CHRIST ALL and in ALL. OR, Several significant similitudes by which the Lord Jesus Christ is described in the holy SCRIPTURES. Being the substance of many Sermons Preached by that faithful and useful servant of Christ Mr. RALPH ROBINSON, late Pastor at Mary Wolnoth London. Which were appointed by the Reverend Author on his Deathbed (if his Brethren should think fit) to be published. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Col. 3. 11. Sufficit omnibus unus Christus. Christus omnia factus est omnibus. Ambros. Aridus est omnis animae cibus, si non oleo isto infunditur, infipidus est si non hoc sale conditur. Si scribas non sapit mihi, nisi legero ibi Jesum, si disputes aut conferas, non sapit mihi, nisi son●erit ibi Jesus. Jesus mei in ore, melos in aure in cord jubilus. Bernard. Serm. 15. in Cant. LONDON, Printed for John Rothwel, and are to be sold by Thomas Johnson, at the golden Key in Saint Paul's Churchyard. 1656. TO THE Reader. Christian Reader, THis profitable Treatise may occasion both sorrow and joy unto ourselves and many others, who were well acquainted with the Reverend Author. 1. Grief, by minding us of our great loss in his death. As the widows were found weeping, while they shown the coats Acts 9 39 and garments which Dorcas made while she was with them. 2. Gladness, in that though he be dead, he Heb. 11, 4. yet speaketh, not only by his holy life, but also by his useful labours, for both which Psa. 112. 6. he shall be had in everlasting remembrance. This good man had high natural abilities, which were heightened by industry, and brightened by his graces, but he always had a low esteem of himself and his services. When he was on his deathbed, he said, that he judged not any of his papers worthy publishing, but yet he looked upon these as most probably profitable. In these Sermons we have the lively picture of the man in his Ministerial capacity drawn up by his own pen, represented to the Readers view: whereby is fully discovered his laborious long after the excellency of the Phil. 3. 8. knowledge of Jesus Christ his Lord, to be improved for his own personal benefit, & communicated for the edification of his Auditors. By his opening the Scripture Metaphors, which familiarly reveile Christ, besides the many notions which shall be beamed into the understanding, the serious-musing-Christian will be much advantaged in occasional meditations. If when these Sermons have been diligently perused, there could be a clear discovery annexed of the Author's gifts for prayer (which were more than ordinary) to gether with his pious winning conversation, cheerful readiness to be assistant in all religious exercises (wherein he was lovely and exemplary) Then the judicious Reader would lamentingly say, Oh how great was London's loss by the death of worthy Master Robinson taken away in his youth, when growing towards greater maturity for the further service of the Church of Christ. In God's counsels for the managing of Israel's wars with their adversaries, this charge was given, that fruitbearing trees should not be cut down, and that Deu. 20. 19 upon this account, for the tree of the ●●●d is man's life. The application here of may be (as we humbly conceive) seasonable for the awakening of secure Christians who be not affected with the removal of their fruitful Ministers out of the land of the living. For thus we argue; Might not man extirpate a vegitative plant, growing in the field of foes, because it was a means of life, how great divine displeasure then do those providences express against this City and Nation, whereby most generous plants in Gods own Orchard are cut down, and cast into the dust! How startling are such dispensations, whereby the Lord himself by the strokes of his own hand, taketh away so many Ministers, Pastors according to his own Jer. 3. 15. heart who were wont to feed the souls of his friends with knowledge and understanding? But yet his Majesty hath not left us without manifold means of strong support and consolation, for ever blessed be his Name. We have just occasion to break forth into praises, in the language of the Psalmist, The Lord liveth, and blessed be our rock, Ps. l. 18. 39 and let the God of our salvation be exalted. For. 1. We have not only this useful Treatise with very many more excellent books, the fruits of the heads & hearts of God's worthies (with the expectation of more, to be made public) for our confirmation and edification in grace, but we enjoy the labours of many famous, orthodox, learned, rightly constituted Ministers, both in this City and other parts of this Nation, whose lives and liberties, with hearts to do service, are still continued through God's mercy, notwithstanding our all-forfeiting sins; together with the malice of Satan, and the inveterate rage of his instruments, who act against the Gospel under different disguises and apprehensions, of whom we may say; They compassed us about, yea, Ps. 118. 11 12, 13, 14. they compassed us about; They compassed us about like Bees. They thrust sore at us that we might fall, but the Lord helped us. The Lord is our strength and song, and is become our salvation. 2. We enjoy the sweet influential presence of his all sufficient Majesty in our Church-assemblies though they be despised and deserted by many ignorant, passionate, rash, selfconceited persons) in the virtue whereof we do walk and hope to walk from strength to strength, in the ways of his truth and fear, notwithstanding all our present and further expected difficulties in our journey towards heaven. Somewhat through God's grace we do experimentally know; of that river, the streams whereof Ps. 46. 4. will make glad the City of God; And we remember that brave speech of magnanimous Luther, when dangers from opposers did threaten him and his associates, Come let us sing the forty sixth Psalm, and then let them do their worst. 3. And this especially doth relieve our spirits, that the Almighty (upon whom we do and will depend) is independent and Isa. 26. 4. unchangeable. For, howsoever we do need Ordinances as the means appointed to build us up yet further, till God shall be pleased Acts 20. 32 to give us the promised inheritance in glory, Acts 17. 25 yet his Highness neither needeth Ministry, nor Ordinances, nor any such things, but can easily, and will infallibly accomplish all the precious promises of his rich grace, though more of our best gifted Ministers with the most taking means of our spiritual advantage should be quite removed from our reach and use. Those breathe of faith recorded by the Prophet Habakkuk, are warming, in such cases, to believing souls. Although the figtree shall not blossom, Hab 3. 17, 18 neither shall fruit be in the vines, etc. yet I will rejoice in the Lord, I will joy in the God of my salvation. 4. But hereto we may annex the encouragement of our hopes, that our eyes shall still (according to God's promise) see Isa. 30. 20 our Teachers, and that we shall not be left 2 Chr. 15. 3 without God through the want of a true Gospel Ministry. 1. Both because of his abiding compassions (notwithstanding our ill deservings) from whence in former ages his Church hath been supplied with a succession of faithful, painful Ambassadors, 2 Chr. 36. 15 though there have been therein many people of very high provocations. 2. And also, because there is a considerable accession of young men, rich in gifts and graces, who from time to time seek entrance into the Ministry through the right door of Ordination, though it be an Ordinance woefully slighted by multitudes, yea, by some who pretend much love unto the Gospel. And therefore seeing Christ who holdeth the stars in his right hand, is obliged Rev. 1. 16. Eph. 4. 11, 12, 13. to maintain his own Officers in the Church, till his Saints arrive at perfection; we his Ministers in reference to our calling, may boldly say, We shall not die, but live and declare the works of the Lord. Reader, Ps. 118 15 believe it, Nothing more endangereth the loss of the Gospel, than contempt and none proficiency. Therefore once and again we most hearty entreat thee to prize and to improve a Gospel Ministry, and all other means of grace which the God of thy mercies doth yet vouchsafe. To him that hath, (and fruitfully tradeth what he is trusted with) shall be given, and he shall have abundance. Mat. 23. 29 Let not this book be received in vain, which the good hand of providence doth now tender unto thee. This field is full of Gospel treasures digged out of Scripture mines, for thine enriching in the knowledge of Christ: and what knowledge is so necessary, excellent, or profitable? For from hence do issue all things which pertain unto life and godliness. Hereby our love to Christ is 2 Pet. 1. 3. inflamed, our long after him enlarged, our faith in him confirmed, our joys in him raised, yea, by the knowledge of him he is possessed and improved, both for growth in all graces, augmenting of all spiritual comforts, and preparation for everlasting glory. Therefore commending this book, which hath by one of us been diligently and carefully compared with the Authors own notes;) together with all thy other helps for heaven, unto thy faithful improvement; we commend thee to the fullness of the blessing of the Gospel Rom. 15. 29 through Jesus Christ, in whom we desire always to approve ourselves. May 28. 1656. The real friends and servants of thy soul Simeon Ashe. Edm. Calamy. William Tailor. A TABLE Of the several DOCTRINES handled in this TREATISE. 1. A Prelimunary Sermon to the whole discourse that Christ is All and in All. pag. 1 2. Christ a Christians life. 11 3. Christ a Christians food. 39 4. Christ's righteousness the Christians robe. 67 5. Christ the Protector. 87 6. Jesus Christ the Physician. 119 7. Christ the true light. 225 8. Jesus Christ the great Shepherd. 249 9 Jesus Christ the true Vine. 282 10. Christ the horn of salvation. 324 11. Christ the dew of heaven. 351 12. Christ the chief corner stone. 385 13. Christ to the wicked a stone of stumbling. 432 14. Christ the Sun of righteousness. 455 15. Christ's Name a precious ointment. 487 16. Jesus Christ the consolation of Israel. 509 17. Christ the fountain opened for penitent sinners. 555 Second Part of the Table. 18. CHrist the Lamb of God. 1 19 Christ a bundle of myrrh. 3 20. Christ the way. 16 21. Christ the truth. 40 22 Christ the glory of his people. 80 23. Christ the gift of God. 81 24. Jesus the Author and finisher of our faith. 101 25. Christ the rock. 121 26. The Word of Christ the sword of the spirit. 153 27. Jesus Christ the desire of all Nations. 1●4 28. The Covenant of grace established in Christ. 206 29. Christ the hope of salvation. 235 30. Jesus Christ as rivers of water in a dry land. 258 31. Christ the power of God. 288 32. Christ the wisdom of God. 306 33. Christ the true brazen Serpent. 329 34. Christ the end of the Law. 365 35. Christ the holy one of God. 379 36. Christ the Christians spiritual Altar. 400 37. Christ the Christians Passeover. 408 COL. 3. last part of ver. 11. I. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth. Lon. May 18. 1651. — Christ is all, and in all. THe Apostle in the two former Chapters persuadeth these Colossians to constancy in the Faith of the Gospel, in which they had been instructed against the practice of those false apostles who laboured to draw them away to judaical ceremonies He doth in this Chapter, as his manner is, give them sundry Exhortations to holiness of life. And first he stirs them up to the more diligent study of heavenly things, by many Arguments, verse 1, 2, 3, 4. If ye be risen with Christ, seek those things that are above. Secondly, he persuades them to mortify their earthly members, those vicious motions and affections of corrupt nature, which were still too strong in them: he doth not only urge this in general, but instances in many particulars, all which are pressed by several Arguments, verse 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10. Amongst other Arguments this is one, They have put off the old man, and put on the new man, ver. 9, 10. This new man he describes three ways. First, it is the renewing of the holiness of our nature, which we lost in Adam. Secondly, it consists in the knowledge of the mystery of the Gospel. Thirdly, the example or Archetype according to which this new man is fashioned, is the image of God our Creator. This Argument the Apostle follows, verse 11. he sets it on two ways. 1. By removing the false opinion of some, who neglecting this new man, did confide in their external privileges, and contemned all such as wanted them; this in the former part of the verse, where there is neither Greek, nor Jew, etc. that is, in this new man it matters not what Nation a person be of, whether he be Jew or Gentile; nor doth it matter what outward prerogatives a person have, whether he be circumcised, or uncircumcised; nor doth it matter what his outward state be, whether he be bond or free, etc. none of all these differences are looked at or considered. No man is more accepted of God for the having of any of these things, nor is any less esteemed of him for the want of them, There is neither Jew, nor Greek, etc. 2. By opposing the true opinion; But Christ is all, and in all. Q●d. All those external things which are accounted so honourable without this new man, do not avail to salvation, nor will the want of all these hinder a person of salvation, and acceptance with God, if the great work of regeneration be wrought, for Christ is all, and in all. We have such another expression, Gal. 3. 27, 28. Ye are all the children of God, etc. for as many of you as have been baptised, etc. there is neither Jew, nor Greek; bond, nor free; male, nor female: for ye are all one in Christ Jesus. The words are a Proposition. In which we have, 1. The Subject, Christ; But Christ. 2. The Predicate, He is all, and in all. He is all things that are necessary to salvation, and that in all persons, who do believe in him, who are renewed and regenerated by his grace. I intent to go over all the comparisons by which Jesus Christ is set out in Scripture. And I have begun with this as a Preface or introduction to the rest. I shall handle it generally, and draw from it this observation, viz. Doct. The Lord Jesus Christ is all things in and to all persons that have a true saving interest in him; Christ is all and in all. It doth not exclude the Father and Holy Ghost but all other things, as circumcision, uncircumcision, etc. A like phrase. Act. 4. 12. Christ is all and in all to every believer. Here are two rules to be observed. 1. We are not to understand this (as excluding the other persons of the Trinity,) for the whole Godhead is all in alto believers as well as Jesus Christ. But because Jesus Christ the second person of the Trinity is the head of the mystical body, by virtue of which union true believers are made one mystical body with Christ, Eph. 1. ult. therefore is this principally appropriated to him, to be all in all to those that are united to him by saving faith. 2. The truth of this proposition is not from the humane nature, but from the divine: it is from the power of the divine nature in Christ, that he is all in all to his people; because the fullness of the Godhead dwells bodily in the humane nature as a part of the person. Now he is all in all to them in these five respects, viz. 1. By way of merit. Jesus Christ is meritoriously all in all to believers. Whatsoever they are, whatsoever they have, whatsoever they do, or can expect, is only upon the score and account of his purchase and merit. They enjoy no good thing upon any other terms, but only upon the consideration of Christ's merits. Because he hath done and suffered for them, and in their stead, therefore do they partake of those blessings which make them happy to all eternity. The Patriarches in the Old Testament, Christians in the New, have pleaded with God for all blessings only upon the account of Christ. Dan. 9 17. cause thy face to shine upon thy Sanctuary, that is desolate, for the Lords sake. Of this the Apostle speaks, when he saith, that Christ is made unto us of God wisdom, righteousness, sanctification and redemption, 1 Cor. 1. 30. Christ doth bestow upon us, and God is pleased to accept for us the merit of Christ's Passion, death, obedience, and righteousness.— 2. Christ is all in all to them by way of conveyance. As he hath merited all for them: so 'tis from him and through him that all good things are communicated to them, John 14. 6. As we have all propter Christum, so we receive all we have, per Christum through Christ. He is not only the fountain, but the Medium and conduit through whom all a believer hath is conveyed to him. Jesus Christ is a believers root, Joh. 15. 5. Now as all the sap which is in the branches is communicated through the root, so all the good which a believer hath is derived through Christ. God hath put all that good he intends to bestow upon his Elect into Christ's hands as a Feoffee in trust, and from him as the great Lord-steward is all communicated unto them. Of this the Apostle speaks, Col. 2. 19 From Christ the head, the whole body by joints and bands having nourishment ministered and ●nit together, increaseth with the increase of God. Jesus Christ is as it were, the hand of God, through which all good things are sent in to us; He is the door, John 10. 7. 3. Christ is all in all to them, by way of efficiency and causality. He it is that works all in all in his Saints, 1 Cor. 12. 6. There are diversities of operations, but it is the same God which worketh all in all. This our Saviour bears witness unto, John 15. 5. when he tells us, that without him we can do nothing. The soul is the principle of all action in man, Jesus Christ is the principle of all motion and spiritual action in his Saints, for he is the soul of their soul. Not a good desire, not a good thought but what is inspired by Jesus Christ. The Apostle doth freely acknowledge this, Gal. 2. 20. I live, yet not I, but Christ liveth in me, etc. so Phil. 2. 12, 13. Work out your own salvation, etc. For it is God which worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure. 4. Christ is all in all to them virtually; he is instead of all things to them. Solomon saith that money answereth all things, Ecoles'. 10. 19 it is meat, drink, , house, lands, etc. all things that are vendible may be procured by money. Jesus Christ is virtually all things, he makes up all things that are wanting. Hence it is that he is in Scripture compared to all things, to food, to clothing, to physic, to gold, to health, etc. because he stands for all these things unto the souls of his Saints. Hence is that promise, Rev. 21. 7. He that overcometh shall inherit all things. Jesus Christ is for all uses and purposes. This is in the text; he is Circumcision to the Gentile, wisdom to the Barbarian, etc. 5. Christ is all in all to them by way of benediction, and sanctification. It is from him that any good they enjoy becomes a blessing to them. He makes every thing effectual for those ends for which they are appointed. No good thing would be good to us without the benediction of Christ; yea were it not for his blessing, every good thing would prove a snare, a cross and a curse to us, as they do to them, who have no interest in Christ. This is that which Solomon saith, Prov. 10. 22. The blessing of the Lord, it maketh rich. Thy health would be thy greatest sickness, thy wealth would be thy ruin, thy parts and abilities would be a snare to thee, did not Jesus Christ sanctify them by his blessing. All the good the Saints enjoy depends upon Christ's blessings to make them good to them. The Application follows. Use 1. How injurious to Jesus Christ are they who mingle other things with Jesus Christ as the causes of their salvation. The Papists mingle their own merits, and righteousness, indulgences, the sufferings of other men, with the merits of Christ, as the causes of their justification and salvation. What else i● this but to deny the al-sufficiency of Jesus Christ? If he be all in all for justification and salvation, he needs not have his merits eked out with such kind of helps as these are. If Christ be all in all, than these are superfluous, yea, the addition of these doth derogate from, and destroy the fullness and al-sufficiency of Christ. Yea Christ who is all in all to believers, will be nothing at all to them who are not contented with him alone. Christ is become of none effect to you, whosoever of you are justified by the law, ye are fallen from grace, Gal. 5. 4. Consider this you that are self justiciaries. Use 2. If Christ be all in all, then is nothing any thing at all without Jesus Christ. All the world, the riches, pleasures, honours of the world is but emptiness without Christ. Vanity of vanities, all is vanity, Eccles. 1. 2. that man hath just nothing, that hath not Christ who is all things; the world is but nigrum nihil. Thy wisdom, thy parts, thy children, thy offices, thy preferments, thy lands and revenues, all thou hast, if thou want him that is all things, can amount to nothing. They are but cyphers without a figure. O that men would consider this! Use 3. What rich inheritance have all those who are truly interested in Jesus Christ! Christus meus & omnia. They possess him that is all in all, and in possessing him they possess all. I have all things my brother, saith Jacob to Esau, Gen. 33. 11. he that hath him that is all in all, cannot want any thing. All things are yours, (saith the Apostle) whether things present, or things to come, and you are Christ's, 1 Cor. 3. 22. A true believer, let him be never so poor outwardly, is in truth the richest man in all the world; he hath all in all, and what can be added to all? Use 4. It shows the reason why the Saints are so fearful of losing Jesus Christ. They value all things at a low rate in comparison of him. They would rather lose all then Christ, they are contented to part with liberty, estate, life, rather than with Christ. Is there not cause for it? Christ is better than all things else. Riches are something, liberty is something, life is something, but Christ is all in all. There is nothing besides Jesus Christ that is good for all uses. Garments are good to cover, but not for food; meat is good to feed, but not to warm, etc. but Jesus Christ is good for every use, for all persons, for all times, for all sexes, for all conditions. They know if they lose Christ, they lose all things. If a man had all his estate in one jewel, you would not blame him to be very careful of keeping that. Jesus Christ is their all, they seek him when they are deprived of him, with greatest care; they keep him when they have him, with the greatest diligence, Cant. 3. ult. I sought him, I found him, and would not let him go; do not wonder at it! for he is their all in all. Use 5. That no soul esteems Christ aright, that doth not esteem him all in all. To esteem any thing equal to Christ, is to disesteem Christ. Thou dost never truly account him any thing, till thou do account him all things, yea, better than all things, and all things as nothing in respect of him. If thou canst not make up all things in Christ, thou makest him but a poor Christ. If thou canst not make him a friend in the want of a friend; an habitation in the want of an habitation; if thou canst not make him riches in poverty; if there be any condition in which Christ will not suffice thee; if Christ be too little to satisfy thee, thou dost but undervalue him; he is never truly accounted any thing, till he be accounted all things. Use 6. Learn hence, The misery of those that want Christ. He that wants Christ, wants all things. Lord, what wilt thou give me, seeing I go childless, saith Abraham, Gen. 15. 2. he had much, and yet because he wanted a child, he wanted every thing. The soul that wants Jesus Christ hath indeed nothing. The Apostles possessed all things when they had nothing, 2 Cor. 6 10. having Christ they possessed all things. Those that want a saving interest in Christ, possess nothing, though they seem to have all things; all they have is emptiness; yea, all they have is a curse, because they have not Christ. O that God would convince men of this truth! Use 7. It's their duty to carry their selves towards Christ, as those that account him all in all. How is that? 1. Love him and prise him above all. Thy love is better than wine, Cant. 1. 2. Above wife, husband, children, life. Christ is not loved at all, till he be loved above all, Matthew 10 37. 2. Be contented with Jesus Christ in the want of all other things. Make up all thy wants, all thy losses in him. Encourage thyself in Christ, when thou art discouraged in all other things. Rejoice in him, when all things fail, vid. Hab. 3. v. 17, 18. 3. Make him thy end in all. Let him be all in all to thee finally. Refer all to Jesus Christ as the ultimate end of all, hear, pray, meditate, do, suffer for the glory of Christ. The Apostle referred all to Christ as the supreme end of all, that Christ may be magnified, etc. Phil. 1. 20. if Christ be not the Alpha and the Omega, the first motive, and the last end of all, thou dost greatly undervalue him. 4. Be sure thou go to Christ for all thou wantest. If comfort, if zeal, if pardon, if strength, etc. he hath it for thee, and it is for his dishonour that thou shouldest go any other way, 2 King. 1. 3. 5. Do all in Christ's name and strength, Eph. 5. 20. Col. 3. 17. Use 8. How careful should men be to prove their interest in Jesus Christ? 2 Cor. 13. 3. you want all, if you have not an interest in him. Signs of this. 1. Have you his Spirit? Rom. 8. 9 the effects of the spirit. 2. Are ye like Christ? 2 Cor. 5. 17. 3. Are ye willing to be Christ's? Use 9 Let the presence of Christ in others be all in all to thee. Though thou be poor; yet if Christ be in them, though unlearned, etc. if thy children have Christ, though they want parts, beauty, etc. yet esteem them. COL. 3. 4. When Christ our life shall appear, then shall we also appear with him in II. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth. Lon. May 25. 1651. glory. THe world, and the things of the world are great enemies to the work of grace. They do a long time hinder the first planting of it in the soul; and when it is planted, they do hinder the growth and progress of it. The cares of this world, and the deceitfulness of riches choke the Word, and it becomes unfruitful, Mat. 13. 22. The Apostle knowing this, doth in the beginning of this Chapter labour to raise the Colossians to the more diligent meditation, and studying of heavenly things, that being above the world, the work of God might prosper better in their hearts. If ye be rison with Christ, etc. v. 1, 2. This he presseth by two cogent Arguments. 1. They are dead to the world, v. 3. for ye are dead. By faith they are partakers of Christ's death, and by their profession they are under an obligation of dying more and more. 2. Their life is hid with Christ in God, v. 3. They are appointed to a higher kind of life then that which other men live, therefore they ought to seek after those things which appertain to this life. Now lest any should object, if the life thou speakest of be a hidden life, what advantage will it be to be so mindful of it; the Apostle answers, v. 4. though it be for the present an hidden life, yet it shall be revealed, and that perfectly. When Christ who is our life shall appear, etc. In which we have these two Propositions, viz. 1. Jesus Christ is a believers life. 2. That Christ who is a Believers life shall appear. Of these in Order. Doct. 1. That Jesus Christ is a Believers life. For the understanding of this, we are to know that a Believer hath a twofold life, for I shall not speak here of the life of nature, which a believer enjoys not as a believer, but as a reasonable creature. Jesus Christ is a believers life▪ as he lives the life of nature, Act. 17. 28. in him we live, move, and have our being. 'Tis from Christ that we live the life of men. But to wave that, a believer as a believer, hath a double life. 1. The life of grace, which he lives after he is regenerated by virtue of the Spirit of Christ living in him, and uniting him to God by Faith. 2. The life of glory, which he shall live in heaven to all eternity after this life. The soul gins this life immediately upon its departure out of the body, and the body shall enter into the possession of this life immediately after the resurrection, and reunion of soul and body. Both these kinds of life are a Believers, as he is a believer; and Jesus Christ is a Believers life in reference to both these. And because both of these are included in the Text, the one of them, the life of grace is but the inchoation of, and a preparation to the life of glory; I shall speak of both of them in the handling of the Doctrine. Jesus Christ is a believers spiritual life. He is so to a believer in these four respects. 1. He is their life originally. It is Jesus Christ that works this life in their souls. He is the Creator and Former of life in them. The second Adam was made a quickening spirit, 1 Cor. 15. 45. As the father raiseth the dead, and quickeneth them, so the Son quickeneth whom he will, Joh. 5. 21. Thy soul had never fetched out spiritual breath, had not Jesus Christ breathed into it the breath of life. The time cometh and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God, and they that hear shall live, Joh. 5. 25. The Ordinances are the instrumental cause, but Jesus Christ is the efficient cause of the animating of the soul by a spiritual life. 2. He is their life materially. He is that principle by which they live. Every living Creature hath some intrinsecal principle of that life which it lives. Jesus Christ is the inward principle of a believers life. He is the soul of their soul. The Apostle speaks of this, Gal. 2. 20. I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live, yet not I, but Christ lives in me. It is only by virtue of the soul's union with Christ, that it comes to live the life of grace. He is the foundation, or form, as I may say, of their life. 3. He is their life conservatiuè. He it is that doth preserve this spiritual life in their souls; by continual communication of himself; he maintains and upholds the life of grace from dying and perishing. When they are sleepy, he awakeneth them; when they languish and faint, he recovers them. He strengthens the things which remain, that are ready to die. He removes those inward distempers which waste this spiritual life, and be blesseth those Ordinances which feed this life. When David was going down the hill, and in regard of this spiritual life was almost at the dust of death, so weak that he could scarce fetch his breath, Jesus Christ did restore and renew him again. He restoreth my soul, Psal. 23. 3. he cast water upon the dying plant, and made it green and vigorous again. Of this the Apostle, Col. 3. 3. our life is hid with Christ. 4. He is their life, exemplariter. He is the example and pattern according to which they are to live. Jesus Christ is the rule according to which they are to walk; he is the copy according to which they are to write. One end of the incarnation and life of Jesus in the flesh, was to set us an exact and perfect pattern for our imitation, 1 Pet. 2. 21. And by the diligent viewing and studying of his example, is our spiritual life carried on to perfection. The Uses of this point are these. Use 1. That all those that are without Jesus Christ are spiritually dead. The Scripture accounts all unregenerate sinners as dead men; They are dead in sins, they are dead unto God, they are dead unto grace; they are as truly without spiritual life, as the body is without natural life, from which the soul is departed. This thy brother was dead, and is alive again, Luk. 15. 32. conversion is called the quickening of the dead, Mat. 11. 5. because all who are unconverted are as to all spiritual considerations in a dead condition. And it cannot be otherwise, because they have no interest in Jesus Christ, who is the Author and principle of spiritual life. The Apostle asserts this clearly, Eph. 2. 1, 12. he tells them at the first verse, That they were dead in sins and trespasses, he gives them the reason, v. 12. because at that time they were without Christ. And so another Apostle tells us, 1 Joh. 5. 12. He that hath the Son hath life; but he that hath not the Son hath not life. Till Christ be form, the soul is a dead thing without either life or motion. And this is a very miserable condition; for a dead soul is far worse than a dead body, in as much as the soul is more excellent than the body. Consider a few particulars. 1. Dead souls are loathsome. Nothing more noisome than a dead body. By this time he stinketh, Joh. 11. 39 Let me bury my dead out of my sight, saith Abraham, even his wife, Gen. 23. 4. she that was the delight of his soul while she was alive, became noisome to him when she was dead. The soul that is spiritually dead, is very loathsome, both to God and man. The Scripture compares them to stinking carrion; Psal. 14. 3. They are altogether become stinking. They defile all that comes near them; whatsoever they meddle with, whatsoever toucheth them is defiled by them. 2. They that are spiritually dead, have no use of any of their spiritual senses. The soul hath senses as well as the body, but he that is dead cannot use any of these. They cannot hear, they cannot see, they cannot taste, they cannot smell, they cannot feel, they cannot hear Christ's voice in the Gospel, they cannot see the glory of Christ, nor of grace, they cannot feel the heavy weight of sin, they cannot taste the sweet and delicate pleasures of Jesus Christ, they cannot smell the fragrancy of Christ's sweet ointments. They have no pleasure in those things that are most pleasant in themselves, and most desirable to such as are spiritually alive: They are to all spiritual things, and all spiritual things are to them as if they were not. 3. This spiritual death, if it be not removed, is a certain forerunner of eternal Death. Blessed and happy is he that hath part in the first resurrection, of him the second death shall have no power, Rev. 20 6. but he that continues still in this spiritual death, shall for ever be under the power of the second death, the eternal death. And this is the state of all such as want Jesus Christ. Use 2. That that spiritual life which is in the soul of a believer, shall never totally and finally die. It may be at death's door, it may be ready to die, so it was with the Church of Sardis, Rev. 3. 2. A Christian may be in regard of his spiritual life, as a tree in the depth of winter, no difference to all outward appearance between him and a dead plant; but it is impossible that the spiritual life shall utterly be extinguished, because Jesus Christ who is our spiritual life, lives for ever. Your life is hid with Christ in God, Col. 3. 3. hid as in a root, for safety and security. Because I live, ye shall live also, John 14. 19 while the root liveth, the plant cannot die; while the fountain runneth, the streams cannot cease; while the olive-trees convey their oil through the pipes into the lamp, the lamp cannot go out. A living Christian may grow very weak, but he cannot die. Jesus Christ must cease to live, before the life of grace in a Saint do utterly perish; while the cause continueth, the effect will. Use 3. That there is a true spiritual union between jesus Christ and a believer. This is one of the great mysteries of the Gospel, that Christ and a believer should be made one; it's set out by many examples, as of root and branches, john 15. init. head and members, Eph. 5. 3. foundation-stone, and the superstructory stones, Eph. 2. 20. meat and eaters, john 6, 56. husband and wife, Eph. 5. 32. This very doctrine makes it good. He could not be our life, if he were not united to us, and we to him. 'Tis by virtue of our union with him, that we come to draw life from him. As the soul and body are united, so are Christ and a believer; the whole mystical body is called by his name, 1 Cor. 12. 12. so also is Christ, speaking of the Church. Use 4. Deadness of Spirit, want of spiritual Activity is very inexcusable in a believer. The ground of this inference is very clear, Jesus Christ is his life. Christ hath life enough in him, and he is willing enough to communicate more and more of this spiritual life. If the fountain of this life were a mere creature, something might be said for thy deadness and coldness; but now seeing Jesus Christ is thy life, thy deadness is inexcusable in thyself, and it is also dishonourable to Christ. The life and greenness of the branches, is an honour to the root by which they live. Spiritual greenness and fruitfulness is in a believer an honour to Jesus Christ, who is his life. Psal 92. 12, 13, 14, 15. The righteous shall flourish as a Palmtree, etc. To show that the Lord is upright, etc. The fullness of Christ is manifested by the fruitfulness of a Christian. Use 5. It is the duty of a Christian to live comfortably on this Doctrine. It affords very much comfort, 1. Against the weakness of this life in ourselves. What Christian is there but finds this life very weak in him at some times? well, when it is weakest in thee, it is then strong in Jesus Christ. And God looks upon thy spiritual life, not only as it is in thee, but as it is in Christ. 2. Against the fear of the wanting of the Ordinances of life. 'Tis a great loss to lose the Ordinances, Leu. 26. 31. Well, though thou lose these, yet thou dost not lose thy life. These are but the pipes, Christ is the Olive-tree. These are but the channels, Christ is the fountain. Man liveth not by bread alone, but by the word of blessing. Thy soul liveth by Christ, not by Ordinances. They are but the instrumental cause, Christ is the efficient. 3. Against the fear of Satan's workings to destroy this spiritual life. 'Tis his great design to take away this spiritual life. He labours to stifle it by sin; he stirs up his instruments to remove the Ordinances. Well, he cannot prevail. He must destroy Christ before he can destroy our life. He must either whither the root, or he cannot kill the branches. Use 6. Let believers be careful to carry themselves towards Christ as he who is their life. 1. Acknowledge him the Author of your life. 2. Go to him when you want life. 3. Strengthen your union with him, Eph. 4. 15. 4. Live to him who is your life, Rom. 14. 8. Use 7. It should invite all to lay hold on Christ. All men are dead by nature. There's no other way to live a spiritual life. If Christ be not thy life of grace, he will never be thy life of glory. COL. 3. 4. When Christ our life shall appear, then III. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth. Lon. June 1. 1651. shall we also appear with him in glory. I Have handled the first Proposition, as it relates to the life of grace; viz. that Jesus Christ is a believers spiritual life. I shall now consider of it as it refers to the life of glory, and so sum it up into this conclusion, viz. Doct. Jesus Christ is the eternal life of every believer. Christ is the everlasting life of all those that are eternally saved. As he is their life of grace, so he is also their life of glory. He is often called in Scripture, not only a Saviour, but Salvation. The salvation of God, Luk. 3. 6. An horn of salvation, Luk. 1. 69. And all because he is the salvation of all the Elect. I must here put in that Caution which I did before, viz. That the Father and Holy Ghost are not to be excluded; they are our life as well as Christ. The Spirit and the Father are Saviour's as well as the Son. Opera Trinitatis ad extra sunt indivise. Prophets, Act. 10. 43. Apostles, 1 John 5. 11. Christ himself, Joh. 14. 16. do all bear witness to this truth, That Jesus Christ is life eternal to every true believer. In what respect Christ is our life of glory, I shall show in the following particulars, viz. 1. In regard of merit and acquisition. Jesus Christ is the procurer of this life of glory. Heaven is called a purchased Redemption, or Possession, Epb. 1●4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Jesus Christ is the purchaser of this possession, and his blood is the price of the purchase. As he hath by his death purchased the Elect, so hath he also by his blood purchased this life for those redeemed ones, 1 John 4. 9 in this was manifested the love of God towards us, because he sent his only begotten Son into the world, that we might live through him. Had not Jesus Christ shed his blood, no sinner had ever tasted of this life eternal. Eternal life is the free gift of God, and yet it is merited by Christ. Christ who is the price and meritorious cause of life, is the free gift of God's grace, and therefore our salvation is both free, and ye● merited. 2. He is our life efficaciously. Though salvation be purchased for the Elect, yet must the Elect of God be fitted and prepared for this salvation before they can be put into the possession of it. The Apostle speaks of making the soul meet for the inheritance of the Saints in light, Col. 1. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. The best of men are unfit for salvation, as well as unworthy of salvation Though heaven be prepared for them, yet cannot they enter into heaven till they be prepared. This fitness or preparedness stands in the changing of our nature, by the working of grace in the heart, and in the merciful acceptation of God covering our infirmities, and reckoning our weak endeavours for perfect obedience. Natura mentis humanae quantumvis perfect a naturalibus donis absque gratiâ non est susceptibilis gloriae. Parisiens. lib. de v●rt. cap. 11. The Apostle tells us that a man must be wrought for glory, 2 Cor. 5. