Revel. 1. 10 of the Son of man; on that day John being in the spirit had that communion with Christ and the Revelation of so great mysteries. The Sabbath sanctified, is also blissed. Isaiah 56. 7 Exodus 20. 24 The house of prayer is the place where God will make his people joyful, and where God records his name in any place he will there meet and bless his people. Upon Isaiah 4. 5 every dwelling place of mount Zion and upon her assemblies the Lord hath promised to creaete a cloud and smoke by day, and a pillar of fire by night, for upon all the glory shall be a defence. Where was Christ to be found but in the Temple? And when did he appear Luke 2. 46 to his Disciples but on the Lords day, one day after another? It is observed, if there be Jo. 20. 19 29 any wind at all stirring, it is about the Church, and if any breath of the spirit, it is within the Church. Sometimes Christ sets Isaiah 57 19 this fruit on the Preachers lips, and there you must gather it. Sometimes (and as usually) in and after prayer; Cornelius had his, and Peter his vision Acts 10. when both at prayer; Christ had both those famous testimonies by audible voice on the day of the holy Ghosts Transfiguration into a dove, and his own Transfiguration Luke 3. 21. & 9 21 after, when at prayer. When did Jacob see the face of God, but when he wept Hosea 12. 4 and made supplication? Often at the Sacrament, when we set John 3. 33 Deut. 26. 17 18 to our seals, and avouch God for our God, he sets to his seal▪ and doth avouch us for his people. Christ at Baptism received that first testimony from the Father's mouth and the spirits descending upon him. And how many do we read of, that have together with Acts 2. 48. 8 & 10. 37 the water Baptism received that also of the holy Ghost? So for that other Sacrament, how many can say in experience, the Lord hath been known to them in breaking of bread, when not till then discovered? Abraham Luke 24. 35 & 32 Genesis 15 had the covenant first made and sealed at that first and notable Sacrament, or Sacramental sacrifice so solemnly celebrated. When Hezekiah and his people prepared themselves to a religious celebrating the 2 Chron. 30 19, 20, 27▪ Passeover, their prayer came up to heaven, God heard and healed his people. Wait then upon God in the way of his own ordinances. And if thou know not yet where Christ is to be found, go thy way Cant. 1. 8 forth by the foot steps of the flock, and feed thy kids besides the shepherd's tents. 2. Sometimes God revealeth himself in an extraordinary manner, when we have been seeking him in a more extraordinary manner: when Jacob was more importunate than ever, had wrestled, and wept all night, he saw God's face in the morning. Gen. 32. 24 3. Often before some singular trial to be undergone, and some hard service to be performed; Jacob had that laetificall vision Gen. 28 Gen. 37 at Bethel, when he was to enter on Laban's hard service. Joseph had his divine dream before he was sold, that he might have somewhat to live upon in his hard bondage. Christ jesus had that first Testimony Matth. 3 & 4 before that first and great tentation of forty days. Moses and Gideon were prepared and forearmed with several signs that they Exodus 4 Jud. 6 & 7 might not dread those difficult undertake they were set upon; if we have well provindered the horse over night, his Master reckons he may travel him the farther next day. Expect some change of weather when thou seest the Sun rising early, and shining gloriously. 4. Often again after some great and sad trial. jacob never so much afraid of Esau's face, a little before he saw God's face; and when he heard of Esau coming with his Troops to cut him off, he saw God's host encamping at Mahanaim to secure him; after the Trumpet had sounded louder and louder in Sinai terrors, Moses spoke, and the Lord answered; after the last and sorest throw the Exodus 19 19 child is borne. And after the great thunderclap heaven is opened, and the refreshing showers fall plentifully on the thirsty earth. 5. Often even when under the heat and brunt of sorest trials and conflicts. Holy Steven standing before the Judge (who condemned Acts 7. 55, 56 him, and the people who shut their ears against his Apology) sees heaven open, and his Saviour standing up to absolve him in heaven, who was condemned on earth; in the midst of the fiery furnace, the Son of Daniel 3. 25 God walked among those precious sons of men. Into the dungeon, where Paul and Silas Acts 16, 25 were cast, the Sun arose, and shone out at midnight. The spirit of Glory and of God never sits nearer, nor rests longer upon any 1 Pet. 4▪ 14 then upon God's servants under their greatest sufferings. 6. Sometimes again after some singular act of a well tried obedience. After that high acting of Abraham's faith and obedience in a ready offering of his son, God could not hold, but speaks expressly, By Gen. 22. 16, 17 myself I have sworn, that in blessing I will bless thee. The like to Jacob after he had sanctified his whole family, and had taken his Gen. 35. 9, 10, 14, 15 journey to Bethel, the Lord appeared more fully, and renewed the former promise and covenant with him. 7. But if at none of these forenamed times, then usually a while before they taste ●f death. The Sun breaks out when near ●●tting, and gives the sign of the fair day Deut. 34. 1, 5 ●f eternity following. Moses saw not Canaan but at Nebo, there saw and died. Ste●●en saw heaven open at his death, never before; before he had been full of faith, now of Assurance; before of Courage, now of Comfort; he had believed in Christ before, ●ow he beholds him; he was a precious Saint before, now like an Angel full of glory, from a lower heaven here on earth he ascends to a higher, from vision, he goes ●o fruition. jesus Christ gave up the Ghost ●n peace after that bloody agony in the garden, his bloody death on the Cross, and after that double horror of darkness. The Sun withdrawing his natural, and the Father his divine ●ight from his spirit, yet all ended well. 8. But if not then, nor before, then certainly immediately upon the dissolution, then is this and all the other promises (not fulfilled in life) perfectly accomplished, therefore Heb. 11. 13 Heb. 6. 12 we are said here on earth to embrace the promises, there to inherit them. Here the child of God is heir of the promises, yet (as the great heir during minority) hath but a small part not the whole of his inheritance till he come to full age. Death is the time to us when we come to that state. There are many promises never actually and wholly fulfiled till death, then are they all to the full. Manyare called [Blessed● here, that are only so by virtue of a promis● to be fulfilled then. Blessed are the poor i● spirit, Blessed such as mourn, as hunger an● thirst after righteousness. They have th● promise now, they have the blessedness, an● the fruition of the promise then. Now ju● ad rem, then jus in re. 9 Lastly, after all, and above all, at th● day of judgement. There shall be a rising o● the Sun, and a rising of the Saints: when thi● Bridegroom shall put on his glorious robe attended with ten thousands of his Saints the children of the Bride-chamber, and shall be admired in all those that believe; he with 2 Thes. 1. 10 Revel. 7 his Crown on his head, they with thei● Palms in their hands. Then shall be sai● to all that fear his name, arise, and stand up from the dead, and Christ shall give thee light; ●oh. 5. 14 Isaiah 60. 1 arise and shine, for thy light is come▪ The● shall all fear cease, tears be wiped away death and fin be swallowed up in victory darkness and shadows fly away. And th● Lamb shall be the Sun, this Sun shining i● his strength never more to set to all eternity▪ Then shall the Sun be ashamed, and the Moon confounded, when the Lord of Host● shall reign in Mount Zion, and in the New Isaiah 24. 23 Jerusalem, and before his Ancients gloriously. 1. This shows that the people of God Use 1. may expect and meet with sad times here both for themselves, and for the Church. They who can say, are there any comforts like my comforts? Shall there be any joys like my joys? May at present say, Behold and see if there be any sorrows like my sorrows? I am he who hath seen affliction by the rod of Lam. 1. 12 Lam 3. 1, 2 his wrath. He hath led me and brought me into darkness and not into light. In the world tribulation is the Church's legacy, and first payment; In Christ peace their last portion, and full payment. 2. Yet may the godly expect glorious times also (many are apt to dream of such on earth, but that will not be till Christ's kingdom John 18. 36 is of this world, which never was yet.) There are two glorious times the godly may expect. 1. On earth for their souls, when this glorious promise is fulfilled, when this Sun of righteousness hath risen on them with healing in his wings. This is the most glorious day to be expected on earth. All Solomon's glory nothing to this. The approach of God in those signal manifestations of his presence to Num. 16. 19 & 42 Rom. 9 4 Isaael, is oft called the glory of the Lord, and the greatest glory of his people. 2. The other is in heaven; There are glorious times to be expected indeed, when the Sun shall no more give light by day, nor the Moon by night, but the Lord shall be thy Isai. 60. 19, 20 everlasting light, and thy God thy glory. These are the only glorious times the Scripture speaks of. Therefore let the overbusy and earthy Disciple take off his thoughts from Kingdoms, and the right-hand, and Mat. 21. 21, 22 lefthand in seats of glory. And think again of the old Cup and Baptism of Christ, wherein the true professor may sooner become an Anabaptist than he is aware. Baptised, not baptismo flaminis, but sanguinis, not flaminis, but flammae, not with the holy Ghost, but with fire. 3. This informs us that the foundation of all true peace and comfort is laid in Grace. The Sun of righteousness only riseth on them that fear his Name, Grace and Peace always joined, but Grace leads the way; unsound Peace may go before or without Grace, true Peace never without, never before Grace. The same seed brings forth the straw and corn too; the husk, chaff and kernel grow together, but are oft parted, not to their loss. The corn is beaten out of the straw by threshing, the kernel from the chaff by winnowing, yet are both the purer and more fit for use; Grace and Peace grow both upon one stalk, yet may Grace be beaten out of Peace and remain pure. 4. What a mighty difference is there between the godly and the wicked, both in their Sorrows and Comforts? Their Rock is not alike. 1. In sorrow there ariseth to the godly light in darkness, non dantur purae tenebrae Psalm 112. 4 to him; in the wilderness he hath in darkest night a Pillar of fire; when his wine is gone, Christ can turn his water into better wine; when he is distressed he is not deserted, when 2 Cor. 4. 8 & 6. 10 perplexed not in despair; as sorrowing but then most rejoicing; when having nothing, then possessing all things, but the wicked in their distress are forsaken of God as Saul was. They run up and down fretting, fuming, cursing God and King, and all that come in their way, and when they look down on the earth, behold nothing but trouble and darkness, and dimness of anguish, and after all Isaiah 8. 21, 22 they are driven into darkness. He oft runs mad Deut. 28. 34 for the sight of his eye, which he must, but cannot see, and for the sorrow of heart, which he cannot, yet must endure. Job falls down, and blesseth, Saul falls down, and despaireth; Job 1. 20 Job falls, and lights on his knees, and takes no hurt; Saul falls, and the first that 1 Sam. 28. 20 comes to ground was his head, and he is tataken up dead. 2. In their comforts there is a great difference. How oft is the candle of the wicked put out, and how oft cometh their destruction upon them? God distributeth sorrows in his Job 21. 17 anger, saith Job. And again, A dreadful Job 15. 21 sound is in his ears. In prosperity the destroyer shall come upon him. The wickeds joy is as a fire of thorns, or the children's squibs which crack, smoke, burst and die; or as the flash of lightning vanisheth as it shines, but after it a terrible thunderclap; or at best as the candle, which if it be not suddenly blown out, is shortly burnt out. The godly man's comfort is as the Sun, whose light no winds can blow, no time can burn out; Job 31▪ 28 they look not upon your sun when it shineth, They have a light as Paul had shining about them, passing the brightness of the Sun; he cares not to eat of your dainties, having Jo●. 4, 32 meat to eat the world knows not of. 1. His Sun is a rising, morning, lightincreasing Sun; yours an Evening, setting Sun. 2. His Sun once risen, sets no more, but shineth more and more to that perfect day of eternity; yours once set, shall never rise more, but as Sodom's Sun entered into a thick cloud, as soon as risen, and set in fire and brimstone. 3. The godly's Sun brings with it righteousness. The Joy of the Lord is the strength Isaiah 64. 5 of their graces, they rejoice and work righteousness; their comforts are chaste, pure and, heart-purifying. The joy of the hypocrite, is a polluting and infective joy; they are bad at all times, worse in their merry fit. Then they say to God, depart from us. They eat Job 21. 14 and drink, and curse God in their hearts. They feast and revel, and praise no other God, but the Gods of gold, and silver, and wine, and wantonness, till the hand-writing on the wall make them leave off with horror. 4. The godly's comforts bring healing with them, make the soul more sound, expel vanity, increase humility, advance piety, sti● up to pray, beget praises, exalt God. But the delights of the wicked taints the soul, engender Diseases, as the sultry heat and moisture in Summer is the mother of putrefaction. 5 The godlies comforts are healing again, bringing the soul into perfect good constitution, removing the Disease. The wickeds increase and strengthen the Diseases; his is as water in a Fever, which only cools as it goes, but feeds the Fever. The godly man's as wine to one in a languishing condition, which cheers the heart, and begets good spirits. 6 The comforts of the godly make them grow (they never shoot higher, and thrive better, then when under or after those comforts.) They then are fat and flourishing, Psalm 92. 14 grow up as fatted Calves in the Stall, that come on apace when well kept, are lively, lightsome, and will be the sooner fit for the plough or pale. But the comforts of the wicked make them grow as wild Bulls of Basan, more brutish, hurtful, unruly. They grow fat as the heifer Jerem. 50. 11 at grass, and bellow as bulls that are shortly to be brought to the slaughter. 5 The last Use is, to encourage the people of God in their present sadness. Let them expect, pray, wait, hope, and importune God to fulfil this Promise, Shall they Jeremiah 8. 4 fall and not arise? Shall he turn away, and not return? Hath God cast away his people? No, God forbid, saith the Apostle. Is the Romans 11. ● Sun so set as to rise no more, hath not the longest night his morning following? Sat not still then in despondency. as the Egyptians under their judgement of darkness, as men without hope, but up and pray as Jacob, till break of day. Urge this Promise; come in when thou art full of fears, as Bathsheba to David, Did not my Lord promise me so and so, and is it thy mind I should be disappointed? Produce this Scripture, Are 1 Kings 1. 17, 18 not these thy own words; thy hand writing? whose Staff and Bracelet is this? Or as David when he had that Promise, 2 Sam. 7. he came before God, and fell to Prayer, his heart was full, his faith was strengthenned, his Joy increased, he was full of great expectations, Therefore hath thy servant found 2 Sam. 7. 25, 26, 27 in his heart to pray this prayer unto thee, because thou hast revealed so much in the ear of thy servant. So say thou to God, Lord, remember Psalm 119 thy Word unto thy servant, wherein thou hast caused me to trust. Say, Lord, I should never open my mouth to ask, if thou hadst not promised; nor could I once hope if thou hadst not power; not should I desire, if it were not for thy glory; nor could I mourn for it, if I did not fear thy Name. Lord, look on thy Promise, my need, thy glory, and my fear. Chase away shadows, Come my Beloved, and be like the Roe, o● like the Hart on the Mountains of Spices▪ The Roe can leap over the mountains, though I cannot get over Molehills; either make Psalm 18. 33 my feet like Hinds feet, and set me upon my high places, or be thou as the Roe. Lord Jesus, thou couldst come to Peter, and canst Matthew 14. 25 to me walking upon the waters; I would to thee, but cannot; stretch out thy hand of Love, when I cannot stretch out the hand Faith: Lord save me, I perish. I cannot apprehend thee, do thou comprehend me. The child's little arms cannot clasp about the Father, yet the fathers do embrace his child's nevertheless. Oh Lord, I am shut up, I cannot come forth Psalm 88 8 to thee, when doors are shut, but thou couldst come in to thy Disciples when all doors were John 20 shut. Thou hast wings and canst come swiftly, Psalm 70 make no tarrying, O my God. The Chariots of the Sun tarry not beyond the appointed hour, Lord, Why are the wheels of thy Chariot so slow? If it be paved with Cant. 3. 10 Love, O that it were driven or drawn by Love, that it might move more swiftly. The Sun with his wings flies not only over Rocks and Mountains, but over Seas and Lands Psalm 10. 1 without any labour. Why art thou so far Jeremiah 14. 8 off, O Lord, and standest as a mighty man astonished, that cannot save? Lord, why is light given▪ to him that is in Job 3. 10 misery, if I may not see the light of thy countenance to lessen my misery? Why do I behold the Sun, if I may not behold the Sun of Righteousness? How sad is it to see day abroad, and night within, all light on earth all dark in Heaven! Take away thy Sun rather than thy favour, my life rather than thy light, which is better Psalm 63▪ 3 2 Samuel 14 than life. If I may not see the King's face, any Exile had been better. If I may not have Exodus 33. thy presence, any wilderness is good enough to mourn in. Thou hast stricken me down, as thou didst Acts 9 Saul, and I am stricken blind; but wilt thou neither thyself tell me what thou wouldst have me do, nor send some Ananias to me? Romans 11. 33 Thou hast shut me up in unbelief, but wilt not thou open the Prison doors, that the ransomed of the Lord may come forth with Isaiah 35. 10 joy on his head, that his sighing and mourning may flee away? It was said of the worst of Tyrants, it can never be said of the God of Mercies, This is he that openeth not the house of his prisoners. Isaiah 14. 17 Use those means forementioned, attend on preaching, prayer, reading, meditations, godly society, holy conference, on Sabbaths, Sacrament days. Look on thy fleece after thou hast prayed, draw up thy net after thou hast cast it forth, stir up Faith, resign thyself, only limit not the Holy One for time, way, means, and manner. The patient expectation of the poor Psalm 9 18 shall not perish for ever, nor shall the long tarrying of God be prolonged for ever. Though God never giveth grace for the use of the means, he usually giveth it in the use of Means. CHAP. XXII. Of Christ his healing the soul. Diseases of his People. WIth healing under his wings.] Doct. Christ the Sun of Righteousness will not only rise with light to dispel darkness, but with healing to remove all the Spiritual Diseases of such as fear God. He is the great Physician of bodies as well as souls. He healed all manner of sickness, Matth. 4. 23 & 8. 16. and every Disease among the people. But this is to be understood of Spiritual Diseases. Christ is not a Natural, but Spiritual Sun; hath not Natural, but Spiritual wings, and gives Spiritual health. The people of God are as so many impotent persons lying by the pools side, attending on his Ordinances, in expectation of cure from Christ. And as the Diseases of the body are many, not easily numbered, so those of the soul more. One is troubled, as Peter's mother in Law Mark ●. 30▪ 3. 1 with a Fever, sometimes very cold, sometimes a hot fit, no even Temper. Another hath a withered hand, can by no means stretch it out to act Faith; a third hath an universal Palsy, which takes away the use of Mark 2. 4 all his limbs, can do nothing to help himself, but must be born on other men's shoulders, and saved by the communion of Saints; another hath by some great fall broken his bones, as David, and he lies by it, full of Psalm 51 aches and complaints; another hath a sore Luke 4. 18 rupture in his heart which much torments him; another a bloody issue of foul corruption continually running; another sore wounded Luke 10. 30 by falling among Cutters and Robbers; another Luke 13. 11 hath a spirit of infirmity, which bows him down to the ground, cannot lift up himself to a heavenly conversation; another complains of barrenness, Ordinances have 2 Kings 2 no fruitful efficacy as to him, but like the unsavoury waters: another of bitterness, Exodus 15. 23 Ordinances seeming to be the savour of death to death (he fears) and causing to miscarry, as those waters, 2 Kings 2. 19 Another sadly complains of an universal Cachexia, Atrophy, and dislike, a sad Disease called, Non proficiency, which is next door to a Consumption; of such the Text speaks, they shall be healed, and then grow as the fatted Calves. Another again complains he is not one Disease, but all Diseases, Isaiah 1. 6 from the crown of the head to the sole of the foot wounds, blains, putryfied sores. Totum pro corpore vulnus. Christ will undertake the cure of all. Many other Diseases there are incident to several Christians: But five especially all the people of God are afflicted with. 1 They all alike partake of that morbus Ezekiel 16 naturae, described by the Prophet, borne children of wrath, brought into the world naked, crying, defiled, lying in their blood, unable to help themselves, uncapable of help from creatures; these doth Christ pity to see them dying, and saith Live, washeth, anointeth, feedeth, closeth, nurseth, adorneth, at last glorifieth them. 2. Besides this, all the godly are born blind, as he John 9 and are not like many other Leonum & canum catuli, etc. creatures whose young see not for certain days, but after that nature gives them sight; but we should never see, if Christ did not anoint our eyes with his eyesalve. 3. After these two are cured, all the Elect complain yet of another, the most dangerous disease in the world, whereof Pharaoh 1 Sam. 25. 37. died without remedy, and Nabal without sense; the Stone, the Stone of the heart, Ezek. 36. 26 worse than that in the reins or bladder, which Nature may expel, or Art may cure, but nothing will help here but manus Christi: He quite taketh away the stone, and filleth it up with flesh. 4 After he is cured of this, every child of God comes to be stricken and sick of the Plague (the worst Disease) in his heart (the worst place) a painful, killing, tormenting Disease, and besides infectious. The Plague infects the breath, sweat, urine, cup, dish, so this plague of heart infects all our duties, acts, desires, Sacramental Cup and Bread; Every one hath his plague in his heart, and 1 Kings 8. 38 when he seeth it, and cryeth ●ut to Christ, he will cure it; This all the Godly have, but it ripens, breaks, runs, and none die of it. The wicked have taken the like Infection, but it lies within them, never breaks to put them to that pain, but they irrecoverably die of it. 5 After this, there is another Disease still. whereto all the godly are subject, the Falling sickness, ever since that fowl fall of our Parents. As Mephibosheth and his nurse 2 Sam. 4. 4 fell together, and he lame all his life after. We are subject to Relapses, and new fits of Stone and of the Plague, subject to many stops, haltings, and that which the Je●▪ ●. 12, 14. 22 Hosea 14▪ 4 Prophet's c●l backslidings. These will Christ heal as well as the former. These are the five ordinary Diseases of the Godly, but there are three extraordinary, which befall some, not all; but Christ will cure them too. 1. To be sick of love. A sad Disease, (if Cant. 5▪ 6 I may call it a Disease) but a safe Disease: Morbus vitalis, as Luther called a Godly Ministers sickness. Many complain of it, none die of it. There be two sicknesses that are the sicknesses only of Saints. 1. To be sick of love to Christ. This is no Disease, but the best Constitution. 2 To be sick of sin, that sin revives, and Rom. 7. 9 Eccles. 7. 26 we die. Such are safe, they shall find Gods savour sweeter than life, who find sin to them more bitter than death. But there are two Diseases opposite to these which are killing. 1 To be Love sick to the Creature; Amnons' 2 Sam. 13 sickness cost him his life; love of the Romans 8. 6 world (earth's sickness) kills all, to be carnal minded is death. 1 John 2, 15 2 To be sin sick, not of it, but for it, Ahabs, Amnons', Absaloms', haman's Disease. This Hell's sickness, and the Damned have no worse. 2. There is a worse Disease than that former; to be Serpent stung, Satan-bitten, Hellbeaten, buffeted, wounded with fiery darts, terrified with Satan's rage and fowl accusations: and more, vexed with his ugly and odious representations, accusing God to us, as he did to our Parents, soliciting to the perpetrating of most abhorred acts, as he did our Saviour, injecting blasphemous thoughts, disputing and arguing thee into distrust, darkness, disuse of means, solitariness, despondency, yea, to utter despair. Yet thus are the Israel of God stung Numbere 2● 1 John 3. 8 Acts 10. 38 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ▪ ●. wholly subjugated, subdued, and under the power of the 〈◊〉. P. 8●. 7, 14▪ 16 with fiery Serpents, and by the brazen Serpent cured. Christ came to dissolve the works of Satan, and healeth those who were oppressed by the devil. 3 A worse Disease than both those, is to be stricken of God, to have his face hid from us, and his indigration lying on the soul; his fierce wrath going over us, and his terrors cutting us off. How doth the soul take on when this scorching Sun, and scalding East wind beats upon the naked soul? The poison of these arrows drink up the spirits. Who Job 6 Ps. 90. 11 knoweth the terror of the Lord, or the Power of his wrath? None can express it, not the Damned that feel it: none can conceive it; but they who have lain under it. The rack Stone, Gout, Child birth pains nothing to this. The wounded spirit who can bear? job Prov. 18 14 Job 6. 2, 3, 4 speaking of this, said, if his grief were weighed and put in the balances, it would be heavier than the sands of the Sea, therefore my words are swallowed up, (he had not words to express it) for the arrows of the Almighty are within me, the poison whereof drinketh up my spirit. The terrors of God set themselves in array against me. job had patience to bear much, Job had not patience enough to bear this, but cried out. This is the saddest Disease in the world, and is next door to hell, yet Christ recovereth these also. These three last Diseases are Opprobria Medicorum, & Theologorum, not opprobria Christi. Christ giveth ease, and cureth all these. Reas. 1. He is the great Physician, whose curing virtue and Office is set out by those many Resemblances in Scripture. 1. He is Numbers 21 the Brazen Serpent, upon which they that were stung with fiery Serpents were to look, and were cured. 2. He the Samaritan, who Luk. 10 30, 31 when the Priest (Aaron with all his Sacrfices,) and the Levite (Moses with all Legal works of Righteousness) passed by and looked upon, unable to help, took pity on the wounded Traveller, bound up his wounds, and took care for his cure, and undertaketh to defray all charges. 3. He Rev. 22. 2 the Tree of Life, whose fruit is our meat to feed to everlasting life, whose leaves our Medicine to prevent everlasting death. 4. He the good Shepherd, who taketh care of the whole flock of God, Seeking that which Ezek 34 16 was lost, bringing again that which was driven away, binding up that which was broken, and strengthening that which was sick. And lastly, He the Sun (Phoebus) God of Physic: The Sun is the universal Physician of the inferior world, curing the Diseases and Distempers of the year, earth, air, and creatures. The vernal Sun drieth up the Airy Distillations, driveth away the earth's cold, healeth barrenness, cureth Rheums, Catarrhs, Agues, and other cold diseases in man's body. How many graves doth our Autumn Sun departing, dig? And how many new births and resurrections doth the March and May Sun produce? Christ is this Sun to the soul. Reas. 2. The Commission given him by the Father upon this his undertaking enableth and obligeth him to this Charge. The Commission was sealed, Isa. 61. 1, 2. and openly read, Luke 4. 18. The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he hath anointed me to preach the Gospel to the poor, to heal the broken hearted, to preach deliverance to the Captives, and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty them that are bruised. As therefore the Disciples substituted and subcommissioned by him to do some part of this work Ministerially, were enabled and assisted to heal all Diseases, cleanse Lepers, raise dead, cast Mark 6, 13 out Devils; much more Christ who received the Original commission from the hands of his Father. Reas. 3. His own disposition inclines him, as much as his Office or Commission betrusts him: He is the compassionate Samaritan; the merciful High Priest. How often is it said in the Gospel? He was moved with compassion and healed the sick. He took our sicknesses, and bore our infirmities: Bore Matth. 8. 17 them in his body by his Passion, bore them in his soul by compassion. Bajulavit, Bore them as a Porter the burden which was too heavy for us to bear. Christ is in his Office and Element when among languishing souls; where should the Physician be, but among the sick? Christ's Church is the Pool, the proper Receptacle and Rendezvous of impotent persons. Christ's Church is an Hospital, Nosocomion, the spital or College for the Diseased. Moses Law excluded the Leprous 2 Kings 5 2 Chro. 26. ●0. out of the Camp; Gehazi went out from Elisha's presence; Uzziah was driven out of the Temple when the Leprosy appeared: but Christ bringeth them into the Camp into the Church. David banished the blind 2 Sam. 5. 8 and lame out of his City; Christ sendeth for the lame, blind, and halt, and setteth them Luke 14▪ ●● at his table. Quest. What doth this healing imply? Resp. 1. That Christ will ease the grief, heal the sore, as Physicians or Chiturgians do in bodily Diseases. 2. Purge out the peccant humours, and draw out the corruption. 3 When one is healed, the decumbent is revived, cheered, raised up; so those whom Christ doth heal shall say now, I am Isaiah 33. 24 not sick, the Lord hath forgiven my iniquity. 