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. The Elect of God come into the world rough and unpolished, filthy and defiled, as well as others, and they are not fit for this life, till they be refined and polished. Flesh and blood cannot inherit the Kingdom of God, 1 Cor. 15. 50. Except a man be borne again, he cannot see the Kingdom of heaven. Aquinas saith well, Gratia haec divina eò infunditur electis, ut peragant actiones ordinatas in finem vitae aeternae. Now Jesus Christ doth fit and work the Elect for this glory. He doth by his Spirit change their nature, he doth by his grace renew the spirit of their mind; he doth set up his own image in their souls, and by working grace, fit them for the enjoyment of that life of glory which he hath purchased. 3. He is our life. He is the fountain of our eternal glory, 1 John 5. 11. This is the record, that God hath given to us eternal life, and this life is in his Son. 'Tis in him as in the head, as in the root, as in the fountain, or spring: All our glory is laid up in Jesus Christ, as in a public treasury. jesus Christ and all believers make up one mystical body, of which he is the head, and they the members, therefore is their glory laid up in him. 4. Jesus Christ is our life in regard of preparation. As he doth prepare us for heaven, so doth he prepare heaven for us. This is attributed to his Ascension, john 14. 2, 3. I go to prepare a place for you. Not as if the place of glory were not created till the Ascension of Christ. There were many souls in heaven glorified before Christ did corporally ascend thither. Abel, Abraham, Isaac, jacob, and the Prophets: the meaning of it is only thus much, that jesus Christ did not ascend only for himself to dwell in glory alone, but he ascended for our sakes, in our stead and place to possess the purchased inheritance for us, and to keep it for us till we actually come to be possessed of it ourselves. 'Tis by way of allusion to the practices of great Kings, who send their harbingers before them, to make ready for them against their coming. jesus Christ is pleased to style himself so in reference to the Elect. And therefore the Apostle calls him our forerunner, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and tells us that he is entered into the veil for us, Heb. 6. 20. and hence it is that we are said to sit down together with Christ in heavenly places, Eph. 2. 6. 5. He is our life, as the way to life. He calls himself the way, john 14. 16. No man comes to the Father but by Christ. This is that new and living way which the Apostle mentions, Heb. 10. 19, 20. 'Tis through the veil of Christ's flesh that we enter into the Holy of Holies. jacob in his vision at Bethel saw a ladder which reached from heaven to earth, Gen. 28. 12. upon this ladder the Angels of God ascended and descended. This ladder is jesus Christ, so he tells us himself, john 1. 51. hereafter ye shall see heaven opened, and the Angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of man. He hath not only showed us the way to heaven by his example, but he is the way himself in which we go to God. 6. He is our life in regard of distribution and communication. As he hath purchased life for us, and keeps possession of it for us, so he it is that shall put us into possession of it, when we come to enjoy it. I will come again and receive you unto myself, john 14. 3. The Apostle speaks of this in 2 Tim. 4 8. There is laid up for me a Crown of righteousness which the Lord the righteous Judge shall give me in that day. 'Tis to be understood of Christ; he that hath purchased the Crown for us, will in that day visibly set it upon our head. Come ye blessed of my Father, receive the Kingdom, etc. Matthew 25. latter end. 7. He is our life formally. jesus Christ is the matter of eternal life. Our eternal life and glory stands in the full enjoyment of jesus Christ in heaven. The seeing of God, the enjoyment of Christ is our very glory, Rev. 22. 3, 4. The Throne of God and of the lamb shall be in it, and his servants shall serve him, and they shall see his Face, and his Name shall be in their foreheads. The glory of heaven is called the eating of the tree of life, Rev. 2. 7. jesus Christ is the tree of life, the enjoyment of him is the souls glory. job therefore reckons up all his eternal glory by this very thing, I know that my Redeemer liveth, etc. I shall behold him not with another's, but with these very eyes. Full and perfect ● immediate communion with Christ, that is the life, the glory of the other world. Vid. Rev. 7. 17. the lamb which is in the midst of the Throne shall feed them, and shall lead them unto living fountains of waters. The whole felicity of glorified Saints, is held out in those expressions. The Uses of this Point. Use 1. Away then with the Doctrine of eternal life by the merit of good works. If jesus Christ be our life, then cannot the merit of our works be our life or the cause of it, either in part or in whole, Christ and works are opposites as to this business of salvation. The affirming of Christ is the denial of works, and the affirming of works is the denial of Christ. Act. 4. 11, 12. This is the stone which was set at nought of you bvilders, etc. neither is salvation in any other: for there is no other name given under heaven, etc. And the truth is, all the things required to make a work meritorious are wanting in the best of our good works. A meritorious work must be, 1. Nostrum. So are none of our good works, Eph. 2. 10. 2. Perfectum. So are not our works. Our wine is mixed with water. We halt upon our best legs, Isa. 64 6. Remember Lord my good deeds, and spare me, was Nehemiahs' prayer, ch. 13. 22. we never did any thing we should do, perfectly, not any one thing. Our most sublimated thoughts are full of the dregs of earthly mindedness, our best words are too scanty and light, etc. 3. It must be indebitum. A man cannot purchase your land by paying an old debt. All our obedience to God is an old debt which we own upon another score. Remember that Parable, Luk. 17. 9 Doth he thank that servant because he did that which was commended? I tell you no. That which will not deserve thanks cannot merit heaven. We are fallen into an erroneous age, man's will is cried up much. High Arminianism is within a few day's journey of this piece of Popery. 'Tis time to give antidotes when such deadly poison is scattered, and drunk in by many injudicious Christians. Let Papists make works their life, let Arminians make freewill their life, but let us make Christ our life. He that will not live by Christ solely, shall die for ever without Christ. I shall conclude this with that of the Apostle, Gal. 5. 4. Christ is become of none effect to you, whosoever of you are justified by the Law, ye are fallen from grace. Use 2. The certainty of the salvation of believers. They shall so certainly be saved, that Scripture speaks of their salvation as of a thing already done, 1 Cor. 1. 18. the Preaching of the cross is unto us that are saved the power of God, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 'Tis reported as a thing in facto, and not in fier●, Eph. 2. 5. By grace ye are saved, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Rom. 8. 30. Whom he justified, them he also glorified, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. He writes as if they were already in glory. All this to show the certainty of their salvation. This depends on many things, upon this in the text for one, — If Christ be their life, they shall live. He that will keep them out of heaven, must first pluck jesus Christ out of heaven; because I live, ye shall live also, John 14. 19 if the Son make you free, ye shall be free indeed: if the Son be your life, ye shall live, and that for ever, in despite of devil, in despite of corruption: he is able to save, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Heb. 7. 25. Use 3. Let this provoke all men to get an interest in Christ. There's nothing but eternal death without him. He that hath the Son hath life; he that hath not the Son hath not life, but the wrath of God abideth on him, 1 john 5. 12. There's no way to glory but by him. Deceive not yourselves; cling to him, lay fast hold on him, and on him alone: Other foundation can no man lay, then that which is laid already, even jesus Christ, 1 Cor. 3. 11. We hope we have an interest in Christ. Well. He that hath a good assurance that Christ is his for life, must have these three things, else he deceives himself. 1. He must be a true believer in Christ, vid. joh. 3. 36. He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life; he that believeth not the Son shall not see life, etc. 2. He must be an obedient subject to Christ. Though we exclude obedience from the cause of salvation, yet we do make it a qualification of the person that shall be saved. Christ is the Author of eternal life unto them that obey him, Heb. 5. 9 Christ will be King wherever he is Saviour. 3. He must live the life of grace. Christ is the Author of spiritual life, before he be the Author of life eternal. We must live in Christ before we live with Christ. Christ must live in us, before we live with him. Christ in you the hope of glory, Col. 1. 27. if Christ be not in you a fountain of grace, he will never be yours for glory. 4. You that have Christ for life eternal, carry yourselves as those that believe this truth. 1. Despair not. No sin disparageth Christ so much as despair: there is more ground of hope and confidence in Christ, then there can be of distrust in ourselves. The sacrifice is sufficient for the guilt. Christ is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, 1 Tim. 2. 6. a ransom, a full ransom. 2. Let salvation be so much the more precious to you for his sake who is the Author of it. 3. Attribute your salvation to Christ only. 4. Live to Christ. 5. The greatness of God's love to the Elect. He gave Christ to be their life, to die for them, Rom. 5. 8. 6. Live with Christ here as much as you can. 7. The greatness of man's misery, he could not be saved without Christ. COL. 3. 4. When Christ our life shall appear, then IV. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth. Lon. June 8. 1651. shall we also appear with him in glory. I Have handled the first Proposition, that Jesus Christ is a believers life, both in regard of the life of grace, and of the life of glory. I proceed to the second, viz. Doct. Jesus Christ who is a believers life, shall certainly appear. There will be a manifest appearance of Jesus Christ. The Scripture makes mention of a threefold appearance of Christ. 1. A bodily appearance in the flesh. Thus jesus Christ appeared in his Nativity, when in the fullness of time he took our nature in the womb of the Virgin Mary. Of this the Apostle speaks, 1 Tim. 3. 16. God manifested in the flesh. Old Simeon in his song rejoiceth for this, Luk. 2. 30. Lord, now lettest thou thy servant departed in peace according to thy word, for mine eyes have seen thy Venit ad homines. salvation. Venit ad homines. 2. A spiritual appearance of Christ in the preaching of the Gospel. Thus jesus Christ was manifested to all that received the Gospel, and is still manifested. The Apostle speaks of this manifestation, Gal. 3. 1, O foolish Galatians, etc. before whose eyes jesus Christ hath been evidently 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. set forth crucified among you. And of this the Apostle makes mention, 1 john 1. 2. The life Venit in homines. was manifested, & we have seen it, & 2 Tim. 1. 10. Neither of these appearances are to be understood in this Text, for it speaks of an appearance that is yet to be made. Therefore 3. A glorious manifestation of Christ, yet to be made at his second coming to judgement. And this is that appearance of which the Apostle here Venict contra homines August. speaks: for than it shall be, and not till then, that the Saints shall appear with Christ in glory. So the Apostle tells us, 2 Tim. 4. 8. Henceforth it laid up for me a Crown of righteousness, which the Lord the righteous judge shall give me in that day; and not to me only, but to all them also that love his appearing. 'Tis at this day of Christ's appearing, that the Saints shall be perfectly glorious. Having found out what is meant by Christ's appearing, I shall in the prosecution of the Point handle these five particulars. 1. That there shall be such an appearance of Christ. 2. Why Christ shall thus appear, the ends of this appearance. 3. After what manner Christ shall appear. 4. When shall be the time of this appearance of Christ. 5. Why it is deferred. I. That jesus Christ shall appear. I shall evince this, 1. By many express testimonies of Scripture. There is not any Article of our Faith more clearly set down in the Book of God than this, Mat. 24. 30. Then shall appear the sign of the Son of man in heaven, and they shall see the Son of man coming in the clouds of heaven. Act. 1. 11. This same jesus which was taken up from you into heaven, shall so come in like manner as ye have seen him go into heaven. The Apostle Paul asserts this truth in express terms, Heb. 9 28. Unto them that look for him, he shall appear the second time without sin unto salvation. 1 john 3. 2. When he shall appear, we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is. And as the Scripture doth expressly affirm it; So 2. God hath taught his people to wait for it, and to pray for it, Cant. 8. 8. Come away my beloved, etc. Rev. 22. 20. the last prayer of the Church is for this very thing, Even so come Lord jesus. And, Luk. 12. 35, 36. they are commanded to wait for this appearance. Let your loins be girded, and your lamps burning; And you yourselves like unto men, that wait for their Lord, etc. God never commanded his people to pray and wait for a fiction or dream which shall never come to pass. 3. From the absurdities which would follow upon the denial of it. We may say of this, as the Apostle saith of the denial of the resurrection of the body, 1 Cor. 15. 17, 18 19 If Christ should not appear, our faith would be in vain; The dead in Christ were perished, and we should only have hope in Christ in this life, and of all men should be most miserable. The whole comfort of a Christian turns upon the hinge of this Doctrine of Christ's appearing, joh. 14. 18. II. The ends of Christ's appearing are such as these. 1. To declare that sin is abolished. This is the meaning of that, Heb 9 28. 2. That he may be admired in his Saints, etc. This end of his coming the Apostle sets down, 2 Thes. 1. 10. he shall come to be glorified in his Saints, and to be admired in all them that believe. One end of the second coming of jesus Christ, is to communicate his glory to his Saints that have believed in him. He shall put his glory upon them, and so shall be glorified in them. jesus Christ is glorified in his Saints now, That holiness and grace which he hath communicated to them already doth render them very glorious: but at his second coming his glory will shine in them with greater splendour than now it doth. He will then communicate unto them all his glory, and make them glorious as he is glorious. Our Saviour mentions this, john 14. 3. I will come again, and receive you unto myself. He comes to fetch all his Elect to heaven, and to reveal his glory both to their souls and bodies. He shall then actually put soul and body into the full possession of that glorious redemption which he hath purchased for them. 'Tis called the day of redemption, Luke 21. 28. 3. To execute the sentence of his wrath upon all his enemies, and the enemies of his people. jesus Christ hath severely threatened all wicked men, that he will visibly take vengeance on them for the dishonours they have done to him, and the wrongs they have done to his people; And in this second manifestation of himself, he will put all those threaten into execution. Of this the Apostle speaks, 2 Thes. 1. 7, 8, 9 The Lord jesus shall be revealed from heaven in flaming fire, taking vengeance on them that know not God, etc. And of this, Enoch prophesied long ago, jude 15. Behold the Lord cometh with ten thousands of his Saints, to execute judgement on all, etc. Wicked men are now secure, they reproach God and wrong his people; but jesus Christ will one day visibly come from heaven to punish these contempts and injuries. The evil Angels, and sinful men shall then be publicly adjudged to suffer that torment which they have deserved. 4. To put an end to his Church's sufferings. Rev. 20. 10. Then shall the devil that deceived the world be cast into the lake of fire and brimstone, where the beast and the false Prophet are, and shall be tormented day and night for ever and ever. 5. To gather together his Elect. This the Evangelist sets down, Mat. 24. 30. 31. They shall see the Son of man coming in the clouds. And he shall send his Angels, and they shall gather together his Elect from the four winds, etc. The Elect of God are scattered up and down in the several quarters of the world, scarce two or three of them are now together in one family at the same time; but then they shall be collected, never to part asunder to all eternity. III. What manner of appearing this shall be. Consider for that these four things. 1. It shall be a real and corporal appearance. Christ shall not appear imaginarily, as some have thought, nor shall he only appear according to his Divine nature, but he shall appear bodily and truly: the same humane nature which was in the grave, and afterwards ascended into heaven, shall descend from heaven. Mat. 24. 30. Then shall appear the sign of the Son of man. The humanity shall appear; so the Angels tell the Disciples at his Ascension, Act. 1. 11. This same Jesus which is taken into heaven, shall so come in like manner as ye have seen him go into heaven. As he did really and bodily ascend, so shall he really and corporally descend. God will honour the humane nature of Christ in the world. They shall look upon him whom they have pierced. The same flesh of Christ which was pierced, shall be manifested in his second coming. 2. It shall be a sudden appearing. His coming is compared to a sudden flash of lightning, Mat. 24. 27. The appearance of Christ is compared to the lightning, in two respects. 1. For the evidence of it. It shall be as clear to the eyes of men as the lightning is. 2. For the suddenness of it. A flash of lightning doth suddenly break forth, and in an instant shines from one end of the heaven to another; so shall the appearance of Christ be. And for this very cause is it compared to the coming of a thief in the night, Luk. 12. 39, 40. As it was in the days of Noah, so shall it be when the Son of man cometh, They eaten, they drank, etc. Mat. 24. 37. when men say, peace, etc. 3. It shall be a very glorious appearance. He shall come with power and great glory, Mat. 24. 30. He was not so mean and despicable in his first coming, as he shall be majestical, and renowned in this his second coming. His first appearance was in the form of a servant. He came not to be ministered unto, but to minister. A low kind of appearance was most fit for such work; but when he appears again, he shall come as a Judge, as King of kings, and Lord of lords; therefore Majesty is fit for him. The Scripture doth set out the glory of his coming sundry ways. 1. He shall come in the clouds of heaven. The bright cloud shall be his chariot, Mat. 24. 30. 2. He shall come attended with an innumerable company of glorious Angels. Those glorious spirits shall come in full regiments attending upon his person to do him service, and to execute his will, Mat. 25. 31. He had the beasts to attend on him at his first coming; but he shall have Angels to wait upon him at this coming. 3. He shall come with the voice of the Archangel, with a mighty shout, and with the trumpet of God, 1 Thes. 4. 16. All these expressions are used to set out the glory of it. All outward glory which ever man beheld, is but darkness in this respect. 4. It shall be a very dreadful and terrible appearance. Full of Majesty, and therefore full of terror. His first coming was dreadful, Mat. 4. 5. The Scripture sets out the dreadfulness of it by the Antecedents, Concomitants, Consequents of it. The Antecedents are in Matthew 24. 29. such an alteration shall be made upon the creatures being, that Sun, Moon and Stars being obscured by the glory of Christ, shall cease from their service, and not be able to show their glory as before. The Concomitants, the firing of the world. The Apostle speaks of this, 2 Pet. 3. 10. what a dreadful sight will this be to the wicked. The consequents of it are, the raising of the dead, the setting up of the Thrones, the summoning of all the world to judgement. Well doth the Scripture call it the terrible day of the Lord. IU. When shall this appearing be? you cannot imagine that I should be so bold as to say any thing of the particular day, month, or year of Christ's coming. Our Saviour hath for ever silenced all curious enquirers about it, Mar. 13. 32. The Scripture tells us thus much about the time of it, that it shall be when the time of the Church's tribulation is ended. Matth. 24. 29. When the number of Gods elect is converted. In the end oft days, Dan. 12. 13. It is one of those Novissima, or last things, which is to be expected in the world. V Why is it deferred? 1. Because the Elect of God are not yet called. All the Vessels of glory are not borne into the world. Christ stays till these flowers be sprung up. The fetching of these to heaven is one end of his coming; And he will not come till these are brought forth. As the world was made at first, so doth it stand and continue for their sakes. 2. That space and time for repentance may be afforded unto sinful men. This reason the Apostle renders of it, 2 Pet. 3. 9 The Lord is not slack, etc. but is long suffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance. He defers his coming, that sinners may have more tenders of salvation made to them; that so they may be inexcusable, if they do not return. 3. That the faith, hope, patience of his own children may be exercised. The delaying of Christ's coming is a very great help both to exercise faith, watchfulness and patience. We may say of this, as the Prophet doth of the delaying of another day of the Lord, Hab. 2. 4. Though it tarry, wait for it, because it will surely come, it will not tarry, And the just shall live by his faith. 4. That all other of God's decrees for, and about the things which must come to pass before this day, may be accomplished. Many things God hath decreed shall be done before his appearance, which are not yet done in the world. The preaching of the Gospel to all Nations, Mat. 24. 14. The overthrowing of Antichrist, 2 Thes. 2. 3, 8. The making of the Jews and Gentiles into one Church, etc. Christ stays, because these decrees must be accomplished. The Uses of this Point. Use 1. Away with those Atheists, and Epicures who deny this Doctrine. In the very days of the Apostles, there were some scoffers that did mock at this doctrine of Christ's appearing, 2 Pet. 3. 3, 4. where is the promise of his coming? we have many such scoffers in our days, that deride the Doctrine of the resurrection of eternal life, of Christ's second coming. The Apostle tells us the reason of this scoffing in the same place. 1. The impurity of their hearts. They walk after their own lusts. That's one great ground of Atheistical and wicked opinions. Such Doctrines curb and check their lusts, and because they cannot have their lusts by retaining such doctrines, they therefore reject and scoff at such doctrines. 2. They walk more by sense, then by the testimony of the Word of God. Since the fathers fell asleep, all things continue as they were from the beginning of the Creation; because they cannot apprehend with their sense any such doctrine, or any ground of it, therefore they reject it. Such as these who will not be convinced by Scripture, we shall leave to feel the severity of that coming, which they will not believe. They that now scoff, will have time enough sadly to bewail their scoffing, they shall then feel what they will not now be persuaded to believe. Use 2. The dear love of Jesus Christ to his people. As his departure was a rich testimony of his love; 'Tis expedient for you that I go away, so is his returning; I will not leave you comfortless, I will come unto you, Joh. 14. 18. Never think of Christ's returning, but meditate upon the greatness of his love. Use 3. That Christ is not now corporally in the world. The Scripture speaks of his corporal appearance as of a future thing. The Papists they make him corporally present in the Sacrament. His body shall descend but once, and that shall never be till he come to take his people into glory with himself. The doctrine of the real corporal presence of Christ is a doctrine of real falsehood. Use 4. This is a very sad doctrine to all ungodly sinners. Christ shall appear. It were well for wicked men, if this Doctrine were an untruth. The very end of his appearing is to bring you to a public trial for all your acts of High-treason against his Crown and dignity. He will appear, and then you shall appear before him to render an account of, and to suffer punishment for all your hard words and cruel actings against him, and against his in the world; when he appears you shall wish that the mountains might fall upon you to hid you from his sight. The appearance of Christ to you, will be as the appearance of a severe Judge to a convicted malefactor. Consider of it beforehand, that by timely and thorough repentance, you may prevent that dreadful sentence which will be denounced and executed upon the wicked in that day. Falix trembled when he heard this doctrine. Acts 24. 25. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. If the hearing of it work such fear, how great fear will the sight of it work? be humbled and converted, that ye may stand when the Son of Man appears. You cannot hid any wickedness from him. You cannot bribe him to excuse your wickedness. Use 5. Let the friends and favourites of Christ draw comfort from hence. Lift up your heads, saith our Saviour, when he is preaching of this very Doctrine, Luke 21. 28. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 'Tis a day of lifting up the head to you. Think of it, and gather comfort from it. 1. Against all the shame you meet with here. That day shall wipe off all your shame, Isa. 66. 5. 2. Against all false judgements and accusations. In that day all shall be judged over again. Christ shall appear, and he will judge righteous judgement. 3. Against all slanders. 4. The appearing of Christ is a general antidote against all evils you suffer, 2 Pet. 2. 9 believe it, meditate much upon it, Mar. 13. 35. Luke 12. 42. 5. Prepare for it. JOHN 6. 55. My flesh is meat indeed, and my VI SERM. at Mary Wolnoth. Lon. Decem. 14. 1651. blood is drink indeed. IN this Chapter we have something Historical and something Doctrinal. The Historical part relates two great miracles done by our Saviour; his feeding five thousand men with five loaves and two fishes, ver. 1. to 15. his walking upon the water, v. 15. to 22. The Doctrinal part is from v. 22. ad finem. The first and principal Doctrine he handles, is to prove himself to be the bread of life. He is occasioned to preach this Doctrine from the people's flocking after him to be fed with miraculous bread, v. 22, 23, 24, 25. seeing a great multitude resort after to Capernaum, he knowing their intentions tells them, v. 26. that they followed, not because they saw his Divine power in the late miracle, but that they might satisfy their natural appetite with bread, and thereupon, v. 27. adviseth them that they would mind that spiritual bread which did excel the other, as far as the soul did the body, v. 27. And after some debate with them, when he saw their hearts a little raised after it, he doth openly declare and profess himself to be that spiritual bread. And when there was some contention among the Jews how he could give them himself to eat, v. 52. he doth, v. 53. show the misery of them that did not eat him, and v. 54 the happiness of those that did feed upon him; and thereupon lays down this assertion in the Text, For my flesh is meat indeed, etc. The wor●s [taken absolutely, and excluding the causal particle for] contain in them a double Proposition. 1. That Christ's flesh is meat indeed. 2. That his blood is drink indeed. I begin with the first. My flesh, etc. in which we have, 1. The subject, My flesh. 2. The predicate, Meat indeed. EXPLICATION. My flesh. Flesh, when it is spoken in relation to Christ, as here in the Text, signifies two things. 1. Sometimes the manhood alone. So you have it, Joh. 6. 63. It is the spirit that quickeneth, the flesh profiteth nothing. In this place the flesh signifies only the humanity of Christ. So Austin expounds it, and Calvin after him. The humanity is without advantage if it be separated from the spirit, that is, à spiritus virtute, quâ perfusa est caro. Calvin. 'Tis the Divinity that gives efficacy to the humanity. It is from the Spirit that the flesh hath any feeding virtue. 2. Sometimes the whole person of Christ, God-man. And so it is to be understood in the Text. My flesh is meat, that is, I am meat. I, God and man in one person. Now why flesh is mentioned here, Cameron gives the reason; because our life is in the flesh and blood of Christ. Si enim carnem & sanguinem Christo tollas, non erit amplius cibus noster. For that he might be food for our souls, it was necessary that he should satisfy the justice of God, and so purchase for us remission of sins. Therefore because by the shedding of his blood, and by the sacrificing and offering up of his body upon the cross, he purchased this for us, Heb. 9 22. his flesh is said to be our meat, and his blood our drink. Is meat, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. This word is translated sometimes rust, Mat. 6. 19, 20. Lay not up for yourselves treasures on earth, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, but lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. It signifies any thing that by rust or fretting doth eat into metal or other creatures, and so consumes them. It is also translated meat, and signifies generally all kind of food which is for the support of life, 2 Cor. 9 10. he that ministereth seed to the sour, both minister bread to your food, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and multiply your seed sown, etc. And so 'tis used in the Text. Indeed, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the flesh of Christ is called meat indeed, in a twofold respect. (1.) In respect of all other food. All other food in respect of this, is but cibi tantummodo umbra & vana imago, as Cameron saith. As natural life in respect of the spiritual, is but a shadow of life; so the meat that is appointed for the natural life, if compared with the meat of the Spiritual life, is but a very image of meat. Christ's flesh is real meat. (2.) In respect of that typical meat which the Jews had lately spoken of, v. 31. Our fathers did eat Manna in the desert, etc. Our Saviour tells them that that is but typical bread, but his flesh is bread indeed; it is the real substance of which that was but a mere type and shadow. Thus for Explication. The Observation is this. Doct 1. That the Lord Jesus Christ is really and truly the food and meat of believers. Flesh is here put for the whole person of Christ. Jesus Christ as he is held out in the Scriptures, is the true, real, and very meat of believing Christians; Christ as he is propounded in the Gospel, dead, broken, crucified. Christ in all his perfection, completeness, fullness, is meat indeed to a true believer. 'Tis the very scope of this Sermon, from v. 27. to v. 59 in which this truth is inculcated over and over again, and all objections answered, which the carnal reason, and unbelief of man's heart can make against it. I shall in the Explication of this Doctrine open these things. 1. Prove that Christ is a believers meat. 2. Show the Analogy between Christ and other meat. 3. How this meat is eaten and received. I. That Christ is the soul's meat. This is proved two ways. First, from the types of Christ in the Old Testament. The Ceremonial Law had many types of Christ. Whatsoever is revealed of Christ in the New Testament, was some way or other typified of him in the Ceremonial Law. There are four types which did set out Jesus Christ as the souls meat. 1. The Manna in the wilderness. The History of the Manna is set down, Exod. 16. the people being in some want of provision in the Wilderness of sin began to murmur against Moses and Aaron, v. 3. God promiseth, v. 4. to rain bread from heaven for them, which accordingly was done, v. 14, 15. That this was a type of the feeding virtue of Christ, is plainly discovered by our Saviour in this very Sermon, v. 31, 32. The Wilderness did typify the state of the Church in this world, and the Manna was a plain type of Christ the Church's meat. 2. The Shewbread, The Law and manner of the Shewbread you have at large, Leu. 24. 5, 6, 7. 8, 9 There are two things represented by this Shewbread. First, the multitude of the faithful presented unto God in his Church, as upon a pure table, continually serving him: made by faith and holiness, as fine cakes; and by the mediation of Christ, as by incense, made a sweet odour unto God. Secondly, the Spiritual repast which the Church hath from and before God, who feedeth them with Christ the bread of life. 3. The meat-offerings. Concerning this Minchah or meat-offering you may read at large, Leu. 2. 1, etc. These meat-offerings were of two sorts; some were the meat-offerings of the Congregation, some of particular persons; of these latter there were several sorts mentioned in that Chapter. It's said, v. 3. that Aaron and his sons shall have the remnant of the meat-offering, that is, all of it; but that which is burned upon the Altar for a memorial, v. 2. Several things were signified by the meat-offerings. Being referred to Christ (who by the oblation of his own body, was our meat offering, Psal. 40. 6. Heb. 10. 5.) they did shadow out our communion with Christ, and participation of his death, and resurrection by faith, whereby he becomes unto us spiritual meat, of which the whole Church are made partakers. 4. The flesh of the sacrifices of the peace-offerings, and others which were given to the Priests, of which you read, Leu. 7. 15. they were to be eaten the same day it was killed. Now what was meant by the eating of the flesh of these sacrifices, and of the flesh of the other sacrifices which were given to the Priests to eat, vid. Leu. 10. 12, 13, 14. Surely Jesus Christ, who by his flesh as by precious meat, feedeth his people who are spiritual, Priests unto everlasting life. Secondly, from the Sacraments of nourishment both of the Old and New Testament. There were Sacraments of implantation, or initiation, and of growth; under the Law, Circumcision Passeover; under the Gospel, Baptism, Supper of the Lord. 1. The Sacrament of nourishment under the Old Testament, was the Paschal lamb. The Law and rites of this are set down, Exod. 12. 3, 4, 5, etc. What did this Paschal Lamb signify, but Jesus Christ our Passeover, the Lamb of God which taketh away the sins of the world? In this Sacrament was Jesus Christ set out as a nourisher. He is that precious meat upon which all the true Israel of God feed continually, who is therefore called our Passeover, 1 Cor. 5. 7. 2. The Lord's Supper. This is the Sacrament of nourishment under the New Testament. And herein clearly Christ is exhibited as our spiritual meat. His flesh is the bread, the wine is his blood. As the body is nourished by bread and wine, so is the soul by his body and blood nourished and fed to life eternal. II. The Analogy between Christ and corporal meat, stands in these three particulars. Three great ends of meat. 1. Corporal meat is for the preservation of the Susientation. natural life. The natural life is maintained by meat, through the concurrence of God's ordinary blessing. 'Tis pabulum vitae. Hence bread, under which all other provision is comprehended, is called the staff of life, Esay 3. 1. Keep the strongest man from meat but a few days, and the life will extinguish and go out, 1 Sam. 30. 12. Jesus Christ is the maintainer and preserver of the spiritual life. As he gives it at first, so he upholds it. 'Tis by continual influences from him, that the life is kept from expiring. If he withdraw his influx never so little, the soul is at the giving up of the Ghost, even half dead. 2. Corporal meat is for growth. 'Tis by meat Vegetation that the body is brought from infancy to childhood, from childhood to youth, from youth to a perfect man. Jesus Christ is he that carries on a Christian from infancy to perfection. All the soul's growth and increase is from Christ. So the Apostle, Col. 2. 19 From him the whole body having nourishment ministered, etc. The branches live and increase by virtue of the sap which is derived from the root. Christians grow by virtue of the sap which is to them derived from Jesus Christ. Every part grows by Christ. 3. Meat is a repayer of nature's decays. When Reparation by some violent sickness the spirits are consumed, the body wasted, the strength lost, meat fitly and seasonably taken, helps through the divine blessing to recover all again; 1 Sam. 30. 12. his spirit came to him again. Jesus Christ is the repairer of the soul's decays. Sometimes a believer through the neglect of his duty, through surfeiting upon sin, brings spiritual languish upon himself, his strength is decayed, his vigour is abated, his pulse beats very weakly, he can scarcely creep in the ways of God. In such a case Jesus Christ recovers him, repairs his breaches and renews his strength, as in former times. The Psalmist speaks of this, Psal. 23. 3. He restoreth my soul, He leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for his Names sake. The Saints have every day experience of this restoring virtue of Christ. III. How this meat is eaten and received. The Scripture makes mention of three things which concur to this act. 1. The Ordinances. These are the conduits. Jesus Christ hath instituted and appointed his Ordinances to be the means of carrying his nourishing virtue to the soul. The Ordinances are the dishes of gold upon which this heavenly meat is brought. Prayer, Reading, Preaching, Meditation, holy conference, the Sacrament; in these Christ presents himself to the soul. He that forsakes these, can expect no feeding from Christ. In this mountain will the Lord of Hosts make a feast of fat things, etc. Esay 25. 6. The feast is made in the mountain of God's house, and the Ordinances are the dishes on which this meat is set, and the knives by which it's carved out to the soul. 2. Saving lively faith. This is the instrument. What the hand, and mouth, and stomach are in the corporal eating, that is faith in this spiritual eating. Faith is the hand that takes this meat, the mouth that eats it, and the stomach that digests it. Yea, faith is as the veins and Arteries that do disperse and carry this nourishment to every power of the soul. This is abundantly cleared in this very Chapter, v. 35. he that cometh to me shall never hunger, he that believeth in me shall never thirst. Come is expounded by believeth. Eating and drinking are here put for believing. Crede & manducasti. He that believes eats; and he that eats not, it is because he believes not; Hic ed●re est credere. Doct. 2. That the blood of Jesus Christ is drink indeed. Blood is here put for the whole person, as flesh was. And it's rather his blood is drink, then that He is drink; because the great efficacy of all Christ did, lies principally in his blood, Heb. 9, 22. And in the same respects, as his flesh is said to be meat indeed, his blood is said to be drink indeed. And those three things which concur to the act of eating his flesh, concur also to this act of drinking his blood. The mystical union, saving faith, the Ordinances. I shall therefore only open two things, 1. Show that Christ's blood is drink. 2. The Analogy between his blood and other drink. I. That the blood of Christ is spiritual drink, will appear. 1. From the drink-offerings under the Law. In the Law there were sundry drink-offerings appointed as well as meat-offerings. The daily sacrifice which was to be offered continually, every morning and evening, had both a meat-offering, and drink annexed to it, Exod. 29. 40, 41. The daily sacrifice did signify three things. (1) That Jesus Christ the true Lamb of God was available to the Church of God, from the morning of the world, to the evening, the end of the world. (2) To signify the continual need the Church had of reconciliation by Christ's blood, which taketh away sin. (3) To sanctify the morning and evening prayers of the Church, by the interceding sacrifices of Christ the Mediator. And the meat-offering, and drink-offering added thereunto, did signify, that Jesus Christ by offering himself to God, becomes not only our redemption, but also meat and drink to the soul. The sheaf of the first fruits appointed to be offered every year, had both the meat-offering and drink-offering added thereunto, Leu. 23. 10, 11, 12, 13. The like is to be observed in other sacrifices. Now as the meat-offerings Numb. 15 init. did represent Christ as food, so the drink-offerings did set him out as our spiritual drink. 2. From the water issuing out of the rock. You read the story of that, Numb. 20. The people in the desert of Zin wanted water. In their necessity, as their sinful custom was, they fall a murmuring, v. 3, 4, 5. God commands Moses, v. 8. to speak unto the rock to give them water; that they and their might drink. Moses smites the rock twice (which was his sin, because God only commanded him to speak to the rock) and it gave forth its water in abundance, v. 11. Now what the meaning of this water was, the Apostle tells us, 1 Cor. 10. 4. They drank of the rock that followed them, and that rock was Christ. The rock typisied Christ, and the water of the rock, of which they and their drank, typed out the blood of Christ our spiritual drink. 3. From the cup in the Lord's Supper. Why is the cup added to the bread? Is it not to let us know, that Jesus Christ is spiritual drink as well as our spiritual bread? 4. From the resemblance of the vine. Our Saviour, John 15. is compared to a vine. Why to a vine? [1.] To show the great mystery of the union of all the spiritual branches with him the root. [2.] To signify that he is our spiritual drink. The vine doth yield wine which is drink for the body: the Lord Jesus Christ doth yield spiritual drink for all those that are his members. He is the wine of God, as well as the bread of God. II. Quae Analogia? The Analogy stands in four things. There are four properties of drink distinct from meat. 1. Drink is for refreshing and cooling. When the body is hot by labour, or by sickness, or travel, drink doth cool and refresh it. The heart panteth after the water-brooks, Psalm. 42. 1. The chased Hart when he is heated with hunting, makes to the river, and by drinking is refreshed. The sweeting Traveller goes to the spring and cools himself by drinking of the streaming waters. The blood of Jesus Christ is of a very refreshing and cooling nature. When the soul is heated with temptations, parched with the fiery wrath of God in the conscience, when it lies sweeting and sweltering under guilt, one draught of Christ's blood taken down by faith, yea one drop of it sensibly falling upon it, doth cool and refresh it again Hence he is also compared to the rivers of water in dry places, Is. 23. 2. Hence is that invitation, Mat. 11. 28 I wil● give you rest, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, I will give you refreshment, so 'tis translated, Phil. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, nothing indeed can cool the parched soul but Christ's blood. And this will do it abundantly when 'tis quite melted with wrath, and burnt up with anguish. 2. Drink cleanseth the body. The inward parts are washed and purified as well as refreshed. As the running water cleanseth the channel, and carries away rubbish and filth, so drink seasonably and fitly taken, carries away the defilements that are contracted within the body. The blood of Christ is of a cleansing nature. 'Tis indeed the only cleanser. It doth, being taken by faith, carry away all the filthiness of the inward Man. All the Ceremonial purifications were types of the purifying blood of Christ, Heb. 9 13, 14. There ye have the typical cleansings expounded. The blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin, 1 John 1. 7 Christ takes away the guilt of sin by justification, and he cleanseth us from the filthiness of sin by sanctification. You read in Zech. 13. 1. of a fountain opened for sin, and for uncleanness. This fountain is nothing else but the fountain of Christ's blood. He that drinks daily of this blood, shall be cleansed daily. 3. Drink is of a reviving nature. It recovers from faintings, it opens the eyes helps feebleness of Spirit, vid. Judg. 15. 18, 19 Samps●n being tired by that great slaughter of the Philistines, found his spirits sink, he prays for drink, and when he had refreshed himself with water, his spirit came again, and he revived. Solomon, Prov. 31. 6, 7. prescribes strong drink to him that is ready to perish, and wine to the heavy hearted, that they may forget their poverty, and remember their misery no more. Some drink is called Aquavitae, because of its usefulness and efficacy this way. The blood of Jesus Christ is a reviving blood. When the soul is in deliquio spirituali, when it faints, and dies, and sinks, the sprinklings of this blood will fetch it again, a drop or two of this true Aquavitae taken down by faith, will open the eyes and restore it again. This effect it had on Asaph, Ps. 73. 26. My heart and my flesh faileth, etc. but thou art the stay of my heart, and my portion for ever. This was foretold of Christ long before his birth, by that Evangelical Prophet, Esay 61. 1. and chap. 57 15. To revive the spirit of the humble, and to revive the heart of the contrite ones. It is his blood, and that alone, that healeth the broken in heart. 4. Drink is of a cheering nature. It doth beget and continue cheerfulness. The Psalmist tells us that wine maketh glad the heart of man, Psalm 104. 15. The blood of Christ is a heart-chearing thing. It's the only foundation, and the only preserver of true joy. It will make the heart merry in adversity, it will create laughter in heaviness. Psal. 4. 6, 7. Lord, lift thou up the light of thy countenance, etc. Thou hast put gladness in my heart, etc. The light of God's countenance is lifted up only in, and through Jesus Christ. Christ's blood is the only medicine for spiritual Melancholy. When the Church was drinking in Christ's wine-cellar, taking down this blood, how was her heart cheered? Cant. 2. 3, 4. I sat down under his shadow, etc. The Uses of this are, 1. For Information in these particulars. 1. Take notice of the great mystery of a believers union and oneness with Jesus Christ. The Scripture sets this out, as by express testimonies, ●o by natural resemblances, as of vine and branches, John 15. init. of head and members, Eph. 1. ult. Eph. 6. 30. of husband and wife, Eph. 6. 32. of the foundation, and superstructory stones, Eph. 3. 20, 21. and of meat and eaters, as in the Text. As there is a union between the meat and the body of him that eats it, so there is an intimate union between a believer and Christ his spiritual meat. And indeed ou● union with him is the foundation of our feeding on him. He could not be our meat, if he were not our Head by mystical u●im. This is the foundation of this eating; this makes Christ ours, gives us right to eat. The Apostle, Col. 2. 19 makes our union with him the foundation of our receiving nourishment from him. And the souls feeding on him, proves the soul's union with him. So it follows, ver. 56. He that eateth my flesh, and drinketh my blood, dwelleth in me, and ● in him. As the meat which we eat is turned into the substance of our body, so are we turned into Christ, made flesh of his flesh, and bone of his bone. 2. Behold here the fullness of Christ. Whence shall we have bread in the Wilderness to satisfy so many, say the Disciples to Christ, Mar. 8. 4, 5. The fullness of Christ appears in this, that he hath enough in him to feed so many, and to feed every one so plentifully. He hath said his people ever since that promise, Gen. 3. 15. and he will feed all his Elect to the end of the world, and he will feed them all abundantly every kind of way; he feeds them with grace, feeds them with knowledge, feeds them in respect of justification, and he feeds them in respect of sanctification, etc. and yet is there no abatement of his fullness. Did not the fullness of the Godhead dwell bodily in him? Col. 2. 9 he could not feed so many so long every way, without any diminution of his fullness; the children have been eating above five thousand years, and the loaf is still whole. III. Behold the great love of Christ, and of the Father in giving us this meat and drink. Remember, 'tis his flesh that is our meat, his blood that is our drink. He could not have been our meat and drink, if he had not been sacrificed; the Priests were not to eat of the offerings allowed them till they were sacrificed, had not Christ been sacrificed, he could have been no food for us. The love of Christ and of the Father appear the more in it, that he should sacrifice his Son to be a meat offering for us, and let out his blood to be a drink offering for us; wonder to eternity at this love, John. 3. 16. the Scripture expresses the great love of God to the Israelites, that he gave them Manna from heaven, Psal. 75. 23, 24, 25. How much greater love doth he express in giving his Son to the Elect to feed them? That Gods only Son should be torn in pieces to be meat and drink for us. Behold what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us, as to feed us with the body and blood of his own Son! iv Behold here the completeness of Christ. The Scripture speaks much of his compleatness and perfection. Look upon him in what respect, under what notion you please, and you will see his completeness. Behold him as a Saviour, and so he is a complete; he saves 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Heb. 7 25. he saves the soul, the body from all evil, unto all good, and that for ever. Consider him as a Physician, and his completeness will appear. He heals the soul, the body, heals in an instant, heals to the bottom, etc. whatsoever he is compared to, he is completely and perfectly so. Behold him as a Feeder, and he is complete in that notion; He is not only meat nor only drink, but he is both meat and drink, complete nourishment. The body cannot live with meat, if drink be wanting; nor can it subsist by drink only without meat. Bread without drink would dry up the blood; drink without meat would in a little time drown the body. A mixture, and fit proportion of both keeps it in health. Jesus Christ is both these, complete and perfect nourishment. Well may the Apostle say, that Christians are complete in him, Col. 2. 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. He is in himself every way complete, and those that adhere to him, are perfectly complete in him. V: Take notice of the truth of Christ humanity. Martion, Eutiches, Saturnius, Manichees hold that Christ was man only in appearance. The Scripture doth both assert the Godhead and Manhood of Christ. The two natures are personally united, never to be separated. His Name shall be called Emmanuel, Mat. 1. 23. And the truth of the Manhood is asserted in many places. The Word became flesh, and dwelled among us, Joh. 1. 14. To us a child is born, Esay 9 6. As other Scriptures, so the Text doth clearly assert his humanity, for it makes mention of his flesh and blood. The Godhead hath neither flesh nor blood, but the Manhood hath both. He is perfect God, and perfect man of a reasonable soul, and humane flesh subsisting. VI How injurious are the Papists to the people of God, that deny them his blood. They take away from the Laity (as they call them) the blood of Christ in the Sacrament. And by this means do in effect deny them nourishment. As the body stands in need of meat as well as drink, and of drink as well as meat, so doth the soul. As they wrong Christ in transgressing his institution, who appointed the cup as well as the bread, Matth. 26. 26, 27. so they are very injurious to the Church, in taking away the one half of their spiritual food. Abhor their Doctrines, bless God, you are freed from the sacrilegious soul-robbers. They that deprive you of Christ's blood, deprive you of life, for except ye eat the flesh of the Son of man, and drink his blood, ye have no life in you, Joh. 6. 53. yea, indeed he that takes away Christ's blood, takes away whole Christ from the soul. VII. The wickedness of the Socinian doctrine that makes nothing that Christ did to be meritorious for us, but only exemplary. This is a soul-damning doctrine. Christ is our meat and drink. He died not only to teach us to suffer, but to be meat and drink to keep us from starving, yea to feed us up to eternal life. VIII. The miserable condition of those that want Christ. Nothing can keep them from starving, who either have not, or will not use this meat and drink. The condition of Lazarus was sad as to his outward man, when he had neither meat nor drink, Luke 16. Hagar and her child were in a miserable condition, when the bread was eaten and the bottle empty, Gen. 21. 15, 16. That condition of that desolate widow of Sarepta, 1 Reg. 17. 11, 12. was very sad: far worse is theirs who want Christ: the starving of the soul is worse than the pining of the body. IX. None far so delicately as believers. That rich glutton fared deliciously every day, Luk. 16. 19 What were his delicacies to this? He had the creatures to feed upon; believers feed on God himself. Nabal it's said, when he had his sheep-shearers, made a feast like the feast of a King, 1 Sam. 25. 36. you read of Ahasureus his great feast, Esth. 1 4, ●. You read of Solomon's daily provision, 1 Reg. 4. 22, 23. this was very great. But the believing beggar hath better provision than this. What is the flesh of fowls to the flesh of Christ? What is the blood of the grape to Christ's blood? This is a believers daily food. They have not only panem & potum Domini, but they have panem & potum Dominum. X. The folly of those that do either feed themselves, or persuade others to feed upon their own works and duties. The Papists set men's works and duties before themselves, and others as their spiritual meat and drink. They make the righteousness of man their meat and drink. (1) This doctrine is derogatory to Christ. To make any thing besides Christ, the soul's meat and drink, is to deny him to be meat, at least sufficient and perfect meat. He will either be our only food, or not our food at all. Christ is incapable of all other mixtures. As the Apostle argues about grace and works, so may we argue in this matter about Christ and works, Rom. 11. 6. If by grace, than it is no more of works, etc. If Christ be our meat and drink, then are not works our meat and drink, otherwise Christ is no more Christ; and if works be our meat and drink, then is not Christ our meat and drink, otherwise works are no more works. (2) This doctrine is prejudicial to the soul. It is indeed a soul-starving doctrine. Our works cannot feed us. The Prophet tells us, Esay 44. 20. that the Idolater feedeth on ashes. Our best works and duties are not meat and drink, but ashes. 'Tis as impossible that the body should live upon ashes, or other such trash, as that the soul should live upon its own works. Our works have no nourishing virtue in them. If a Son shall ask bread, saith our Saviour, of any of you that is a father, will he give him a stone? Luke 11. 11, 12. The Papists are unnatural fathers to their children. When they ask them bread, they give them a stone; when they ask fish, they give them a serpent; and when they ask an egg, they give them a scorpion. A man's best works are Stones, Serpents, Scorpions; yea, they are poison to him that makes them his food. You read of a severe threatening of Rabshakeh against the people of God, 2 Reg. 18. 27. He would make them eat their own dung, etc. The Papists put this threatening into practice upon all their followers in a spiritual sense; They make them eat their own dung, etc. Indeed our best works and duties in the account of strict justice are no better, Mal. 2. 3. I will spread dung upon your faces, even the dung of your solemn feasts. A person had better never do any good works, then make him his spiritual meat and subsistence. XI. Behold here the excellency of Jesus Christ. He is meat and drink. He is indeed compared to all things that are excellent; he doth fare excel whatsoever he is compared unto. He is as far above all other meat and drink, as the best meat and drink are above the coursest pulse, and the mddiest water. See this excellency in a few particulars. 1. Christ is spiritual meat and drink. All other meat and drink is only corporeal. 'Tis so in its own nature, and 'tis so in regard of the subject; it nourisheth not the soul, but the body only. All their delicacies do not feed the inward man. Those that have the fattest bodies, have not always the fattest souls. But Christ is spiritual meat and drink. He feeds the soul, the conscience, the spiritual part. His blood purgeth the conscience, Heb. 9 14. it refreshes the conscience, it cheers the conscience, his body strengthens the soul, repairs the decays of the inward man. 2. Christ is heavenly meat and drink, Joh. 6. 32. My Father giveth you the true bread from heaven. Other meat and drink is terrene and earthly. Your bread grows out of the bowels of the earth. Your wine is the blood of an earthly grape. The flesh you eat is fed of the tender grasie that springs out of the earth. If the earth should prove barren, you would soon feel a famine. The King himself is served by the field, Eccles. 5. 9 'Tis true, the blessing comes from heaven, but all the materials of meat and drink are earthly. But Jesus Christ is the bread of heaven, and the wine of heaven. The Manna came from the clouds only; but Christ from the beatifical heaven, even from the bosom of the Father. 3. Christ is incorruptible meat and drink. All earthly meat and drink is of a fading perishing nature. The best bread grows mouldy in a little time, the best flesh in time putrifies and taints; the best wine grows eager and sour in a little time, and becomes unfit for the body of man. The very Manna itself, when it was kept till the morning of the next day, contrary to God's command, bred worms and standk, Exod. 16. 20. But Jesus Christ knows no corruption. His flesh & blood is now as sweet and pleasant after so many Ages, as it was the first hour it was eaten and drank, John 6. 27. And it will be as fare from corruption at the end of the world, as now it is. The Manna in the golden pot corrupted not, though kept for many Generations. Christ is Manna in that golden-pot, the humanity in the golden pot of the Divinity shall see no corruption. 4. Christ is such meat and drink as preserves from death. Other meat and drink cannot keep man from the grave. That rich man that fared deliciously every day, was not made immortal: The rich man died and was buried, Luke 16. 22. All that Generation that fed on Manna, and drank the water out of the rock, died, John 6. 49. But Christ preserves the soul from Death. John 6. 50. This is the bread of God that came down from Heaven, that a man may eat thereof and not die. It immortalizes the soul that feeds on it. He that believeth on me hath eternal life, ver. 51. And then, 5. Christ is soul-satisfying meat and drink. He that believeth on me shall never hunger, and he that cometh to me shall never thirst, John 6. 35. There is a hunger of desire, and a hunger and thirst of total emptiness and want. He that hath this meat and drink, shall never totally want him. It is not so with other meat and drink. A man may have his belly filled with other meat and drink, and may have a good quantity beforehand, and yet may at last want a morsel and die for want of a draught of water. But he that once hath this spiritual meat and drink, though he eat but a little, shall never be utterly destitute, Jehn 7. 37, 38. The widow's handful of meal, and spoonful of oil, was never spent till God sent rain upon the earth, 1 Reg. 17. 16. He that hath but a handful of Christ's flesh, and a spoonful of his blood shall never see want, but shall have enough to satisfy him to all eternity. 6. Christ is such meat and drink as gives life to the Dead. Other meat and drink cannot preserve a living body from death, much less can it give life, and restore breath to a dead body. Put the most delicate meat, the strongest drink into the mouth of a dead man, and they will not give him life if the soul be quite departed. They may recover from a swoon, they cannot from death. But the flesh and blood of Christ quicken the dead. Christ by putting his flesh and blood into the mouth of the dead soul conveys life into it. His flesh and blood make the lips of the dead to speak. As the Father raiseth the dead and quickeneth them, so the Son quickeneth whom he will, John 5. 21. if thou hast any spiritual life in thee, thou didst receive it from the enlivening virtue of Christ's flesh and blood communicated to thee by the Spirit of life. 7. Christ is such meat and drink as will never surset. All other meat and drink, if it be taken immoderately and unseasonably, tends to sickness and surfeiting. The more luscious and delicate they are, the sooner do they surfeit the body. Hence is Solomon's advice, Prov. 25. 16. drunkenness and surfeiting bring more to their long home, than pining famine. But the flesh and blood of Christ never surfeit. A man cannot eat and drink too much of Christ, nor can they eat and drink him unseasonably. There is no killing, no annoying virtue in Jesus Christ: this meat and drink will never clog, never cloy the stomach. Christ is an occasion of death to none but to those that refuse him. 8. Christ is such meat and drink as is suitable for all persons at all times. Other meat and drink is not fit for all persons, nor for the same person in all conditions. That that will nourish a man may kill a child. That that strengthens a man in health, may kill him in sickness. There is meat for strong men, milk for babes, etc. But Jesus Christ is meat and drink for all persons, for all conditions. He is meat for the strong man, he is milk for the babe. He is proper for the healthful person, and he is fit for the sickly person. He is the labouring man's food, and he is the sick man's diet. His blood is Physical drink to him that is sick; cooling drink to him that is parched with heat, he is strong cordial-drink to him that faints. He is a suitable nourishment. 9 Jesus Christ is meat and drink that is freely bestowed. He is not purchased by our money, nor procured by our industry, but freely communicated. Other meat and drink is procured at dear rates. Men must Till, and Blow, and Sow their land; men must breed up , men must plant vines, dig springs and fountains, otherwise they can expect neither meat nor drink. The Egyptians in a time of famine pawned their lands for food, they gave their for bread, and at last sold their land outright that they might have food, Gen. 47. 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20. But Christ is meat and drink, though the most costly in himself, yet costless to us. Nothing is required on our part, but receiving of him. If any should offer money, Christ would say as Peter to Simon Magus, Act. 8. 20. Thy money perish with thee. He that will not take this meat and drink as an Alms, shall famish for want of it. Use 2. For Exhortation I. To such as want Christ. My counsel to them is, that they would labour for an interest in him: you cannot be well without him; you will famish your soul, if you have not Christ for your meat and drink. Quest. How may we come to have an interest in him. 1. Be thoroughly persuaded of your need of him. This is the first step to the attainment of him. Look upon your natural guilt; upon all your sins; upon the severity of the curse of the Law against disobedience; upon the exact justice of God in punishing sin; and upon your own helpless▪ nesse either to satisfy justice, or to stand out under the deserved wrath of God, and you will be convinced of your need of him. 2. Wait upon Jesus Christ in that way in which he gives himself to sinners. The public Ordinances, chief the preaching of the Word. In that Christ makes the tender of himself, and by that ordinarily faith is wrought in the heart to embrace that tender, Rom. 10. 17. Zacheus obtained Christ by being in the way of Christ, Luke 19 4. the Ordinances are the Sycamore-tree. C●●mb up into them, and stay and wait till Christ come. He is to pass by that way. 3. Observe his call and embrace it, Prov. 9 init. Luke 14. 16, 17, 18. Mark the impressions of the Spirit, the knockings of Christ. Thus did Zacheus, Luke 19 5, 6. Zacheus, Come down, etc. And he made haste and came down, etc. Beg of Christ that he would give a heart to come down, when he says, come down. He is the meat and drink of God. He that refuseth him, sinneth against his own soul. Consider seriously of it. When you find your stomach crave meat and drink; think, O what shall I do for spiritual meat and drink? II. To such as have an interest in Christ, who is meat and drink, let me commend a few things to you. 1. Feed on him. Eat and drink of this flesh and blood every day. Christians grow weak, because they let their meat and drink stand by them. 'Tis not the flesh in the pot, but the flesh in the stomach that gives nourishment. 'Tis not the drink in the vessel, but the drink taken down that revives. Stir up spiritual hunger, and that will make you feed hearty on Christ. Eat and drink Christ by Meditation, eat and drink him by Application. Let your faith draw in Christ in every Ordinance. Keep your Spiritual meals as constantly as you do your other meals. Your eating will help you to a stomach. Satisfaction and hunger are mutual helps one to another. Eating and drinking other meat takes away the appetite, but it increaseth the spiritual appetite. Fixed times of spiritual feeding every day, are marvellous profitable. When you have prayed, call your heart to account what it hath taken in of Christ. When you have been reading, ask it what nourishment it hath received from the Word. When the Lords Supper is over, inquire what refreshment is received. Put yourselves forward to frequent, constant, actual feeding. It's pity such precious meat and drink should stand in corners, when the soul hath so much need of it. 2. Be thankful for this meat and drink. That it is provided for any; that it is actually dealt out to you; That you have that meat and drink which others want. There are many that have no other meat but sin. They drink iniquity like water, Job 15. 16. Some eat the bread of violence, and drink the wine of deceit. Some there are that drink the wine of the condemned in the house of their God, Amos 2. 8. They eat the flesh of men, and drink their blood like new wine, Micah 3. 3. The greatest part of men have no other meat than the pulse of worldly comforts; no other drink then the puddle water of created things; and thou hast the flesh and blood of Jesus Christ to eat and drink: prize and value at an high rate the exceeding riches of this grace. We are to bless God for our corporal meat and drink. Jesus Christ gave thanks when he eaten and drank, John 6. 11: And so did the Apostles, Acts 27. 35. and so should all men do. It is brutish to eat and drink without Thanksgiving. How much more cause have we to bless God for our spiritual meat and drink! The corporal is common to us with others; This is peculiar only to the Elect; no other shall taste of this provision. 3. Let your growth be answerable to such excellent feeding. God expects that our spiritual growth should be proportionable to our spiritual feeding. Bos Macer pingui in arvo, is prodigious. Husbandmen expect that when they put their into pastures that are rich, where there is plenty of grass, and abundance of water, they expect that their growth should be answerable. The Saints of God are highly fed. They have Angels meat, should they not then do Angels work? If you do not grow very fast, you will bring up an evil report of Christ; as if his flesh were not nourishing meat, as if his blood were not nourishing drink, as if it were meat in show, and not meat indeed; as if it were drink in show, not drink indeed. Jesus Christ may repent that his body was broken, his blood poured out to be meat and drink for you that are still lean and ill-favoured, even dwarves in grace. It's the Saint's privilege that they shall grow, because Christ is their feeder; and it is their duty, because they have such food, to be carefully mindful of growing. Every limb of the new man should thrive. We should grow lower in humility, higher in heavenly-mindedness; broader and thicker in spiritual affections, etc. you cannot express your thankfulness for this royal meat and drink, any other way so much to the contentment of Christ, as by growing abundantly. It is that which our Saviour requires as a testimony of our union with him, and of thankfulness for that feeding virtue we receive from him, John 15. 5, 8. As he is unworthy of meat that doth not labour, so is he more unworthy that doth not grow. 4. Show pity to others that feed on other meat and drink. Endeavour to communicate Christ to those that want him. We naturally pity famished men; lean cheeks, and pale faces work some bowels in a miser, in an enemy. Commend Christ to others, persuade them to embrace him. You shall feel no want of meat and drink for yourselves, by communicating Christ to others. Though a thousand eat and drink of him, no one shall have the less. 5. Do not despair of spiritual growth and strength. 'Tis a dishonour to Christ to think that he should starve you. His flesh is strengthening flesh, his blood is strengthening blood, quickening blood. 'Tis full of spirits, 'tis full of life. Though thy graces be weak, thy spiritual diseases violent, yet despair not. Thou receivest more from Christ, than thou canst lose or spend. ROM. 13. 14. Put ye on the Lord Jesus Christ. VII. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth. Lon. Jan. 11. 1651. IN this Chapter the Apostle recommends unto Christians the practice of several excellent duties for the adorning of their holy profession in the world. 1. Subjection to civil Magistracy. This is urged by sundry Arguments from v. 1. to 8. 2. Unto that heavenly and divine grace of love. This is pressed by many Arguments, from v. 8. to 13. 3. Unto honesty of conversation, v. 13. he would have them to abstain from all acts of intemperance, such as rioting, drunkenness, etc. and to walk, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, decently and honestly. 4. 'Tis the putting on of Christ's righteousness. This he names to distinguish Christian graces from moral virtues; unless Christ and his righteousness imputed by faith be put on, that power to live holily may be derived from that fountain, a Christians holiness shall not exceed the righteousness of moral Philosophers, and Jewish Pharisees, They did abstain from many works of the flesh, they did practice acts of temperance and other virtues, but they did not draw power from this fountain Jesus Christ, being strangers to Christ and his righteousness, all their eminent virtues gained no saving acceptance from God. The Apostle therefore would have Christians not only to walk holily, but to draw all power of holy walking from Christ the root of all true holiness, v. 14. 5. Not to make any superfluous and inordinate provision for the flesh, ver. 14. latter end. The text hath two parts. 1. An Act, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. It's a Metaphor borrowed from the putting on of garments, used by the Apostle often. In reference to the Newman, Eph. 4. 24. In reference to the spiritual Armour, Eph. 6. 11. In reference to acts of mercy, Col. 3. 12. And here in reference to the application of Christ. But Put ye on. 2. The object. The Lord Jesus Christ. 3. Expressions relating to one and the same person. They are many times joined together, though used singly and apart often. Acts 16. 31. Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved; so in those Apostolical benedictions. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all. We may distinguish them thus. Lord is a Name of Power. Jesus a Name of Grace. Christ a Name of Authority. The words afford a twofold lesson. The one implied, the other expressed, Viz. 1. That Jesus Christ is a spiritual garment. 2. That it's the duty of believers to put on this garment. Doct. 1. The Lord Jesus Christ is a spiritual garment. This is necessarily implied under the metaphor of putting on. This 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth imply 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Jesus Christ is the soul's clothing. Christ is a Christians vestment. As he is spiritual meat and drink, so he is spiritual Apparel. Two things here to be opened. 1. To prove that Christ is a garment. 2. To show the Analogy between Christ and other garments. 1. That Christ is a garment. This will appear two ways. 1. From express Scriptures. All those texts where mention is made of the putting on of Christ, are testimonies of this truth, Gal. 3. 17. As many as are baptised into Christ, have put on Christ. That in Esay 61. 10. I will rejoice in the Lord, for he hath clothed me with the robes of righteousness; he hath put upon me the garments of salvation. Jerom expounds it of Jesus Christ, salvatorem & justificatorem nostrum; who covers us with his own righteousness as with a precious robe of salvation. This is taught by our Saviour in that counsel which he gives to the naked Church of Laodicea, Rev. 3. 18. I counsel thee to buy of me gold, etc. and white raiment that thou mayst be clothed. What are those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but Jesus Christ himself imputed and applied to the soul, Isa. 52. 2? its spoken of deliverance from Babylon, and more fully of redemption by Christ. 2. From typical or more mysterious Scriptures. There are many of this kind. (1.) Those garments of skins wherewith God clothed our first parents after the fall. You read of them, Gen. 3. 21. This was not without a mystery. Peter Martyr hath this note upon that place, that by these garments was shadowed out the promised Messiah, that blessed seed of the woman, who should be sacrificed upon the cross, and cut out (as it were) into garments for the clothing of Gods Elect. The like is observed by Interpreters from those kid-skins which Rebeccah put upon the hands of Jacob, and upon the smooth of his neck, when she sent him to his Father for the blessing, Gen. 27. 16. They did decipher Christ, with whom the soul being clothed obtains a blessing from the hands of God. (2.) Those garments of the High Priests. God appointed in the Law that glorious garments should be made for Aaron. You read of them, Exod. 28. 2. What was typified by those garments? They related to Christ. As the High Priest did typify Christ; so the garments did set out the pure administration of Christ, who offered up himself without spot, Heb. 9 14. and they did also teach the people of God, that it is Jesus Christ that their souls with choice raiment, that fine linen which is the righteousness of Saints, Rev. 19 18. This type is more fully expounded in Zech. 3. 3, 4. Those filthy garments noted Joshuab's sins, and the sins of the people. That raiment which was afterward put upon him, did signify Christ and his righteousness, wherewith all spiritual Priests are gloriously decked and clothed. (3.) The wedding-garment in the Gospel. You read of it, Matth. 22. 11, 12. What is meant by this wedding garment, but Jesus Christ, who being apprehended, and put on by faith, works and creates the saving fruits of grace in the heart, and in the life? II. Wherein stands the Analogy? There are several uses of garments, in all which respects Christ is a garment to the soul. 1. Garments are for the covering of the body. Men use garments, that the nakedness of their bodies may not appear to the eyes of others; for this reason did our first parents few fig-leaves together to hid their nakedness. In the state of innocency, when the body was without guilt, nakedness was the greatest Ornament; when sin had polluted the body, than was nakedness deformity; therefore man sought the best garments he could to cover that nakedness. For the same reason did God afterwards make man garments of skins to him, Gen. 3. 17. Jesus Christ is a covering to the soul. He is the Lamb of God that did not only redeem us by his blood, sed etiam lanis operuit, saith Jerom. (1.) He covers the deformity of our natural filthiness. (2.) He covers the ugliness of our actual sins, Psal. 32. 2. (3.) He covers all the spots of our holy duties. The mercy-seat under the Law, covered the two Tables of the Decalogue, vid. Exod. 25, 17, 18, 21. This mercy-seat did typify Christ, who is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Rom. 3. 25. as the mercy-seat is, Heb. 9 5. the Cherubims covered the mercy-seat, and the mercy-seat covered the Ark in which were the two Tables of the Law. Jesus Christ is that covering mercy-seat, that covers or plasters over all the sins which believers commit against the Law of God. Hence it is that God is said not to behold iniquity in Jacob, Numb. 23. 31. He doth not see it to impute it, because it is hidden under the covering mercy-seat, Jesus Christ. 2. Garments are for Ornament. They do set out the body — Viro vestis magnum decus addit honesta. Garments to the body are as rich hang or costly varnish over a wall of clay, they make it look better than it would do. Garments do mend the crookedness of bodies that are bowed, and they do set out the perfections of beautiful bodies. Jesus Christ may well be compared to a garment in this respect he puts a beauty upon the soul, a rich, lasting, perfect beauty. Therefore it is that he is compared to the wedding-garment, Matth. 22. 12. and to the High Priests garments, Exod. 28. 2. which were made for beauty and glory. Hence it is that believers that are loathsome and crooked in themselves, are made so excellently beautiful in Christ. You read much in Solomon's song of a believers comeliness, Vid. Chap. 4. 1 2, 3, etc. and again, Chap. 7. 1, 2, 3. 4. etc. 'Tis because of the beautiful dress in which he is attired. The comely garment puts comeliness on him that wears it. You read of the orient beauty and rich attire of the King's daughter, Psal. 45 13, 14. The King's daughter is the real Saint, the clothing of wrought gold, and the raiment of needlework, is nothing but Christ, and the graces he brings with him in which the soul is invested. Christ is the only Ornament indeed. He is a crown and diadem upon the head, he is a jewel in the bosom, he is a ring upon the finger. No soul hath any true beauty (though outwardly clothed in scarlet) that hath not on it this garment. Christ is the soul's Ornament, as he is a justifier, and as he is a sanctifier, 1 Cor. 1. 30. He adorns us as he is our justification, putting us into a state of righteousness. And he adorns us as he is our Sanctification, by communicating unto us his own comeliness in the seeds of holiness. 3. Garments are for the defending of the body. They are munimenta corporis. They are as light armour upon the body. In the Winter they guard the body against the nipping cold; in the Summer they preserve, and defend it from the parching heat. Every blast would pinch the body, were it not for our garments, every thorn would prick, every stone would bruise the foot if it were not fenced by that raiment which is upon it. The garments are a little movable Garrison in which the body marches through many inconveniences which otherwise it could not do. The Lord Jesus Christ is the defence of the soul; he saves it from many a knock which otherwise it would get. 1. He defends the soul from sin. Sin hath not that power and dominion over a believer that is clothed with Christ, as it hath over the soul that is unclothed. Rom. 6. 14. Sin shall not have dominion over you. Christ keeps sin from bearing that sway in a Saint which it doth in other men. It is a vanquished, wounded, crucified enemy. 2. He defends them from the rage and fury of men. Man would tear them to pieces, if this garment did not interpose between their rage and the soul. Of this our Saviour speaks, John 16. 33. the sting cannot touch the skin till it pierce through the raiment. The arrow cannot wound the body till it pierce through the garment. Jesus Christ preserves his people from the devouring teeth of ungodly enraged men. 3. He defends them from the fiery assaults and onsets of the devil. Simon, Simon, Satan hath desired to sift thee as wheat is sifted: but I have prayed for thee that thy faith may not fail, Luk. 22. 32. This roaring Lion would tear them into pieces, if this impenetrable garment were not betwixt his teeth and their souls. These fiery darts would strike to their very hearts, did not this garment dead them and beat them back again. That the devil by his malice and power doth not destroy you, it is because you are clothed with this garment. Can Satan either break through, or pluck off this garment, he would as soon prevail over you, as he doth over others. 4. He defends them from eternal wrath. God is in himself to sinful men a consuming fire, Heb. 12. 29. This fire doth not burn, nay it doth not sing the believer, because he hath this garment upon him, 1 Thes. 1. 10. 'Tis a believers comfort, that the wrath of God must burn Jesus Christ, before it can burn him. The hottest flames cannot so much as touch the body till they have burnt through the garments. The wrath of God cannot seize any more on Christ, he hath lain under it once for ever, and therefore it shall never seize upon the believer that is encircled about with Christ, as the body is with the garment. The fire cannot devour the man while the screen stands between him and the flame; Jesus Christ is a believers screen, which stands continually between him and the devouring flame of God's anger. 5. Garments are for the warmth of the body. 'Tis a great piece of the providencial care of God, that garments that have no heat in them, should give warmth to the body, Job 37. 