4 When one is healed, he hath strength in the weak part, and use of the disabled part; he can labour, travel, &c, David after his broken bones were set again, could pray, praise God, believe, resist sin, perform any Duty, as well as ever he could in all his life. 5 Then the danger of death is over; no danger to them that fear his name; Christ hath undertaken your cure, and yet never Patient died under his hand. 6 When one is healed, he is restored to his perfect health to be as well as ever he was; yea, some are made more healthful by Physic then ever they were before. Christ, whom he healeth, maketh to be as well as before they fell ill; yes, in as good condition (for safety) as Adam before his fall; and in a better (for Glory) then could have been if Adam had not sinned. Adam's sin cast us out of Paradise; Christ lets us into Heaven. Adam's sin drove him from the Typical, Christ hath brought us to the Celestial tree of Life. Therefore this Sanitas is vera salus, Health and Salvation, or saving health. And Christ is not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. And as the Prophet joined them in his Prayer, so Christ in his Promise, Heal me, and I shall be healed; Jer. 17. 14 save me, and I shall be saved. Qu. 2. What are the means Christ useth in this healing? Answ. Four especially. 1 His Word. He sendeth his word and Psalm 107. 20. healeth them. He sends it, and the Minister is he that brings it. I create the fruit of the Isaiah 57 20 lips peace, and I will heal him. The waters issuing out of the Sanctuary are healing waters, Ezek. 47. 9 and the Sabbath day was oft the day of Cures. The good word of a man makes the Luk. 13. Joh. 5 Proverb 12. 25 bones fat, and cheers a drooping spirit: How forcible is the good Word of God then! 2. His blood: By his stripes are we healed, every blow given Christ was a blow to Isaiah 53 1 Peter 2. 24 our sin, every wound of Christ was health to our souls. The blood of Christ, who through Hebrews 9 14 the eternal Spirit offered himself to God, is only that which can ease the troubled, purge the defiled, and heal the wounded conscience. Christ's spittle could cure the blind, his touch Mark 8. 23 open the ears and mouth of the dumb and deaf, his word could send home health to Mark 7. 33 Matth. 8. 13 9 20 the Centurion's servant, his very garment stop an Issue of blood, but only a plaster of his blood can heal a broken heart, purge out old festered sores, and allay the Inflammations of the soul. This is present remedy against the venomous stings of Satan's rage, and the poisoned Arrows of God's wrath. It is not thy tears, if thou shouldest weep out thine eyes, nor thy blood, if thou couldst bleed out thy heart, can heal thee: but this blood perfectly cleanseth us from all sin, (all without exception.) It is Sovereign against 1 John 1 7 all sores, sins, blasphemies, fear, despair itself. If Ahab and Saul, yea, if Cain and Judas had gone to this blood, they had been saved. He whose sins are as Scarlet, shall become (being washed in this fountain) as white as Snow. He that hath a bloody Issue of bloody crying Crimes (david's bloody Issue or Manassehs) the blackest Malefactor; he that hath a bloodyflux of Oaths or Blasphemies, may be healed and saved, (Paul's bloodyflux of Blasphemy and Persecution.) Many Diseases are Opprobria Medici, none Christi. Many sinners are dangerously sick, none can be desperately that he takes in hand The Devil's case is desperate, man's not There is an impossibility they should be saved, but a possibility of every man's (even the vilest sinner) but a certainty of the Salvation of all that fear his name. 3 The Spirit of Christ. This is the oil the Samaritan applied to the wounded man, the former was the wine. Christ with his blood washeth the sore, then with his Spirit softeneth, suppleth, closeth the wound. Justification and Sanctification are of an even length: to whom one, to him both belong, That is Purgative, this Restorative; that expels old ill humours, this breedeth new spirits. 4 His love and favour. In his favour is Psalm 30. 5 life, health, Salvation. This is Christ's extreme unction which he useth; after this the soul is ready and willing to depart. The lovesick soul is only curable by the love of Christ shed abroad into the heart. This healing is under the wings of Christ: a Metaphor taken from birds, who cherish their young under their wings. It is the nearer approaches and warmer embraces of Christ that are our health. David calls The help of God's countenance, Psal. 42. 5. the health of his own countenance▪ ver. 9 The sick child is half cured by lying in his Mother's bed and bosom. As one whom his mother comforteth, so will I comfort Isaiah 66. 13 thee, and thou shalt be comforted, saith the Lord to his afflicted people. Christ is said to have wings for four Reasons. 1. The wings are to cover. The Cherubims with their wings covered their bodies. Christ's are covering (sin covering) wings. 2 The dams wings with their warmth recover the drooping young. Christ's are sin-covering, but soul-recovering wings. 3 The wings are used to secure the young. The Eagle carries her young upon her wings, she fears nothing above, but only from Deut. 32. 1● below, and it must pierce her first, if hurt her young. The hen hideth her chickens under her wings, nothing from below hurts them, but the Kites above. How safe are Matth. 23. 37 the Godly whom Christ doth secure both ways? beareth them on his wings, as the Eagle; hideth them under his wings as the Hen; that whether Satan above strike at the chicken, or the world below shoot at the young Eagle, both are safe; and Christ must be first wounded ere we are hurt. 4. The wings are given to hasten the flight, and speed the way. Christ is said to have wings, to show when he comes how speedily he will come, and will not tarry; therefore is he for strength called a Giant; he traveleth in his strength, mighty to save: Isaiah 63. 1 Canticles 8 for his expedition likened to the Roe, that is the swiftest Creature of foot; and yet for more swiftness, to the winged fowl whose motion is swifter than the Roes: He is said to ride upon the Horses and Chariots of Salvation; Hab. 3. 8 yea, for more swiftness yet, he is said to ride upon Cherubims, or the wings Psalm 18 Luke 17. 24 of the wind; yet swifter his pace is as the lightning. Quest. But there is a sad and serious Question to be answered If Christ have promised to come with healing, how is it that many fearing God remain uncured? Ans. 1. It may be they are not healed, and then it is their sin. 2. It may be they are cured, and then it is their Error. 1. It may be they are not cured, and then it is their sin. 1 They go not to this Physician. They go from Doctor to Doctor, and from Duty to Duty, as she that spent all on Physicians, Mark 5. 26 and came to Christ in the last place. These are not better, but worse by Duties. The Silkworm spends the first part of her life in eating and sleeping; the latter in working; and dies in working out of her own bowels, Our last is not better than our first, if we are changed only from an idle to an operative (not believing) life, and from neglect of Duties go no further then to a performing and resting in Duties. 2 They go not to this Physician that they John 5. 40 may have life; but (may be) think they may wear it out, by strength of nature, or Psalm 32 power of Grace. David thought once to get his peace, by holding his peace and keeping silence, but it would not be. And a godly soul sometimes gives over by too much contentedness and despondency, and saith, Woe is me for my hurt, my wound is Ser. 10. 19 grievous; but I said, Truly this is a grief▪ and I must bear it: Must bear it! as if no remedy but patience. But is there no Balm in Gilead for a wounded soul? is there no Physician there with healing in his Jer. 8. 2●. wings? 3 They do not believe Christ able, ready, self-sufficient; therefore Christ did not cure Matth. 13. 5● some because of unbelief. 4. They think to lick themselves whole by duties and endeavours. They repent, mourn, watch, fast afflict themselves mingling Christ's blood with their own. It is as if a person infected with the Pestilence should think to heal himself by his spittle, breath, urine, licking his sores. All these are infected; it must be somewhat without Luke 7. 38 him. Our tears of love may wash Christ's feet, not our own though tears of greatest Repentance; only Christ's water washed the Disciples feet, and his blood all our hearts. We are as Naaman * 2 Kin. 5. Magis honorificum est habere aliquid ex merito quam ex donatione sola. Bellarm. Nobiliu● est aliquid habere ● se, & per se, quam ab alio & per alium. Durand. Ab●it ut justi vitam aeternam ut pauper eleemosynam expectarent; multo namque gloriosius est, ipsos quasi victores & triumphatores eam possider●●anquam palmam suis sudoribus debitam. Tapper. , who would not receive health upon so easy terms, Wash and be clean; he could not believe it: He would have undergone it rather if the Prophet had required some harder service. Herein we are too much of affinity with that Popish Doctrine, who are not willing to give the whole glory of our Salvation to Christ and free Grace, but think it too much for Christ to give all, and too little for them to take all of grace, free gift, without any consideration of congruity, if not condignity of merit. 5. Or they neglect the rules and Physic prescribed, as too strong, too stirring, and too much weakening nature. Psal. 32. 3. David laid by Confession, Humiliation, Mortification, and such strong purging Physic, as not necessary for a person once justified. He thought a while, that once come to faith, and past repentance, (a justified person might after so fowl acts as comfortably apply the Promise, as confidently make prayers, as if he had never sinned) What need pardon be asked for a person once beloved? But he was taught another lesson ere he regained true peace. Nathan was sent to lance and cut such a ripe Impostume, and to apply sharp Corrosives to take down such proud flesh. The Apostle tells us in such a case, there must be mortifying Physic taken; we Colossians 3. 5 must kill sin, or it, will kill us: Mortify your earthly members; mortify the deeds of the body, and live. There must be crucifying Galatians 5. 24 the flesh: now how much a do is there to get sin to the Cross! There must be cutting off of a rotten member, and how painful that! Answ. 2. They are cured, and it is their mistake to think they are not. For, 1 They expect a perfect cure, but that is not here. Christ hath two Hospitals, one in heaven of such as are perfectly cured; another in earth for such as are under cure. 2 One may be said to be healed, who is at ease to what he was, and when the danger of death is over, although he be not yet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, every whit whole. Israel was John 7. 23 delivered when by Moses brought out of Egypt, although not yet settled in Canaan. Thy case is good to such as lie still in their blood, dead in trespasses and sins. The blind man was much better than before, when upon the first touch of Christ he saw men as trees walking; the second touch of Christ Mark 8. 22, 23 made him see clearly. The first touch of Christ gives a dim sight of faith; the second touch at death, gives the clear sight of vision. 3 He is in a way of cure who complain more of his sickness and pains, which he felt less when he was in more danger. When the Plague sores break and run, it is more painful and noisome then in those who die of it. What doth thy mourning for sin, and resisting of it imply, but thou art alive from Romans 6. 13 the dead. God seeth it meet to keep us humble; therefore after greatest favours some Messenger of Satan, thorn in the flesh, or stroke in the hollow of the thigh, to make us go halting and humbly to the grave. God to prevent further danger, sees it good to leave an Issue open (of godly sorrow) to carry away those humours which otherwise were more dangerous. There are three Fountains you read of in Scripture; these do not all run together; when one is open, another is shut. 1 The Fountain of sin; like her 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a bloody fountain; while this runs the Mark 5. 29 other are shut. 2 The Fountain of godly sorrow. When the hear● is a Spring, and the eyes Conduits as Mary M●gd●lens was, then is the former fountain dried up. 3 The fountain of Grace opened for Zachary 13. 1 sin, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a Fountain of blood, which is shut up and sealed to such as live in sin, but opened to such as have the fountain of godly sorrow opened in them. In that day there shall be opened to the house of David a fountain for sin and for uncleanness. Jesus Christ is not one benefit, but many. Applic. Here are four promised, 1. He is a Sun, 2. of Righteousness, 3. with Healing, 4. with Growth. He is made of God, Wisdom, justification, ● Cor. 1. 30 Sanctification, Redemption, saith the Apostle; and here the same. 1. The Sun, here Wisdom. 2. Of Righteousness, there Justification. 3. Healing, there Sanctification. 4. Growth, there Redemption. He is All in All (as I said before) who is best resembled by those rare fruits, the Cocos and the Melt, whereof that divine Duke Bartas thus in English. — The Cocos f●r richer Wonders yields The third day of the first week Then all our groves, meads, orchards; gardens, fields. What? wouldst thou drink? the wounded leavs drop wine, Lackest thou fine linen? dress the tender rind; Dress it like flax, spin it, and wove it well, It shall thy Cambric and thy Lawn excel. Longest thou for butter? bite the poulpy part, And never better came to any Mart. Needest thou oil? then boult it too and fro, And passing oil it soon becometh so. Or vinegar to whet thine appetite? Then Sun it well, and it will sharply bite. Or want'st thou Sugar? steep the same astounded, And sweeter sugar is not to be found. 'Tis what you will, or will be what you would; Should Midas touched (I think) it would be gold And in another place as much of the Melt, or as others call it, the Metle-tree. There mounts the Melt which servs in Mexico Du Bartas Eden For weapon, wood, needle and thread (to ●ow) Brick, honey, sugar, sucket, balm and wine, Parchment, perfume, apparel, cord and line; His wood for fire, his harder leaves are fit For thousand uses of invencive wit. Sometimes thereon they grave their holy things Laws, laud's of Idols, and the gifts of Kings: Sometimes conjoined by a cunning hand Upon their roofs for rows of tiles they stand: Sometimes they twine them into equal threads; Small ends makes needles, greater arrow heads. His upper sap the sting of serpent's cures; His new sprung bud a rare Conserve endures; And they extract from liquor of his feet, Sharp vinegar, pure honey, sugar sweet. 2 No man's sin or misery can make his case desperate where Christ is Physician. The Leprosy, dead Palsy, Stone in the heart, Bloody Issue, heart Ruptures, Plague in the heart, the stinging of Serpents, strokes of divine vengeance; or whatsoever else is incurable by men or Angels, Christ doth perfectly cure without difficulty or danger. 3 Oh how then are we bound to God for sending such a Doctor from heaven when man's case was desperate? How much to Christ Jesus who voluntarily undertook such a low Employment, to be master of the society of Cripples, lame, blind, impotent persons? When Charles the Great had persuaded Ayg●●andus, an African King; & ● Mahometan, upon his voluntary promise to become a Chri stian, to receive Baptism, he entertained him at his Court & placed there a company of poor and lame people, at whom the barbarous King wondering, the Emperor told him they were the servants of our Master Jesus Christ; at which he grew offended, and refused to be a Christian, because he saw Christ's servants to be in so mean condition. But it is the glory of Christ to have the greatest respect to such: What a speech is that? Heaven is my Isaiah 66. 1, 2 throne, and earth my footstool, but to this man will I look who is of a contrite spirit and poor. God will leave heaven and earth, to look after a poor distressed soul. As a mother that hath other children whom she leaveth her ma●ds to look after, but one is sickly whom she saith, I'll look to this myself, I'll trust none of you'all, I'll sit up with it, stay by it, I'll not stir from it. So Christ chargeth the Angels to look after other of his Servants, but him that is poor and contrite in heart, saith Christ, I'll look to that poor soul: all you Angels have not skill, nor care, nor compassion enough, I'll not from him, but look to him; and he is well looked to whom Christ looks to. 4. Here is then a singular encouragement for all distressed souls to go to Christ. To whom did he ever say, Thy case is past cure? Whom did he ever cast out, and reject with repulses and denials? And now he is not absent, though invisibly present. His passion he hath put off, but not his compassion. Therefore, wouldst thou be made whole? observe these five Directions. 1 Before all other means used, come to 2 Chron. 16 Mark 5. 26 Christ A●a was never cured because he only used means. The Haemorr●oesse never mended while she used means and came not to Christ. But it must be, 1. A coming with Faith. Matth. 8. 2▪ & 8. 9 The Centurions and the Lepers coming. Lord, if thou wilt thou canst make me clean. 2 With Prayer, importunate Prayer, as that father, who besought Christ for his son, and put Omnipotency upon it, If thou canst Mark 9 22 do any such thing, as ever thou didst help poor Creature, as ever thou wilt, have compassion on us and help us. This was the coming of the Canaanitesse, who when she had begged Matthew 15 and waited for an answer, and at length was called dog or little better, she retorts the term, Lord I am a dog. But as ever kind Master threw crumb to dog, or as ever thou scatteredst the least crumb of mercy to poor unworthy creature, think upon me. Her faith and importunity prevailed. 3 With Repentance. This Mary Luke 7 Luke 23 magdalen's coming; and thus came the penitent Thief at the last hour and was saved; but the impenitent Thief died at the foot of Christ. Impenitency damns while Christ looks on; and is trodden down while it looks on the plenty that itself never tastes of. Were Christ to die a thousand times, he would not save one Impenitent person. 2. Direction. After coming to Christ, then use of means, not before. Then must we go and wash in five waters. 1. In the water of Repentance▪ This was magdalen's wash, and wash seven times in this Jordan (with Naaman;) David washed 2 Kings 5 seven times, making so many Penitential Psalms, upon his Penitential washings, and was cleansed. In this sense, we must be all Anabaptists, yea, Hemerobaptists; God commanded divers Baptisms, or washings, Heb. 9 10. So oft as any touched a dead body, or any thing unclean, he was to wash again; so we, so oft as we are defiled by any dead works (as they are called:) In which Nulli rei natus nisi ad poenitentiam. respect we may say with Tertullian, I am born to daily repentance. 2. In the water of Baptism, a more sacred laver, which we may not despise or neglect; it is a Gospel fountain of Christ's own opening. This our Pool of Siloam, to which all Christ's are sent. Arise, why tar●yest Acts 22. 16 Ephes. 4. 5 thou, and be baptised, and wash away thy sins. This washing is but once; there is one Lord, and one Baptism. 3. In the water of the Word. This is the Churches wash, wherewith Christ hath after Ephes. 5. 26 Ezra 47 Baptism further cleansed his Church. That he may sanctify and cleanse it by the washing of water with the word. The Word is as the water of the Sanctuary, Healing water. Wherewith shall the young man cleanse his way? Psalm 119 9 By thy Word. This is the Churches Holy water. 4. In the Blood of Christ. This the most precious Bath above all the rest; the King's Bath. Herein those sealed Saints had washed their long robes, and made them so white Rev. 7 14 in the Blood of the Lamb. 5. After all these, the last washing is in the Sanctifying water of the Spirit. Christ's Blood fetcheth out the guilt, the Spirit the stain. This the Apostle calls the Laver of Regeneration▪ and Renovation of the Holy Tit. 3. 5. Ghost. Christ Jesus comes with water and blood. This was shadowed ou● in the Ceremonious 1 John 5. 6. cleansing of the Leper▪ where there was the blood of a slain bird applied with another living bird, and running water, Leu. 14. 6 & 51 and the person was pronounced clean. Besides the blood of a dead Saviour, there must be the application of running water, and a living spirit. Therefore beg after all the former washings, another dipping of Psal. 51. the spirit; Lord wash me throughly from mine Iniquities, and cleanse me from my sin. If we be not thus Anabaptized, our first baptism is null as to salvation. Except a man be born of water, and of the spirit, he cannot enter the Kingdom of God. 3. Direction. Then to Duties, (here is their proper place, not before) take up thy bed and walk; expect not Christ to say, thy sins are forgiven, go in peace, be whole. And Matth. 9 6. John 5. 8, 9 that he should carry thy bed after thee, and bear thy yoke. There is some duty required after cure, when strength is given thee, from recovering and assisting grace; grace assisting must be sin resisting grace. Israel was delivered from the Egyptians while they struck not a stroke, God fought for them; they must not expect they should always stand still and see the salvation of God; and that the Canaanites should be overcome without battle; God will fight for them, they must go before the Lord armed, and fight under him. Justification and first conversion is God's work, not ours; Christ fights for us, died for us; we stand still and see that salvation: Sanctification must be carried 2 Cor. 7. 1. Phil. 2. 12. on by our Endeavours also. 4. Direction. Then take heed of relapses. Remember that Item, Behold thou art made whole, sin no more, lest a worse evil come unto thee. Thou mayst sin thyself into a worse Joh 5. 14. condition than before; thou mayest sin away thy peace, pardon, comforts; If thou return again to folly. Great care must be had of taking cold in Physic taking, and of Psal. 85. 8. relapses after a begun recovery. 5. Direction. Then wait after all for the Appearing of Christ. The rising of this Sun, with his nearer approaches; be still fearing his name, and lie at the Pool in use of means. His appearance will make thee whole and grow up, giving both strength and growth. All the Godly wait for the appearing of 1 Cor. 1. 7. 2 Tim. 4. 8. Christ. A twofold appearance thou mayst waitfor: 1. Here for a more full discovery of his favour, and a more sensible manifestation of his presence, which will cheer thy heart, and chase away all former fears and troubles. 2. A perfect manifestation of himself to thee at death, saying, Lord jesus come, Rev. 22. come quickly; this wipes away all tears from the eyes of God's people. CHAP. XXIII. Of the Admirable growth promised to the Saints. ANd ye shall grow up as Calves of the stall.] Observe Christ was compared to one creature, the Christian to another, the gracious heart can read Christ and himself in every creature. When he sees the Sun he thinks on Christ; when the Sun Rising, he thinks of the Rising of Christ in the soul; when the Physician healing, of Christ's healing; when the Bird with her wings cherishing her brood, of Christ's wings; and when he sees the Calves, or other creatures grow, he thinks how sweet a sight it were to see himself grow in grace. This is the contemplative Divinity every spiritual and gracious heart studieth and practiseth. There is a threefold use to be made of the creatures. 1. A natural (which is the lowest) wherein men and beasts, good and bad men share alike. We use the sun, and other creatures for food and Physic. This is a lawful (but the lowest) use we should make of them, and in this we should remember God the Creator, Lord, and Donor of them, and Joel 2 25 Deut. 8 when we have eaten and are full, praise his name: not being like the swine, who gathers up the Acorns, fills his belly, then tumbles in the mire; but as the Chicken, which every sip of water it takes, so oft looks up to heaven. 2. There is a moral use to be made of Prov. 6. 6 them, which wisdom and natural reason extracteth. When a wise man sees the Ant and Bee at work in the Summer, he saith what a shame it is for man to be idle? when he looks on the idle man's back, and sees it covered with r●gs, on the sluggards field, and sees the hedge broken, Thistles growing, Prov. 24 30 he needs no other Lecture against sloth; when he sees the Drunkard's eyes red, face clawed, countenance disfigured, he Items himself and others from the Tavern and Prov. 23. 29, 30, 31 Alehouse. 3. There is a Gracious and Divine use, the Christian makes, when we have our hearts raised to a consideration of God's goodness, and our own duty upon the sight of every creature. And this is one of the chief ways we have besides the word, for the knowing of God. 1. God is described and known Negatively. He is not a creature, the Sun, a Man, an Angel, not mutable, weak, finite, passionate, etc. 2. Comparatively, when I compare him to the creatures, and extract all ●●ose excellencies, that are sparsed ●●ngly in him, and ascribe them all to God, to ●et out his p●rfections; when I consider the glory and power of a King, God is a King and more; when I behold the light of the Sun, God is light and Sun, but more; when the bowels of a Father or Mother; God is a Father but far more, Tam Pius nemo, tam Pater nemo. T●rtul. de penitent. Si ad solis aspectum oculorum a●ies hebescit, hoc idem mentis acies pat●●ur in cogitation omni de Deo; et quanto ad considerandum Deum intenditur, tanto raag is cogitationis suae luce caecatur. Quid enim de eo condignè dicas qui est omni sublimitate sublimior benignitate benignior, bonitate melior, justitia justior, omni clementia clementior? So when in creatures I behold somewhat that minds me of duty, or of grace; the leaven, mustardseed, fisher's net, seed, field, talents, oxen, farm; every thing may teach us somewhat to contemplate God, or self in. It is said of Pythagoras, as I remember, that he brought Philosophy down from heaven: what a far higher Art was that which our Saviour hath taught us, who hath brought up Divinity from the earth. Study this contemplative Divinity in the Book of the creatures. There is a fourth use of the creature which some make, but God never intended, which hath neither Nature, Reason, nor Religion, to defend it, a Superstitious, heathenish, and brutish use. When I see the Sun, or Constellation of Stars, to raise such a conclusion; when the salt is spilt, or a Hare crosseh the way, than there is some ill luck Tertul, de Trin follows. What a beast is man to ask counsel of his staff, as the Prophet saith? This is to idolise or make Deities of the Creature, and to resolve God into an Idol. And it is as great a folly in Christians to ascribe any thing to such contingencies, as for the Egyptians * Porrum & cepe nefas jugulare, a● frangere morsu. of old to worship their Leeks, and their Garden Gods. They shall grow up as † 〈◊〉 saginarii, junius Saginati, Arius Mont● Calus of the stall, or fatted Calves.] O sanctas ge●●es quibus hac nas●nntur in ho●tis numin●. Juven. Doct. All the Godly in whom there is already wrought a work of Grace, shall ere Christ hath done with them, come to a manifest and excellent growth. As the Ca●f.] His growth is great, speedy, sightly, comely in stature, strength, to be more tractable, gentle, to be afterward useful for the plough or pail. Hosea 14. 5, 6, 7. There is a like Promise, I will be as the Dew to Israel, he shall grow as the Lily, and cast forth his roots as Lebanon; his branches shall spread, and his beauty shall be as the Olive tree, and his smell as Lebanon. They that dwell under his shade shall return, they shall revive as the corn, and grow as the vine, the sent thereof shall be as the wine of Lebanon. Here is a notable description of the Christians growth, 1. For the Nature of it; set forth by four comparisons, the Lily, Corn, Vine, Olive, whose growth is great and excellent. 2. The kinds, all kinds, 1. Downward, in roots cast forth, ver. 5. 2. Upward, his branches spread, ver. 6. 3 In beauty, as the Olive. 4. In smell, as Lebanon. 5. In taste as the wine of Lebanon. 3. The order of this growth (the same that in Malachi) I will heal their back-slidings first, ver. 4. then growth. 4 The means of all this, I will be as the Dew, ver. 5, or as the Sun here. There is a threefold growth, or three remarkable growing times to the Christian; two of which are manifest and sensible to all, the third is to some less perceptible. 1 The first growth is at his conversion, which is a strange and supernatural growth, a growth per saltum, a translation from darkness to light, from death to life, from a stone to flesh, from a thorn to a firtree, a briar to a vine, or a branch of a wild Olive to a grafted bough in a right Olive. This is the greatest change in the world, far greater than that from Grace to Glory at death. Grace and Glory differ but gradually, as the morning light and noon day. But Nature and Grace do toto Coelo differre, as much as light and darkness. 2 The other sensible growth is at death▪ when from an imperfect he grows to a perfect Saint; from a militant to a triumphant. This is a mighty shoot and growth per saltum, than the feeble shall be as David; ye● Zachar● 12. 8 as an Angel, who in one moment was creat● and made perfect in Grace and Glory. There was not one feeble person among all the Tribes Psalm 105. 37 of Israel when they came out of Egypt; there was while dwelling there: So there shall be no feeble Saint go to Heaven, but they shall be perfect when carried hence by the Angels of God, though they complain of feebleness here. There shall not be thence Isaiah 65. 20 an infant of days, nor an old man that hath not filled his days, for the child shall die an hundred years old. As there is in all dying or departed persons a great shooting in their stature observed; so is there in the soul much more. The least Infant shoots in the instant of Dissolution to that perfect knowledge of God, and such a measure of grace as is not attainable here, (that he is as David;) and the tallest Christian comes to such a height, that he is as an Angel of God. 3. Between these two great, and so remarkable growths, there is a third, which is to some more, and to some (especially at some times) less perceptible and discernible, and is fourfold; in grace, comfort, experience, acceptableness. 1. In Grace; and that, 1. For the number and kind. He that at first conversion had but a little godly sorrow, now that seed hath brought forth seven fold, What carefulness hath it wrought? what clearing? 2 Cor. 7. 11 what indignation? what fear? what vehement desire? what zeal? what revenge? How doth this little grain of Mustard seed multiply? So that ye come behind in no gift, waiting 1 Cor. 1. ● for the appearing of Christ. Here is a kindly shoot. 2. In the measure of Graces. His knowledge was dim and confused, now is more clear, distinct, and certain; before notional, now practical and affectionate: he before had dosires, now endeavours; good thoughts, now good words and deeds; longings before, now labourings. In his Repentance more fear of hell, now more hatred of sin: before more fears, now more hopes: before less love of God because of more fear, now less servile fear because of more love: before faith was historical, now experimental; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Rom. 1▪ 17 of adherence, now of assurance. 