17. The garments receive heat from the body, and then they keep the body warm, Job 31. 20. if he were not warmed with the fleece of my sheep. Jesus Christ is in this respect truly a garment to the soul; he keeps the soul in a good warmth. There is indeed no spiritual warmth till Christ have wrought it, and when it is wrought, 'tis preserved by virtue of this garment. The two Disciples were very i'll, as cold as ye till Christ wrought a holy heat in them; then they began to glow, yea, to burn; Did not our hearts burn within u●, etc. Luke 24. 32? if you find any holy heat within you, you are to attribute it to this heart-warming garment, as to the only cause of it. The Ordinances would never heat you, if Christ did not first heat them. We are by nature as cold as that child was, when his spirit was departed, 2 Reg. 4. 34. And yet Jesus Christ by laying himself upon us, chafes us into a lively warmth. 6. Garments are used for distinction. They difference one sex from another. God would have the sexes distinguished visibly by their apparel, Deut. 22. 5. The man shall not put on that which appertaineth to the woman, etc. And as they distinguish sexes, so they should distinguish the conditions of men: they that wear soft raiment are in King's Courts, Matth. 11. 8. The servant and Master now cannot be distinguished by their apparel unless it be thus, that the servant excels, the Merchant and Mechanic, the Prince and Peasant scarce distinguished. God would have it otherwise, raiment should distinguish conditions as well as sexes. Christ in this regard is fitly compared to a garment. He distinguishes between the believer and the unbeliever, between the regenerate and the unregenerate, 2 Cor. 5. 17. If any man be in Christ, he is a new creature, and 2 Cor. 13. 5. know you not that jesus Christ is in you except you be reprobates. God hath made Jesus Christ to be the distinguishing character between him that shall be saved, and him that shall perish. The Uses of this Point. I. Behold Christ's excellency. He is all in all. He is compared to all things that are both necessary and excellent. He is life, he is meat and drink, he is a garment. Quid quaeras, saith Austin, See in Joh. 19 quoth in illo non invenias? si esuris panis est, si sitis aqua, si in tenebris lumen est, si nudus es, immortalitatis tibi vestimentum. Ministers are bound upon all occasions to preach up Christ, that men may see their need of him, that they may be provoked into a good opinion of him. He is as needful for the soul, yea, more needful than garments are for the body. He is all good, he hath all good in him, and that in a transcendent manner. Quicquid velle potes & debes est Dominus Iesus Christus. Consider how fare he excels all other garments. 1. jesus Christ is a large garment. Other garments can cover but one at once. One garment cannot several persons, no more than one morsel can feed several men. But Jesus Christ is a garment of such extent and dimension, that he can cover many, though they be at never so great a distance. Should I fear saith Bernard, that Christ's righteousness will not serve for him and me? No, Non est pallium breve, quod duos operire non potest. All the Elect of God, though they live in several Nations, though they be a multitude which no man can number, Rev. 7. 9 yet they are all clothed, and all sufficiently clothed with this one garment. I saw saith the Evangelist, a wonder in heaven, a woman clothed with the Sun, Rev. 12. 1. This woman is the whole Church of God. This Sun that covers the woman, is Christ the Sun of righteousness, as he is called, Mal. 4. 1. His skirt is large enough to cover his whole Church, and yet never a member can complain of want. 2. jesus Christ is a garment for every part. Your material garments will not serve every part. That which is proper for the head will not cover the loins; that which fits the body will not fit the feet. Every part of the body hath a distinct clothing which is only proper for itself. But now Christ is a garment that fits every part. He is the Diadem or Crown upon the head, he is the robe upon the body, he is the shoes upon the feet, Luke 15. 22. Christ is a complete suit of apparel, from head to foot the soul is perfectly clothed. 3. jesus Christ hath the uses of all garments. There is no one garment that serves for all uses to the body. Some Garments are good for covering, but they are not for beauty. Others serve for ornament and beauty, but they do not serve for defence. Some garments are good in the cold, but they are not so useful and fit in a time of heat. Persons that are of ability have several garments for several uses, because no one garment is fit for all. But Jesus Christ is a garment for all uses to the soul. He is for covering, and for ornament, and for defence; as good for all uses as for any use. He is a Winter-garment, and he is a Summer-garment; he is as good for cooling as for heating. He is the travellers, and he is the labourer's garment, and he is the soldier's garment. He is light for walking, thick for stormy weather; He is strong for fight, and spiritual warring against Satan and his temptations. Christ suits all the occasions of the soul. He is wisdom, righteousness, sanctification and redemption, 1 Cor. 5. 30. 4. Jesus Christ is a garment fit for all sexes, for all sizes, for all conditions. No one garment will fit all bodies. That which is decency in one sex would be monstrousness on the other. That garment which fits a child, would be unuseful to a grown man. That which is proper for the Subject, would be unsuitable for the Princes wear. But now Christ is as proper for one as for another. He is as fit for the woman, as for the man; for the child, as for the father; for the King, as for the Subject. As the Apostle saith in another case, we may say in this. There is neither Barbarian, Scythian, Jew nor Gentile, male nor female, bond nor free, but ye are all one in Christ, Col. 3. 11. God hath made Jesus Christ a fit garment for the souls of all sorts of men. There is no soul too big, none too little, none too small, none too great for Jesus Christ to array and cover. 5. Jesus Christ is a durable garment. All other garments are of a moldring nature. The moth corrupts them; old age takes away the beauty of them; the strongest and finest garments turn to rags by daily use. But Jesus Christ is a lasting garment; the moth cannot fret it, old age cannot wear it thin. Christ is now as fresh as when he was first put upon Adam in Paradise. When our bodily garments shall be plucked off, yea, when the very garments of our bodies like the mantle of Elijah, shall fall into dust, then will this garment abide upon the soul as beautiful as now it is. The Lord did miraculously preserve the garments of the Israelites from waxing old, Deut. 8. 4. Though they were worn forty years in the wilderness, yet they were not threadbare. Their bodies wasted, but their garments did not waste. They were as fresh when they came to Canaan as they were when they came out of Egypt. Jesus Christ, though he be worn every day, yet he doth not wax old. He is as fresh upon the soul on its dying day, as upon the first moment of its regeneration. 6. Jesus Christ is a free garment. All that is required on men's part is to put him on. He is provided without our cost, without our care. Though he be the most costly garment in himself, yet he is the most cheap garment in the world. Other garments cannot be had without money, Christ is obtained without money, without price. The Scripture speaks of buying him, Rev. 3. 18. this buying is free receiving. The Prophets expound the phrase, Esay 55. 1. Buy milk and wine without money, without price. Indeed this garment is so invaluably rich, that all the treasure in the world cannot purchase one inch of it. He that dreams of buying Christ, shall die without Christ. II. Behold the sufficiency of Christ for spiritual life. Two things are necessary for the bodily life, food and raiment, 1 Tim. 6. 8. Jesus Christ is both food and raiment. He is set out as raiment in Baptism. Gal. 3. 27. and he is held out as food in the Sacrament of the Supper. He is every way sufficient for all the concernments of the soul; he feeds it, he cloaths it, and that with the best food, and the best raiment, with himself. His flesh is meat, his blood is drink, his righteousness is clothing, substantial durable clothing. III. The misery of those that are without Christ. All men are by nature strangers to Christ, Eph. 2. 12. He that is without Christ, is without spiritual raiment, he is a naked man. The Scripture calls the state of nature a state of nakedness, Ezek. 16. 4, 8. and Rev. 3. 18. A naked condition is a miserable condition. Nakedness is a very comprehensive word. A naked man is exposed to the scorn of every eye, it's a shameful object, Rev. 3. 18. A naked man is exposed to every storm; every shower wets him, every wind pierces him. A naked man is unfit for employment; he is neither fit to fight, nor to labour. Such as are without Christ are unspeakably miserable. Their condition is full of shame, their condition is full of danger; they have nothing to cover them from God's wrath, from the devil's rage. They have nothing to warm their hearts when they are cold with fears, terrors, despairs, and spiritual anguish. A naked body amongst dar●s and swords, is not such a spectacle of compassion as a naked soul exposed to the arrows of God's wrath. They are as unfit for any work, as the naked man is for labour and travel, Vid. Esay 3. 6. he that is without Christ, hath neither bread nor raiment. iv The misery of those that reject Christ. None but mad men and barbarous men reject clothing. 'Tis the character of a distracted madman to refuse raiment. Vid. Luke 8. 27. You read a sad story of a man possessed with a Legion of devils, and the text saith, he wore no ; his madness is evidenced by that that he would suffer no to be put upon him; for v. 35. When Christ had cured him, the text saith, he sat at the feet of Jesus clothed, and in his right mind. 'Tis a sign that that man is spiritually possessed with a Legion of devils, that will not be clothed with this spiritual garment. And yet the world is full of these spiritual Bedlams. They will go naked. Let Ministers say what they will, let the spirit of God use never so much importunity, they will not be clothed. They will have none of Christ. These garments are hanged out every day in the public market, yea, men are entreated to take them even without money, and yet they will not. Is it not just that such men should be buried in hell in their own rags, that will not embrace Christ that they may be clothed with eternal salvation. V. None so well arrayed as Saints. Dives had purple, etc. Luke 16. 19 They have Christ. VI Here is comfort for poor Christians, counsel for proud men, you that will have the best apparel and new fashion. VII. When you put on your garments, think of Christ. A serious Christian may spirituallize every thing he useth or beholds. VIII. Hinder none from Christ, Exod. 22. 27, 28. Job 24. 7. Amos 2. 8. Doct. 2. ‛ It's the duty of men to put on the Lord Jesus Christ. This is often recommended to us in Scripture. Two things I shall briefly open. 1. What it is to put on Christ, How we must put him on. 2. Why we must put him on. 1. Christ is put on two ways. There is a double putting on of Christ. 1. A putting on of Christ for justification. When by faith we apply him unto ourselves, by faith for righteousness. The Apostle tells us that Christ is made unto us of God justification, 1 Cor. 1. 30. He is called Jehovah, our righteousness, Jer. 23 6. 'Tis by his righteousness that the believer is constituted righteous in foro Dei; which is by an act of grace of God imputing and reckoning this perfect righteousness of Christ unto him, as his own righteousness. Now then doth a person put on Christ, when by an act of faith, he doth apply Christ and his righteousness unto himself for justification. This was that which the Apostle desired, Phil. 3. 9 That he might be found in Christ, not having his own righteousness which is by the Law, but that which is by the faith of jesus Christ, the righteousness of God by faith. When this righteousness is actually applied, received, relied upon, then is Christ put on: This is one piece. 2. A putting on of Christ by imitation. When we imitate the gracious life of Christ. This refers to Sanctification, and new obedience. To put on Christ, is virtute Spiritus Christi undique nos munire, quâ idonei ad omnes partes sanctitatis reddamur, Calvin. And so Erasmus. In as much as ye are spiritually ingraffed into Christ, hunc ipsum induite, eluceat in omni vitâ quem sitis professi, exprimite quem imbibistis, etc. Zuinglius. When we apply his righteousness for our justification, when we put on his example, and express his virtues in a course of sanctification, then, and not till then do we put on Christ as the Scripture requires. II. Why we must put him on. There is good reason. I might be large in each, but I shall only give general Reasons. 1. Christ is of no effect to us if we do not put him on. Garments neither warm, nor cover, nor defend, nor adorn the body if they be not put on. Christ is rendered invalid to such as do not apply him. His righteousness will not justify you, if you do not by faith put it on as a garment. His holy life will do you no good if you do not imitate it. His righteousness will perish as to you; his virtues will be lost as to you, if you do not actually put on both. The Apostle speaks of making Christ of no effect, Gal. 5. 4. 2. If we do not put on Christ both these ways, we can have no hopes of salvation. If Jesus Christ be not put on for righteousness, there is no remission of sin, All our guilt is imputed to ourselves. 'Tis by the imputation of his righteousness that our sins are covered, Rom. 5. 20. And where there is no remission, there can be no salvation. And if we do not put on the virtues of Christ in a course of sanctification, we can have no Scripture-hope of heaven. The Apostle is express for this. He that hath this hope, purifieth himself as Christ is pure, 1 Joh. 3. 3. Our Justification is by Christ's righteousness, and our Sanctification is an evidence of our Justification. Ergo. The Uses of this. 1. What shall we say of those that instead of putting on Christ, put on their own works and duties? The Papists teach their proselytes to cover themselves not with Christ and his righteousness, but with their own works, and their own righteousness. They call Imputative righteousness in scorn putative righteousness. Well! let them themselves with their own fleece, but let us be clothed only with Christ's righteousness. Our own righteousness is too thin, and too narrow, it will neither cover us, nor warm us, Esay 28. 20. our own righteousness is a soiled garment, a very filthy rag, Esay 64. 6. The Apostle Paul, was as touching the righteousness of the Law blameless, Phil. 3. 6. and yet he durst not appear before God in the day of judgement in that garment, but in the garment of Christ's righteousness, Phil. 3. 9 Let us therefore abhor this Doctrine; rather take Christ's counsel, than Antichrists counsel. Antichrists advice is, buy of him, etc. but Christ's counsel is to buy of him precious raiment, Rev. 3. 18. Let us rather be advised by the Church's Counsellor Christ, Isa. 9 6 then by him who is next to Satan the Church's greatest outward destroyer. 2. What shall we say of those that instead of putting on Christ by imitation put on the devil. Instead of expressing the virtues of Jesus Christ, hold out the vices of Satan; live inordinately, unholily, serving divers lusts and pleasures, full of envy, malice, intemperance, covetousness, licentiousness of every kind; instead of putting on Christ themselves, they hate, persecute all those that do thus put him on. Let them know, they that will not put on Christ by sanctification, shall not put him on for justification. He is made of God to us, wisdom, righteousness, sanctification, redemption, 1 Cor. 1. 30. He that rejects him as to sanctification, shall be rejected by him as to righteousness and redemption. 3. Be entreated to put on Christ. Put him on both these ways. 1. Put him on for righteousness. 1. Have you not all need of him? are you not unrighteous? are ye not under guilt? If your righteousnesses be as filthy rags, what are your unrighteousnesses? 2. Is there any other garment that will carry you dry through the dreadful storms of God's wrath? you must make another Scripture if you will find another garment. God's Scripture mentions no other covering but God's righteousness. Read and remember that Text, Rom. 9 30, 31, 32. 3. Undervalue not the great love, and deep design of God in providing his Son for your raiment, He is made unto us of God wisdom, righteousness, 1 Cor. 1. 30. Therefore called the righteousness of God, Phil. 3. 9 4. God will accept of nothing you do till you be invested in this garment. He will own none that come not in his own livery. You shall have no blessing, yea you shall have his curse, if you have not the kid-skins of Christ's righteousness upon your necks, and upon the smooth of your hands; your elder brother's garments must be on you, else you cannot be blessed. Now that you may put on Christ, you must (1) put off all thoughts of your own worth. These are inconsistent, Phil. 3. 7, 8, 9 2. Beg of him that he would you. Lie at his feet, as Ruth did at the feet of Boaz, and say, Spread thy skirt over me, for thou art my near kinsman, Ruth 3. 9 I conclude this with comparing those two Scriptures, Jer. 23. 6. with Jer. 33▪ 16. in the first, Christ is called the Lord our righteousness, in the other the Church is so called. 1. Because that which is proper to the head, is common to all the members. 2. They are as willing to apply Christ's righteousness, as he is to communicate it. 2. Put him on by a holy imitation. Walk as Christ walked. 1. Christianity consists chief in this. Christianity is imitatio divinae naturae, 1 Pet. 2. 21. 2. 'Tis one end of Christ's incarnation. He became man, that that might be a perfect pattern of holiness in our nature. 3. He that doth not imitate his life, shall have no benefit by his death, 1 Pet. 2. 21. ESAY 32. 2. And a man shall be as a hiding place VIII. SERM. a● Mary Wolnoth. Lon. Feb. 8. 1651. from the wind. IN this Chapter we have a glorious prophecy of the spiritual Kingdom of Christ. It's written by the Prophet for the consolation of the Church in her present afflicted condition. This Prophecy hath four parts. 1. The constitution of this Kingdom, ver. 1. to 9 2. An exhortation given unto the people, by repentance to prevent the miseries which should happen before the constitution of this Kingdom, v. 9 to 15. 3. A description of that good which the godly should receive from this Kingdom, v. 15, 16, 17, 18, 19 4. The conclusion of all in that Epiphonema, v. 20. wherein the Prophet compares the people of God to those happy husbandmen, who are in expectation of a plentiful harvest, after their labours and cost in tilling and sowing. Blessed are they that sow beside all waters, that send forth thither the feet of the ox and the ass. In the constitution of this Kingdom two things are to be observed. (1.) The safe administration of it. This is in the two former verses. Behold a King, etc. By King, we are to understand Christ the King of his Church; by Princes we are to understand those that do under Christ administer this Kingdom. 'Tis an allegory taken from humane Kingdoms, in which the King himself, and all his officers do administer in righteousness. The safety of this government is expressed in the second verse, And a man shall be as a hiding-place from the wind, etc. 2. The true simplicity of it in the public and private administration of all things, and all persons, ver. 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8. And the eyes of them that see shall not be dim, etc. the administration of this Kingdom shall be with sincerity as well as safety. God would give men eyes to see and ears to hear. Those that before were spiritually blind and deaf, should now have spiritual eyes to see, and ears to hear. Those that were rash and heady, should now understand knowledge, those that stammered in the things of Christ should now speak plainly, v. 3, 4. yea, there should be such simplicity in the administration of this Kingdom, that vices should not be called any more by the names of virtues; evil should not be called good, nor good evil, but every thing should be called by its own name, ver. 5, 6, 7, 8. The vile person shall be no more called liberal, nor the churl said to be bountiful, etc. Holiness shall be called holiness, covetousness covetousness, baseness shall be called baseness under this spiritual Kingdom of Christ. The Text falls under the first of these; viz. the safe administration of this Kingdom. And a man, etc. we may divide it into two parts. 1. A danger hinted, Wind. 2. A remedy discovered, in which are, 1. The Protector. A man. 'Tis ille vir 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with an Article, this man. 'Tis the King mentioned in the former verse; he that is there called King, is here called a man. 'Tis Christ who is a man, and more than a man, God-man. This is the Protector. 2. The Protection. This is set down by way of comparison. Here are four resemblances. 1. As a hiding place from the wind. 2. As a covert from the tempest. 3. As rivers of water in a dry place. 4. As the shadow of a great rock in a weary land. I am now to speak of the first, namely, a hiding place from the wind. By wind we are to understand, troubles, afflictions, tempestuous storms, whether they be outward or inward. Here are four words which all signify one and the same thing; only they are varied a little, that they may be fitted to the several metaphors: wind, tempest, a dry place, a weary land, Trials, tribulations, temptations are usually called wind in Scripture, as Matth. 25. 27. The rain descended, and the winds blue, and the floods came, etc. Two Observations lie clear in the Text. 1. That godly men must expect windy days even in the times of the Gospel. 2. That Jesus Christ is a hiding place to believers in all the windy days which they meet with in this life. I shall begin with the first, viz. Doct. 1. That godly men must expect to meet with windy days even under the Kingdom of Christ: Christ's Kingdom, though it be a glorious Kingdom, yet it is not without stormy winds and tempests. There is under the Kingdom of Christ a great deal of inward peace, serenity and calmness under the Kingdom of Christ. The Scripture foretells this, Psal. 72. 7. In his days shall the righteous flourish, and abundance of peace, so long as the moon endureth, Esay 32. 17, 18. The work of righteousness shall be peace, etc. And my people shall dwell in a peaceable habitation, and in sure dwellings, and in quiet resting places. And the Scripture makes mention of external peace and quietness which shall be under the Kingdom of Christ, Esay 11. 6, 7, 8. The wolf also shall dwell with the lamb, etc. And, Mic. 4. 3, 4 He shall judge among many people, and rebuke strong Nations afar off; and they shall break their swords into ploughshares, and their spears into pruning books, etc. These and many prophecies of this nature are yet, I suppose, to be fulfilled, and they shall have their accomplishment before the end of this life. But yet believers are to meet with windy days even in Gospel times. 1. Windy days of outward troubles. Outward afflictions of all sorts are to be expected, sickness, weakness, poverty, reproach, persecution and all other evils. These winds have blown very sharp upon the Apostles, Disciples, Martyrs, and other servants of God in their generations; yea, upon whole Churches, the seven Churches are overturned by them. And they do so continue to this very day. Through many tribulations we must enter into the Kingdom of heaven. This was Paul's Doctrine, Act. 14. 22. Ye shall have tribulation ten days; this message is sent by Christ to the Church of Smyrna, Rev. 3. 10. And our Saviour himself foretold the Church before his departure, that these winds would arise, Joh. 16. 33. In the world ye shall have tribulation. And Rev. 11. 22. the holy City is given unto the Gentiles to be trod under foot forty two months, and ver. 3. of that Chapter, the witnesses shall for the space of one thousand two hundred sixty days (which is the whole time of Antichrists reign) prophecy in sackcloth; and to this very day we see they have their sackcloth upon their loins. Till the fall of Antichrist these windy days will not be over. 2. Windy days of inward troubles; Temptations, desertions, inward fears and shake in the soul. There will be these spiritual earthquakes and agonies in the souls of God's people even in Gospel-times. This wind did beat violently upon the Apostles; without were sightings, within were fears, 2 Cor. 7. 5. Paul felt these winds make a horrible noise in his bowels, in those fierce buffet of Satan which he speaks of, 2 Cor. 12. 7. yea, these winds blew fiercely upon Christ himself, when he uttered those doleful words; Eli, Eli, Lamasab achthani, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? Mat. 27. ●6. And if the King of the Church met with such a windy day of temptation, as we read, Mat. 4. init. and of desertion, as we read in this Text; the subjects must expect to meet with them. I shall give you a triple account of this point. 1. There is a devil, an Antichrist, wicked men even under Christ's Kingdom. 2. There is sin under the Gospel. And where there is sin, there cannot but be winds. The wind is (as the Philosopher teacheth us) an exhalation arising from the earth, drawn upwards by the power of the Sun, which meeting with the cold of the middle region of the air, is beaten back again; it is so light that it cannot descend, and so violently resisted that it cannot ascend, therefore it is carried aslaunt with a mighty violence through the air. The matter of winds is an exhalation mixed for the Magir. Phys. most part with vapours, from whence it is that the wind is sometimes moist. The same exhalations or vapours enclosed in the bowels of the earth, and not finding an open passage cause an earthquake. Sin is the matter of spiritual winds without, and spiritual earthquakes within. Now as there will be winds and earthquakes where there is the matter of them; so there cannot but be the winds of outward troubles, and the earthquakes of spiritual troubles where sin is, which doth engender and breed both these. Now the people of God sin under the Gospel, and from their sins do these winds and earthquakes proceed. Sin creates storms in gospel-days. 3. These winds are for the advantage of believers even under the Gospel; ye are in affliction if need be, through manifold temptations, 1 Pet 16. The winds are not more necessary for the world, than these winds are for the souls of God's people even in Gospel times; I shall show you the usefulness of the winds of heaven for the earth, and show you the usefulness of these spiritual winds in the same respects to the soul. Consider the parallel in five things. 1. The wind is useful for purification. The wind cleanseth and sweetens the air, carries away & disperses noisome and infectious vapours that are hurtful to the bodies of men and other creatures; the wind is ventilabrum naturae, nature's fan by which all putrefying vapours are driven away, Vid. Job 37. 21. Men see not the bright light which is in the clouds: but the wind passeth and cleanseth them. These spiritual winds, both inward and outward have, when sanctified by God, a purifying virtue. Those corrupting infectious mists and vapours of sin which pollute the soul, are purged and driven away by the blasts of these winds. Dan. 11. 35. Many shall fall, ●o try them, and to purge them, and to make them white. No soul is ordinarily so full of infectious savour as those that want these winds. Moab hath been at ease from his youth, &c, Esay 48. 11. And no Christians have such sweet souls as those that are frequently visited with these winds of trouble. Corruption will hardly fasten where these winds do ordinarily blow. Saints have foggy souls in Gospel-times. 2. The wind hath a searching virtue. It's a penetrating creature; If there be the least chink or cranny, the wind will find it out. As the light finds out the least hole, so doth the wind. These spiritual winds are of a searching and discovering nature. Temptations, desertions, outward troubles, will search the very inward parts of the soul. Christians have found out those defects in themselves, which they could never espy till God sent these winds to blow upon them. Many holes and crannies they have seen in their own spirits; which they could never discern till these windy days arose upon them. He openeth their years to discipline, and shows them wherein they have exceeded, Job 36. 9 Transgressions, excesses, and spiritual defects too are found out by these winds and tempests. Our Saviour lays down this useful effect of these tempestuous days, Mat. 7. 25, 27. the winds blue, etc. and it fell not, etc. Great winds do discover whether your houses be made of firm timber, or of shaking rotten wood. These spiritual winds are great discoverers, especially if they be in extremity. A sword shall pierce through thine own soul also, that the thoughts of many hearts may be discovered. The words of Simeon to the Virgin-Mary, Luke 2. 35. the stony ground is not discovered till these winds arise, but then 'tis fully discovered, Mat. 13. 20, 21. No Christian knows himself so thoroughly as he that hath traveled through these gusts of trouble. Peter did not know his own weakness till these high winds had searched him; then he saw the unworthy fear and Apostasy of his own heart, Mat. 26. 70, 72, 74. Peter did not know his own distrustfulness till the wind began to be boisterous, than he saw he could sink as well as another man, Mat. 14. 30. Saints need self-discovery under Christ's Kingdom. 3. The wind hath a cooling virtue. When the air is heated by the scorching beams of the Sun, the wind passeth through it, and brings it into a cool temper again. These spiritual winds cool the soul. Christians are sometimes scalding-hot in the pursuit of the world, or perhaps of some sin. God stirs up these winds and cools that heat. Some sharp wind of distress of conscience, some gust of temptation, some piercing blast of trouble abares those feverish heats, removes that eagerness which was before in the soul after things that cannot profit. That wind of God that blew in Paul's face, cooled that zeal for persecution which was in his heart, Acts 9 1, 3, 4. 4. The wind makes men keep their garments closer about them. You have heard of the fable of the Sun and the Wind striving for the Traveller's cloak; the issue was, the Sun got it; the more violently the Wind blew, the faster he held it. These spiritual Winds make the soul look better to his spiritual garments; he holds all his graces faster then, then at another time. He keeps his faith, his hope, his patience, his integrity tacked close about him. Job never was so careful of keeping his garments, as when he met with these winds. Vid. Chap. 27. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6. As God liveth saith he, who hath taken away my judgement, etc. All that while my breath is in me, etc. my righteousness I hold fast and will not let it go, till I die I will not remove my integrity from me. Soldier's never keep their armour so carefully as when they come to an encounter. Christians are never so careful of their spiritual harness as when the winds of tribulation and temptation beat upon them; And we have need to keep our garments even under the Gospel. 5. The wind hath an awakening power. When it lifts up its voice with violence, the noise is so dreadful, that sleep is taken away from those that hear it. The Mariner cannot sleep when the winds are up. The Shipmaster wondered that Jonah could sleep when the Winds were so high, and the Sea so raging, Jonah 1. 6. These spiritual Winds awaken the soul out of sloth and carnal security. When there is an earthquake of inward trouble in the conscience; when there is a tempest of outward trouble upon the body, the soul is made more watchful than ever it was; if these storms be sanctified it will be so. Psal. 78. 4. Thou holdest mine eyes waking, saith Asaph. That storm of temptation which then lay upon him, kept the eyes of his soul waking, as well as the eyes of his body. That earthquake which was at midnight, when Paul and Silas sang praises to God, awakened the sleepy Jailor, Act. 16. 26, 27. the natural conscience is startled by such providences, much more is the regenerate conscience. These Winds are God's Physic which he useth to remove spiritual security; and God will make it effectual to accomplish his end. Jonah slept a while, but God did awake him both in his sleepy body, and more sleepy soul, before these winds ceased blowing, Mat. 26, 40, 41, 43. Saints under the Gospel have need of awakening. The Uses of this. Use 1. Expect these windy days. Do not think that now the Gospel is come, now Christ's Kingdom is set up, storms are at an end. God doth every day confute this folly. The end of one tempest hath been the beginning of another. Hitherto it hath been so, and we can see nothing to make us think that it shall yet be otherwise. If you believe not this truth, you will have little benefit by the next doctrine. The winds will be very high in the Church of God. This is evident in Scripture; however it be, this is our comfort; These Winds if we be godly, will blow us faster to heaven; and the higher the Winds are, the nearer is the calm. Expect outward storms. Expect inward tempests. Do not believe yourselves to be past either of these. Our former storms may perhaps prove calm weather, if they be compared with our future tempests. Preparing for them will be no prejudice if they never come. When you are out of one temptation, look for another before Antichrists utter down-fall. Use 2. Get good provision against these windy days come. Take to yourselves the whole Armour of God that ye may stand when the Winds are at the highest. Whether they be tempests without, or storms within; outward blasts, or inward earthquakes. 'Tis the Apostles counsel, Eph. 6. 13, 14. God that foretells evil days, hath provided Armour of proof against those days. Take this Armour. 1. No other Armour will serve, saul's Armour will not serve God's soldiers. 2. This Armour will serve, it was never battered, it will never be broken. Take it therefore and put it on. 1. Put it on wholly. 2. Put it on speedily. 3. Use it when it is on. 4. When you have done all, hid yourselves in Christ, who is here called for their comfort, Latibulum à vento: of which comfortable point I shall speak the next time. ESAY 32. 2. And a man shall be as a hiding place IX. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth. Lon. Feb. 15. 1651. from the wind. TWo things I observed in this Text. 1. A danger intimated, in this word, Wind. 2. A remedy prescribed, A man shall be as a hiding place. The Observations were two. 1. That Christians must expect to meet with windy days, even under the Kingdom of Christ. Of which I have spoken. Doctor 2. That Jesus Christ is the believers hiding place in all the windy days which they meet withal in the world. He is latibulum, or Absconsio à vento, whether they be windy days of outward trouble, or windy days of inward trouble, temptation, desertion, discouraging fears and terrors. Christ is a hiding place to them in all these days and in all these cases. Here are four words used in this text, which set out this hiding virtue that is in Christ, hiding place, covert, rivers of water, sha●ow of a rock. Many other Scriptures bear pregnant testimony to this truth. Esay 4. 5, 6. The Lord will creat● upon Mount Zion, upon every dwelling place of Mount Zion, and upon all her assemblies, a cloud, etc. This is spoken of Christ the beautiful branch of the Lord, v. 2. This glorious and beautiful branch, the root of the stock of Jesse shall be a cloud, and smoke, a defence, a Tabernacle, a shadow, a place of refuge, a covert, and that not to one, but to every dwelling place of Mount Zion, and to all her Assemblies. To this agrees that of our Saviour, Cant. 2. 14. O my dove that art in the clefts of the rock, and in the secret place of the stairs. Jesus Christ is this cleft of the rock, he is this secret place of the stairs. Christ is called Shiloh, Gen. 49. 10. Shiloh is from the root 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies in quiet● vel pace agere, tranquille & in otio vivere, all safety is in Christ. The tunicle in which the infant is wrapped in the mother's belly, is called by the Hebrews Shiloh, because it lies there securely out of fear. In the prosecution of this point, I shall open these three things. 1. What it is in Christ that is a hiding place. 2. What it is of theirs that Christ hides. 3. Why Christ is a hiding place to them. 1. There are several things in Jesus Christ which make up this hiding place: indeed every thing in Christ is a hiding place. I shall instance in some. 1. The providence of Christ. The Scripture tells us that the eyes of the Lord run to and fro throughout the earth, 2 Chron. 16. 9 Jesus Christ hath the same watchful eyes of providence over his people that the Father hath, Col. 3. 17. By him all things consist. It's one Argument Divines bring to prove Christ's divinity, because be governs the world by his providence, as the Father doth, John 5. 17. My Father worketh hitherto, and I work. It's meant of his providential working. And Heb. 1. 3. Christ is said to uphold all things by the Word of his Power, which is an act of providence. Now as Christ by his providence watcheth over all things and and creatures; so do his eyes watch continually over his people. Esay 27. 3. I the Lord do keep it, I will keep it night and day. This is one great stone of this biding place. 2. The Attributes of Christ. All the Divine Attributes are ascribed to Christ as well as to the Father. Eternity, Micah 5. 2. Almightiness, Esa● 9 6. Omniscience, Heb. 4. 13. It's spoken of Christ our high Priest. Wisdom, Prov. 9 1. He is called God only wise, Judas 25. All these Attributes are as so many stones that make this hiding place. Prov. 18. 10. The Name of the Lord is a strong Tower. Christ's name the Prophet mentions, Esay 9 ●. Wonderful, Counsellor, etc. every one of these names is a room in this hiding place. 3. The Promises of Christ. All the promises of God are in Christ yea, and in him Amen, 2 Cor. 1. 20. Christ hath purchased them; they all have their ratification and accomplishment in Christ. The Scripture is full of promises of all sorts; of protection, provision, deliverance, salvation. Every promise is a piece of this hiding-place. Ps. 18. 30. The Word of the Lord is tried. He is a buckler to them that trust in him. Christ's Word of Promise is the souls defence. 4. The merits of Christ. Christ hath by the shedding of his blood merited for his Elect whatsoever is necessary. These merits are a believers hiding place. O my dove that art in the clefts of the rock, Cant. 2. 14. those foramina petrae are vulnera Christ●. There the believer hides himself in the time of danger. As the dove when she is pursued flies to her windows; so the believer flies to the wounds of Christ, and there is hid. 5. The intercession of Christ. The Scripture tells us that Christ appears continually before the Father for us, he is still moving for us at the right hand of God. His Intercession in heaven is the believers Sanctuary on earth. So the Apostle tells us in two places, Heb. 6. 18, 19, 20. and Heb. 7. 25. He is able to save, etc. because he lives for ever to make Intercession for us. Christ directs Peter to this, Luke 22. 31. 2. What it is of a believer that Christ is a hiding place unto. 1. Christ is a hiding place to the outward man. He hides that in time of storms, Christ hides that two ways. (1.) Sometimes he hides it from danger. He keeps his people from the rage of them that would swallow them. Thus the Church was hid, Rev, 12. 6. The woman fled into the Wilderness, where she hath a place prepared of God, that they should feed her there one thousand two hundred sixty days. Thus David was often hid from the fury of Saul, and his Courtiers that sought his life. (2) Sometimes God hides it in danger. That though his people be in danger, yet they are not destroyed. Thus the Church was hid in Egypt. The bush was burning, & yet was not consumed, Ex. 3. 2. 2. Christ is a hiding place to the inward man. And herein he excels all other hiding places. (1) He hides the soul from sin. The best of his people would sinne more frequently, and more grievously, if Jesus Christ did not hid them from sin. (2) He hides the soul from temptations. He chains up Satan from tempting them, that he cannot bait them so furiously as he would; and when he suffers Satan to tempt, he doth not suffer them to be utterly overcome. Thus he was a hiding place to Peter, Luke 22. 31. Thus he was a hiding place to Saint Paul, 2 Cor. 12. 7. Though he did not hid him from being buffeted, yet he hide him from being vanquished by those buffet. (3) He hides their graces. Their faith, their hope, their patience, their humility, etc. were not Christ a hiding place to their very graces; they would whither, they would die, they would come to nothing: he hides the root of grace, keeps that warm that it perish not, yea he so hides it, as that he makes it fructify. (4) He hides their joy, their peace of conscience. Our comforts have need of Christ's protection, as well as our graces. Should not he be a hiding to our inward peace and joy; the wind of terror and temptation would soon blow them away. In the world ye shall have tribulation, but in me ye shall have peace, John 16. 33. Our peace is built upon Christ, our peace is laid up in Christ, our peace is preserved and defended by Christ. The Devil would soon quench our joy, if Christ were not a hiding place to it. Jesus Christ is in every place, and in every thing a hiding place to his people. 3. Why Christ is a hiding place to them. There is a double ground of it. Necessity. Convenience I. It's necessary that Christ should be their hiding place. This necessity is grounded upon a double consideration. 1. Believers want a hiding place. They are exposed to many enemies, to many dangers. The world, the devil, the flesh are assailing, pursuing, making attempts upon them every day, and that several ways. Luther was wont to compare the Church to a poor weak Virgin in a wild Wilderness, where there is nothing but ravenous creatures that seek her life. Our Saviour's comparison is somewhat like it, Lak. 10. 3. Behold, I send you forth as sheep among wolves. Joseph is a fruitful bough. The Archers have shot at him, etc. Gen. 49. 23, 24, 25. Believers are in this world in a strange land; they are not of the world, and therefore the world hates them. They want a hiding place for their bodies, for their souls, for their graces, for their comforts. The chicken doth not want the wing and the nest, more than they do a hiding place. 2. There is none other besides Jesus Christ that can be a hiding place for them. First, they cannot be hiding places to themselves. They are weak and foolish, they expose themselves to danger; they know not well how to hid themselves in Christ, much more unable are they to be protectors to themselves. Should Christ leave the best of us to ourselves, we should be our own Butchers, not Protectors. Secondly, no other creature can protect and hid them. Kings and Princes, they cannot hid us, Psalm 146. 3. and if they cannot, inferior men are much more unable. Horses and Armies, they cannot be a hiding place to us, Psalm 33. 16, 17. They are soon routed and scattered. If they could be hiding places to our bodies, yet surely to ou● souls they cannot. Gold and Silver cannot be a hiding place to us. Though men say to their wedge of Gold, thou art my confidence, Job 31. 24. yet will not mountains of Gold and silver be safe hiding places in the day of trouble. The Holy Angels cannot be hiding places to us. They are but subprotectors; they do but spread Christ's wings over us The truth is, all creatures want hiding places for themselves. The best of creatures are but as the Dyal, they cast no shadow unless the Sun shine upon them. The best of creatures is like Jonahs' Gourd, the least worm eats them thorough and thorough in a short time. II. There is Convenience as well as Necessity. It's very expedient that Christ should be a hiding place to believers. First, he hath all qualifications that may fit him for this work. 1. He hath strength. A hiding place must be locus munitissimus. Paper houses will never be good hiding places. Houses made of reeds or rotten timber will not be fit places for men to hid themselves in. Jesus Christ is a place of strength. He is the rock of ages. His name is the Mighty God▪ Esay 9 6. 2. He hath height. A hiding place must be locus excelsissimus, Your low houses are soon scaled. Jesus Christ is a high place; he is as high as Heaven. He is the jacob's ladder that reacheth from earth to Heaven, Genesi● 28. 12. He is too high for men, too high for Devils; no creature can scale these high Walls. 3. He hath secret places. A hiding place must be locus abditissimus. The more secret, the more safe. Now Jesus Christ hath many secret chambers that no creatures can ever find, Canticles 2. 14. O my Dove that art in the secret places of the stairs! As Christ hath hidden comforts which no man knows but he that receiveth them; so he hath hidden places of secrecy, which none can find out but he that dwells in them. Come my people, enter into thy chambers, and shut the doors upon thee, Esay 26. 20. 4. Christ is faithful. He that will hid others, had need be very faithful. A false hearted Protector is worse than an open pursuer; Will the men of Keilah deliver me up, saith David? They will deliver thee up, saith the Lord; but now Christ is faithful, Revelations 3. 14. He is the faithful witness; He cannot be bribed to surrender up any creature that comes to hid himself with him. Christ will die before he will betray his trust. 5. Christ i● diligent. Diligence is as necessary in those that will hid others, as faithfulness. A sleepy Guard may betray a Castle or Garrison, as well as a faithless Guard. But Jesus Christ is very diligent and watchful, he hath his Intelligencers abroad; yea, his own eyes run to and fro in the earth, to see what contrivances are made, and set on foot against those who are hid with him, Psal. 121. 3, 4. He that keepeth Israel, neither slumbreth nor sleepeth. 2. Ground. — Christ is fit in regard of that propriety he hath in his Saints. All his Relations make him a fit hiding place. First, He is the Captain General of the Church. The Church is compared to an Army with Banners; Christ is the General of this Army, Joshuah 5. 13, 14. It was Christ the Angel of the Covenant; whom God hath made a Leader and Commander to the people, as the Prophet calls him, Esay 55. 4. Who should secure the Soldiers but the General? Secondly, He is the Churches King. Psalm 2. 6. The King's Court is the Subjects hiding place. Nebuchadnezars dream, Dan. 4. 12. shows that Kings should be shelters to their Subjects. Thirdly, He is the Church's shepherd, John 10. 11, 12. Shepherds are to secure their flocks. David slew the Lion that tore the flock. Fourthly, He is the Church's Father, Isaiah 9 6. The Father's house is the child's Castle. The child when he is pursued makes straight to his Father's lap, and there he is hid. Fifthly, He is the Church's Husband, Ephes. 5, 25. The house of the husband is the wife's Garrison. There she is hid and protected, as well as nourished. ESAY 32. 2. And a man shall be as a hiding place X. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth. Lon. Feb. 22. 1651. from the wind. THe Doctrine was, that Jesus Christ is unto a Believer a hiding place fromthe Wind. The Uses are three Information. Exhortation. Consolation. 1. For Information. This consists of four Branches. 1. That Believers are Christo chari, very precious in the esteem of Christ. Believers are persons of great worth. They are called excellent ones, Psal. 16. 3. They are more excellent than any persons in the world besides. They are flowers, roses and lilies, the best of flowers, Cant. 2. 2. They are fine gold, others are the dross of silver, Jer. 6. ult. They are wheat, others are Lam. 4. 2. but chaff, Mat. 13. 30. They are precious stones, others are but common stones; They are light, others are darkness. Their worth appears by this, that Jesus Christ hides them in times of danger. Men do not use to hid rubbish or lumber; but their jewels, their writings, things of value. The Saints are the jewel● of Christ, they are the jewels of the Crown; Christ will lose all, rather than one of these, Mal. 3. 17. They shall be mine in that day when I make up my jewels. They are Gods hidden ones, Psal. 83. 3. Jesus Christ will venture all the world to save one of his Saints. While he is able to protect himself, he will protect them; they are his very members, a part of himself; he keeps them with the same care he keeps himself. Wicked men look upon them as vile and mean things, but Christ accounts them his precious ones; he keeps the very number of their hairs, Mat. 10. 30. It was asigne that Jacob respected Rachel and Joseph more than all the rest of his household, because he was so careful of their preservation, Gen. 32. 2. He puts the handmaids and their children foremost, then Leah and her children, and then Rachel and Joseph. If there be but one place of safety to be found in the world, Jesus Christ will put the believer there. The Scripture saith, that Noah found favour in the eyes of the Lord, Gen. 6. 8. How is this grace of God to him evidenced? When all the world was exposed to the violence of the deluge, God takes care to make an Ark for his preservation. 'Tis a sign of the precious thoughts of Christ towards his Saints, that he makes himself a hiding place for their preservation. Though they be never so mean in the eyes of men, they are incomparably precious in the esteem of Christ. 2. How impossible is it that any true believer should eternally perish. The Scripture saith that they can never perish, John 10. 28. They may seem to be lost in the judgement of men, they may be at lost in their own apprehension, but they cannot be lost. Amongst other reasons this is one, Christ hides them. Satan must storm and levelly this hiding place before he can reach a believer to destroy him. The treasury must be broken before the treasure that is hid in it can be carried away, the jewels cannot be taken away before the chest that keeps them be broken. The hiding place must be entered before that which is hidden in it be removed. Christ stands between his Elect and danger. The Devil must pierce Christ himself, before he can touch a Saint to destroy him. The believer is hid in Christ, and Christ must suffer before he can suffer. Jesus Christ did once conquer the devil for the believers freedom, and the devil must conquer Christ before he can finally overcome the believer. 3. See here the al-sufficiency of Christ. He is to his holy ones every thing they stand in need of. He is their life, he is their food, he is their raiment, and he is their hiding place. A hiding place is as necessary sometimes as meat and clothing. The Saints here are militant; they could not live if they were not hid. Though Christ were every thing else, yet if he were not an hiding place, he were not enough; but he is a hiding place as well as food. Jesus Christ serves all the necessities of the soul. The Saints of God are in Scripture compared to sheep, John 10. 14. Now a fold is as necessary for sheep as pastures; as the pasture preserves them from starving, so the fold preserves them from worrying. Christ now is both fold and pasture. and so a sufficient shepherd. The Church of Christ is compared to an Army, Cant. 6. 10. A place of retreat is as needful to 〈…〉 any other provision. Christ i●● 〈◊〉 pl●ce to his soldiers; he doth not feed and them, but he hides them too. He doth not only give them ammunition to fight when they are in the field, but he is a hiding place to them when they are heaten out of the field. The Church of Christ is compared to a ship, Esay 54. 11. A haven is as necessary for a ship as either Masts or Sails, or Anchors. Jesus Christ doth not only provide Sails and Tackling for his ship, but he provides a Haven also; yea, he himself is the Haven; when his ship is weatherbeaten by long voyages and sharp storms, he brings her into the Haven, and there she's out of danger. ●e is fit for all the exigencies and necessities of the soul, a complete all-sufficient Saviour. 4. The misery of those who are out of Christ. One great work of the Ministry is to discover the misery of a Christlesse Condition. All unbelievers are without Christ. Though they be in Christ by outward profession, yet they are without Christ in regard of saving union, Eph. 2. 12. The misery of being uninteressed in Christ is unspeakable even in this regard, that he is without a hiding place. No greater emblem of misery then to see a man in a sharp storm without a shelter. He that is without Christ hath neither shelter for soul nor body. When men assault him, when devils tempt him, when sin sets upon him, he hath no place to retire to, where he can can have any security. He that is without Christ hath not one bush to defend him, either from men, devils, his own conscience, or from the indignation of God. He lies open to all the hostile incursions of men, devils, of the w●●●h of God which is as a consuming fire. All his confidence is but as the shadow of a spider's web, which will neither keep him warm, nor safe. Use 2. Exhortation. 1. Let not believers be inordinately afraid in times of danger. Should such a man as I fly, saith Nebemiah? and who being as I, would go into the Temple to save his life? Neh. 6. 11. A fear of providence becomes the people of God as well as others; but fear of anxiety or distrust should be far from them; wondrous confident have the Saints of God been in times of danger, upon this very ground. God is our refuge and strength, saith the Church, a present help in time of trouble; therefore we will not fear though the earth be moved, etc. Psal. 46. 1, 2, 3. A Saint that believes this may laugh at fear, he may esteem iron as straw, and brass as rotten wood, as the Scripture saith of the Leviathan, Job 41. 27, 28. 'Tis a disparagement to your hiding place, that you should be afraid. If Christ be able to hid you, you shall not be undefended. Let the world rage, let devils roar, let men lift up their voice, let sin be never so furious, Christ is a hiding place; he hides you from God's wrath, and he will hid you from man's fury. Let unguarded sinners fear and tremble; but let Christ's hidden ones rest in settled peace, in firm security. Your sinking doth upbraid your hiding place with weakness and insufficiency. 2. Acknowledge from whence all your safety and protection comes. That you are hid from danger, when others are exposed to danger; that you are sheltered, when others 〈◊〉 without shelter; that your souls, bodies; graces, comforts are secured, it is not because of your own care, but because Christ hides you. If the Lord himself had not been on our fide, now may Israel say, they had swallowed us up quick when their wrath was kindled against us, Psal. 124. 1, 2. If Christ did not prepare a place for the woman, the Church, and if he did not give her the two wings of an Eagle to carry her to her hiding place, the Dragon would soon devour both her and her child, Rev. 12. 14. Acknowledge the protection of Christ, let him have the praise of all your safety. The ancient Romans used to pay tribute for shadows: let Christ have praises for his shadowy protection. Whosoever are the instruments, he is the principal Author of all your hiding. 3. Take heed of making any other hiding places. Men are very apt when danger approacheth to dig created hiding places for themselves. We may read how the Prophet reproves this practice, Esay 22 9, 10, 11. A providential use of outward means, is not only lawful, but necessary, but carnal trusting to any such hiding place is sinful. To trust to creatures in time of danger is very Atheistical. God hath cursed such confidence, Jer. 17. 5, 6. But to descend to particulars; There are sundry places which men create to themselves in time of danger. (1) Many make great men their hiding place. When troubles arise they have recourse to men, that by the strength of horses and Armies they may hid them. Alas what a vain confidence is this? Ahaz thought to have hid himself under the wing of the King of Assyria: but what was the event? 2 Chron. 28. 20. The King of Assyria came unto him, but strengthened him n●t. The skirt of men, the strength of horses is weak and very vain, Prov. 21. 31. The horse is prepared against the day of battle, but safety is of the Lord. We must say as the Church, Lord give us help in trouble, for vain is the help of man. He that makes a chariot his hiding place, shall not be hid. God will drive the wheels over their own back. If men and horses could be a hiding place from men to your bodies, they cannot be any competent shelters to your souls; they cannot hid the inner man. I shall conclude this with Psal. 20. 7. Some trust in chariots, etc. They are brought down and fallen, but we are risen and stand upright. He that makes men and horses his hiding place, shall bring down the fire of God's anger upon his hiding place, and upon himself, Esay 31. 1, 3. When God shall stretch out his hand; both he that helpeth shall fall, and he that is helped shall fall down, and they all shall fall together. (2) Others make strong Castles and desenced Cities their hiding place. When danger approaches they sly to such places, and there think to be safe. But alas, how insecure are all these places? The high walls of Jericho fell down with a shout, when Jesus Christ gave commandment for their downfall. Josh. 6. 20. such hiding places are made of perishable materials. Nineveh was a strong place, but it could not secure the inhabitants thereof. See how the Prophet derides their confidence, Nah. 3. 12, 13, 14. Tyrus was very strong, Ezek. 27. 11. The Gammadims were in thy Towers. They were a people of Phenicia, called Gammadims, as if we should say, vi●i 〈◊〉, because of the gr●●t strength they had in their 〈◊〉▪ 〈…〉 & lac●rtosi, saith Juni●s. And not for all their strength they could not preserve their Towers, nor their Towers them from the rage of Nabuchadnezzar, Chap. 26. 7, 8, 9 If any defenced place could hid you, yet it could but hid the outward man, it could be no security to the soul either from sin or temptations. Devil's can climb the highest walls; brazen walls cannot keep out his temptations, much less can they secure you from the wrath of God. (3) Others make their silver and gold a hiding place. The rich man's wealth is his strong City, and as a high wall in his conceit, Prov. 18. 11. but alas, how unable are these things to secure us? riches sometime lay men open to danger; poverty is a better securer than riches, even from bodily danger. Osiander reports that in that bloody Epit. Cent. 16. l. 3. c. 69. Parisian Massacre many rich Papists were murdered for their wealth as well as protestants. Though their profession made them Papists, yet their wealth made them Hugonots as well as others. However, riches cannot secure a man from a disease, nor from death, Luke 16. nor from temptation, nor from troubles of conscience, nor from the wrath of God, Prov. 11. 4. and Zephan. 1. 18. Neither their silver nor gold can deliver them in the day of the Lords anger. (4) Others make their outward privileges a hiding place. This the carnal Jews did ever betake themselves to, when the Prophets threatened any storms. Nothing is more frequent in Scripture then this, Jer. 7. 4. The Temple of the Lord, etc. Mic. 3. 11. and Mat. 3. 9 Think not to say within yourselves, we have Abraham to our Father, etc. But alas, all this will not hid you. Go to my place at Shiloh, saith God, Jer. 7. 12. Go to Jerusalem, and see how it is there; go to the seven Churches of Asia, and see how it is there. These privileges are so fare from being hiding places, that if he that enjoys them be not hid savingly in Christ, they will expose him to more sudden, more certain, and more dreadful ruin. Read Mat. 11. 20, 21, 22▪ 23, 24. joab was slain at the horns of the Altar. God's Temple shall not be a Sanctuary except he who is the Lord of the Temple be our hiding place. Indeed whatever hiding place is made, besides Christ, shall not shelter when storms come. We may say of all these hiding places, as the Prophet doth of that one, Esay 28. 15, 16, 17, 18. Every hiding place besides Christ is a hiding place of falsehood. 4. Be persuaded actually to hid yourselves with jesus Christ. To have a hiding place, and not to use it, is as bad as to want one: fly to Christ; run into the holes of this rock. Three things must be done by all those that would hid themselves with Christ. (1) You must put away sin by repentance. Jesus Christ will not be a Sanctuary for rebels, he will not protect evil-doers. Christ will never hid the devil, nor any of his servants. Esay 55. 6, 7. Let the ungodly forsake his way, etc. David knew this, therefore he prays that God would teach him to do his Will, Psal. 143▪ 9, 10. Deliver me, etc. I fly unto thee to hid me. Teach me to do they will. He that will not do the Will of Christ, shall receive no protection from Christ. Protectio sequitur Allegiantiam, You must be his liege people if you will have him to defend you, Jo●. 22, 23, 25. (2) You must pray that he would hid you. The promise is made to prayer, Esay 65. 10. Sharon shall be a fold of flocks; the valley of Anchor, a place for the flocks to lie down in, for my people that have sought me. He that prays most fervently is like to be hid most securely. And then, (3) You must believe in him. Faith is the key that, opens the door of this hiding place, and locks it again. One word in the Hebrew signifies to trust, and to make a refuge, Psal. 57 1. He that doth not make Christ his trust shall not have Christ for his hiding place; he will hid none but those that commit themselves to him. I will set him on high, because he hath known my name, Psal. 91. 9, 14. Dependence on Christ is not the cause of his hiding us, but it is the qualification of the person that shall be hid. Use 3. Consolation. 1. It's comfortable against the malice of all their enemies. Though devil's rage, though men roar, yet here is shelter against both. Satan is a destroyer, but Christ is a hiding place. This made David so secure, Psal. 4. 8. I will both lay me down in peace and sleep, for thou Lord makest me dwell in safety. 2. When other hiding places fail. God's people often find by experience that the places of their protection are places of destruction. Well, when all other places fail, Christ will not fail. See how it was with David, Psal. 142. 4, 5. and when his hiding place at Ziglak was gone, yet his Saviour was not gone, 2 Sam. 30. 6. He encouraged himself in the Lord his God. 'Tis a mighty encouragement to believers, that Christ is a hiding place. 1. He is a safe and strong hiding place, Esay 33. 16. Christ is a rock, and he that is in Christ, is in the munitions of rocks. 2. He is a large hiding place. There's room enough for all his Elect. His skirt is large. 3. He is a hiding place to the soul as well as to the body. 4. He hath undertaken to hid us. God hath committed his Elect to Christ, that he should hid them. 5. Christ is a man. As he is God and so able, so he is man also; he hath not put off his humanity, he is pitiful to his own flesh. I suppose Christ is here called a Man for the comfort of men. MAT. 9 12. — They that be whole need not a XI. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth. Lon. March 14. 1651. Physician, but they that are sick. THis Text is an Apology made by our Saviour in defence of his charitable practice in conversing with Publicans and sinners, for the good of their souls. Matthew the Publican Isa. 65. 1. Luke 19 5 is called by Christ from the receipt of custom to be one of his followers, v. 9 Note. Christ's preventing grace, Mar. 1. 16, 17. Note. jesus Christ is able to convert the worst, Luke 19 5 Luke 8. 2. 2 Chr. 33. 3, 4, etc. and greatest of sinners. Matthew the Publican. Zacheus the Extortioner. Marry Magdalen that had seven devils in her. Manasseh a bloody Murderer, a great Idolater, a sinner of the first magnitude. Paul a Persecutor. All these are converted Act. 9 2, 3. and brought home to God. God's grace is so efficacious, that it can overpower, and bring in the worst of sinners. No sinners greater than Publicans, and yet many of them converted by Christ. This Matthew being called, presently follows, ver. 9 He arose and followed him. Note. Those that savingly receive the call of Christ, do presently yield obedience. Zacheus no sooner called down from the Sycamore tree, but presently comes down speedily, Luke 19 6. Elisha no sooner effectually called, but presently leaves the plough and follows Elijah, 1 King. 19 19, 20. Paul no sooner effectually called, but he obeys presently, Act. 9 6. Gal. 1. 16. Simon and Andrew as soon as they were savingly called, left their nets and followed Christ, Mark 1. 16, 17, 18. Christ when he calls effectually, gives out strength with his call to submit to it. This Convert makes Christ a feast, Luke 5. 27. which is employed also, v. 10. of this chap. Note. New Converts are full of affection and love to Christ. Mantthew feasts our Saviour, and so did Zacheus, Luke 19 6. Those that before conversion would have been glad to stone him, do now kindly and familiarly entertain him. A true Convert thinks nothing too good, too dear for Jesus Christ. At this feast many Publicans and sinners were present, perhaps invited by Matthew for their souls good. Note. Such a● are truly brought to Christ themselves, do what they can to bring others to Christ. We have two clear examples of it, john 1. 40, 41, etc. Andrew being called, calls Simon. Philip being called, calls Nathanael, v. 45. Another example in the woman of Samaria, John 4. 28, 29. The Scribes and Pharisees observing these passages, begin to quarrel with Christ's Disciples, v. 11. Saint Luke saith, they murmured against his Disciples, Chap. 5. 30. Note. 'Tis a grief to wicked men to see others brought home to Christ. This ariseth from envy to Christ, and hat●ed to men. And then they question with his Disciples about this. Wh●eateth, etc. Note. 'Tis the mark of a man desperately wicked, to endeavour to draw Christ's Disciples from their obedience. The Pharisees were often scandalising Christ, and blasting him to his Disciples, that so they might draw them from their allegiance. But why do they go to the Disciples, and not to Christ? They thought the Disciples were weak, and therefore might be more easily won. Note. 'Tis the property of corrupters and seducers to make their hottest attempts on such as are weakest. Satan set first in Paradise on the weaker vessel, Gen. 3. and so do all others that follow that trade. Young chapmen are most likely to be deceived. Our Saviour hears this dispute, and steps in with them in his own person. 'Tis likely the Disciples acquainted him with it, as they usually did in other cases; or else by the flocking of the multitude about them, he observed it; or by the omniscience of his Divinity he knew it; however it was the Text saith, he appeared in the controversy, v. 12. Note. jesus Christ will plea! for them that are quarreled with for his sake. The Disciples are baited by the subtle Scribes and Pharisees, and see how ready Christ is to come to their rescue. Christ will back all those that stand up for him. Now the answer which our Saviour gives to this cavil is in the Text. They that are whole, etc. which is more plainly expounded in the next verse, I came not, etc. Our Saviour tells them, that he did in this action the office of a good Physician; took all opportunities for the good of sinful souls. q. d. If a Physician may visit infected persons, etc. And he doth withal secretly intimate to them their misery, that while they continued in their present self-conceitedness, they could expect no benefit at all by him. They that are whole need not, etc. They that are whole, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. They that are of ability or strength. 'Tis referred in Scripture both to the body, and to the soul; and it notes either truth of strength, or opinion of strength; that man that is either really, or conceitedly strong in body is, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. and he that is spiritually stronger conceitedly so, is a whole man, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉: here it means men that are opinionated and conceited of their own ability. It doth secretly point out the Pharisees distemper. Though they were as other men in regard of their spiritual condition, yet they had good thoughts of themselves; they were strong men in their own conceit. Need not, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. The word signifies necessity and usefulness. Rom. 12. 13. contributing to the necessities of Saints, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Mat. 6. 8. Your heavenly Father knows what things you have need of, etc. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The word signifies also a necessary office, as Acts 6. 3. Look out among you seven men, etc. whom we may appoint over this business, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Men that are whole as before, they can make no use, they have no want of a Physician. A Physician, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. The word signifies a healer. The work of a Physician is to heal. God hath given men insight into that study, to prevent diseases, and to cure diseases. But they that ●re sick, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. They that are evil affected 'Tis referred both to the outward and inward man. There is a sickness of the body, and of the mind also; and the phrase expresses the nature of sickness. Health is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 corporis a right temperature of body. 'Tis malus habitus corporis. Spiritual sickness is malus habitus Animi. When the spiritual part is dis-affected, the soul is spiritually sick. In this place it relates to both. The words are a double Proposition, in which are, First, the Subject, this is twofold. Secondly, the Predicate twofold. 1. That men that Need not a Physician. are whole 2. That men that Do need a Physician. are sick The sum of all amounts to these five Observations. 1. Sin is a spiritual sickness, a spiritual disease. 2. Jesus Christ is a Physician for the curing of this disease. 3. Some sinners are spiritually sick, and yet think themselves whole. 4. Christ is not a Physician to those that think themselves spiritually whole. 5. Those that see their spiritual sickness, shall find Jesus Christ ready to heal them. I begin with the first, viz. Doct. 1. Sin is a spiritual sickness. This is intimated in the text. 'Tis the very foundation of this defence of Christ. He points out these Publicans, with whom he now conversed, as so many diseased men. Every sin is a spiritual disease, every iniquity is a real malady. Sinful men are truly sick men, sin bath many names in Scripture, a burden, a wound, darkness, bonds, folly, etc. and here a sickness. Two things I shall open here by way of Explication. 1. Prove that sin is a sickness. 2. Show what kind of sickness it is. 1. That sin is a sickness. This is proved two ways. 1. From clear testimonies of Scripture. The Word of God calls it a sickness, Esay 1. 5. The whole head is sick, etc. It hath relation both to Jerusalem's miseries▪ and to Jerusalem's sins. She was sick with misery, and sick with sin; therefore sick with misery, because sick of sin. Ezek. 34. 4. The Prophets of Israel are compared to shepherds, and they are charged with this, that they did not strengthen the diseased, nor heal that which was sick. What is meant by the sick and diseased, but the sinful members of that Church, whose conversion and reformation the Prophets had not endeavoured. And Eccles. 6. 2. Solomon calls covetousness an evil disease. Hence also it is that sin is called in Scripture by the name of diseases. 'Tis called the plague of the heart, 1 King. 8. 38. There are as many diseases of the soul as there are of the body. Drunkenness is a spiritual dropsy; Security is a spiritual lethargy; Envy is a spiritual canker; Lust is a spiritual fever, Hos. 7. 4. They are all adulterers, as an oven heated by the Baker. Apostasy and backsliding is the spiritual falling-sickness; hardness of heart is the spiritual stone; searedness of conscience is a spiritual Apoplexy; unsettledness of judgement is a spiritual pa●fi●; pride a spiritual tumour; vainglory a spiritual itch. There is not any sickness of the body, but there is some distemper of the soul that might be paralleled with it, and bear the name of it. Hence also it is in Scripture, that the pardoning of sin is called healing, Psalm 103. 3. who forgiveth all thine iniquities, who healeth all thy diseases. 2. From the effects of sin. Sin doth produce all those effects upon the soul which sicknesses do upon the body. (1) Sickness unfits the body for action. Men that are active in health, they are in sickness indisposed for any thing. The Mariner cannot row, the soldier cannot fight, the husbandman cannot till, the Merchant cannot trade. It doth take a man quite off from all his labours; and that both in regard of Act, and in regard of Affection. Eccles. 12. 1. what was loved before yields no pleasure. Sin doth unfit the soul for spiritual employments; it takes men off from prayer, from hearing from meditation, etc. And the more power it hath over the soul, the more is the soul indisposed for holy exercises. Even Gods own children, when they have fallen into some spiritual sickness, are exceedingly indisposed to the things of God. Their zeal, their forwardness, their activity is much abated. David when he had fallen into that long sickness, how unlike himself was he? he had no actual repentance, till Nathan came to him with a message from God, and quickened him. Sin quencheth the Spirit in Godly men, as the water quencheth the fire. Sin takes off the edge of the soul, deads' the appetite and affection to the things of God. It locks up the heart that it cannot act as it was wont to do. (2) Sickness begets torment and anguish in the body. When sickness is in extremity in the body, how doth a man cry out of pain? head, and heart, and every part is under torment. What restless toss are men under when diseases are violent? hear how Job complains, Chap. 30. 16, 17, 18 Sin is a Creator of torment and painfulness in the soul. Felix his sin made him tremble, Acts 24. 25. cain's sin put his spirit into such anguish, that he cries out, My punishment is greater than I can bear, Gen. 4. 13, 14. Judas his sin did bring such despairing torment upon his soul, that he takes away his life to end his misery, Matth. 27. init. And even Gods own people, when they fall into this spiritual disease, they are pained at the very heart, till by pardon and remission, they have obtained a healing from God. How full of pain was David's spirit by reason of his sin? He was as a man upon the rack for a long time, if he did ever recover his former serenity. Vid. Psalm 6. per totum, Psalm 38. per tot. Many of the dear children of God, do by sin fill their hearts with such anguish, that they are never without much smart to the day of their death. (3) Sickness doth bring uncomeliness. The most beautiful body in the world, if pining sicknesses continue long upon it, becomes like a garment that is motheaten; the eyes sink, the colour is lost; the skin is shriveld, the bones stick out, etc. Job observes this, Chap. 16. 8. Thou hast filled me with wrinkles, which is a witness against me, and my leanness rising up in me beareth witness to my face. Sickness makes straight bodies how down, beautiful faces look ghastly, well-coloured cheeks look pale, and oftentimes the more beautiful sickness finds us, the more uncomely doth it leave us. Sickness turns youth into old age, vid. Lam. 3. 4. My flesh and my skin hath he made old. Sickness dries up the spirits, Prov. 17. 22. A merry heart doth good like a medicine; a broken spirit dries up the bones. Sin takes away the comeliness of the soul. The first sinful sickness that ever entered into the world hath turned the souls and bodies of all mankind into deformity and ugliness. Can we see the picture of Adam's soul in the state of innocency, and compare it with the souls that are diseased with sin, we would wonder at the sad change. Sin is a very deformed thing; it turned Angels of light into ugly devils. Those who were never healed by regeneration and remission of the disease of sin, what deformed souls have they? they have not one spot of beauty upon them, Psal. 14. 3. They are altogether become stinking. A dead carrion, a putrefied carcase is as beautiful, and as sweet an object as a sinfully-diseased soul. Yea, even Gods own children, by falling into sin, though but in one or two particular acts, do lose much of their beauty. They do not look with that grace they did before. Every act of sin casts a dark thick shadow upon the soul. As deep wounds leave scars upon the body, so sinful acts leave some scars of infamy upon the soul. A Saint doth not look like the same man he was before he fell into sin. (4) Sickness brings death. Dorcas was sick and died, Act. 9 37. Long sicknesses, if they be not removed, will bring the strongest body to the dust of death. Sickness is indeed Anteambulo mortis, the forerunner of death. The sickbed is the direct way to the dark bed, the grave. Sin doth bring death to the soul. One disease of sin, if it be not healed by Christ's blood, will certainly bring the soul to eternal death, Rom. 6. 23. it hath brought many to hell, and it will certainly bring all others to the same condition that live and die in it unhealed. He that dies in his sin, shall die for ever. II. For the nature of this sickness. 'Tis a more dreadful sickness than any other sickness. I shall set it out in a few particulars. 1. It seizeth upon the most noble part of man. All other sicknesses do infest the body only, but sin is a disease in the soul. Those sicknesses are most painful and most mortal, which seize upon the vitals and inward parts. A disease that feeds upon the spirits, doth soon drink up the natural moisture, and is not so easily cured. Sin is a disease that doth immediately reach the spirits. 'Tis the sickness of the heart. O Jerusalem, wash thy heart from wickedness, that thou mayest be saved, Jer. 4. 14. The Apostle it's true, speaks of the filthiness of the flesh, and of the spirit, 2 Cor. 7. 1. Some sins are only acted by the brutish, fleshly, and sensitive part; others rest in the spirit, as pride, vainglory, envy, etc. yet notwithstanding, even those filthinesses of the flesh have their chief seat and residence in the heart, according to that of our Saviour, Matth. 15. 19 Out of the heart proceed evil thoughts, etc. All sin is spiritual wickedness in regard of the fountain and root of it. As grace is seated in the heart, so also is sin, jer. 4. 18. This is thy wickedness, because it is bitter, because it reacheth unto thine heart. 2. Sin is a sickness which God never made. All bodily diseases are the handy work of God. He created Plagues, Fevers, Consumptions, etc. Amos 3. 6. But sin is a sickness of which God never was the Author. 'Tis true, God sometimes punisheth sin by sin, not by creating sin, but by suffering a sinful creature to fill up his sin, by withdrawing, denying his grace, which only can preserve from sin. 3. Sin is a sickness which separates: between God and men. No other disease can divide between God and the soul. Hezekiahs' plague, Asa's gout, jobs sores, none of all these did make any division between God and them. Some sicknesses do separate between the husband and the wife, the father and the child, at least in regard of actual communion, though not in regard of affection; but no bodily sickness divides between God and men. But sin doth separate between God and the soul. Esay 59 2. It makes God stand at a distance from his own children, to hid his face from them, and to deal with them as with enemies. 4. Sin is the cause of all other sicknesses. All bodily diseases come from this disease. Hast thou not procured this thy unto self? Thine own do shall correct thee, etc. Jer. 2. 19 A distempered soul is the true cause of a distempered body. Sin was the first disease that ever was in the world, and the cause of all that ever followed. 5. Sin is a disease that cannot be cured by any natural medicine in the world. No drug in the Apothecary's shop is able to heal this disease, Jer. 2. 22. Though thou wash thee with nitre, and make thyself never so clean, etc. There is no bodily disease, but there is something in nature, if it could be found out, able by Gods ordinary blessing to cure it. But there is nothing in nature can heal sin. There is but one medicine in all the world able to cure a diseased soul, and that's the blood of Jesus Christ. 6. Sin is the most loathsome disease i● all the world, and the most infectious. The small pox, the pestilence, the leprosy, these are delightful, pleasant diseases in respect of sin. Sin doth pollute every thing it comes near; it pollutes the conscience, it pollutes the Ordinances, it pollutes relations, it pollutes persons, it pollutes Nations. If it were possible that one drop of sin could come into heaven, it would turn heaven into hell. It's compared in Scripture to all loathsome things. 'Tis compared to the plague of pestilence, of leprosy, 1 King. 8. 38. The leprosy in the Law was a type of it. It's compared to poison, Psal. 140. 3. To the vomit of a dog, Vid. 2 Pet. 2. 22. It's called filthiness, Abomination, Lewdness. All the things that are loathsome in the world, are used in Scripture to shadow out the loathsomeness of sin. There is a disease called the foul disease. Sin is a fouler disease than that. 7. Sin is a propagating disease; Not only because it spreads over the whole man, but because it spreads itself to posterity; it descends from parents to children. Some bodily diseases, they say, are hereditary, yet not so hereditary, but some children scape them. But this is a sickness that conveys itself to all a man's posterity. This sickness is interwoven in the very essence of a person, which he doth together with his being communicate to all his seed. As a man begets a man; so doth he get a diseased man. Enosh. The Uses of this. 1. Oh the multitude of sick persons that are in the world! There is not one person living, but is less or more troubled with this sickness. The world is nothing but a Hospital of sick persons. There is not a family in which this plague of sin is not. In many things we offend all. The root of the matter is in the best of us, Esay 64 6. 