3 In the strength of grace. As the Calf in the stall to an Ox to bear the yoke; from milk to strong meat: from a babe to a strong young man who hath overcome the 1 John 2. 14 wicked one; and from a strong young man to a solid experienced old father, who hath known the Father. He holds on his way, and becomes stronger and stronger. He was Job 17. 9 wont as a weak child to stumble, fall; now he hath more care and strength and falls not. He stumbles at no command, being strong in obedience, staggers at no promise, being Romans 4. 20 strong in faith. 4 In the actings and exercise of Grace, which is a great growth towards perfection, when acts grow to habits, and habits are daily exercised. The life of grace is exercise. To live by faith, to act it upon all emergencies; Acts 24. 16 Isaiah 32▪ ● to exercise conscience in all undertake; to devise liberal things. The valiant man increaseth in strength when he is still about some notable acts to exercise his valour; first to encounter a Bear, than a Lion, th●n a Philistin, than not to fear an Host. He grows not the great Scholar, who hoards up much Learning, but he who brings out of his Treasure things new and old. He not the rich man who hath much laid up in bags and chests, but hath much laid out in good works. Habits of Grace imply Truth, exercise growth; that denominates a Saint, this one perfect. Jesus Christ in his Infancy grew Luke 2. 40 in grace, waxed strong in spirit, and filled with wisdom; there you have the habits of Grace; but when he came to grown age, and to the work of his Ministry and Suffering, he was then put much more upon the exercise of all Grace; therefore he is said, to be made perfect through sufferings. And Hebrews 2. 10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hebrews 5. 14 the Apostle calls them perfect, or of full age, who by reason of use (or through an habit) have their senses exercised to discern good and evil. 5 In more fruitfulness and usefulness, Psalm 92. To bear more fruit in age, and to have their last exceed the first, as Thyatira Revelat. 2, 19 had. You are full of goodness (said the Apostle) able to admonish one another. Your Rom. 15▪ 14 2 Thess. 1. 3 1 Thess. 5. 11▪ faith groweth exceedingly, and your love aboundeth. Exhort and edify one another as ye also do. These are great commendations, and a great progress in Grace, when one becomes of a public spirit and more useful. Salute Tryphoena and Tryphosa, who labour in Romans 16▪ 12 the Lord, and Persis who laboured much in the Lord. When the growth of a Minister and 1 Tim. 4. 15 his profiting doth appear; when a private Christian grows so eminent and useful, that he may of an old grown Disciple be fit to be set apart for the public Ministry, as in the Primitive times they did; this is a good growth: But when they who have had the Time for Teachers, have not the parts and proficiency Hebrews 5. 12 of good Learners, it deserves reproof, shows a poor growth. 2 There is a growth in comforts, when the Mourners in Zion have outgrown their old garments of mourning, and have new white raiment of praise (as Mordecai for sackcloth a Prince's Robes) for ashes, beauty, for drops of tears oil of joy, for spirit of heaviness▪ Isaiah 61. 3 garments of praise: Then shall they be called Trees of Righteousness, the planting of the Lord. hannah's growth from affliction to mourning, from mourning to praying, from praying to quiet waiting, from waiting to believing, from believing to obtaining, from obtaining to rejoicing. This 1 Samuel 2. 1 an excellent growth, when one hath taken all those degrees, and gone through those five forms in the School of Christ, beginning at Tribulation (the first and lowest form) and then coming into the next form of Patience, then into the higher of Experience, than ●●to the next of Hope, then into the highest, Certainty. Hope maketh not ●●m. 5▪ 3, 4, 5 ashamed, because the Love of God is shed abroad into our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us. This is to have the white stone, and to eat of the hidden Rev. 2. 17 Manna. 3 In Experiences. The Favourite grows great by the many favours, gifts, jewels, Offices the Prince bestows on him. The Christian grows rich in experiences, which he wears as Bracelets, and keeps as his richest Jewels. He calls one Eben-ezer, hitherto 1 Samuel 7. 12 Genesis 30. 8 Exodus 1. 22 Genesis 30▪ 24 God hath helped; another Nepthali, I have wrestled with God and prevailed; another Gershom, I was a stranger; another Joseph, God will yet add more; and another Penuel, I have seen the face of God. I have been delivered from the Lion, therefore shall be from the Bear; from Lion and Bear, therefore from the Philistin; from the Philistin, therefore from Saul; from Saul, therefore God will deliver me from ev●y evilwork, 2 Tim. 4. ●● Col. ●. 19▪ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Roman● 8▪ 15 ● Tim. 1. 7 Psalm 116. 7 2 Tim, 1. 1● and preserve me blameless to his heavenly Kingdom. This is scal●●●●i, or the growth of God, as it is called, a most excellent growth; from a spirit of B●ndag● to a spirit of Adoption; from a spirit of st●● to a spirit of love and of a sound ●ind; that the soul can ●●● down and say, Now return to thy rest, the Lord hath dealt graciously with thee. Now I know why I have believed, and wherefore I have believed, and whom I have believed; and I know ●● it able to keep wh●● I have committed to him to that day. When he can say with the Samaritans, Now we John 4. 42 believe not because of thy Report, and because we have so read and heard, but because we have seen and heard him himself. This is the glorious growth: when Thomas who was John 20. 25, 26 27, 28 shut up in unbelief, and made such sad conclusions, I do not believe (though you all affirm it;) nay worse, I will not believe, (wilful Thomas Mr. Bradford calls him) or worse, I shall never believe; it is impossible I should; (as impossible as for a Venice Glass to fall to the ground unbroken, as a distressed Gentlewoman said, but was confuted) Mr●. Honywood shall have Christ come in to him revealing himself more familiarly, singling out Thomas from all the rest, and bid him believe his own eyes and hands, and make proof of the love of Christ. He breaks into the highest admirations, and in fullness of Assurance cries out, My Lord and my God Before all unbelief, here all faith. 4 In acceptableness. Jesus increased in stature and wisdom, and in favour with God Luke 2. 52 and man. This is a growth indeed. So when from a state of loathing we grow into a state of loving; removed out of our blood into a state of beauty, of nakedness to Ornaments, Ezekiel 16 of deformity to comeliness, as is expressed in the Prophet. Abraham first a servant, Isaiah 41, 8 than a friend; first Electus, then Dil●ctus: before from faith to faith, here from love to love; from love of commiseration to love of benevolence, from benevolence to complacency. What a preferment in Esther? of a Captive, taken into Heges' custody, thence into the King's bed, thence into his highest favour, thence to the Crown, thence to ask whatsoever she would. This the honour of Angels, and the rising of all the Saints; from an enemy to reconciliation, than a servant, than a son, than an heir, than a co-heir with Christ, then to inherit all things. I will be Rev. 21. 7 his God, and let him ask what he will, that my love and his joy may be full. Thou shalt Isaiah 62. 4 be no more termed forsaken, but thou shalt be called Hephzibah, for the Lord delighteth in thee. Moses at first was charged not to draw near, after Moses was singled out to Exodus ●. 5 19, 24 draw near when Israel must keep their distance; afterward he talketh face to face with Deut. 34. 10 God as a friend; at last he desireth, and is admitted to behold the glory of God, and see all Exodus 33. 19 his goodness pass before him, as if he had been an Angel. 1. This is to be ascribed to a threefold Reas. 1. cause. 1. To the nature of Grace, which (as Art and Nature do with their works) bringeth all her works to perfection. The Workman leaves not his work unperfected. Grace is as the leaven, mustard seed, as the corn, Mark 4 which by nature's force dies, revives, roots, sprouts, brings forth a blade, than a stalk, than an ear, then full corn. Grace as great Rivers, hath slender beginnings. Sin is killed by degrees. God begins with a reproof, reproof begets a conviction, conviction grief, grief grows unto hatred, hatred unto loathing, loathing causeth a divorce of sin, that divorce death. Reproof discovers sin, conviction fears it, sorrow laments it, hatred resists it, loathing shuns it, divorce puts it away. So the greatest measure of Grace proceeds from a spark, first a motion, (in the Ministry or by the Spirit) begets a desire, that desire cannot go, but creeps in longing The new man is not as the first Adam, created perfect at first, but is renewed day by day. and wishing, longing shows itself in a tear, the tear begets a Prayer, that Prayer begins acquaintance, acquaintance brings on experience, experience more hope, hope diligence, diligence confidence, confidence assurance, assurance satisfaction. Thus where ever is life, is growth. The least twig grows, but the biggest dead branch grows not; the young child grows, the old picture grows not (unless fouler and more uncomely:) True grace hath a seed of God in it, and grows; ● John 3▪ 9 counterfeit Grace grows not, unless as a Carcase, more unsavoury every day than other. 2 This growth is helped forward by the benefit of quickening Ordinances, whereby the soul is made fruitful as the watered garden: Isaiah 58. 11 Those that are trees of Gods planting by the water's side, shall grow more and more fruitful. They that be planted in the house of the Lord, (the Church's Nursery) shall Psalm 92. 13▪ 14 flourish in the courts of our God. 3 But most of all is this to be ascribed to the singular undertaking, promise and blessing of God. Grace for all its nature might decay, and when it is as Jordan in harvest, overflows Joshuah 3. 15 all his banks, yet without a fresh supply it might stand still, be driven back, or quite dried up. And Ordinances cannot help, if God put not influence into Ordinances, and put this golden oil into those golden pipes, therefore Paul looks for salvation through 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phil. 1. 19 Mark 4 6 Luke 8. 6 the supply and auxiliary Grace, as additional force to help out Habitual, for lack of which supply the stony ground miscarried, it lacked root below, and moisture from above, the root of spiritual union to Christ, and the moisture of spiritual unction from Christ. Now God hath undertaken for his people, where he hath begun a good work to finish Phil. 1. 6 1 These. 5▪ 24 it, Faithful is he who hath called you, he will do it, you may rely upon it. 1 To apply this, What thankfulness Apply. 1. doth this call for from those in whom Grace is wrought. It is a mercy to be prized when the poor grows rich, the despised favoured, the diseased strong; but none to this, the sinner to grow gracious, to grow out of God's displeasure into his favour, when the soul prospereth, 3 John 2 1 Hereby is more God honoured then by any Isaiah 55. ult other, It shall it be to the Lord for a name, for an everlasting sign that shall not be cut off. 2 He that hath passed out of nature into grace hath shot the great gulf, and is in a safe state as to his soul. 3 God hath not undertaken the rich shall grow richer, and that he who is now in honour shall abide in his honour; but he hath undertaken to keep those whom he hath begun a good work in. 4 This growth is always in mercy, others may be promoted in wrath, as Pharaoh and Haman. They may have their hearts desire Psalm 116. 15 with lean souls. But this ever argues love in God, and such as accompanies salvation. 5 Where this growth is, there shall be another and greater shoot at death; but in all other growthes there may be an alteration (a sad alteration) at death, They may spend their days in mirth, and in a moment go Job 21. 13 down to hell. Use 2 Reproof to three sorts. 1 Such as grow not at all (unless as a stake in the hedge, more rotten:) ignorant, vain, worldly, profane they were, and are; no changelings they, no Apostates; this were a good Apostasy. Luther gloried he was an Apostate from the Pope. Ever learning never 2 Tim. 3. 7 growing. Thy child becomes a man, and thou remainest a child. Thou hast put off thy childish years, not put away childish things. It was a heavy curse, when to the figtree it was said, Never fruit grow on the●: Matthew 21. 19 Hebrews 6 These are near cutting down or burning up. This was the property of the high way, (the worst ground of the four, the rest had all some good in them) which brought forth no fruit at all, but seed and showers were all cast away upon it. 2 Such who are worse than those who grow not at all, who grow from evil to evil, Jeremiah 9 2 2 Tim. 3. 13 or worse and worse. It is the curse of God upon Seducers to become worse and worse. There is a growth of God, Col. 2 19 this the growth of Satan; from standing in the way to sit in the chair of scorners. It was the glory of Josiah to outstrip all the Kings 2 Kings 23. 25 1 Kings 21▪ 25 that were before him: the contrary is said of Ahab, There was none like to Ahab, who sold himself to work wickedness. He was too bad at first, his wife Jezabel made him worse, his false Prophets worse still; and Satan with that commission, Go, persuade, prevail, worse 1 Kings 2●. 23 Isaiah 3. 9 Phil. 3. 19 if worse could be. How is he grown to the highest pitch, who now proclaims his sin and glories in it? Ahab served Baal a little, I will serve him much. Cain killed a man, saith Lamech, and denied it; feared, trembled, cried out his sin was too great, and his punishment not to be born; but saith he, I neither deny the fact, nor fear the punishment; the murder committed grieves me not, the hell threatened terrifies me not, I only glory to think that I have got the name of the first three of all the Devil's Worthies. If Cain be Gen▪ 4. 22, 23, 24 punished seven fold, than I trow Lamech, a more notable adventurer for hell, shall be punished seventy and seven fold. In such the unclean spirit goes and returns with an Octas (as Ir●naus saith) of unclean spirits; then is the last state worse than the first. 3 But there is a third basket of worse figs yet, such as are grown from good to bad, There are two growths which are the growths of God; 1. From evil to good: 2, From good to better. And two growths of Satan; 1. From ill to i'll: 2, From good to ill; miserum est fuisse faelicem. Sa●an fell thus from an Angel of Light to a Prince of darkness. from seeming good to downright bad. The washed Sow becomes again a wallowing Sow. Hath not only left his love (which is possible to a Believer for a time) but lost and loatheth his former love, turns again to his vomit; reputes of nothing more than of his former repentance, was once enlightened, had a taste, found a liking, felt the power of the good Word, and the force and horror of judgement to come, but is gone back, and now sins wilfully after receipt of this knowledge of the Truth. Judas, a young Apostle, an old Apostate, juvenis Discipulus, senex Diabolus, A young Disciple (never Saint) an old Devil, The case of none is so sad. God oweth these a shame, and will pay it them home to their face. These lay a stumbling block in the way of others, and God lays one in their way, and they fall usually into some notorious Ezekiel 3. 