2. What's the reason that there are no more cry out of this sickness? Sin is a sickness, and yet few bewail it. Other sicknesses are lamented. You cannot meet in any company, but you shall hear men cry out of their sicknesses. One man of his Gout, another of his Stone, another of his Consumption, etc. but little spoken of sin: The reason is, because sin is a spiritual disease, and so not discerned but by grace. And this is indeed the dreadfulness of this sickness, that it kills many before they feel it; it sends men to hell before they know themselves to be sick. 'Tis with sinners as with the drunkard in the Proverbs, Chapter 23. 35. They have stricken me, and I was not sick. 3. They are not your enemies that are solicitous to keep you from sin. Naturally we account them our friends which would prevent us from painful diseases; and yet we naturally account them our enemies, who would prevent us from falling into sin. I hate him, saith Ahab of Michajah, 1 Kings 22. 8. A wicked man hates none so much as those that would preserve him from sin. Well, whatever you think, they are your best friends, and that you will acknowledge another day. If you should be at the door of an infected house ready to go in, and one should whi●per you in the ear, Sir, the plague is in that hou●e, have a care of yourself; would you reproach him? nay, would you not thank him? Why will you think them your enemies, that would preserve you from sin? They know the dreadfulness of this sickness, and they would preserve others from falling into it: David blesses God for Abigail, and gives her many thanks for her great care of him, 1 Sam. 25. 32, 33. God sets it down for friendship, and whether you be saved or damned, you will clearly see it another day. 4. Watch against sin as you watch against sickness. How cautious are many men of their bodily health? They will eat and drink nothing that may prejudice their health. If they know any thing that will disturb the quiet of their bodies, they will not meddle with it, though their affection be never so much inclined to it. And why will you not be as cautious of sin? Take heed to yourselves; remember, swearing is a sickness, lying is a disease, pride is a sickness, &c Avoid all occasions of sin, all temptations to it. Pray against it, watch against it. Sin is a sickness will keep you out of heaven: sin is a sickness which will provoke God to hate you. Keep sin out of your family. Let not liars, swearers, drunkards, etc. lodge a night under your roof, Psal. 101. 7. No sickness is so catching as sin is. All men have the root of it, an inclination to it in their hearts. Preserve your children from this sickness. 'Tis worse than the smallpox, worse than the plague. Other diseases will kill the bodies of your children, sin will kill both body and soul. Keep watch and ward over your hearts, over your families, that sin may not enter thither, nor that any of yours may go where this catching sickness is. 5. What cause have they to bless God that are cured of this disease? We are never perfectly cured of it till we come to heaven, we shall have some grudge of it while we live here. But when sin is pardoned, then 'tis healed; Psalm 100L. 3. When grace is thoroughly wrought, then is sin healed. 'Tis healed as to the guilt of it, that is done away. 'Tis healed as to the damnation of it. 'Tis the reigning sin that is the damning sin. And 'tis healed in part, as to the pollution and filthiness of it. 'Tis in a sure speedy way of healing. How glad are men when they are healed of old diseases! A man that hath been troubled with the Stone, Gout, Headache for many years; how glad, how thankful is he when he is recovered? he will be telling every one of the man, of the medicine that cured him. Let them whose spiritual sickness God hath healed, be very thankful and bless his name. David calls upon his soul to praise God for this kindness, Psalm. 103. init. Though you be full of other infirmities, yet be of good cheer, the damning sickness is healed. 'Tis better to have a healthy soul in a crazy body, then to have a found body and a diseased soul. And show your thankfulness for your healing, by being careful to prevent recidivations into sin again. Take your counsel of Christ to that man that was lately cured of his infirmity, of which he had smarted thirty eight years, Joh. 5. 14. Thou art made whole, sinne no more, lest a worse thing come unto thee. 'Tis a slighting of your Physician, and a vilifying of your disease, not to be as careful as you can, that you may not relapse. And know this for the increasing of your thankfulness, that when this disease is once cured, all your other diseases are cured. They are cured, as to the malignity, as to the hurt of them. They cannot destroy you, though they may disquiet you. The inhabitants shall not say, I am sick: the people that dwell therein shall be forgiven their iniquity, Esay 3●. ult. The peril and dreadfulness of other diseases depends upon this; and when this is removed, the evil of all the rest is removed also. Doct. 2. That Jesus Christ is a Physician for the healing of these spiritual diseases. Christ is a Physician to the body as well as to the soul. He heals the wounds and sores of the outward man, as well as of the inward man. We read that in the days of his flesh, he cured immediately sometimes, and sometimes by the use of means many bodily maladies. Such as were possessed with devils. Such as had the palsy, Such as were leprous, Such as had fevers, Such as laboured under several other diseases, were brought unto him, and he healed them, Luke 6. 17, 18, 19 And Mat. 8. 14, 15, 16. He healed many that were incurable. When other Physicians had given them over, they were brought to Christ, and he healed them, Luke 8. 43. Concerning the woman sick of a bloody issue, she had spent all her living upon Physicians, and could not be healed of any, and yet by the touch of Christ's garment her bloody issue was staunched. He cured a man that had had an infirmity thirty eight years, Joh. 5. 5. Yea, he healed those that brought their diseases with them into the world. One that was borne blind was recovered to sight by him, John 9 6, 7. The text saith, he healed all manner of diseases, Mat. 4. 23. And he doth still heal bodily diseases. In three respects he is a Physician to the body. 1. He created all those simples that are useful for cure. Every herb, every plant, every mineral, whatsoever in rerum Naturâ, is Medicinal and Physical, was created by the Lord Christ; and whatsoever was created by him, is preserved by him, Genesis 2. 5. Nothing sprung up of itself, the roots of all healing herbs were set by his hand, and by his Providential care they are kept from perishing to this very day. 2. He it is that gave skill, and still doth give skill unto Physicians to make use of those materials. All Arts and Sciences are his invention. What is said of Bezaleel and Aholiab, Exod. 31. 2, 3, 4, 5, 6. is as true of all other more noble Arts. Men by study could never have such insight into the secrets of nature, if Jesus Christ did not instruct them. He enables them to know diseases, and to know what is proper and suitable for those diseases. He that is the Lord of nature, doth discover the secrets of nature in men when they study them. He teaches them how to mingle and compound several simples together to make an apt medicine, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, 1 Cor. 12. 9 Christ is the Father of all Arts and Artists. If he hid skill from the Physician, the Physician can never find out the disease, nor prescribe a fit medicine to remove it. 3. He blesseth the applications that are made. The most proper and apt medicine that ever was prescribed by man, needs the blessing of Christ to make it effectual. As man liveth not by bread, but by the word of blessing, Mat. 4. 4. So neither is man cured by Physic alone, but by the benediction of Christ upon the using of Physic. He suspends the operation and efficacy of Medicines when he please●h, and when it is his will they are salutiferous and healing. Thus is he a Physician to the outward man. But his chief subject is the soul. He is in an especial manner a Physician to that. He doth several times in the Gospel compare himself to a Physician. In this Text, and in Mar. 2. 17. We have the same comparison, Luke 4. 23. He was prophesied of before his incarnation, as a Physician. Vid Esay 61. 1. Binding up is the work of a healer. Christ was sent into the world to be a binder up of the broken in heart. The Prophet Malachy speaks of him as of a spiritual Physician, Chap. 4. 2. The Sun of righteousness shall arise with healing in his wings. This is that which is held out in the Gospel in that parable of the wounded man and the Samaritan, Luke 10. 30, 31, etc. Jesus Christ is that Samaritan who doth by that Parable preach himself to be the Physician of souls. In the handling of this Doctrine, I shall open three things. 1. That Christ is a Physician. 2. How Christ heals sinsick souls. 3. The excellency of Christ above other Physicians. First, that Christ is a spiritual Physician. This is manifest. 1. You may see his commission. God hath authorized him with power. The Prophet asserts this, Esay 61. 1. He hath anointed me to bind up the . This Prophecy is applied to Christ, Luke 4. 18. God hath given Christ his Gratiam ad practicandum. Those that are Physicians amongst men, must receive commission to practice before they ought to use that Art. The bodies of men are of that worth, that in all well-ordered Kingdoms and Commonwealths, none are permitted to profess the Art of Physic till they be tried by such as have skill, and enabled by public Authority to exercise that faculty; hereby professed Physicians are distinguished from illiterate, and cheating Mountebanks. Now God hath conferred on Jesus Christ under hand and seal, full Authority to be a spiritual Physician to heal the souls of men. And therefore it is that all are invited to come to him for cure, Mat. 11. 28. Come unto me, etc. 2. Christ hath ability as well as authority. Whatsoever is requisite for the healing of souls, is to be found in Jesus Christ. This the Prophet expressly affirms, Mal. 4. 2. The Sun of righteousness shall arise with healing in his wings. Healing is a large word; The Geneva translation reads it, health shall be under his wings, Now there could not be health or healing under Christ's wings, if there were not in him whatsoever is necessary to health or spiritual healing. The Apostle saith, That it hath pleased the Father that in him should all fullness dwell, Col. 1. 19 Christ is a garden so well furnished, that there is in him every root and plant that is requisite to make a spiritual medicine. He hath a purging virtue, a strengthening virtue, a comforting virtue, a cheering virtue, a quickening virtue. There is that in him which is proper for all diseases. The Evangelist tells us, that when sick persons resorted to Christ in the days of his flesh, there went virtue out of him, and healed them all, Luke 6. 19 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, no virtue could have gone out of him, if all virtue had not been treasured up in him. Christ hath eyesalve for blind eyes, mollifying grace for hard-hearts, enlivening grace for dead souls, humbling grace for proud minds. God hath given him fullness of all things necessary for sick souls, and wisdom to apply the same for the benefit of those that repair to him. Secondly, how Christ heals spiritual Diseases. 1. He heals by justification. Sin brings guilt, Leu. 5. 2, 3, 4, 5. Rom. 3. 19 Every sin makes the creature liable to wrath. This guilt is removed by the grace of justification. Jesus Christ applies his spotless and perfect righteousness to the soul, and thereby actually removes the guilt of sin, and makes the sinner as pure in the sight of God, as if he had never offended. Of this the Apostle speaks, Romans 5. 18, 19 This is called in Scripture the covering of sin, Psal. 32. 1, 2. Blessed is the man whose unrighteousness is forgiven, and whose sin is covered. Christ draws the veil or garment of his own merit and obedience over the spotted soul of a sinner, and thereby covers all his guilt. In this respect a sinner is perfectly healed. Though sin abide in him, yet the guilt is taken away, so that it shall never redound upon the person for condemnation. Hence it is that God is said, not to behold iniquity in his people, Numb. 23. 21. Of this healing the Psalmist speaks, Psal. 103. 3. Who forgiveth all thine iniquities, who healeth all thy diseases. Of this healing we are to understand that in 2 Chron. 30. 20. The Lord harkened to Hezekiah, and healed the people. He did not reckon nor impute the guilt of that sin to the people. 2. He heals the soul by sanctification. Every sin hath filthiness in it as well as guilt. It is of a defiling nature, and leaveth defilement upon the soul of the sinner, Matth. 15. 11. Hence it is that sinners are said to be filthy creatures, Rev. 22. 11. and Psal. 14. 3. they are altogether become filthy. This is called Macula▪ or labes peccati, the spot or stain of sin. Corruption, pollution, etc. It doth immediately follow every offence of sin, and remains when the act of sin is over. Look as waters, when they break their banks and overflow the earth, leave a filthy slime and sediment behind them; so all sinful acts leave upon the soul a filthy slime of corruption. This filthiness Jesus Christ heals by Sanctification. He doth by his Spirit plant the seeds of grace in the heart; he doth make the soul partaker of the divine nature, 2 Pet. 1. 4. He doth cause all old things to pass away, and all things to become new, 2 Cor. 5. ●6. He doth write his Laws in the heart of the sinner, Jer. 31. 33. He doth sprinkle clean water upon the sinner, whereby he is cleansed from all his defilements, Ezek. 36. 25. And by this means the filthiness of sin is healed This Sanctification hath two parts; the one is mortification, whereby the body of sin is wasted, Rom 8. 13. and Col. 3. 3, 5. The other is regeneration, or the spiritual resurrection, whereby the inward man is strengthened and renewed from day to day: the one is the putting off the old man, the other is the putting on the new man. Now although the sinner is not healed perfectly, and at once of the filthiness of sin by Sanctification, as he is of the guilt of sin, in regard of justification, because this is a real change, and therefore it's carried on successively and gradually, whereas justification is only a relative change, and therefore is perfect at once; yet he is in so sure and certain a way of healing, that Jesus Christ will never let him go out of his hands till he be fully cured. He is perfectly healed in respect of parts already, and he shall be perfectly healed in respect of degrees; he shall see the day when there shall not be the least speck of sin or filth, either upon the soul or body. Thirdly, the excellency of this Physician above all other Physicians. This appears in many respects. 1. In regard of the Subject. Other Physicians have to deal only with the body. All their business lies in the temper, constitution, parts of the body, in preventing, removing diseases that annoy the outward man. Their line reacheth no farther. The soul is not the object or subject of the Physicians Art. But now the chief part about which Christ is employed, is the soul, the conscience, the affections, the inward man. He heals the distempers of the heart, which other Physicians as Physicians can neither know, nor heal. Vid. Esay ●1. 1. 2. Jesus Christ is a Physician for all diseases. There are some diseases which are opprobria medicorum, no Physician in the world is able to cure them. But Jesus Christ can cure all diseases, all kinds of diseases, and every individual disease. He knows the cause of every disease, and therefore he can cure all. Some Physicians, though they have a general skill in all diseases, yet their excellency lies sometimes in one or two which they have studied more than others, and about which they have been employed more than in others. As some Divines are better versed in some one or two Controversies than others, so, etc. But Christ is as exact in all spiritual diseases, as he is in any disease. He is as good for the diseases in the head, as for those that are in the heart; and for those that are in the affections, as for those that are in the head. He can cure ignorance, pride, unbelief, discontent, impatience, hardness of heart, etc. and he can cure one as well as another, that is, he can cure all. Christ never yet met with a spiritual distemper, which he was not able to call by its right name, and to prescribe a fit medicine for. It's said of him in the Gospel, That he cured all manner of diseases, John 5. 4. He can cure all manner of spiritual diseases. 3. Jesus Christ can give no hurtful medicine. The most learned Physician in the world, being he knows but in part, may prescribe something which is not proper for the disease; unless they had spectacles to see into the body, they may be mistaken; but Christ cannot be mistaken. He never appointed any thing but what was fit, yea, nothing but what was best for the patient's condition. And indeed Christ's Physic is therefore proper, because he prescribes it. Other Physicians appoint such receipts, because they are proper, but Christ's receipts are proper, because he prescribes them. If he will use a plaster of clay and spittle, it is therefore right, because he will use it, John 9 6. That which would have made a seeing man blind, if it had been done by a man, will m●ke a blind man see when it is done by Christ. 4. Jesus Christ heals speedily. Other Physicians are long in healing; We use to say, diseases come on horseback, but go away on foot. No Physician can cure in a moment. They must observe method. A cure over-hastened may be as prejudicial to the Patient as a disease neglected. But Christ can heal in an instant. Many a diseased sinner, who hath laboured for many years under many spiritual distempers, have been cured by Jesus Christ in a trice of time. We read in the Gospel, that Christ did immediately cure some that had laboured a long time under diseases, in a moment. Take up thy bed and walk, Vid. Mat. 8. 3. immediately his leprosy was healed, Mat. 20. 34. immediately their eyes received sight, Mar. 1. 31. immediately the fever left her; many instances of like nature. Immediate cures are not the Acts of creatures, though never so learned, though never so wise. Many a dead, lame, blind, impenitent sinner hath come sick into the Church, and gone out whole. When Christ pleases, he can heal presently. 5. Christ can bless his Physic. He can make it effectual for what he pleaseth. No Physician in the world is able to do it. He applies Physic, but he cannot say this shall cure it. He must seek a blessing from Christ. The efficacy of that which other Physicians prescribe, doth depend upon the suitableness of it, and principally upon Christ's blessing; but the efficacy of Christ's Physic depends upon his Application. Christ can say peremptorily, I will remove such a spiritual distemper. The Leper acknowledgeth this, Math. 8. 2. Lord if thou wilt, thou canst make me clean. I will, saith Christ, Be thou clean, etc. He hath all spiritual diseases at his beck. The Centurion acknowledgeth it, Do but speak the word, and my servant shall be healed, etc. Mat. 8. 8. If Christ say to impenitency, to unbelief, etc. Be healed, they will be healed; If Christ say, I will by such a Sermon heal such a sinner, the work will be done. His Word is cure enough for any disease. 6. Christ heals the poor as well as the rich. Many Physicians do not care to take poor patients in hand; but Jesus Christ is as willing to visit and heal the poor as well as the rich. He is as ready to go to the beggar on the dunghill, as to the King on the Throne. Jesus Christ in the days of his flesh, was as ready to heal the servant as the Master, Luke ●8. 35, 36. the noble and ignoble, the great and the small are all alike to him. Christ looks not at outward qualities, but at spiritual distempers. Christ heals all freely. Other Physicians take rewards. 'Tis their calling, and they ought to live upon their calling. Many of them are very exacting. If they have not a daily fee, they care not for visiting. The Gospel speaks of one that had spent all her living on Physicians, Luke 8. 43. But now Christ takes nothing from his Patients, whether they be rich or poor. He gives them their Physic freely. Nay, he gives rewards to all his Patients. Other Physicians receive from their Patients, but here the Patient receives from the Physician. He provides meat, drink, attendance for all his Patients. Christ is a nurse as well as a Physician. You may see this in that Parable, Luke 10. 34, 35. Physicians are not bound to take care of their Patients in this sense, but Christ doth. 8. Christ offers himself. Other Physicians stay till they be sent for. No sick man expects a Physician till he be called; he is glad if he can see him then; but Christ comes without calling; indeed he should never come if he did not come without a call. The sick soul would die before he would send for Christ. Other Physicians are entreated to come to the sick, but here the sick are entreated to come to the Physician, Matth. 11. 28. The work of the Ministry is to beseech sinners that they would be healed, Vid. 2 Cor. 5. 20. Jesus Christ c●me to seek and save that which was lost, first to seek them, then to save them. 9 Christ doth not departed though he be reviled, etc. Other Physicians they absent themselves if they be unkindly used. Who would expect a Physician should come daily to one that reproaches and reviles him, yea, to one that shuts the door on him when he comes, much less to one that beats him, & c? The sick sinner useth Christ uncivilly, discourteously; he frowns on him, he shuts the door on him, he reviles him, he beats him, and stones him, and yet the Physician will not departed; though he seem to be angry, and to withdraw for a time, yet returns again. Christ will put up a thousand abuses, rather than suffer one of his Elect to die in their sins. Though Christ see that we throw his physic into his face, that we tear and burn his bills in his presence; that we send for Empyricks and prefer their advice before his, yet he waits with patience, and will not be driven away by the worst usage. 10. Christ himself is the sick man's Physic. Other Physicians do not heal their patients with their own flesh, but Christ doth. Other Physicians do sometimes take away the blood of their patients, but Christ lets himself blood to heal his patients. By his stripes we are healed, Esay 53. 5. Christ makes a wound in himself to heal our wounds. The Physician dies to save the patient's life from the grave. To him that loved us, and washed away our sins with his blood, Rev. 1. 5. Neither the guilt nor filth of one sin would have been removed, if the Physicians blood had not been shed for it. 11. Christ is a Chirurgeon as well as a Physician. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, comprehends both. The Uses. 1. That Christ will kindly accept all endeavours of men, for the healing of the spiritual distempers of their brethren. He is a Physician for spiritual sores; and those are most like him that desire to heal and dress such sores as these are. 2. Let men bring their souls to Christ, Desperet nemo. Present yourselves before Christ: he is a Physician, yea he indeed is the only Physician. All others are mere Empirics and Mountebanks, they will cheat you, they cannot heal you. Those that would, send you, to works, to duties, to Angels, etc. they are destroyers of your souls. Here is good news for a sick world, that Christ is a Physician: lay all your diseases before him. See how men did for their bodily diseases, Matth. 4. 24 do so by your spiritual diseases; bring your ignorant hearts, your proud hearts, your impatient hearts, your covetous hearts, etc. and lay them at Christ's feet. etc. Here is Christ's pool where he heals. I shall lay down for the encouragement of sinners five Arguments against despair of being healed; viz. 1. How many Christ hath cured. Thousands and ten thousands are now in heaven, that have been as si●k as thou canst be. 2. Christ i● still in a way of curing. His hand is in. Indeed his hand is never out. 3. He hath undertaken to cure all thy diseases. He hath given the hand to his Father. 4. He hath healed them all 〈◊〉. He hath done that which will heal you. He hath shed his blood; he hath poured out his Spirit, etc. 5. He is related to you. Your brother, your kinsman, your husband, your head, a part of yourself▪ If a sick man had a brother, or husband; a Physician which could cure him, would he despair, & c? Why should a sick Christian despair of cure, whose husband is such a Physician? 1. Object. But I have many diseases upon me, what hope shall I have? Sol. Christ can cure all manner of diseases. He cured Paul a blasphemer. etc. He cured Mary Magdalen; He cured Manasseh, etc. Let thy disease be what it will, so Christ be thy Physician. 2. Object. But my diseases have been long upon me, what hope shall I have? Sol. Christ can cure long diseases. He cured one that was eighteen years diseased, Luke 13. 16. Another that had been sick thirty eight years, John 5. 5. All the diseases he cures, are old diseases. The original fountain of all is from the fall of Adam. 3. Object. But I have relapsed, etc. what hope shall I have? Sol. There is a peculiar promise for this disease, Hos. 14. 4. Peter relapsed, and Christ healed him, etc. Whatever your diseases are, if you will be willing to be cured, Christ is willing to heal you. Only you must First, Take Christ's counsel. Fellow his Direction. Never any miscarried that took Christ's advice. Secondly, Keep back no disease. Let him heal all, or he will heal none. Oh that Christ might get some custom with you this day. 4. Object. But I am worse since Christ took me in hand, etc. Sol. 1. Thou art so much the better, because thou thinkest thyself worse, if it be thy complaint that thou art worse. 2. Let Christ alone with the cure, he goes the safest way, yea, he goes the nearest way, when he seems to go the farthest way. 3 Take notice of the alsufficiency of Christ. He is every thing to the soul which it wants. The soul wants bread, Christ is that; the soul wants drink, Christ is that; the soul wants raiment, Christ is that; the soul wants a shadow, Christ is that; the soul wants a Physician, and Christ is a Physician; not a Mountebank, but a learned skilful Physician. The soul that hath Christ hath every thing. One Jesus Christ is enough for all the Necessities of the soul. 4. What comfort is this for the children of God We get new falls every day, we breed new diseases every day. We contract new guilt, new filth. Christ is a Physician, he hath healing in his wings; he can cure your deadness, your dulness, your hardness, your blindness, etc. He is a compassionate Physician. He is touched with the sense of your infirmities, Heb. 4. 15. Get nearer and nearer to Christ, get farther under his healing wings, etc. 5. Rob not Christ of the honour of this Doctrine. Christ is rob of the honour of a Physician, two ways. 1. When we go to other Physicians. To creatures, to duties, to carnal mirth, etc. all which are Physicians of no value. 2. When we attribute our spiritual healing to ourselves, or any creature, and not to Christ. He that robs Christ of the honour of a Physician, shall when he is sick, perhaps, want a Physician. Doct. 3. That there are many sick of this spiritual disease, who think themselves to be whole. As in regard of the body, many that are very full of diseases judge themselves to be healthy and strong, so very many there are who are mortally sick of spiritual maladies, and yet conceive themselves to be in perfect health. As many that are spiritualy healed think themselves sick unto death; so many that are spiritually sick unto death, judge themselves to be in a healthful estate. Thus it was with the vain glorious Pharisee, Luke 18. 11. he thought himself perfectly in health, when as he was ready to drop into his grave; yea, to fall into hell through the abundance of his spiritual sicknesses. Thus it was with those other Pharisees; John 9 39 40. Our Saviour hints their sad condition to them, v. 9 They imagined themselves unconcerned in what was spoken. Are we also blind? q. d. our eyes are as clear as the eyes of any in the world, we are far from blindness. They thought themselves to see as perfectly as any, v. 40. Thus was it with the Church of Laodicea, Rev. 3. 17. she thought her condition as good as the best in the world, when she was indeed as sad a spectacle as the earth bore. Experience shows it to be so still, and that with the greatest part of men in the world. Come to men that are grossly profane, tell them of their dangerous condition; ask them why they will not think of another course, etc. What is their answer? Trouble not yourself about us, we are well, our condition is good we hope to be saved as well as you that are so st●nct, and so zealous; heaven belongs to us as well as to you, etc. But whence comes this to pass? I shall reduce all to these heads or springs. First, Ignorance. The greatest part of men are grossly ignorant of their spiritual estate. They know not, they do not understand their inward estate. The Scripture tells us that a carnal condition is an ignorant condition, Eph. 4. 18. 1 Pet. 1 14 A carnal heart is spiritually an ignorant and blind heart. The state of nature is called a state of darkness, Acts 26. 18. And a state of folly, Prov. 5. 23. And all such men are called spiritual fools, Psalm 14. 1. They may know much in outward things, they may know much of the letter of the Scripture, but as to saving knowledge, they are very ignorant, and without understanding. And as they are ignorant of other matters, so they are ignorant of their spiritual condition. This ignorance is to be ascribed to these four heads. 1. They want the Spirit of God. The holy Spirit is the principle of all saving light. It is called by the Apostle, The Spirit of wisdom and revelation, Eph. 1. 17. because all true wisdom and saving illumination is the work of the Spirit; the Spirit gives us power to discern, and light whereby to see spiritual things. Pregnancy of natural wit without the Spirit of God, can never make a person wise unto salvation. Elihu tells Job, Chap. 32. 8. There is a spirit in man, and the inspiration of the Almighty giveth him wisdom. He that wants this spirit cannot possibly know his spiritual estate. But now many men, all unregenerate men want this Spirit, Ergo. This the Apostle largely disputes, in 1 Cor. 2. 10, 11, 12, 13, 14. 2. They do not search into their own hearts. He that would know his spiritual condition, must carefully and conscionably dive into his own spirit by serious examination of himself. He must turn his eyes inward. This the Apostle tells us, 2 Cor. 13. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. We must pierce through our own hearts before we can see whether they be sound or rotten. We must prove ourselves as the Goldsmith doth his metal, whether it be right or not; we must cast our hearts into the fire, and bring them to the touchstone, etc. He that is not a self-visitor, a self-examiner, can never attain to any competent knowledge of himself. Now there are many men, who never did spend one hour in the trial of themselves, they are as great strangers to their own hearts, as they are to foreign Countries, this makes them ignorant. 3. They do not consult with this spiritual Physician. Jesus Christ is the great principal Physician. Under Christ the Ministers of the Gospel are Physicians, ● Cor. 6. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 'Tis their office to be helpers of God's people in their spiritual condition, and 'tis the duty of the servants of God to consult them about the state of their souls, Mal. 2. 6. 'Tis not only to be understood of public preaching, but of private conference. They are to discover their spiritual state to the Ministers of Christ, that they may help them in knowing what they do not understand, and in healing those distempers which they have discovered: we are not to rest upon their hare opinion; no, we must seek the Law at his mouth: if they say any thing without the Law or beside the Law, they are not to be heard: they must judge according to Scripture, otherwise they are not to be heard. But yet by advising with them, some light and knowledge of our spiritual condition may be attained from the rules of Scripture. They are spiritual Seers in their model and measure, as the Prophets of old were. 2 King. 1●. 13. As they help men by the direction of the Word of God, to know what they are to do, and what they are to believe; so they may be very beneficial by comparing the spiritual stare of men with the rule to help them to a better, and more perfect knowledge of themselves than they had before. But now the greatest part of men neglect this. Men generally go to the Lawyer to be informed about their outward state, they go to the bodily Physician to be helped in the knowledge of their corporal estate; but they never make conscience of enquiring of the estate of their souls at the month of the spiritual Physician. This makes them so ignorant; and because they are ignorant▪ they think their condition to be good when it's bad and miserable. 4 They consult with Mountebanks, which are weak or flattering. Secondly, Pride. Man is naturally a very proud swelling creature, willing to see what may make him excellent, unwilling to acknowledge any thing in himself that may render him contemptible, either in his own eyes, or in the eyes of others. Simon Magus the Sorcerer gave out that himself was some great one, Act. 8. 9 he would be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. All men by nature have a spice of that disease. How comes it to pass else that men are so impatient to bear rebuke, that they are so unwilling to be instructed, that they are so ●verse to have their spiritual condition searched, that they are so raging under affliction? Is it not because of that pride and conceitedness that is in their hearts. Hence also it is, that though they besick unto death; yet they judge themselves to be in a sound, healthy, saving conditition, lest by acknowledging their spiritual sicknesses, they should be laid low in the thoughts of men. See how proudly the Jew's speak to Christ, when he would convince them of their spiritual bondage, John 8. 33. We are Abraham's children, and how sayest thou, ye shall be made free? They thought it a mighty injury to a people of their quality, to be told of bondage and subjection. 'Tis want of humility that makes sinful men hold such groundless conclusions about that their spiritual welfare. Thirdly, Love of case. Men naturally love their ease and quiet. They would not be disturbed. Issachar law that rest was good, and therefore he coucheth down between two burdens, Gen 49. 14, 15. Most men are for spirituals, as Issachar was for his outward condition; they prefer an unsafe rest before a safe unquietness. They know that if they once see, or acknowledge themselves to be spiritually sick; they must enter into a course of spiritual Physic. They must take down many a bitter potion which they do not like, therefore they conclude they are whole. As it is with many foolish men in regard of their bodies; though they be sick of many diseases, yet they had rather say, they are well, then meddle with Physic; they willingly cast the thoughts of their diseases behind their back, that they may not be at the trouble and cost of curing. Just so it is with spiritual sick men. If they should say they are sick, than they must make use of means. They must pray, they must repent, their sins must be purged out, they must have some spiritual disturbance, etc. This they love not, therefore they conclude they are whole, and often drop down into hell, before they will acknowledge that they stand in need of Physic. Soul take thy ease, saith that rich fool in the Gospel, eat, drink, etc. Luke 12. 19 This love of painful ease (for so it will prove in the end) is the bane and ruin of thousands of souls. Fourthly, They judge of their spiritual state by false Rules. 'Tis very sad to consider what groundless, rotten foundations men build hopes of heaven upon. Our Saviour speaks of two sorts of bvilders in the Gospel, under which all the Sons of men are comprehended: the one builds his house upon, a rock, the other upon the sand, Matth. 7, 24, 25, 26, 27. Every man is a builder, and every man builds his salvation, either upon the rock, or upon the sand. Most men build upon the sand, conclude themselves to be well upon such arguments as will not hold in the day of trial. I shall both discover them, and show the rottenness of them. 1. False Rule. Freedom from scandalous flagitious sins. Many men think they are spiritually whole, because they are not sick of those visible desperate diseases which other sinners have upon them. They are neither thiefs, nor whores, nor drunkards, nor oppressors, nor cheaters, nor murderers, etc. They live soberly, civilly, orderly amongst men, 〈…〉 them with any enormous act. Hereupon 〈◊〉 gather that they are spiritually whole, that they have no mortal disease upon them. This was the ground of that misjudgment which the Pharisee made of himself, Luke 18. 11. God I thank thee, that I am not as other men, etc. It's very like the Pharisee spoke no more than what was true, for they were generally men very inoffensive as to all such things. For the discovering of this false foundation, I shall lay down four things, viz. 1. 'Tis a very great mercy to be freed from these scandalous sins. If God have preserved you from these visible diseases, that you have none of these botches of Egypt upon you, it is to be acknowledged as a very great blessing. The Pharisee did not amiss in blessing God that he was no Extortioner, if he had done it upon a right ground; if he had not gone on to censure the Publican, he had not been blamed, but commended for it. David blesses God for preserving him from the sin of murder upon Abigails persuasion. Vid. 1 Samuel 25. 32, 33. And there is very great reason for it, For (1) Hereby we are delivered from much anguish and torment of conscience. These scandalous sins as they do in an extraordinary manner waste the conscience, so they do lay a foundation of much horror, and trouble in the soul; every sin creates much torment, but these great abominations create exceeding much. What horror did David's Adultery and Murder cast into his spirit! Though God pardoned them both to him, yet he was filled with anguish a long time after, vid. Ps. 6. Ps. 38. Ps. 50. 1. Now 'tis a great mercy, when God prevents any anguish. (2.) Hereby we are delivered from being hurtful examples to other men. Gross scandalous offences are very prejudicial to others. The hearts of those that are good are grieved, and such as are wicked are caused to stumble oftentimes to their eternal ruin. David's sin gave great occasion of sin to others. Now it's a great mercy when God keeps a person from being an instrument of hurt to others, especially of hurt to their souls. 2. Such as expect salvation must keep themselves from such wickednesses. Vid. 1 Cor. 6. 9, 10. Heaven is not a place of common receipt for good and bad. 'Tis not like your ordinary Inns, which lodge all kind of passengers without difference; such Lepers so living and dying, must expect to go to another place, Rev. 22. 15. Without shall be dogs, etc. 3. 'Tis possible for a person to be free from these abominations, and yet to be mortally sick of spiritual diseases. Every sick man hath not the plague. A man may die of a consumption as well as of a Fever. A person may be in a damnable state, that never committed murder or uncleanness. (1.) The Pharisee was free from all these impieties, and yet deadly sick in his soul, Luke 18. 11. Paul when he was a Pharisee, saith, that he was blameless concerning all such enormities, Phil. 3. 6. and yet at that time sick even unto death; so he in Mat. 32. 11. so the five Virgins, Mat. 25. 1. Those in 2 Pet. 2. 18, 20. A natural conscience may keep men from such enormities. The penalty of humane Laws may preser●● 〈…〉 these great wickednesses. Civil education may preserve a man from falling into these wickednesses. A desire to keep our reputation in the world with men, with whom we converse, may keep us from these high impieties. Mere restraint may do this. (2.) If freedom from these offences were enough to proclaim men to be spiritually whole, than no hypocrite should be sick. A man must be free from all these sins, before he be advanced into the hypocrites form. Now we know that every hypocrite is spiritually and mortally sick. Yea, the Scripture tells us that hell is prepared for the hypocrites, other sinners are said to have their portion with the hypocrites, Mat. 2●. 