20 sin, that lays them open to the world, as Saul, judas Hymenaeus, Alexander, Ananias, Nicholas the Deacon. These are Trees twice dead, plucked up by the roots: Judas v. 13 Matthew 23 Double children of hell above any others, and become usually Pros●lyte-Makers for Satan, who maketh of these fugitive Professors, the chief Janissaries to guard his person, and enlarge his Kingdom. How disparingly above all others do these men die! Saul, judas, Spira, how fearful was their end! This is the only way to that sin against the Holy Ghost. As we said before, grace mounts up to perfection by degrees, from small beginnings; so is sin perfected by as unsensible degrees. There is a beginning in the spirit, first an Illumination, than Conviction, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. James 1. 15 Vide Bern. de conscien cap. 3 Vide lapsum (inquit) im● casum mal● conscienti●, qu● minuta●im & peditentim declinet à Deo, & ita in profundum descendat ut super eum urgeat Puteus os suu●. then Faelix his fear, than Aggrippas' half Conversion, an outward restraint or partial reformation, a bold avowing and open professing the doctrine of grace, as Alexander; an attentive hearing with Herod, a flashy rejoicing as the stony ground, a temporary believing, praying, joining, going in and out. Thus far they run well, but here they stand, from standing still to declining, from declining to discontinuance of holy duties; (they will not pray this morning, they will at even, at even to morrow) from discontinuance to indisposedness, from indisposedness to dislike, from dislike to enmity, from enmity to scorning, from scorning to persecuting, then to impenitency, then to all uncleanness with greediness, then to despair, and there we leave them. 3 Use. Examine what growth is there in Use 3 us; if we see none, then certainly we are neither such as ever truly feared God's name, or ever had Christ risen upon us. It is manifest many grow not. 1. The nation generally is grown a degenerate Vine, which was at first a noble plant. We are worse than our fathers, as the Lord Jeremiah 7. 26 Judges 2. 10 Jeremiah 24 complains. The good generation is worn out, and the better figs are carried away. They joyed when the Manna first fell, we grow weary of it. The word of the Lord Jeremiah 6. 10 was to them precious, to us it is become a reproach; they desired to see the things we Isaiah 30. 11 Hosea 4. 16 see; we desire the holy one to depart from us. They grow as the Calf in the stall, we as the untamed heifer, or as the back-sliding heifer. 2 Professors in particular grow not better but worse, in shadow, not substance; in light as the increasing Moon, which grows bigger and bigger, lighter and lighter; not hotter and hotter, as the Morning Sun, which goes higher and higher, and grows hotter and hotter. It is an ill growth when we grow in stalk not ear, in straw not corn. When trees run up in stature, and put out leaves and blossoms without fruit. Many grow colder and colder (as old David for his body) Ordinances can keep no heat in them: or a worse cold in their spirits, as Solomon declining: indifferent what, and how many Religions there were; All that pretend conscience, should not want liberty. Many grow fowler and fouler, as the the linen garment; or courser and courser as the woollen garment▪ when the nap is off, and grows rotten and full of holes, the longer it is worn. Many Professors, how handsome and hopeful were they at first, but wear very course and full of holes and rents, the longer you are acquainted with them. We have cause to cry out with Jeremy, Woe to us, for the day goeth away, for the shadows of the evening are stretched out. Jer. 46. Our harvest is past, Jeremiah 8 20 our Summer is ended, and our winter is come. Winter ways fouler and fouler, winter days colder and colder, winter weather dark, foul, misty, boisterous, unpleasant to go abroad in, and winter barrenness. All dead winter. But for Notes of growth, take these: 1. There is variety of grace where growth; not all knowledge, no love; not all faith and confidence, without fear and conscience. A hypocrite may have one gift, the Saint hath every grace. Integrality is a note of integrity. The body is not one member, but many. Christianity is not one Grace, but 1 Cor. 1. 7 Revel, 22. 2 all. You come behind in no gift, etc. The tree of life brings forth twelve several fruits. It is an unkind growth in the Rickets, where only the head grows extraordinary big, but all the body thrives not. Many are all head for knowledge, voice for discourse, praeterea nil; and all nose (as he said) for censoriousness. Tongilianus habet nasum scio, non nego; sed jam Nil praeter nasum Tongilianus habet. 2 Higher thoughts of Christ are a fair sign of a higher growth. Ille se plurimum Ille se plurimum profecisse sciat, cui Cicero valde placuerit▪ Erasm. Quintil. 2 Peter 3. 18 Philippians 3. 8 profecisse sciat, cui Christus valde placuerit. Grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord jesus Christ. Paul had outgrown all Pharisees, and his own Righteousness, and was come to a high pitch, when he counted all loss and dung to the excellency of the knowledge of jesus Christ. The man that stands on earth thinks earth only great, but Sun and Stars little; were he lifted up to them, earth would seem nothing (less than a punctulum) and they only great. Our own Graces and Duties seem only great to him that is ignorant of Christ and his Righteousness. 3 Lower thoughts of self, is ever a sign not of a lower Christian, but of the growing and grown Christian. His expressions, are, Icount not myself perfect, I have not yet attained, I am more brutish than any man, I have Phil▪ 3. 12 Proverbs 30. 2 Ephesians 3. 8 Genesis 32. 10 not the understanding of a man, I am less than the least of all Saints, Less than the least of thy mercies. Much humility argues much Sincerity. God gives grace to Humility, Humility gives rooting to Grace. 4. Strong laborious desires argue much Grace. Our perfection here is but in desires, Desires are infinite when Duties are defective. God measures men by their desires, not deeds The desire of a man is his kindness. The Proverbs 19 22 Godly boast more of their desires then any thing else▪ I desire to fear thy Name. Vehement Nehemiah ●. 11 desires one of the best signs of saving Grace; but they must be laborious desires, 2 Cor. 7. 11 not lazy wishes, Through desire a man separateth himself, and intermeddleth with all wisdom. Proverbs 18. 1 But there are lazy desires which hell is paved with and full of, the desire of the sluggard Prov. 21. 25 killeth him. 5 The grown person can climb over greatest difficulty, In the name and strength of God go out against Goliahs or Anakims. With Ram's horns and Faith blow down Jericho's walls; with the rod of God divide the Sea; as Samson (when he could not find the key, carries away the gates) is not discouraged with difficulties; but emboldened, swims against stream; dares venture, if called, as Peter, to go upon the waters, or into the fire, or Lion's den; answers all Objections with God's Command, Promise, and Omnipotency. Abraham was grown strong when he could believe against Faith; Hope above hope, neither stagger at Promise through unbelief, nor Precept by disobedience, but resolved all into Jehovah-jireh: He would not dispute Commands, nor question Promises; he had learned to believe and obey when God spoke, with an implicit faith, and blind Obedience. He could not untie the knot, and make Promises and Precepts agree; he knew he who gave both, could. Endeavours, Faith, Obedience belong to us, issues to God. Oh strange Logic ● Grace hath learned to deduce strong Conclusions out of weak Premises, and happy out of sad. If the Major be, My strength and my heart faileth; and the Minor, There is no blossom in the figtree, nor fruit in the Vine, etc. yet his Conclusion is firm and undeniable, The Lord is the strength of my heart, and my portion for ever: or, yet will I rejoice in the God of my saltion. And if there be more in the Conclusion then in the Premises, it is the better; God comes ever in the Conclusion. 6 Where labour is but an exercise, there is growth and strength. To a weak one, exercise is hard labour, as to a child to go alone; to a sick man to go cross his chamber. If we are out of breath when we begin a duty, and give over, what strength? Revelat. 2. 2, 3. Thou hast laboured and not fainted. 7 When men leave their wont fall, they are grown stronger and better. The weak unwary child gets many a fall and knock, but as he grows stronger, he falls seldomer, and becomes more cautelous. 8 When a man can bear a heavy burden and not stoop or faint. 1. Of affliction from Proverbs 24. 10 God's hand: If thou faint in the day of adversity, thy strength is small. 2 Of provocation from man's. David was a high grown 2 Samuel 16. 10 Saint, that he could hear Shimei curse, yet not be distempered. That sword is of good mettle that snaps not in pieces when bend, or stands not bend. 9 A good stomach is an excellent sign of growth. Children growing are ever eating, their heat is much. Men grown eat heartily, more than the child. The new born Babe desires 1 Peter 2. 2 the sincere milk of the Word that he may grow thereby. And the man-grown-Christian desires with his Saviour, the strong meat; With desire have I desired to eat the Passeover Luke 22. 15 before I suffer. 2 Hindrances of growth. 1 Idleness never comes to good. The diligent handmaketh rich. To him that hath Proverbs 10. 4 shall be given, and he shall have more abundantly. The Talon was doubled by industry, forfeited by slothfulness. Milo putting out his strength daily to carry his Calf, had strength to carry it when an Ox. Stir up 2 Timothy 1. 6 the gift of God which is in thee. 2 Over much earthly activity is as bad. The thorns choke the Word: the Farm and Luke 8 and 14 Oxen make Christ's plough to stand still. Earth's best are heavens worst husbands. Hell is full of good and bad husbands both. Some of the sons of Sodom were very idle fellows, minding nothing but eating, drinking and Luke 17. 28 tippling; some were great husbands, building, planting, buying, selling. Both perished together. The interposition of the earth eclipseth the Moon, depriving it of the light of the Sun. If the world get between Christ and thy heart, all is gone. 3 Pride is a blasting East wind, which destroys Grace, and breeds those Caterpillars, which destroy both leaf and blossom. This is to the soul not as a Disease, but poison; Diseases stop growth, poison takes away life, (though taken in meat or Cordials.) Pride is poison to Grace, death to the soul (though it be taken in the best Duties and parts.) This destroyed the Angelical nature, when spiritual pride got into heaven. It infected the humane, till then in innocency. It is a ●anker oft bred in the fairest rose, but destroys it. The Devil seeks to get into his service the best wits, choicest parts, greatest Scholars, and by pride he makes them sure. What drew Arius, Paulus Samosatenus, Novatus, etc. into their Schisms and pestilent Heresies? but their pride and arrogancy. 4. Evil company is as great a hindrance to growth in Grace as any of the former. We may compare these four to those four devourers, Joel 1. 4 That which the palmer worm (of idleness) hath left, hath the Locust (of worldly activeness) eaten; that which that Locust hath left, hath the Canker (of Pride) eaten; and what that Cankerworm hath left, hath this Caterpillar (of ill company) quite eaten. Or else to those four destroyers, the Sword, Ezekiel 14. 21 Famine, Pestilence, and (this ill company worst of all) the evil Beasts. Oh Inimica Amicitia! Austin cries out upon it. Judas took no hurt in the Apostles society, yet among the High Priests he was undone. Peter sitting by the High Priests fire, fell in and burnt himself. Lo● had perished in Sodom, had he not hasted out. Nothing brings the Plague so soon, as eating, drinking, and conversing with the Infected. Nabuchadnezzar became a Beast, by conversing with Beasts; and man turns to earth lying in the earth. Such as the company, such is, or shortly will be the man. Worldly company will make thee worldly; profane, profane; corrupt company opinionative and erroneous. Satan and his black Retinue come out in dances to meet this their great Champion singing. Pride and other Commanders have slain their thousands; but good fellowship (otherwise called, ill society) hath slain his ten thousands. Other sins send men single to hell; this as Phinehas Javelin, strikes two dead at one stroke; or as Samsons Jawbone, lays heaps upon heaps. 5 Any reigning sin hinders growth. If the Worshipper comes with Idols in his Ezekìel 14. 4 heart, his inquiry after God will not profit. Many complain of the Minister, they cannot profit by him; their Idols cause it. Ahab could neither pro●it by Elijah, nor Micajah, not one good Sermon from them both. Judas might be with Christ all his days, yet not profit; he was a Thief and a Hypocrite. Nor could Herod profit by John Baptist. Herodias, the right eye that caused him to offend, should have been plucked out. It is the Physicians Aphorism, Corrupt Bodies, the more they are fed, the more they are corrupted. Therefore Peter's prescript is to lay aside ● Peter 2. 1●2 all malice, guile, hypocrisies, etc. before you come to the sincere milk of the Word, if you would grow thereby. 6 An ill diet, or an ill Ministry. Would you grow without meat, or by eating unwholesome, flatulent, or poisoned meat? Take ●eed o● such a Ministry: and fix thyself under that godly Minister whom God hath set over thee in the Lord. We will not have our child suck every nurse, nor doth the often changing the Nurse benefit, but endanger the child. Be not carried about with divers Hebrews 13. 9 Luke 8. 18 Mark 4. 24 and strange Doctrines. But take heed how and what, and whom you hear. 7 Intermitting Duties. Pray without ●easing, quench not the spirit, despise not prophesying: ● Thess. 5. 16, 17, 18 1 Timothy 4 Hebrews 19 neglect not the gift that is in thee; forsake not the assembling of yourselves together. Intermitting Duties for two or three days, is like intermitting meat for as long a time. The Amalakitish servant was taken 1 Sam. 30. 12 up fainting, but when he had eaten again, his spirit came to him again. We need Duties to keep grace and soul together, as much as meat to keep life and soul together. When the candle is newly blown out, you may D● Harris easily blow it in again, but when the fire is out, no blowing can light it. When we go from Duty to Duty, the heart is kept burning; when we let grace die for want of present blowing up, we are insensibly hardened and Grace decays. 8 Self sufficiency. There is more hope of Proverbs 26. 12 a fool, then of him that is wise in his own conceit. He that thinks he hath already attained, seeks to go no further. He that thinks he hath Learning, Wisdom, Riches enough to serve his turn, gives over the wise man's seeking and intermeddling with all wisdom. Hosea 10. 1 Si dixifti sufficit, periisti. Aug The emptiest Vine brings forth most fruit to itself. 3 Helps to Growth. 1 Thou must be the plant which God hath planted. He is the only Husbandman, we are God's Husbandry. Every plant which his John 15. 1 1 Cor. 3. 9 Matthew 15. 13 right hand hath not planted, at length is rooted up. Nature, Art, Education, Industry, all moral persuasions make not a heavenly plant. Flesh and blood did nothing to Peter, but the Father which is in Heaven. Matthew 16. 17 2 As planted by the Father's hand, so engrafted into Christ's root. Therefore is the branches fruitfulness ascribed to a double cause. 1 The Father's pruning and purging: Every branch that beareth fruit he● purgeth, John 15. 2 that it may bear much fruit. 2 To our Insition into, and abiding in Christ. He that John 15. 