51. The hypocrite is of all sinners the special proprietor of Hell, and yet he is free from all these offences. (3.) It's possible for one that hath no saving grace in his heart, to be free from these offences. Though every one that hath grace will abandon these sins, yet every one that is free from these sins hath not grace. The instances mentioned before will prove this. But every one that wants saving grace, is under the rage of spiritual sicknesses. Yea, he that is without true grace, is not only sick in sin, but dead in sin, Eph. 2. 1. and yet those that are dead in sin may be free from these wickednesses. (4.) Although many be free from the actual commission of these sins, yet they have the roots of these sins in their hearts. Every sin is in that bundle of sin which we call original. There is pride, and murder, and theft, &c▪ Now the pollution of nature, if it be not healed by justifying grace, and pardoning mercy, and sanctifying grace is enough to make the soul sick, and that unto death. Yea, indeed the great sickness of the soul lies there. There lies the strength of sin, and the heat of sin. David when he bewails his murder, goes to that as the root of it, Psalm 51. 5. All a man's actual sins, be they never so gross, might soon be healed if that were but healed. This is the fountain of blood. This is the law of sin, here is the devil's magazine. (5.) Though thou art free from th●se foul sins, yet thou mayest have some secret idol or other set up in thy heart. Now the least sin, a vain thought is a mortal sickness in itself; and if it be not healed, will prove a soul-destroying sickness. The Papists have devised a distinction, of sins venial, and sins mortal. That there are some sins that in their own nature do not make a man liable to eternal death, but only to temporal chastisement: so Bellarmine teaches. The Scripture knows no such distinction, nor can we allow it. All sins are venial to true repentance, except that one sin against the holy Ghost; He that commits that shall never be forgiven. But there is no sin venial in its own nature; the least is a mortal sickness, and deserves eternal death. So saith the Scripture, Gal. 3. 10. Rom. 6. ult. the Apostle speaks of all sin that is opposed to legal righteousness; and there is no sin so small, but it is a breach of the Law of God. For of every idle word that a man shall speak, he shall give an account at the day of judgement, Mat. 12. 36. What is less than an idle word? and yet that doth in its own nature deserve wrath. By all these things it appears that a man may be spiritually 〈…〉 thief, nor drunkard, etc. 4. Yet may a person gather evideners of grace from his acting against sin, in some cases. David argues so, Ps. 18. 23. And therefore for the winding up of this point, I shall lay down some Rules, whereby a person may know whether his acting against sin be from a principle of saving grace, or merely from common restraint. 1. He that forbears sin from a principle of true grace, doth act from the Authority and declaration of anaked truth. When the immediate declaration of Gods Will in his Word, without any investiture of promise or threatening carries a man out against sin; then is his abstaining from sin, from a principle of true grace. Not but that he that hath true grace may look both at the word of promise and the word of threatening. God hath propounded both promises and threaten, to be as helps to preserve his people from sinning, but the principal ground of acting against sin, is the revelation of Gods Will forbidding such actions. This is that which David saith of himself, Psal. 119. 161. My heart standeth in awe of thy Word. He was kept from sin upon the mere awful respect that his heart bore to the naked Word of God. So Psal. 119. 11. Thy Word have I hid within my heart, that I might not sinne against thee. So Joseph, Gen. 39 9 When the heart and the Word of God are shut up alone; when heaven and hell, promises and threaten are laid aside, and the heart and Gods command are alone; if then thou be restrained from sinful actions upon the account of God's command, then is thy forbearing of sin from a principle of grace. Vid. Psalm 17. 4. By the words of thy lips; Bala●m shows himself an hypocrite in this very thing. He pretends to abstain from sin upon the Authority of God's Word, Numb. 22, 18. yet afterwards in that very act goes away from God, out of a covetous principle. 2. He that forbears sinful actions from a principle of grace, acts against sin out of love to holiness. He abstaines from sin not only as it is a deadly thing, but as it is a loathsome thing. Ps. 119. 140. Thy Word is very pure, therefore thy servant loveth it; David abstained from sin, because of his love to the purity of God's Law, out of his love to righteousness. This is that which is in Jer. 32. 40. I will put my fear in their hearts, that they shall not departed from me. When we are kept from sin because of the fear of God, than its a right abstinence, Neh. 5. 15. Esay 30. 22. When sin is cast away and abstained from as a menstruous cloth, because it hath filthiness in it, and because it pollutes them that meddle with it, such forbearance of sin argues truth of grace, Psal. 119. 113. 3. He that abstaines from sin upon principles of grace, will abstain from all sin. From profitable and pleasurable sins, as well as disparaging, disgracing sins; from small sins as well as great sins; from sinful anger as well as murder; from sinful words as well as sinful actions. He will abstain from walking and standing, as well as from sitting with the ungodly, Psal. 1. 1. he will pray with David, Psal. 139. ult. See if there be any wicked way, Psal. 119. 104. I hate every false way. This is clear from what goes before; he 〈…〉 sin out of respect to God's Law, and 〈…〉 to holiness: therefore he cannot but desire to forbear all; because every sin is unholy, every sin is derogatory to Gods Law. 4. He that forbears sin from a principle of grace, will act as well against the being of sin in his nature, as the break out of sin in his life. He will labour to suppress the corruption of his heart, as the excursion of his feet, Psalm 51. 5. In iniquity was I shapen, etc. He would be delivered from a polluted heart, as well as from a polluted hand. So it was with Paul, Rom. 7. 23, 24. he that acts against sin from common restraint, will never much care for the inhabitation of sin; but he that hath grace, is most careful and sorrowful for that: he would keep down the filthiness of the spirit as well as of the flesh, 2 Cor. 7. 1. the sinful habit is worse to a gracious man, than the sinful Actions. 5. He that forbears sin from a principle of grace, is as careful of doing good, as of abstaining from evil. He prays as David did, Psal. 119. 5. O that my ways were directed to keep thy statutes. He that hath only restraining grace, matters not much the neglecting of good; but he that hath true grace, is very careful for this as well as for the other; he chooseth the way of obedience, as well as refuseth the way of disobedience. A godly man is described by this character, that he chooseth the things that please God, Isa. 56. 4. He is every jot as careful for the Positives, as he is for the Negatives of Religion. When these things concur, than the forbearance of sin will witness your condition to be good; otherwise it will be no evidence. 2. The second false Rule is, Outward profession. There are many who do conclude that they are in a good condition for their souls, merely because they are members of the Church, especially if they hear, pray, etc. This is the general rule whereby carnal Professors judge their condition to be good. They have been baptised, they have come to God's Table, they have lived in the Church, etc. therefore surely they are in a very healthful condition. I have four things to say for this particular. 1. 'Tis a great honour to be a member of the Church though it be only by visible Profession. Theodosius accounted it a greater honour to be Membrum Ecclesiae then Caput Imperii. It was that which advanced the people of Israel above all other people, Rom. 3. 1, 2. The Church of God is the most honourable society upon earth, Such as are the members of the Church are nearer to God than any others. They enjoy such privileges as none else enjoy. They have more helps to salvation then any others. We can never be sufficiently thankful for this favour. 2. To pray, and to hear, and to frequent the public Ordinances, etc. is that which all that hope to be saved, are to do. That man is in a bad estate that slights these duties. The wrath of the Lord lies upon them that do not call upon the Name of the Lord, Jer. 10. 25. He that wilfully neglects these, can never be saved, Psal. 14. 14. not to call upon God, is the character of a worker of iniquity. 3. Yes all this may be done, and 〈…〉 be in a very sick estate. (1.) There are many instances in Scripture to prove this. Was not Ishmael circumcised? was not he a member of the Church? Gen. 17. 16. and yet without any saving interest in the promise. Was not Esau jacob's brother? was not he likewise a member of the Church? and yet lived and died a profane wretch, Heb. 12. 16. Did not Cain sacrifice as well as Abel? Gen. 4. init. and yet the Apostle saith, he was of that wicked one, 1 John 3. 11. What think you of Saul, Ahab, and all those wicked men? did not they live in the Church? did they not observe outwardly the worship of God? and yet the sons of Belial. In the new Testament, did not the Publicans fast and pray, Luke 18. 12. Was not Judas a Disciple? did not he preach as well as others? and yet a child of perdition. Was not Simon Magus baptised? Act. 8. 13. Did not Ananias and Sapphira walk with the Church of God a long time, Act. 5. 1. and yet they lived and died wickedly, v. 5, 6, 10. Had not the five foolish Virgins lamps, as well as the wise? Matth. 25. 1, 2, 3. and yet they were excluded out of heaven, vers. 11, 12. so the three sorts of ground, Matth. 13. 4, 5, 6, 7. (2.) God takes men off in Scripture from resting upon this. And that both in the Old Testament and in the New. In the Old Testament, Jer. 7. 4. In the New Testament, Matth. 3. 9 Now for a man to make that an Argument of a good condition, which God saith is no Argument, is to no purpose. (3.) Our Saviour, tells that many will plead this, at the day of judgement in vain, Luke 13. 26. 27. (4) A man cannot be a hypocrite, till he do all these things. A hypocrite may pray, and fast, and hear as often, and as well externally, as a sincere Christian, Esay 58. 3. and more plainly, Esay 48. 1, 2. lege. Therefore the bare performance of these duties, doth not argue a man to be in a good condition. 4. And lastly, yet may a person from the performance of these duties evidence himself to be in a good condition God-ward, when he doth perform them according to those Rules which the Word of God lays down. I shall reduce them to three Heads. 1. When holy dispositions are brought with us to duties. Several dispositions the Word of God requires in every duty. (1) Holy fear and reverence of God. Of this David speaks, Psal. 5. 7. In thy fear will I worship towards thy holy Temple. 'Tis meet the heart should be possessed with an holy reverential awe of God, when it comes before him in any duty, Heb. 12. 28. The distance that is between God and man, the consideration of that pollution that is upon the souls of the best, should breed this reverence: We cannot sanctify God, if this fear be not in our hearts, Esay 8. 12. Now that man that can find such a dispisition in his heart, when he comes to hear, or to pray, may conclude that there is a principle of grace in his heart. Though bare hearing, and bare praying will not argue our estate to be good; yet trembling at the hearing of the Word, and a filial awe of God upon the heart in prayer, will evince a spiritual principle. (2) Humility of spirit. God expect● 〈…〉 that come to worship him should come 〈◊〉 humbly, with low, mean, vile apprehensions of themselves. So came the Publican, Luke 18. 1●. There are many things that testify his low conceit of himself. He stood afar off. He would not so much as lift up his eyes to heaven. He smote his breast, etc. Thus it was with Abraham, Gen. 18. 27. and thus it was with Ezra. Chap. 9 6. Now though bare prayer will be no Argument of a good condition, yet praying in godly humility will, if it be from the heart, if it be from a deep spiritual sense of our own vileness. If our souls lie in the dust before the Lord, when we come to worship him; such worship will argue grace. (3) Faith in the Promise. 'Tis the mind of God that we should bring faith with us to God in every duty. He that cometh unto God must believe, Heb. 11. 6. Now when in hearing we can close with God by applying what we hear, when in prayer we are able in some measure to cast ourselves upon God, to rely and depend on him for audience, for acceptance; When we can pray as David saith to God, and look up for an answer, Psal. 5. 3. such dispositions in duties are Arguments of a work of grace upon the heart. (4) Hungring after God. God looks that we should have strong desires after the duties of God's worship, David fainted and longed for the courts of God, Psal. 63. init. Psal. 84. 2. Psal. 42. 1. When we do not only pray, but hunger after prayer. When we are glad of an opportunity of hearing, as David was, Ps. 122. 2. especially if these hungrings be to private duties, as well as to public, such prayers are evidences of grace. 2. When a man hath right ends in duties. God looks much at the ends which men propose to themselves in all their actions. And so do holy men. I shall fi●st negatively remove those carnal ends which Hypocrites and carnal Professors propound in the duties of Religion. First, The pleasing of men. Most propound no higher, no other end of their holy services but this. The Apostle disowns this end, Gal. 1. 10. Secondly, Custom. When a man prays, and hears, because it hath been his wont ●o to do. Many men have no other end, but merely a religious wont. They and their forefathers have been used to do so, therefore they continue it. Thirdly, To avoid penalty of the Laws. This many men make their end in Religious duties. Fourthly, To get honour, preferment, repute with men. When men shall pray, hear, merely because they would be accounted Religious. And thus the Shechemites were circumcised, Gen. 34. 23. Fifthly, To stop the voice of conscience. Many men sometimes pray, hear, read the Scriptures, that they may stop the mouth of conscience, accusing them for some sin committed. This is nothing else but spiritual bribery. Sixthly, When duties are made a mask to cover some foul sin, either done or intended to be done. As Jezabels fasting, 1 Kings 21, 9 The Pharisees long prayers, Matth. 23. 14. He that makes these, or any such things. 〈…〉 end of his duties, cannot conclude a principle of grace from the performance of them, although they be never so frequently done. But the right ends are such as these. (1) Obedience to the Divine command. When a person shall upon serious examination find that his end in praying, hearing, etc. is, that he may show his subjection to the Divine Precept. He prays not only because he wants some mercy, but because he would honour God by performing his Commands. When a person can say with David, Psal. 119 4, 5. Thou hast commanded, etc. He may from the performance of such services comfortably conclude, that there is a principle of grace in his heart. When we can appeal to God, that we wait upon his Ordinances, because we would do that duty we own to God; in such case, we may argue from duties to grace. (2) A desire to get and keep communion with God. This is one end for which holy duties are appointed, that by them God and the soul may come together. And this hath been the end which holy men have propounded to themselves in holy duties, Psal. 27. 4. Thy face Lord will I seek. Thus it was with David, Psal. 42. 2. When shall I come to appear before God? And Psal. 63. 2. To see thy power, and thy glory, so as I have seen thee in the Sanctuary. Now when a person can in the uprightness of his soul say, that his end in coming to duties, public and private, is because he would see him whom his soul loveth; and therefore he is not satisfied with a duty, if he meet not with God in it, he may then comfortably conclude from the performing of duties, a principle of grace in his heart. (3.) A desire to get corruption weakened, and grace strengthened. This is one end why God hath instituted his Ordinances, that sin may be outed thereby, and grace confirmed. 2 Cor. 10. 4. and 1 Pet. 2. 2. Now when a person can in the integrity of his soul say, that he prays, hears, etc. that he may get love increased, faith confirmed, grace exercised; that he may get his heart warmed, his conscience purified; then he may comfortably conclude from such duties, that his heart is upright with God. 3. When the deportment is fair after duties. I shall here name two things. First, When we bless God for duties. 'Tis a great mercy to enjoy the Ordinances of God, Psal. 147. 19, 20. Now when you return from prayer, hearing, etc. if you can from your souls bless the Lord, that you have had such an opportunity, from a sincere heart; than you may conclude that your hearts have a principle in them above nature, when you look upon them as privileges. Secondly, When the doing of duties make you fruitful. When you hear, and give up yourselves to be ruled by the Word you hear, Rom. 6. 17. When you desire as well to be doers of the Word, as hearers of it, Jam. 1. 22, 23, 24. When you pray, and desire to live the prayers you make to God. When your souls are troubled that you cannot find that fruitful efficacy of your duties upon your hearts, and in your lives, which you would fain find. You can hearty chide yourselves that you are no better for your duties. When you go to prayer, or to hearing, or to the Table of the Lord, your earne●● 〈…〉 is, that he would make you 〈…〉. When you go into your ●l●eset to 〈◊〉 the Word, you send up some ejaculation to heaven, that the Word may be effectual upon your soul●, etc. then you may comfortably conclude, that there is a supernatural work upon your hearts. But if these things be not in you in some degree and measure; the bare performance of duties, though they he done never so frequently, never so exactly as to the outwards of them, will be no ground to you, for the reasons above mentioned, that you are in a good condition. This is the second false Rule. 3. The third false Rule; Outward Prosperity. Multitudes of men judge of their spiritual condition by the Rule of outward Prosperity. They think their souls are in health, because their bodies are in health; they think they are inwardly prosperous, because they are outwardly happy. They have great revenues, a full trading, they have a multitude of children, their flocks and their herds are increased, they are advanced to great honours; therefore they bless themselves and say, God loves them, and they are highly in his favour. They think they are the heirs of heaven, because they are the possessors of the earth. Thus it was with the ten tribes: when the Prophets threatened the judgements of God against them for their sins, they ran to this Sanctuary to secure themselves, they concluded Gods special favour from outward prosperity. Vid. Hos. 12. 8. 'Tis the general and common refuge of worldly men. They think their hearts are full of grace, because their purses are full of gold; because the world dandles them upon her lap, they think God dandles them upon his knee. For the removal of this, I shall propound four things. First, 'Tis a mercy in itself to enjoy a competency of these outward things. To have health, wealth, prosperity, plenty, is a mercy to be received with much thankfulness from God. To be poor, sickly, weak is in itself an evil; and to be rich, strong, healthful, is in its own nature a blessing; which I shall prove by these two Arguments. 1. The Scripture puts outward prosperity amongst blessings. Deut. 28. 3, 4, 5, to 15. So Leu. 26. 3, 4, etc. Now what the Scripture calls blessing, is in its own nature a blessing. The judgement of God is according to truth. 2. Those which are rich, etc. have more opportunities of doing good, than such as are poor. They may by their outward estates promote Religion, help to advance the worship of God in the world, be instruments of planting the Gospel in foreign parts. A good purse and a gracious heart meeting together, may be very instrumental sundry ways for the glory of God, and the good of men. They may be the means of bringing in many to God, both by their example, which is very prevalent in the world, and by giving unto men rewards for godliness sake. One rich man in a Parish may be a great help to make a Parish Religious, if not in heart, yet in profession; which is a great mercy. Rich men have a capacity of doing that good, which men of meaner condition want. They may relieve prisoners, cloth the naked, feed the hungry, ransom captives, which other men cannot do. Now it's a mercy to be put into a capacity of doing good 〈…〉 a good man, when he is not capable 〈…〉 the good he would, though it be but a temporal good. 'Tis a greater trouble to a good man not to be able to give, than it is to the poor to be turned away without giving. Though in such case the liberality of the heart is accepted instead of the liberality of the hand. He that would give when he hath not to give, is set down in God's Calendar, for a bountiful man, though he give nothing at all. This is the first conclusion. Secondly, Riches and grace do sometimes go together. Outward Prosperity and inward do sometimes meet in the same person. 'Tis not impossible that rich men should be good men. We have some instances of this in Scripture. Abraham was very holy, Called the righteous man, Esay 41. 2. the Father of the faithful, The friend of God, etc. and yet Abraham was very rich, Gen. 24. 35. Job was exceeding pious, a man whom God boasts of to Satan, Job 1. 8. and yet he was very rich. He had plenty of children (those are first put in the inventory) and he was rich in all other wealth, ver. 3. he had seven thousand sheep, three thousand camels, five hundred yoke of oxen, five hundred she asses, and a very great household, and Chap. ult. when his estate is surveyed again, you will find it doubled, ver. 12. many other instances we have in Scripture of the Association of grace and greatness. This God doth for these six Reasons. 1. To confute the judgement of the world. Plain dealing is a jewel saith the world, but he that useth it will die a beggar. God gives these things to his people, to cross that wicked Proverb. 2. To convince men that they are not evil things. It was Augustine's Observation long since. God bestows outward things upon the worst of men, that they may not be thought to be the only good things; and he bestows them sometimes upon his own people, that they may not be thought to be evil things. 3. To show his Dominion and right of disposing even these outward things. Should not some godly men enjoy these outward things, they would be apt to think that God did not meddle with things of this nature, but now the conferring of these things upon the godly disproves that Atheism. 4. To let men see, even sensual men, that it is not in vain to serve God Worldly men say, what profit shall we have if we pray to him? Job 21. 15. Now they are not capable of understanding the inward profit of holiness, but they can understand the outward advantages. God therefore will prove the profit of piety by such Arguments as they are able to understand. 5. To fulfil the letter of his Promise. He hath promised these outward things to godly men, Psal. 112. 2, 3. Now men would question his faithfulness in keeping promise, if it should not sometimes be made good in kind. 6. God makes some of his people rich to help such as are poor. Wicked men generally hate the people of God for their very holiness. They are not willing to relieve them, though God by his power makes them Authors of good to them. Therefore that, the 〈…〉 flock may have some to stand by them, ●● conscience sake, God is pleased to make some of their number great, that the wicked of the world may not always tread them down without opposition. Joseph was made great, to provide for his father's house in their poverty, Gen. 50. 20. God makes some of his flock rich and great, that the poor of his flock may have some to look after them for his sake. This is the second Conclusion. Thirdly, That grace and holiness is the best and nearest way to attain to all outward prosperity. For although God as sovereign Lord, make rich and poor, whom he please; yet no man can expect or hope for temporal felicity but the man that is truly godly, 1 Tim. 4. 8. Godliness hath the promise of the life that now is, and of that which is to come. And Matth. 5. 5. The froward do often enjoy much of these outward things, but the promise of the inheritance of them belongs only to the meek, Prov. 3. 16. Riches and honour are put into the hand of wisdom, and none but wisdom's children can upon any good ground expect to inherit either of them. This is the third. Fourthly, That the enjoyment of these outward things, is no infallible evidence of a good condition. 'Tis possible for a man to possess a great portion of outward happinesses, and yet be unhappy in regard of his soul. The purse may be full of gold, and yet the heart empty of saving grace. The body may be fat and in good liking, and yet the soul lean and withered. A man may have great possessions in the world, and yet have no interest in God. Our Saviour supposeth this, Matthew 16. 26. There are four things required to make up this supposition. (1) A man that gains the whole world must enjoy all the riches, honour, pleasure of worldly things. (2) He must have a heart capable to take delight in all these. (3) He must enjoy all these from the first man to the last man, from the beginning to the end of the world. (4) Freedom from all vexations, and troubles of Spirit. This no man ever did enjoy. And yet our Saviour supposeth, that a man may enjoy all this, and yet lose his soul. That outward prosperity cannot evidence a man to be in a state of grace, appears by these seven Arguments. 1. They are bestowed upon the worst of men. The Scripture tells us of many rich men, very rich, that lived and died wickedly. What think you of him mentioned, Luke 12. 16, 17, 18, 19, 20. He was exceeding rich, his treasury was too little, his store-house was too small for his revenues, and yet no interest in God at all that might entitle him to salvation; a very fool for all his richeses. You read of another in Luke 16. 19 There are all expressions of prosperity that can be imagined, and yet v. 23. that very person is in Hell torments. You know the story of Nabal, 1 Sam. 25. 2, 6. he was very wealthy, and yet a sinful fool. As his name is, so is he, Nabal is his name, and folly is with him. You read of some in Job, Chap. 21. 7, 8, 9, 10. that enjoyed much prosperity, and yet desperately wicked: read v. 14. They say 〈…〉 from us, we desire not the knowledge of 〈…〉 Sodom and Gomorrah were very rich, it was a land fruitful as the Garden of God, Gen. 13. 10. and yet they that possessed that fruitful land, are now suffering the vengeance of eternal fire. Judas 7. The Scripture is full of such examples. 2. Riches and honour are but common blessings. They are the good things of the Footstool, not the good things of the Throne. They are in the left hand of wisdom, Prov. 3. 16. Now no common mercy can argue special love, Eccles. 9 1. No man knows either love or hatred by any thing that is before him. 3. Outward prosperity is very often a hindrance of salvation. That of our Saviour would seriously be taken notice of. 'Tis easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, then for a rich man to enter into the Kingdom of God, Mat. 19 24. Riches too often draw the heart from God, they cool zeal, quench devotion. We see by experience many men that were hot for Religion when they were poor, are grown dead, cold, now they have got estates. Our Saviour tells us, that the deceitfulness of riches chokes the Word, and makes the heart unfruitful, Vid. Mat. 13. 22. Now that which hinders men from salvation, can be no argument of a state of salvation. 4. Men may transmit riches to their posterity. Now that which a man may have by descent and natural generation, can be no evidence of a state of grace. No man is born in a state of grace, Eph. 2. 2. A man must be borne again before he can see the Kingdom of Heaven, Joh. 3. 3. Many men are borne rich and honourable, etc. therefore none of these things can entitle a man to heaven. 5. If outward prosperity were an Argument of grace, than Covetousness would be no sin. 'Tis no sin but duty, for a man to labour for, and to covet evidences of grace. We are commanded to do so in Scripture; Make your calling and election sure, 2 Pet. 1. 10. but covetousness is not a duty, but a sin, a sin of a high nature, The root of all evil, so the Apostle calls it, 1 Tim. 6. 10. 'Tis idolatry, one of the worst kinds of idolatry. 6. Outward prosperity may be quite lost. Therefore it can be no evidence of a state of grace. Evidences of true grace can never totally be lost where once they are; the knowledge of the evidence may be lost, but the ground of the evidence cannot be lost; but all outward prosperity may be lost. Riches are not for ever, Prov. 27. 24. Honour's die before he that had them die. Haman will be an example of that; our own age hath given us fresh precedents in abundance, of the perishingnesse of these things. Do not many that were clothed in scarlet embrace the dunghill? Are not rich men made poor, and poor rich? 7. Outward prosperity is sometimes given in wrath. He gave them a King in his anger, and took him away in his wrath, Hos. 13. 11. God gave quails to the Israelites, but his wrath came along with them, Psal. 78. 30, 31. 'Tis true of all outward things. The prosperity of fools shall destroy them, Prov. 1. 32. Prosperity kills more than adversity. But now, that which is an evidence of salvation, is never given in wrath. I shall answer one question, and then I shall shut up this Rule, viz. How shall I know whether 〈…〉 are given in mercy? 1. When they make the heart▪ 〈…〉. Riches when they are given in anger, 〈…〉 heart sensual, stubborn. When they are given in love, they do spirituallize, enlarge the heart God-ward: we may see it in Hannah, 1 Sam. 2. 2. My heart is enlarged: outward mercies naturally make the heart carnal, but when they are given in mercy they make it spiritual. See it in David, Psal. 23. 5, 6. I will dwell in the house of the Lord for ever. When health, riches, etc. raise the heart nearer heaven, then 'tis a sign they are bestowed in mercy. 2. When they make the heart more humble. Naturally outward prosperity swells the heart. That Caution, 1 Tim. 6. 17. notes the distemper. A full purse ordinarily makes a big heart. If therefore you find your spirits humble under your outward enjoyments, you may conclude they are given you in mercy. See it in Jacob; How humble was he? Gen. 32. 10. His spirit was as low when he marched with his two bands, as when he traveled with his scrip and staff from his Father's house. So it was with David, 2 Sam. 7. 12, 13. There is a promise of great prosperity to David and to his house. See how humble this made David's spirit? v. 18, 19 Who am I, O Lord God, and what is my house that thou hast brought me hitherto? 3. When we are as ready to lay them out for God, as to receive them from God. When God gives thee an estate, and thou growest covetous, art loath to part with it, to promote either the service of God, or the good of his people; When God gives thee a healthful body, and thou carest not to serve him with thy health, etc. This is a sign that these things are given in anger. But when thou canst freely part with thy substance, when thou studiest, how thou mayest honour God with thy estate, as the Wiseman enjoins, Prov. 3. 9 When thou art willing to feed Gods hungry, and his naked, and lodge his houslesse ones, etc. This is an Argument that God gives thee thy estate in mercy. But now if thou squandrest it away in the service of thy lusts, or if thou canst not find in thy heart to lay it out for God; thou mayest suspect that God gave thee what thou hast in great anger. Thus much for the third false Rule. 4. The fourth false Rule. The judgement of others. There are very many in the world, who conclude themselves to be in a good condition, because others have a good opinion of them. They think they are perfectly well, because others tell them they are well. Especially if they be such as are godly and religious. The Apostle hints at this, Gal. 6. 4. I shall lay down two things. 1. 'Tis a very great mercy to be well reputed of by such as are godly. The good opinion of one godly man is better than the acclamations of many wicked. It's an honour to any man to have a good report amongst them that fear the Lord in sincerity. It's recorded concerning Timothy, that he was well reported of by the brethren that were at Lystra, and Iconium, Acts 16. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. They that are godly are more knowing than others, as having the Spirit of God, and so better able to discern of men than others are. And then they are more faithful than others; They dare not willingly call evil 〈…〉 The testimony of one godly 〈…〉 and valued before the testimony of 〈…〉. It is a great comfort and strengthening▪ to a godly man, when such as are of a discerning spirit, approve of his condition. 2. It's possible for a man to be in a very sickestate, and yet to be well reputed of by godly men, the wisest, the faithfullest. I shall give three Arguments to clear out this, viz. (1) We have several instances of it in Scripture. What think you of Judas? he was a very wretched man, our Saviour calls him a devil, John 6. 70. And yet all the eleven had a very good opinion of him. If Judas had desired it, he might have had a Testimony under the hands of all the Disciples, that they judged him to be a very godly man. When our Saviour told them, ●hat one of them should betray him; every one of them was more ready to suspect himself then Judas, Mat. 26. 21, 22. They were exceeding sorrowful, and began to say unto him one by one, Mr. Is it I? Ananias and Sapphira were (without doubt) well reputed of by the people of God, and yet you know, Act. 5. 1, 2. how great hypocrites they were: they both agreed together to tempt the Spirit of the Lord. Was not Demas once highly approved of by the Apostle Paul? and yet a very painted rotten-hearted hypocrite, one that forsook the Apostle to embrace the present world, 2 Tim. 4. 10. What, should I tell you of Jehu, Hymeneu● and Alexander, and many others who were highly esteemed of by the servants of God in that generation? Our present Age will furnish us with too many precedents of this nature; many, very many have turned fearful Apostates, of whom the servants of God judged far better than ever they durst of their own hearts. (2) No man doth infallibly know the state of another man's heart. 'Tis made by some a question, whether a man can know the state of his own heart infallibly? Though I do not question that, yet I believe, 1. That no man can do it at all times. 2. That no man can do it without the extraordinary assistance of the Spirit of God bearing witness with his Spirit, Rom. 8. 16. Sure it is, no man can infallibly know the state of his brother's heart. All the knowledge we have of other men is but conjectural. A faithful Brother, as I suppose, saith the Apostle concerning Sylvanus, 1 Pet. 5. 12. 'Tis God's Prerogative infallibly to know the hearts of men. You cannot infallibly know a man's temporal estate unless it be discovered, much less his spiritual estate. (3) That that will be a good ground to another man to judge well of us, will not be a sufficient ground for us to judge well of ourselves. Others are bound to judge well of us, if they see no evil in us. Charity believeth all things, hopeth all things, thinketh no evil, Vid. 1 Cor. 13. 5, 6, 7. A fair outward deportment free from offence, is a sufficient ground for another man to judge charitably of me, and for me to judge charitably of another. But now more than this is required to give me a ground of judging well of myself. I must see some inward saving work of grace in my heart before I can judge, before I ought to judge my own condition to be good. That that will evince me to be a censurer of another, if I do not judge well of him, will 〈…〉 flatterer; if I do judge well of myself upon such grounds, because I must know, positively my condition to be good, before I conclude it to be good. Thus much for this Rule. 5. The fifth false Rule; Some outward reformation. Many men conclude themselves to be in a very healthful condition, because they are better than they were. They have left some sins which formerly they walked in, etc. Therefore they hope their condition is good in the sight of God. They were wont to swear at every word, but now they swear not at all; if they do, 'tis but very seldom, etc. Vid. 2 Cor. 16. 12. I have four things to say about this Rule. 1. 'Tis a very great mercy when men are on the mending hand. When they grow better any manner of way, in any degree, they have cause to bless God exceedingly. When he that was a common swearer, can now speak without an oath. When he that was a cheater, doth now deal honestly with men. When he that was a drunkard, doth now live soberly. There is some better hopes of this man, than there is of another who goes on still in his old ways. When a man can say, I was an extortioner, an oppressor, a liar, etc. but now I have left these sins. He hath very great cause to bless God that hath made him better; to leave one sin is a greater mercy then to gain the world. 2. No man can have hopes of heaven, that doth not mend his life. He that doth not outwardly reform, shall not go to heaven, Job 22. 23. Col. 3. 4, 5. 3. It's possible that a man may outwardly reform some things, and yet he in ● very sick condition still. A man may be better than he was, and yet far short of a good condition. A man may be less wicked than he was, and yet not at all truly good in the sight of God. Consider four things to clear this. (1) A man may part with some one sin to make more sea-room for some other sin. Though all lusts are from the devil, and all lead to the devil, and all are contrary to Holiness, yet there is some opposition between one lust and another, so that one cannot act vigorously, unless another which opposes it be brought under. Prodigality is contrary to covetousness, etc. Now it's possible for a man to leave some sin out of love to another sin; to part with covetousness out of love to prodigality. A man may put out some of his children to make more room for the firstborn, and yet he accounts them all his children. A man's heart may be so much addicted to one sin, that he may seem to neglect all the rest, to make the better provision for that which is most dearly beloved. (2) A man may leave some sins, because he hath not ability or opportunity to commit them as before. The Prodigal man hath so fare wasted his estate▪ that he hath not ability to be so wasteful as before. The adulterer hath so impaired his health and strength, that he is not able to act his sin as he did before. A thief may have reform his the every, because he hath not that opportunity to purloin as he had before. He is better watched than he was. (3) A man may part with some sins merely to please men with whom 〈…〉 because he hates the sin; but 〈…〉 displease others whom he would 〈…〉. A man may forbear some dish of meat which h● loves, because his friend whom he hath invited doth not affect it. (4.) A man may part with some sin, because he hath found some outward smart by it. He hath impaired his health by immoderate drinking, and therefore he will now be sober. He loves the sin as well as ever he did, but he cannot without the hazarding of his life or health frequent it. Many a man abstaines from some meats, not because he hates the meat, but because the meat doth not love him. So it is in respect of sin. It hath been a chargeable sin to him, and will be so still if he use it, therefore he puts it away. By all these things it appears that some outward reformation may be attained unto, and yet the soul still in a sick condition. This is the third thing. 4. How may a man know then whether his Reformation be such as will evince his condition to be good. These things will evidence this. 1. If it proceed from a true displicency and hatred of it. When loathing of sin goes along with leaving of sin. When the heart is disaffected with it. When the filthiness of sin is apprehended as well as the destructiveness of sin. Esay 30. 22. True grace doth ha●e sin more for its filthiness, then for its damnableness; more because of its opposition to God, then for its hurtfulness to himself. He that can find this, may conclude his reformation to be an argument of grace. 2. If care be taken as well to suppress the root as ●● reform the outward act. Every sinful act doth proceed from a sinful habit. Out of the heart proceed evil thoughts, murders, fornications, etc. Mat. 15. 19 Now if you can find that the outward reformation, and the inward reformation go together, you may conclude the presence of grace from such acts of reformation. This is that which the Apostle speaks of, 2 Cor. 7. 1. Now if as great care be used to be freed from the filthiness of the spirit, as from the filthiness of the flesh, 'tis a sign the fear of God is there. Put away your iniquities from before mine eyes, saith the Lord, Esay 1. 