45 abideth in me and I in him, the same bringeth forth much fruit; for without me ye can do nothing. Those parts of the tree which are nearest the root are biggest, those twigs which furthest off, lest. 3 The Spirit of God hath the third hand in a Christians growth. When the Spirit breathed on the dry bones, they stood up, Ezekiel 37 1 Samuel 10 and became an Army. Saul, when the Spirit came upon him, had another heart, became another man. The Apostles were well Acts 2 grown before, but when the holy Ghost came upon them, than they grew mightily; Pray, Blow O North wind, and breath thou Cant. 4. 16 South wind, that the Spices of my garden may flow. 4 To hold communion with the body as well as with the head, that being knit together by those mystical bonds and joints, there Ephesians 4. 15 Coloss. 2▪ 19 may be an increase in the body to the edifying of itself in love. Yea, that it may increase with the increase of God (a Divine and admirable increase.) The branch cut off from the arm of the tree, is cut off from the root also, and withers. The sheep straying from the flock is devoured, safe when it abides with his fellows, than the Shepherd's eye is upon it. 5 To attend upon living and lively Ordinances. The tree of life grows close Revel. 22, 2 by the River of the water of life, no where else. 6 A good depth of Mortification to begin withal. The ground deep ploughed retaineth the seed and gives it root; the stony for lack of this depth withered. Mark it while you will, the well seasoned Christian with Mortification, seldom warps and shrinks; but your flashy, high flown spirits, over filled with joy at first. The meat well powdered with salt, keeps long sweet; without, it corrupts and putrifies. 7. A good measure of Humility. God giveth more grace to the humble. The low 1 Peter 5 valleys are ever more Rich than the lofty hills. Trees in time of drought whither not because of deep roots, when as the corn and grass burn quite away. 8. Sincerity makes to grow up to him in all Ephesians 4. 15 things who is the head. This the Nutritive grace. Mortification prepares the way for Humility, humility for Sincerity, sincerity for growth, growth for perseverance, perseverance for the Crown. Faith is the mother or seed grace; mortification the planting or ploughing grace, humility the rooting grace, sincerity the watering grace, perseverance the crowning grace. Sincerity makes grace to be, and makes grace to grow: without sincerity no grace is, only seems: Faith is not faith without sincerity, repentance no true repentance; prayer no prayer. And without sincerity grace thrives not, but decays, wanting what should water and nourish. The life and growth of all grace is bound up in the life of sincerity. 9 Lastly, but especially, wait and pray for the Rising of the Sun of Righteousness, for a further and fuller manifestation of Christ to thy soul: when Christ came in to Thomas, and took him by the hand, he raised him from the lowest pit of unbelief and doubting, to the highest pitch of confidence and Rejoicing. My Lord and my God. John 20. 28 The Sun returning, makes the trees shoot again at Spring, which grew not all winter. Let me add a few Motives to seek after a Growth. The Husbandman loves to go out to see his corn grow in the field; the mother how her child comes on at nurse, the father his son at School. The first Motive. This an Argument of Truth, how differs the living child from the dead, the Picture from a true man but in growth? Where you see not growth suspect truth. 2 There is a Perfection attainable here. As many as are perfect, let us be thus minded, Phil. 3. 15. That is, 1. A perfection comparative (with others that fall short), not absolute. The Stars compared with the other parts of heaven are perfect lights, with the Sun are darkness. Saints compared with other men are lights, but with Christ they are but darkness. 2 In Desires, Endeavours in voto: The Godly have weak performances, strong desires, are stinted and bounded in their doings, but their desires are boundless, aspiring, infinite. 3 They have an inchoated, not complete perfection, as a child in his parts, which daily receive a growth. We must labour after such a perfection as we are capable of. The child cannot speak when born; first he gets one word, than another, than all his Native Language perfectly; so must we be growing. All Nature's works tend to it. The child grows first in stature, when no more in stature, then in strength; when no more in strength, then in judgement; when no more in judgement, then in affection, then in Grace. Sin stays not till it come to its unhappy perfection, and shall Grace stop in the middle? Shall the tares ripen for the fire, and not the wheat for the Garner? 3 There is no perfection here; viz. Actual, Absolute, Complete. This contradicts not, but fortifies the former Motive. As many of us as are perfect, Phil. 3. 15. yet ver. 12 he puts not himself into that number, I have not yet attained, I am not yet perfect; therefore follow the harder after it. If I were at the Race end, I might rest; I am but entered, therefore must look forward, not backward. The water runs out of the Springs, and stops not till it come together and makes a River, The River stays not till it comes to the Sea; there is his fullness. Our measure and pitch is to do the will of God on earth as it is in heaven: and our pattern, Be perfect as your Father in Heaven is perfect. Be holy as God is holy; which because we can never reach, we must be still striving after. The body at length comes to his growth, the soul never in this life. The Christian herein like the Crocodile, which ceaseth not to grow till it cease to live. Therefore the Godly is described, thirsting after Righteousness. The greedy Worldlings desires after Riches are enlarged as Hell, and the desires of the Godly after Grace are enlarged as Heaven. Another saith, Had I so much Grace I should be satisfied. Be thankful for the least, be not satisfied with the most Grace. The Godly at first saith, Oh that I had knowledge; after, what will knowledge do without Repentance? when he hath Repentance, yet I want Faith; when Faith, I would have more; when more, I would have Assurance; when Assurance, I thirst still, I would have Christ; more union, more communion. When Christ on earth, he longs to be with Christ in heaven. The young Christian is like the young Housekeeper, who thinks a few things go to furnish and keep a house; but the well experienced Christian (like the old Housekeeper) finds much to do about a house, many things wanting, many decaying. 4 Non progredi, est regredi. If we go not forward we go backward; and this motus recessus, is ever motus trepidationis, a sad and dreadful motion: God hath made all Creatures to go forward, that is a handsome motion; to go backward how unhandsome is it! The Spirit moved the wheels Ezekiel 1. 12 ever forward, never backward. The Sun rising gets heat and strength till noon, when it declines night hastens on; at Spring it goes higher every day, and makes days longer till it comes to the Tropic or Solstice, then farewell Spring; Autumn and Winter hastens. The Sun once stood still, but it Joshuah 10 Isaiah 38. 7, 8 was prodigious and fatal to the enemies of God; once went back, and was a sign of recovery. Our Sun neither stands nor goes back but is always ominous. 5 This the only way to be secured from the incursion of Error and prevailing Impieties. That ye be not drawn away from your steadfastness into the error of the wicked, grow 2 Pet. 3. 17, 18 1 Kin. 11. 6, 7 in Grace, is Saint Peter's Antidote. When was Solomon drawn to commit or permit those foul Idolatries, and tolerate all those new Religions, but when he cooled in his love, and was declined? The man and beast seldom falls going up hill, usually down hill; the Carters Proverb, When did Cart overthrow up hill? Take heed how you descend. Those that were made a prey to house-creeping and house-subverting Seducers, were only such as had made no proficiency; but learning 2 Tim. 3. 6, 7 and learning, and never able to come to the grounded knowledge of the truth; leave off growth in strictness, and the next error carries thee away. 6 Those may be able to look Christ in the face at death and Judgement, who have 1 Cor. 1 7 been growing; You come behind in no gift, waiting for the coming of Christ. A little Grace is enough to begin the world with, not to die with. One Talon serves to begin with, one Talon bad to appear with. If th●se be 2 Peter 1 in you and abound,— Then shall an abundant entrance be ministered to you into the Kingdom of God: we are apt to say, if I once have true grace, I shall be safe; away despair; take heed of saying, away diligence too. A little grace may bring thee to glory, a little brings none to God, Phil. 1, 11. and wilt thou set thy glory in opposition to God's glory? A little may bring thee into heaven when thou diest, much would bring heaven into thee while thou livest. Some truly Righteous are Saved with a Vix, and in their own apprehensions oft with a Ne vix quidem, scarcely or hardly saved, as through fire; but these with an Euge bone serve. The man grown in grace is the great man in God's Books: Jobs goodness is set down in God's inventory before his goods; that he was a perfect man, is set down before his so many Thousands. What a poor Inventory is there, where you can only say, Imprimis so many thousands per annum; Item so many children: no Imprimis a perfect man, a grown Christian? Somewhat like that short Chronicle of that long lived Methuselah, he lived nine hundred sixty nine years, Gen. 5. 26, 27 begat sons and daughters, and died. That is a better memorial of samuel's and John Baptists childhood, then of such an old age; The child grew, and was strong in spirit, Luke 1. 80. Samuel grew, and the Lord was with him. 1 Sam. 3. 19 Obj. I shall only resolve one great question, and troublous case of conscience, and conclude; I grow not at all in Grace, I fear I never had Truth, what will become of me? Answ. This is as weighty and sad an Objection as can be made, yet is frequently the complaint of many gracious hearts, no where more need of a wary Answer. 1 It may be thou sayest true, then is thy Heb. 6, 4 case sad. It is a fearful case to go back: It Revel. 22. 11 is a fearful curse if God say, Let him be filthy still, never let fruit grow more on that tree: Let neither dew nor rain be upon the mountains of Gilb●a. 2 Thou mayst be mistaken, for as all do not grow who say they do; so all are not growing back who fear they are. Hypocrites make their Phylacteryes broader, Godly men often make their Evidences of Heaven narrower than others. 1 We see not that growth which is really▪ Growth is insensible, not momentaneous. The Sun we know moves, but we perceive it not moving. The blade grows but imperceptibly, Mark 4 ●7 not so fast, but though the husbandman rise every night, and see it every day, he sees not how it grows. Little children, if we be a while from them, we see they have grown, but they with them discern not when. Others that converse with us can discern more than ourselves. 2 Growth is usually more sensible at the first conversion then after. Children grow faster at their birth, than they do all their life again. The Sun is more easily observed to move after his first rising then at noon, yet moveth still. The new married persons may show more fondness, yet have the same or greater love continuing to their dying day. 3 God gives not the like measure of grace to all, therefore though thou come short of another's measure, yet thou mayst be a good Proficient. God doth stint each man with Roman● 12. 3 Matthew 25. 15 his measure of Faith, one man two Talents, another five, another ten, to each according to their ability, not his ability, but according to his own wisdom, not haply according to theirs. The Lord expects not of all alike. He gives not Grace by the Omer, as he did Manna, to every man his Omer, none more, none less. God's Church is not like an Army, wherein only valiant men are listed, all perfect Saints, men of statu●e; but as an Army in another respect, where are a few Commanders, and many common Soldiers. Thou hast the measure which God hath dealt thee, as well as the ablest Christian. The good ground brought forth some sixty, some thirty, some an hundred, not all alike. God requireth not the like rate and measure of Grace in all, as he did the like Ransom▪ Exodus 30. 15 money from each Israelite, The Rich should not give more, the poor less, (●n Emblem of the same price of Redemption paid by Christ for richer and poorer Believers;) but as he did for Sacrifices, he that could not go to the price of a greater Sacrifice, might bring his Lamb, if not that, a pair of turtle Leu. 12. 8 Doves or two young Pigeons. There are Mites in God's Treasury, as well as Talents. Mark 12. 42 4 There may be a stop at present, yet in order to growth, by some Disease and hindrance. Children under a fit of sickness, grow not at present, but shoot the more after. Est mora in vi●i●● regressus qui progressu● conducit, ut in saltu qui toto impetu antrorsum ferri cupi●, regreditur. Bolles Past. Evan▪ lib. 2. c. 21 The children of Israel went not always forward towards Canaan, but about and about; sometimes stayed, sometimes went backward; but at last, after many a weary step in a way they knew not, they were possessed of Canaan. Godly ones may under temptation or desertion be as the trees in Winter, lose their Summer leaves and fruit, but the life is hid in the root. Godly may lose the measure of their comfort and sense of God's favour, but grow in experience, humility, self denial, poverty of spirit, and love to Christ. 5 There may be a growing in one kind Crescunt Pom● & corpora humana, non solum cum vel magnitudine, aut proceritate augentur, sed & illa ubi maturescunt, & h●c ubi firmius consolidan●ur membra▪ Bol. ubi sup●●▪ when not in another: Look well and you may find it. If you grow not upwards as trees in blossoms (which oft kill the tree) you may grow downwards. Be not high minded but deep rooted. All growth is not in knowledge, or Comfort, or Faith, but if we grow judicious, solid, serious, experienced. If we grow not in Joy, if in spiritual sorrow, if we act not Faith at present so lively, if we are exercising Repentance, it is as well. Graces as Stars, are not all seen together, but take their turns; some setting, others rising; some in the Meridian when others out of sight. God sometimes puts upon the exercise of Faith, sometimes of Patience, sometimes of Zeal, sometimes of Meekness, sometimes it is high water with floods of godly sorrow, and Joy at an ebb; sometimes Springs and Rivers of fresh joy carry away all the salt waters of sorrow; heavyness Psalm 30. 5 over night, joy in the morning. 6 The soul often sympathizeth with the body and mind in their natural or accidental Distempers; melancholy humours abounding Natura ●● obtu●i●r languidius gratiae exerci tium. Non zelus in senibus, ut plerumque videtur, sed ardor ●uvenilis deserbuit. Idem. in the body, or melancholy passions in the mind, damp and cloud the present actings of grace in the soul: as the Sun when thick clouds cover it, is not seen at present, though it be at the same time in his height. 7 Grace is not always decaying when there are new eruptions of old corruptions. Paul is led captive into sin (Pugna coesus, non praelio victus,) yet recovers himself and conquers. The Christian Soldier is dismounted and thrown beside his confidence, and fight on his knees, overcomes his enemy. Pride is such a wild Beast, and such an enemy Est superbia gratia imprimis infesta; banc bestiam ut subigat Deus, facit quod medicis sole●ne morbura non ita gravem fovet, ut qui certè let●alis devitet. Idem▪ to Grace, that God leaves the Canaanite within us to learn us war, that it should not rise up against us to destroy us. As the wise Physician leaves his Patient to conflict with a less distemper, to break the force of a mortal Disease. Object. But I have had stronger and more stirring desires formerly: I am cold and flat to what I was: is not this a decay? Answ, 1 There are at first legal stir raised from the Law's terrors; and heightened by the quickness and sharpness of strong convictions, which gall and wound the conscience; such a one is as on a Rack, he roars, cries out, taketh on, he hath drops of God's wrath falling on him, which puts him into a flame (as one in a fever, who cries out, Drink, drink.) This is a diseased, not right thirst. And there are Evangelical stir and desires begotten by the Spirit, raised by the Gospel, cherished by the Promise. These are not so loud, turbulent, make not like noise, but argue more grace. The former said, Give me ease, I am sick, I am damned, give me a pardon, or I die. This saith, Give me grace, let me have Christ, let me be renewed, or I die. There was more of self-love in those first desires, more of love to God in these. 2 Hast thou not, 1. Bemoyled and bemired thyself with the world? We cannot both prize Christ and Mammon, grow in Grace and Wealth. The stomach that feeds on coals and ashes, and such trash, must needs forsake his meat. 2 Or hath not spiritual pride given thee a fall? Thou seest not that need of dependence on God, use of Ordinances, frequency of Duties, but art in conceit above all. Take away the wood, the fire goes out. 3 Haply thou hast obtained thy desire. Why should the Sponse seek, fear, be so solicitous, when she hath found her Beloved, as when she missed him? Shall the children of the Matthew 9 Bride-chamber mourn when the Bridegroom is with them? Say to thy soul, Now return to thy rest. The Floods stop their course when come to the Sea. The stone rests when at the centre. Hope deferred makes heart sicls, Prov. 13. 12 desire obtained is a tree of life. A poor man condemned to die, falls down, entreats, weeps, cries out for his life; it is granted, he kisseth the pardon, blesseth the Prince, thanketh his friends, he leaps, joys, praiseth God. A Month after, this man is not so full of joy, or grief, or care, yet his life is as dear to him as ever it was. 4 Thou hast more work to do then thou couldst apprehend. Thy desires are divided into many streams, which then were confined to one object. Then thou more earnestly thirstedst after knowledge, prayedst more for pardon, now more for a broken heart, Increase of Faith, power against this Lust, skill to manage this calling, that business, and to look to the whole charge of God, and the whole Armour of a Christian. One work in hand goes on faster, but when we must use the Sword and Trowel, fight and build, this Church work goes slowly an end. Object. 3. But my desires are not uniform, equal, sometimes up, sometimes down; I know not what to think on it. Resp. This may be, and yet all well. 1 This may come from the different actings and assistance of the Spirit, which is a free Agent, as the wind blows sometimes higher, than the Ship moves faster. The Spirit is not as fire or other natural Agents, which always act to the utmost of their activity: fire burns as much as it can at all times: The Spirit not so, but as it pleaseth; When Ezekiel 1 the Spirit moved the wheels, they moved; when it stood, they stood. When the Spirit of God came upon Samson, he was more than a man, when the Spirit departed he became like another man. 2 Faith acts differently, and the Affections are raised or abated according to the actings of Faith. The more faith is acted in the persuasion of the love of God, the more thou lovest, prayest, obeyest, etc. 3 Thy mind is better prepared by spiritual Meditation, therefore thou art more affected; at another time thou hast slackened thy thoughts, and thou art more dull. 4 Is not thy body or mind distempered with melancholy? This makes thee as blind Samson to the Philistines, sport for Satan. Luther Caput melancho● licum Diaboli B●●n●u● was wont to call the melancholy head, the Devil's bath, where he could cool and refresh himself. There are two sights, which above all other please Satan: 1. To see a wicked man merry. 2. A godly man sad. He reckons himself sure of both when he seeth them thus. Object. But I find those corruptions in my heart which I never suspected, what a sad growth is this? Answ. As the day lengthens the cold strengtheners. When thou wast alive without Regredi non est, plura●n se peccata animadver●ere; quo enim peccatum nobis conspectiu●, eo pl●● adest luci●●nterna. Bolls the Law and thy sins, thou wast dead really; when sin revives thou art alive. As sin reigned unto death, so grace by righteousness reigneth to eternal life. There may be these two opposite Kings in one Kingdom, reigning sin, (or raging rather) and Grace reigning; death and life reigning; sin and death reign in thy apprehension, Grace and life in God's intention. Where sin aboundeth most, Grace aboundeth the more in one sense; that is, Grace is seen and set out the more to pardon so much sin. So in another sense it is as true, where Grace abounds most, sin abounds the more in making opposition so new, so great, so strange against Grace. Doubtless the greatest Scholars have the greatest Doubts and Objections, which they cannot answer, and the highest Saints have the sorest temptations. The more the Spirit lusteth against the flesh, the more the flesh lusteth against the Spirit. But Tandiu non relabimur, ubi ad priora contendimus. Aug. what doth thy resisting of sin, lamenting for it, watching and praying against it signify, but that thou art fight the Lords battles? and thou must never think of putting off thy harness till death. There is no triumphant Church on earth, all the Saints are militant. We must not look to see the Egyptians▪ drowned till we are on the other side the red sea. It is enough if the Lord keep a distance between them and us here, that they may not come so near as to overcome us, though in continual sight to terrify us. Sin hath received his death's wound by Christ his death, and the Law of the Romans 8. 2 spirit of life in Jesus Christ, but in the grave it is not; on the Cross it is, but it is long a dying (as if it had nine lives, as we say) the legs and arms of it are broken; it can never come down (it is fast nailed) to rule over thee; dying it is, not dead; but shortly what is now dying, thou shall see dead; and what now thou seest on the Cross, thou shalt see in his grave; when sin and death and hell shall be cast into the lake of fire. All swallowed up in victory. Lastly, This and all the other Promises shall be fulfilled at death, then shall be the great shooting of the departing soul, as of the bodies at the departure: then shall what is imperfect be done away; or rather made perfect. Therefore in this case I conclude with the Angels words to Daniel, Go thy way Daniel, for the words are closed Daniel 12, 9 up, and sealed till the time of the end. Many of the choicest and greatest Promises concerning the Church are sealed up and closed (unfulfilled) till the end of the world. And the best and richest Promises made to the Saints are sealed, closed up, not perfectly fulfilled till the end of their life; among which this is one great and glorious one. Etiam veni Domine jesu. The TABLE. THE Introduction to, and opening of the Text page 1 Chap. 1 That Christ is to the Church what the Sun is to the world 6 This prosecuted, in showing, 1A Likeness: 2 Unlikeness between Christ and the Sun 8 Chap. 2 The Likeness between Christ and the Sun, in five particulars; viz. 1 Their Essence, 2 Attributes: 3 Properties: 4 Effects: 5 Accidents. Of the Agreement in their Essence. 8, &c Chap. 3 The agreement between Christ and the Sun in their Attributes, Whereof, 1 some Incommunicable: 2 Some Communicable Unity the first Incommunicable Attribute 13 Chap. 4 Omniscience the second incommunicable Attribute. 19 Chap. 5. The Sun's Omnipresence a shadow of Christ's 25 Chap. 6. The Sun's Omni-influence a fourth Incommunicable Attribute 28 Chap. 7. Perfection another Incommunicable Attribute 39 Chap. 8 Unchangeableness the last Incommunicable Attribute 42 Chap. 9 Communicativeness a Communicative Attribute 47 Chap. 10 Of several Properties in the Sun as a resemblance of Christ, whereof Greatness the first 60 Chap. 11 Glory a second Property 68 Chap. 12. Light the third Property 71 Chap. 13 Warmth the fourth Property 93 Nine Effects in the Sun's warmth, the like whereof in Christ, 96, 97 & seq. The vast difference between Christ's teaching and man's 100 The difference between comforts given by Christ; and those flowing from the creature, showed in nine particulars 123 Chap. 14. The Sun's Regency a shadow of Christ's, alike in seven particulars 109 How the Sun is said to rule? How said to be for a Sign. judiciary Astrology condemned 115, 116 Chap. 15 The Sun's activity and motion the last Property Alike in seven particulars 118 Chap. 16 The fourth agreement between Christ and the Sun in their like Effects 132 Alike in nine Effects ibid. Chap. 17 Their likeness in their Accidents 137 Whereof, 1 one greater, viz. the Sun's Eclipse, wherein a likeness in nine particulars ibid. 2 Many less accidents: eleven mentioned 141 Chap. 18 The unlikeness and disagreement between Christ and the Sun in ten particulars 147 Chap. 19 The second main Proposition, That Christ is the Sun of Righteousness 150 Three things opened. 1 How Christ is said to be Righteous or Righteousness. 1. In respect of 1. his Person. 2. His Office 151 2 What Righteousness we have by Christ? A twofold Righteousness 152 Sundry Theses or Aphorisms of Righteousness 154 3 How and why called the Sun of Righteousness? showed in three particulars 155 Man's best Righteousness like the Moon at full; in six parlars 156 Four things done in Israel's solemn Expiation day 157 Four Notes of such to whom Christ is made Righteousness 161 Five golden chains laid down in Scripture; viz. 1 Of Decrees: 2. Grace's: 3 Duties: 4 Beatitudes: 5. Privileges 163 A fourfold unsafe Righteousness; 1 Seeming, not real▪ 2 Semi-righteousness, not complete: 3 Decaying, not persevered in. 4 Relied upon, not disclaimed 166 A fourfold good and necessary Righteousness. 1: Moral, or of Nations. 2 Legal, or of Duties. 3 Evangelical, or of Graces. 4 Divine, or of Faith 167 Chap. 20 The third main Doctrine, That all the Godly are such as fear God's Name 171 Godly subject to a threefold fear: 1 Natural. 2. Inordinate. 3. Religious 172 Religious fear hath a double object. 1 Evil, 2 Good Evil to be feared with fear of abhorrence 173 Good with fear of Reverence 174 Reverential fear twofold. 1. Of lowest Saints arguing less perfection. 2 Of greater perfection and the highest Saints 175 Religious fear, 1 The initial grace 176 2 The lasting Grace 178 3 The lowest grace 179 4 The constant frame of the new heart 180 All Christians are not of one stature 181 The safety of such who have only this grace of holy fear 182 Eight Notes of holy fear 185 God takes notice of the least grace and lowest measures in his servants 186 Eight Objections answered. 1 I have no Grace. Answ. 1 Godly ones ever have low thoughts of themselves 188 2 Not always equal judges in their own case 189 3 It is possible to have true grace, and be ignorant of it ibid. 4 God can espy grace where we espy nothing but sin 190 Three Gospel graces cover all sin: 1 Repentance: 2 Faith: 3 Sincerity 191 Object. 2. No grace because so little, answered 194 Object. 3 No grace because no growth 195 Object. 4 No grace, because no parts ibid. Object. 5 No grace, because no more comfort 196 Object. 6 No grace, because so many fears 197 Object. 7 No grace, because so many temptations 197 Object. 8 No grace, because such corruptions 198 Three things hard to determine 199 Eight kind of sins destroy not sanctification, lessen not justification, hinder not salvation, observed out of Rom. 7. 199, 200 Seven other sins neither destroying Grace, nor depriving of glory 204 Chap. 21. The fourth main Proposition, That Christ shall certainly and timely arise upon all such as fear his Name 207 Seven Positions employed 208 The Reasons, 1 Partly from somewhat in God; viz. 1. His Power. 2 His Promise to back his Power. 3 His love which confirmeth his Promise. 4 His Glory which engageth all 210 2 Partly from somewhat in the godly, 1 Their prayers. 2 Miseries. 3 Grace's 2●1 Quest. When shall this Promise be fulfilled, or what is the time of this Sun rising? 212 Dispensations of Grace and comfort various, not like the dispensations or operations of nature ibid. The four notable and great days of the Lord all unknown, 213 Nine special times when this Promise fulfilled 215 The Godly may meet with sad times 220 The godly may expect glorious times 221 Two glorious times to be expected ibid. The foundation of all sound hope laid in Grace 222 The great difference, 1 Between the sorrow in the godly and in the wicked ibid. ● In their comforts; set out in six particulars 224 The godly to expect and pray for the accomplishment of this Promise 225 Chap. 22 Of Christ his healing all the soul Diseases of his people 229 The many and various soul Diseases of the Godly ibid. Five sad but common Diseases of all the Godly 231 Three extraordinary Diseases of some Godly ones 232 Three Reasons of the Point 234 This healing implieth six things 237 Four Means Christ useth to heal the soul 238 Quest. Whence is it that many complain they are not healed? 242 Ans. 1. It may be their sin, from a fivefold default. ibid. 2 Or is their mistake. A threefold mistake of the godly 244 Christ is not one benefit but many 246 No man's case desperate 248 How are we bound to bless God for Christ? ibid. Five Directions to get spiritual health 249 Chap. 23 The gracious heart can read Christ and self in every creature 254 A threefold good use of the Creature ibid. A fourth sinful use made of the Creature 256 The last Doctrine, That all the godly in whom Christ hath begun a good work shall come to an excellent growth in due time 257 Three especial growths or growing times to the godly 258 Two growths more easily discernible ibid. A third growth not so perceptible 259 A fourfold growth in the godly ibid. 1 In grace; in five particulars 260 2 In Comforts 262 3 In Experiences 263 4 In Acceptableness 264 Three Reasons of the Point 265 Thankfulness for Grace bestowed 267 Five Motives to this thankfulness. ibid. Three sorts reproved: 1. Such as grow not at all 268 2 Such as grow from evil to evil 269 3 Such who grow from good to evil 270 Enquiry and examination of growth 271 Nine Notes of growth 273 Eight Hindrances to spiritual growth 277 Nine Helps to growth 281 Six Motives to growth 284 That sad Objection of many of the godly who complain of their non proficiency and want of growth. 288 Seven Considerations laid down in answer to this Objection 289 Object. 2. I feel a decay, I have not such life, or lively stir of grace as formerly 292 Four things in answer thereunto. 293 Object. 3. My desires are not alike and uniform, but unconstant 294 Four things in answer to such a case ibid. Object. 4 I find more curruption in my heart beyond all imagination. 295 Two things in answer thereunto 296 FINIS. Errata quomodo Corrigenda. REader, If thou be not ingenuous, thou hast greater Faults of thy own to look over; and if thou be, greater of mine then literal or vocular to overlook; pass by another's, amend thy own: but think not to mend thy own at the end of thy Death-Book, but have a care to avoid or amend them all along in thy Book of Life, so wilt thou be sure to— Farewell.