16. What is it to put away our iniquities from before the eyes of God, but to take care that they may be blotted out of the heart, as well as put away from the hand? 3. If the Reformation be general. If we mend in one thing as well as another, we may conclude grace is in the heart. Hypocrites always reform with a reservation; they leave a nest-egge for Satan to sit on. In this thing, the Lord be merciful to thy servant, saith Naaman, 2 King. 5. 18. But where there is true grace, the reformation is universal. Abuses against the first table are reform, as well as abuses against the second Table; and abuses against the second table, as well as such as are against the first. Through thy Commandments, saith David, I get understanding, therefore I hate every false way. 4. When it is a Reformation to all good, as well as from all evil. When the heart is carried out as strongly after the reforming of good things omitted, as of evil things committed, then 'tis a sign that there is grace in the heart. When a man shall not only reform of oppression and in justice, but reform to liberality and open heartedness. God puts these together 〈…〉 essential branches of all true 〈…〉 Esay 1. 17. Cease to do evil, le●● to do 〈…〉 a man shall not only leave swearing, but conscionably take up the work of praying, etc. Such reformation will evidence grace to be in the soul. 5. When it is a settled and fixed Reformation, Two things are comprehended in this. First, resolution never to return to these evils which we have put away, never to forsake those holy courses which we have taken up; when a man through the grace of God doth purpose that his Reformation shall last as long as life lasts. He may fall into the same Acts again, but 'tis against his intention, against his prayer, against his endeavour. Secondly, a resolution to carry on his reformation from day to day in regard of degrees, never to leave mending and mending till he have mended every thing that is amiss either in excess or defect. This I call fixed Reformation. 6. The sixth false Rule; Quietness of conscience. Many persons judge themselves to be in a whole condition, because they find no troubles in their spirit. They have not those Tormina and gripe in their consciences which other sinners have had, therefore they gather that they are in a good condition. They think they are well, because they do not find those pains which others have found. I have these three things to say about this rule. 1. Holiness is the only way to true quietness of conscience. See Jam. 3. 17. Esay 32. 17. disturbance is threatened to the wicked, Job 15. 21, 24, Job 20. 20. Esay 57 2. All quietness of conscience is not an argument of a good condition. This I shall make out by three Arguments, viz. (1) A man may be in a very good condition, and yet want peace of conscience. A good conscience, and an unquiet conscience, sometimes meet in one man. Though purity of conscience be the way to peaceableness of conscience; yet the conscience may be pure, and for the present unpeaceable. We have many instances of this in Scripture. That of Heman is very remarkable, Psal. 88 15, 16. a very good man, as will appear by many instances in that Psalm, yet had a very stormy conscience. That instance in Isaiah 50. 10. is another proof of this. Yea, Jesus Christ himself had always a good conscience, but he sometimes wanted a peaceable conscience; when he uttered those words, Mat. 27. 46. he wanted serenity and peace. David a holy man, doth often complain of unquietness, and of great troubledness in his conscience. In the beginning of the new-birth, when the pangs are not well over; upon the hiding of God's face, upon the stepping aside into sin, upon want of evidence of grace, upon some great assault of Satan; in such cases consciences that are very good, may be very unquiet. (2) A man may be in a very bad condition, and yet find some quietness in his conscience. See that clear text to prove this, Luke 11. 21. While the strong man armed keeps the palace, all is in peace. The devil may be in full possession of the soul, and yet the soul may be sensible of no unquietness at all. That rich man in the Gospel sings a Requiem to his soul, Luke 12. 19 The Apostle speaks of some that are past feeling, Eph. 4. 19 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. They sin, and yet do not feel sin. (3) Some quietness of 〈…〉 Some peace of conscience ariseth from 〈◊〉 of a man's condition 'Tis not peace, but security, sleepiness, deadness, yea 'tis one of the greatest judgements God inflicts in this life, to afford men quietness of conscience in a sinful condition. When God lets a man be as Jonah▪ was, ready to be drowned, and yet fast asleep in the sides of the Ship. 3. All that are truly godly, shall at last find peaceableness of conscience. Though they may be full of toss and unquietnesses in their consciences, yet they shall at last find peace; though not perhaps so much peace as shall free them from doubting, yet so much peace as will free them from distrust. Peace is promised to them often in Scripture. Esay 26. 3. Thou shalt keep him in peace, Psalm 85. 8. Psalm 37. 37. Christ hath purchased peace for them. The Spirit is a Spirit of peace as well as a Spirit of grace. Joy is a fruit of the Spirit as well as Love, etc. True peace of conscience is an evidence of true Grace. Quest. How shall a man know true peace of conscience from carnal security? They may be distinguished three ways. 1. From the rise of them. True peace proceeds from true spiritual roots, viz. 1. Acquaintance with God, Job 22. 21. False peace ariseth rather from ignorance of God, forgetfulness of God; but true peace ariseth from acquaintance and communion with him. 2. The knowledge of our justification. Of this the Apostle speaks, Rom. 5. 1. When a person doth upon good grounds know that his person is put into a state of justification, and thereupon finds peace and quietness in his spirit, this is a night born peace. 3. The sense of our walking according to the rule of the Word. The Apostle mentions this, Gal. 6. 16. He that can derive his peace from such foundations, may conclude the work of grace from the work of peace, as truly as he may conclude light from the Sun. II. From the manner of the working of his peace. True sound peace hath usually followed great conflicts of conscience. True quietness ordinarily grows out of disquietness. Storms usually go before calms. As it was with that natural outward calm, Mar. 4. 39 so it is generally with spiritual calms. Though spiritual storms are not of the same violence, or of the same continuance in all, yet some tempestuous blasts go before these serenities. III. From the properties of it. I shall name these three properties of true peace. 1. It will allow no peace with sin. Carnal security is at amity with sin, at least with some sin; but gracious peace is at enmity with all sin. The Prophet mentions this fruit of it, Psal. 85. 8. 2. It raises the heart to enjoy more full communion with God. The heart is made more active in all holiness; whereas carnal security deads' the heart. It's a heart-ruling peace, Col. 3. 15. A heart-keeping peace, Phil. 4. 7. 3. True peace continues even in outward trouble. Outward troubles dash carnal security, not true peace, unless God hid his face in trouble, Joh. 16. 33. This is the sixth Rule. 7. The seventh false Rule; Comparing a man's self with others. Very many do build much upon this foundation. They judge 〈…〉 be in a healthful estate, because they 〈…〉 sick as other men. They see abundance 〈…〉 then they are, and therefore they conclude▪ all is well with themselves. This was the Pharisees case, God I thank thee, that I am not as other men are, Luke 18. 11. This is a general common case. I have two things to say about this Head. First, 'Tis a great mercy that thou dost in any degree or measure exceed any of the sons of men. As we are bound to bless God that others do go beyond us, so 'tis our duty hearty to bless God, that he hath made us in any degree better than the vilest of men. And we have great reason so to do in four respects. 1. Because our nature is as bad as the nature of the worst man. Original corruption, as it doth abide in all, so it is equal in all. No man is better than another by nature. The image of the old Adam is by nature as deep, and as black, and broad in every one of our souls, as it was in the soul of Judas, Cain, Saul, or any of those that are at this day in the place of torment, Psal. 14. 3. They are all gone aside, they are altogether become filthy. The Apostle citing this place, Rom. 3. 9, 10, etc. refers it to the natural estate of all the sons of Adam, both Jews and Gentiles. And therefore it is that he pronounceth the Elect, and regenerate, as well as others, to be by nature the children of wrath, Eph. 2. 3. This being true, it appears to be a mercy, that we are in any thing better than the vilest of men. Though we be not so good as many, yet 'tis some happiness that we be not as vile as any. 2. In a● much as a person is less evil thin others, his punishment will ●e less than the punishment of others. There are certainly degrees of torment in hell. Though extensive in regard of duration there is no difference (the torment of every damned creature is an eternal torment;) yet intensiuè in regard of degree and quantity, there is lesser and greater. Those that question whether there be degrees of glory in heaven, do hold without question that there are degrees of punishment in Hell. The justice of God distributes punishment for sin as the wages of it, and therefore according to the quantity of sin shall be the measure of punishment. And the Scripture is express to this purpose, Matth. 11. 22, 24. Tyre and Sidon shall not undergo so much torment as Chorazin and Bethsaida, Sodom and Gomorrah shall be inferior in punishment to Capernaum. Capernaum out-sinned Sodom and Gomorrah, and therefore shall exceed them in degrees of punishment. Now 'tis a mercy to have any abatement of torments. Though a man be shut out of Heaven; yet if he have a milder punishment in hell than others, it is a great mercy. 3. He that is less evil than others, dishonours God less than others. The great evil of sin consists in this, that it casts dishonour and contempt upon God. Sin is worse as it is a God-provoking thing, then as it is a creature-damning thing. Every act of sin greatly dishonours God; and the more acts of sin a man commits, the more doth he dishonour God. Now 'tis a great mercy that we do not dishonour God so much as others. Though it be a great unhappiness that we do not glorify God as much as any, yet it is some happiness 〈…〉 dishonour him as much as any▪ 〈…〉 from dishonouring God by any one sinful action, is in itself a greater mercy then to enjoy the greatest outward advantage in the world; the dishonouring of God, (though it be but by one act, the least that is imaginable) is a greater misery, then to lose all the world, because the Name of God is better than all the world; so to be delivered from dishonouring, though but in one act, is a far greater happiness then to acquire the best outward advantage, which the world hath to bestow. 4. He that is less evil than others, is delivered from some filthiness. Sin is a great defiler. 'Tis the only soul-defiler in the world. The Scripture resembles it to the most filthy things; To the vomit of a dog, to a miry puddle. You have both these in one place, 2 Pet. 2. 22. To a menstruous cloth, Esay 64. 6. 'Tis often called filthiness in the abstract, Lam. 3. 9 Now 'tis a mercy, though a man be not clean, yet 'tis some mercy, that he is not altogether so filthy as he might be. To be preserved from any one spot of this filthiness, is a very great kindness, a kindness to be acknowledged with the greatest thankfulness. This is the first conclusion. Secondly; It's possible for a man to be better than others, and yet to be in a very bad condition. A man may be sick unto death, and yet not so far spent in his body as some others are. A man may have a greater estate than many hundreds, and yet be no very rich man for all that. So 'tis for spirituals. Thou mayst peradventure be nearer heaven than many hundreds are, and yet ●e ●● the highway to Hell, and destruction. That young man in the Gospel that came to Christ, had outstripped thousands of his Neighbours. When Christ told him, Thou shalt not commit adultery, thou shalt not kill, thou shalt not bear false witness, honour thy father and thy mother; Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself: What answer did he make? All these things have I kept from my youth up, Mat. 19 20. There were millions in the world at that time, that were inferior to him, and yet he was under the power of mortal diseases. The greatest part of the world are in a very bad estate. Our Saviour tells us, that many are called, but few are chosen, Mat. 22. 14. The greatest part of men in the world walk in the broad way. Judas, Saul, Jehu, were better in many respects, than multitudes that then lived in the world; and yet every one of them sick unto death. God hath no where in Scripture said that that man is in a good condition, that is better than others, unless those others whom he excels be in a saving regenerate condition. 8. The eighth false Rule; Knowledge of spiritual things. Many men think themselves in a saving condition, because they have attained to a good measure of knowledge in the things of God. They understand the Doctrine of the Bible, they are well versed in the principles of Religion, they can answer almost any question in Divinity; and therefore they judge their estate to be very good. I have three things to say concerning this head, viz. 1. 'Tis a very great mercy to have the knowledge of saving and spiritual things. 'Tis a happiness to have a deep knowledge in natural things. Humane knowle●●● 〈…〉 could be seen, i● far bright●● 〈…〉 star. Knowledge never had neve● 〈◊〉 any enemy but ignorance. What 〈◊〉 Solomon? Eccl. 2. 13. He tells us, that wisdom's excels 〈◊〉 as far as light excels darkness. But especially the knowledge of Divine things: This is a rar● jewel indeed. Knowledge is one of the excellencies of God, He is a God of knowledge, 1 Sam. 2. 3. Knowledge was one of the perfections of man in the state of Innocency. A knowing man finds more content in knowledge, even in the knowledge of natural things, than ever they could find in gold, or silver, or any such things. You have heard of some that have cast away their outward estate, that they might not be taken off from searching after knowledge. But of all knowledge, the knowledge of heavenly things is most excellent. The price of this knowledge is better than wisdom, and the merchandi●e of it then fine gold, Prov. 3. 14, 15. No outward gain in the world is comparable to the gain of this knowledge. By knowledge we come to know what is to be done, what is not to be done; what is to be believed, what is to be rejected▪ Hereby we are enabled to guide others to regulate our own action. By knowledge the most principal and highest faculty of the soul, the understanding, comes to be enriched. Knowledge makes a man's face to shine. Many high commendations are given in Scripture to this precious pearl of knowledge. To know spiritual things is a greater mercy by far, then to be made Ruler over the whole world, and to want knowledge. He that wants knowledge is brutish, he is under the curse of Nabuchadnezzar, Dan 4. 16. Let a beasts heart be given him. An ignorant man is more truly a beast then a man. 2. It's the duty of all that expect to be saved, to labour after this knowledge. God commands it often in Scripture, Prov. 4. 5, 6, 7. Get wisdom, get understanding. Search the Scriptures, John 5. 39 Let the Word of Christ dwell richly in you, in all wisdom, Col. 3. 16. An ignorant heart is a bad heart; I mean, a heart totally ignorant of the things of God, for without knowledge the mind is not good. Knowledge is as necessary unto practice as light is to action. A man must know the Will of God before he can do it. Ignorance is the mother of Popish Devotion, but knowledge is the mother of true Devotion. A Christian can do nothing acceptably without knowledge. Want of knowledge is a destructive thing, especially if it be where God affords the means of knowledge, Esay 27. 11. Hos. 4. 6. want of knowledge doth stir up Controversies between God and men, Hos. 4. 1. A man may go to hell for want of knowledge, as well as for want of faith or other graces. God puts such a high esteem upon knowledge, that he saith, It is life eternal to know him, and Jesus Christ whom he hath sent, John 17 3. It's the character of the worst of wicked men, that they desire not the knowledge of God's ways, Job 21. 14. Knowledge in its kind and degree is necessary to salvation, as well as holiness. Why is piety in Scripture so often set out by the name of wisdom, knowledge, understanding, but to let us see how necessary it is to the attainment of true Piety? 3. It's possible to be very knowing in spiritual things, and yet to be in a sick condition 〈◊〉 ●●●sician may know the nature of all diseases, and yet be sick of the worst of them. A person may be well versed in the History of the Scriptures, in the System of Divinity, and yet for all that be in a bad condition as to his eternal state. This I shall make good by these four Arguments. 1. From the Apostles supposition, 1 Cor. 13. 1, 2. The Apostle supposeth a great measure of knowledge. Very few men attain to that height of knowledge which is there supposed. See the expressions. To speak with the tongue of men and Angels. To have the gift of prophecy, which God bestowed upon many in the Primitive times, to understaad all mysteries and all knowledge; yet it's possible that all this may be without one spark of true grace. Though a man could say all the Bible memoriter, could resolve all the difficult cases in Divinity; yet it's possible that such a man may be destitute of all saving grace. 2. From experience. There are at present, there have been in former ages, many knowing and learned men, who had not the least measure of true holiness. Judas was (without doubt) a man of great knowledge. We do not find any thing in Scripture, that he was inferior to any of the Apostles in notional knowledge. He could (for aught we find to the contrary) preach as well as any of the Apostles, and yet a very wicked man. What need we instance in men, when as the very devils are so great intelligent creatures; their name carries knowledge in it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 gnarus, peritus. The devil understands Scripture as to the letter of i●, fare more exactly than the best of men. Now that which the worst of men, and the worst of devil's may attain unto, can be no infallible argument of a good estate. We see by experience many drunkards, swearers and debauched men, do in all manner of literal knowledge excel those that desire to fear God in uprightness. The Pharisees were very knowing Rom. 2 18, 19, 20. 3. Natural abilities and education may help men to notional knowledge. All this kind of knowledge is attained by industry and education, by the concurrence of God's ordinary blessing. But now grace and holiness is not by education, or industry, or from natural abilities, but from the special grace of God. Knowledge is but a common gift, which is bestowed promiscuously upon the good and bad. Now no common gift can entitle a man to Heaven. 4. The Scripture doth not make knowledge simply, but saving sanctified knowledge an evidence of salvation. National knowledge may be without sanctifying knowledge. Sanctified knowledge will evidence a man's condition to be good, but notional knowledge will not. How shall a man know whether that knowledge he hath be a sanctified saving knowledge, or merely a notional knowledge? I shall lay down these evidences of it, and so shut up this point. (1) Sanctified and saving knowledge is an humbling knowledge. Mere literal knowledge swells and puffs up the heart, 1 Cor. 8. 1. makes men conceited and proud, and to despise others; but holy knowledge makes the 〈…〉 selfdenying. See it in Asaph, Psal. 〈…〉. He was one of the Wise men of his time, and ye● how vilifying doth he speak of himself? So foolish was I and ignorant, I was as a beast before thee. Agur a very intelligent good man, and yet how humble is he? Prov. 30. 2, 3. The reason of this humbling property of knowledge is, because it helps men to see their own vileness: as their knowledge increaseth, so the knowledge and sense of their own unworthiness increaseth. (2) Saving sanctified knowledge doth not abide in the head only, but in the heart. Notional knowledge lies only in the head and in the brain, it hath no influence upon the heart to purify it and purge it, only it swims in the brain; But saving knowledge, it doth distil, and descend upon the heart, it hath its chief residence in the inward man, it purifies and cleanseth the soul, makes it more holy than ever it was. The Apostle makes purification one effect of true wisdom, James 3. 17. The wisdom that is from above, is first pure. Notional knowledge is often a heart-corrupting knowledge, but saving knowledge is ever a heart-purifying knowledge. 3. Saving knowledge is a life-reforming knowledge. Notional knowledge is often a life-disordering knowledge, it makes men lose, licentious; we have two much experience of this; but saving knowledge regulates the conversation. He that knows spiritual things savingly, desires as well to practise as to know. H●s knowledge doth not please him, unless his practice be conformable to his knowledge. Very excellent is that prayer of David, Psal. 25. 4, 5. Saving knowledge would not only see God's ways, but would be led in God's ways; It's ever practical. You have such another prayer of David, Psal. 143. 10. Teach me to do thy will, lead me into the land of uprightness. He that can find these properties, may from his knowledge, whether it be much or little, argue grace; otherwise mere knowledge though it be never so exact, will not infallibly argue a good condition. The Uses of this Point. 1. How necessary is it for the Ministers of the Gospel to be frequent in the Doctrine of conviction. They are under Jesus Christ spiritual Physicians, whose office it is, ministerially to cure the spiritual maladies of the soul. One effectual means to do this, is to endeavour to set sin upon the conscience. To discover men's spiritual estate unto their consciences, that so they may be delivered from those gross mistakes about their condition under which they are held. 'Tis a very hard thing to persuade men that they are sick. Men are naturally apt to run away with a conceit that all is well with them, therefore 'tis needful to bring sin to sight. The cure is as good as done when this is done. Conviction of sin is the first work of the Spirit of God, john 16. 8. He is a convincing Spirit before he be a comforting Spirit. You must give the Ministers of Christ leave to set sin upon the conscience. The fallow ground must be broken up before the seed of comfort be cast in. A sin-convincing Ministry is most likely to be a soul-converting Ministry. They 〈◊〉 discover to men their righteousness, 〈…〉. until they have convinced them of their unrighteousness. 2. Do not wonder that spiritual Physic is so generally contemned. 'Tis at first sight a very great wonder that the offers of grace and salvation should be so despised; That the Word of salvation should do so little good in the world. Christ is tendered, life is held out in the preaching of the Gospel from day to day. Wisdom cryeth without, and lifts up her voice in the concourse of the City, and yet men do not come in. Ministers may complain as the Prophet Esay 49. 4. What is the reason? 'Tis because men run away with an opinion that they are well, that their condition is good, and therefore are the precious tenders of salvation so generally slighted. 3. See the reason why there is so little complaining of sin. Never more sin, never less spiritual complaining of sin. 'Tis a great rarity to hear any soul crying out, What shall I do to be saved? You may hear in every corner complain of bodily diseases, one of his Gout, a second of his Head, a third of his Stone, but very few crying out of sin. How comes this about? It is because men think they have no sin, they see not their diseases. They think they are sound men, and therefore they are quiet, and make no complaints either to God or men. 4. 'Tis a marvellous great mercy to have a true discovery of our spiritual diseases. 'Tis not a happiness to be spiritually diseased, no, no; sin is a misery, but 'tis a mercy that those that are diseased, are convinced of their condition. Many ●●en think they are well, when they are indeed going down to the chambers of death; if therefore God have so fare opened your eyes as to let you see your disease, you have cause to bless his Name. Such conviction though it be not the cure of sin, yet it is the ready way to the cure of sin. It may be, your sorrow after conviction is greater than it was before: you are now full of fea●s and horrors, which before you were free from; but certainly your condition is fare safer. Bless God for the work of conviction, and he will bring it on to the work of conversion. Doct. 4. Jesus Christ is not a Physician to any Mat 9 12. that think themselves spiritually whole. It was the misery of the Pharisees, that they dreamt themselves to be in a very healthful estate. They looked upon all others as men mortally sick, and upon themselves as sound men. Our Saviour therefore declines them as Patients unfit for him to meddle with and applies himself to the poor Publicans and sinners, who did see and acknowledge themselves to be sick of sin and ready to perish. Jesus Christ doth not immediately heal sinners as they are sinners; but his constant general method is first to take them off that conceit that is naturally in their hearts, that they are in a good estate; and when he hath showed them their sickness, than he goes in hand with the cure. The making of the heart sensible of sin is the work of Christ, as well as the healing of sin. Did not Christ give the sinner a sight of his misery, he would never be able to see his misery. Conviction of sin is as truly the work of Christ, ●s 〈…〉 sin. John 16. 8. Nature is a● 〈…〉 sin, as it is to heal sin when it i● d●●●vered. All that is meant in the doctrine is 〈◊〉, that Jesus Christ doth not ordinarily heal any soul till he have first delivered from the misc●no●●t of their condition and given them eyes to see, that it is otherwise with them than they did before imagine. This is the full scope of this Doctrine, and of this Text, as is clear from v. 13. where our Saviour doth in plain and express terms set down, what is here more covertly propounded, saying, I am not come to cast the righteous, but sinners to repentance. In the handling of this doctrine, I shall open these four things. 1. Show that this is Christ's usual method. 2. How this work of discovery is wrought. 3. Why Christ takes this course in the healing of sinners. 4. Whether this work be wrought alike in all. 1. That this is Christ's usual method, appears two ways. 1. By our Saviour's own declaration. We shall find him in Scripture expressing this two ways. (1) By declaring the end of his coming. He came from heaven to save and convert such kind of persons, Luke. 19 10. The Son of man came to seek, and to save that which was lost. Not simply all such as are lost (for there are abundance of lost sinners which he neither came to seek or to save intentionally) but such as see themselves to be in a lost condition, such as are first made sensible of that lost undone condition they are in without Christ. So Esay 6●. 1, 2. He doth there fully declare, both for what sinners he came into the world, and how he heals those sinners. They are such sinners as are ; such sinners as mourn; they are meekned sinners. Christ first breaks their hearts, causes them to mourn out of the sense of their sins; meekens their spirits by a work of conviction; and then heals them by the Application of the Promises of grace. (2) By the form of invitation he uses to sinners. This is fully expressed by the Evangelist, Matth. 11. 28. Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. The words are very significant, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Christ doth not call sinners as sinners, but as labouring sinners, as burdened sinners, such as are even overwhelmed and born down with the heavy weight of sin. Such as see sin, and upon the sight of it are so overwhelmed, that they cannot look up, but are ready to sink and die under it. 2. From the order of this working upon such as he hath healed. You can hardly find any one that ever was healed but in this way; but multitudes that have been wrought upon after this manner. Those three thousand who were converted by Peter's Ministry, were first brought to the sight of their sick estate, and then were converted, Acts 2. 37. What is the meaning else of those words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; There was not the least part or point of the heart, but it was wounded; it was with them as if the sharp points of daggers, or stings of Scorpions had been stuck and fastened in their hearts. So it was with the Jailor, Acts 16. ●7▪ 〈…〉 those expressions and gestures of his show, that he was first convinced of his sick estate before he was cured. The same method is observable in Paul's conversion, Acts 9 4, 5, 6, 9 his falling to the earth, his trembling and astonishment, the words uttered by him, the continuance of his blindness for the space of three days, What are these, but evidences of the work of conviction which Christ wrought upon his heart? The same course and method in some degree or other, doth Christ observe in all those whom he heals of their spiritual diseases, especially if they be such as are adulti, grown men, when this work is wrought upon them. This is the first particular. 2. How Christ makes this discovery? Answ. This is wrought ordinarily by the preaching of the Law. The Ministry of the Law is the most certain and expeditious way to make the sinner sensible of his sick estate. The Law hath a threefold effect upon the soul, as to the accomplishing of this work, viz. 1. The Law sets before the eye of the sinner the miserable estate which man is in by sin, with the wrath of God due to him for the same. All knowledge of sin is by the Law through the convincing power of the Spirit of God, Rom. 3. 20. By this means the Apostle came to see his sin, Rom. 7. 7, 9 He thought inward concupiscence to be no sin, till God by his Law had better informed his judgement. He thought his condition while he was a Pharisee, to be as good as the condition of the best: but when God had tutored him a while by the Law, than he looked upon himself as a dead man; when the commandment ●ame, sin revived (saith he) and I died, v. 9 2. It doth convince the conscience of the sinner, that he is the guilty person whom the Law threatneth with all that misery. The Law of God doth point him out, as Nathan did David, and tells him that he is the man against whom all that wrath is denounced. The Apostle mentions this work of the Law, 1 Cor. 14. 24, 25. The sinner being smitten with the edge of the Law, falls down on his face, confessing that he is the very man that is guilty of such sin, and liable to the miseries due to such sin. The condition discovered is his condition. 3. The Law awakens the sinner out of his security, lets him see the impossiblity of his personal satisfying the Law, and so works horror and astonishment in the soul. This effect it had on the Jailor, Acts 16. 29. his heart was set on a trembling frame, upon the apprehension of that sad guilt and misery under which he lay, from which he was not able to deliver himself. This is that which the Apostle calls, the Spirit of bondage, Romans 8. 15. which is opposed to the Spirit of Adoption. This is the second thing. 3. Why Christ takes this course in the healing of sin? why will he not heal the sinner, till he have him sensible that he is not in a sound condition? 1. That sin may be embittered. Sin is in itself and evil and bitter thing. 'Tis compared unto gall and wormwood, and 'tis far more bitter then either of these. Now 'tis the mind of God, that the sinner should taste the bitterness of sin before he be healed, Jer. 2. 19 Therefore is he pleased to 〈…〉 course. 2. That the sinner may be brought to a 〈◊〉 shame for his sin. Sin is a very sha●eful thing. 'Tis called shame in Scripture; and 'tis the mind of Christ, that all sinners that are recovered shall bear the shame of their sins, Ezek. 16. 52. Now if the sinner should be healed before his sin be discovered, this design of God would be frustrated. 3. That the sinner may be willing to come up to his terms. When Christ gins at first to deal with a soul about the work of Conversion, he keeps a huge boggling, he doth exceedingly dodge with Jesus Christ to bring him to low terms. Christ therefore shows him his naked condition, what he is, and what he must expect if he close not with him, and by this means he is brought to a ready and willing compliance with him. We see it in those three thousand which Peter converted, when their condition was discovered, when anguish and horror was upon their spirits, than they were contented to do any thing, Acts 2. 37. What shall we do to be saved? Thus also it was with Saul, Acts 9 6. When Christ had created those tremble and astonishments in his spirit, than he comes off fully to Christ, Lord, what wilt thou have me to do? So it was with the Jailor: when he had a true representation of his estate, than he cries out, Acts 16. 30. Sirs, what must I do to be saved? A man that is in extremity will do any thing to save his life. When he sees that he must perish if he do not presently consent to what is proposed, than he lingers not: if he must throw all his goods overboard, he is contented to cast them out presently, because death is before him. 4. That the mercy of the cure may be more highly valued. Salvation from hell is a very great work which should be valued by all on whom it is bestowed. The Prophet David calls upon his soul, and all that is within his soul, to praise God for such a mercy, Psalm 103. init. He that considers the worth of salvation, the unworthiness of the persons enjoying it, the costliness of it, the multitudes that shall never partake of it; must needs acknowledge it a thing worthy to be esteemed. But so unthankful a piece is the heart of man, that he doth not value it at any considerable rate. Jesus Christ therefore, before he bring any into such a state, will discover their misery to themselves; that so he may provoke them to extraordinary thankfulness for it. And the truth is, nothing doth so much enhance the price of salvation in our hearts, as a clear manifestation of our wretched condition. See how the Apostles heart is enlarged upon this very consideration, 1 Tim. 1. 15. Had he not seen himself to be the chief of sinners, he would never have thought salvation by Christ worthy of all acceptation, as now he did. 5. That the skill of the Physician may be more clearly discovered. Jesus Christ seeks to advance his own glory in all the works he does for the sons of men; As in other his works, so especially in this great work of conversion. Therefore it is, that he will not heal any till he have showed them their sad estate 〈…〉 may see his wisdom, power, goodness, in their healing. Men that think little or nothing ails them, do not half so much value the Physicians pains, or skill, as those that see themselves at the very brink of the grave, when the Physician takes them in hand. Jesus Christ therefore will show them every sort, that so they may publish his glory that wrought it for them. I was brought low, and he helped me, saith David, Ps. 116. 6. See how the poor blind man proclaims the honour of Christ, Joh. 9 32. 4. Whether Jesus Christ observe the same method in this work of discovering the sinner's estate to himself? Whether all sinners have the same measure of humbling and terror, and whether they continue for the same time under apprehensions of wrath? Answ. Jesus Christ is a free Agent. He is not tied to any certain method, nor doth he always walk in the same way. His dispensations in the work of convincing men of sin, are various and different. The work is wrought on all so far as to make the soul sensible of sin's bitterness above all other bitterness, and to make it sensible of Christ's excellency above all other excellent things. But that it is done in the same violent manner in all, or that it is of the same continuance, cannot be affirmed. Conviction and conversion may be wrought at the same Sermon, as we see it was with those three thousand, Acts 2. 37. 41. They were no sooner pricked in their hearts, but they gladly received the word. There was great difference between this work in Lydia and in the Jailor, Acts 16. 14. God shown her hersicknesse in ● more mild way. The Lord opined her heart, that she attended unto the things which were spoken of Paul. But the Jailor, he had an earthquake, and great horrors in his conscience, v. 27, 29. 1. Some sinners have been more scandalous than others. These are brought to Christ with greater troubles, so it was with the Jailor: he had been a cruel bloody man; God lays him under deep sorrow. 2. God hath a greater work to do by some sinners then by others. These he uses to deal with in a more rough way, that he may prepare them for service the better. This seems to be the reason of his so sharp dealing with Saul, Act. 9 15, 16. 3. Some sinners are of a more rough turbulent nature than others. These must be handled more severely. Some men must be bound, before they will be ruled. So it is with some kind of sinners. Thus with Manasseh, 2 Chr. 33. 11. 4. Some have been sinners of a longer standing than others. These Christ useth to be more sharp withal in his way of curing. 5. Some sinners have been more confident in their civil righteousness than others; As Paul was in his Pharisaisme, Phil. 3. These Christ uses to handle more sharply. Jesus Christ is a wise Physician, he observes the nature of all his Patients, and accordingly prescribes medicines for them. He that hath the least measure of this conviction, hath so much, as that he sees himself lost, undone, helpless, hopeless in himself. He sees the evil of sin, he sees Christ an excellent, suitable, all sufficient good for his soul. This one thing 〈…〉 Where there is the least sorrow before 〈…〉 con●●●sion, there is many times greater sorrow, and mor● troubles of Spirit after conversion. The Uses of this Point. 1. How sad is the condition of those that never yet were truly made sensible of their sick estate. They never yet had a true, lively, sensible apprehension of their sick condition. They were never so much as pricked in their hearts for sin so as to make them loathe it. They were never taken from all their high conceits of their own natural estate, etc. These men have cause to suspect that sin is not yet cured. A person may have some conviction of his misery and not be healed, but a man cannot be healed without some conviction. The heart cannot be broken for sin without the sight of sin, Ezek. 36. 31. There can be no self-loathing, till there be a remembering of our ways and do that have not been good. 2. How necessary the preaching of the Law is to true conversion. A man will never be taken off from the opinion of his own healthfulness but by the preaching of the Law. The Law shows men what they are, what they may expect, etc. The fallow ground of the heart will never be broken up without the plough of the Law, Jer. 4. 3. The plough of the Law must go and make deep furrows too before the seed of comfort be cast in. Though the preaching of the Law do not convert, yet it helps forward conversion, in as much as it works that preparatory work, without which conversion ordinarily is not; as the needle makes way for the thread, so the Law makes way for conversion. The spirit of bondage makes way for the Spirit of Adoption, and that is wrought by the preaching of the Law. 3. The mistake of those who are against all kind of preparations to conversion. They would have mercy held out to sinners as sinners, not as sinners so and so qualified. Surely the Scripture hath laid down qualifications for sinners to whom the Gospel is tendered. They must be humbled sinners, burdened sinners, etc. The mercy of the Gospel is not to be prostituted to sinners as sinners, but to sinners, to heart-wounded sinners, to sinners that see themselves lost in themselves, to hungering and thirsting sinners. The brazen Serpent was only for such to look upon as were stung with Serpents. Such as are in some measure sensible of the stinging nature of sin, are to be invited to lay hold on Christ. As it is an undoing to wounded sinners, to keep them from Christ, so 'tis an undoing to such sinners as are not in some measure pressed with sin to apply the promises of the Gospel. This was prefigured in the Leper, The L●per must cry unclean, etc. every sinner is this Leper; sight of sin must go before healing of sin. 4. Let Ministers take the same way which Christ takes for the curing of sinners. Jesus Christ is both an able and faithful Physician. 'Tis no disparagement to use his method, yea 'tis the greatest wisdom to prescribe the same receipts which Jesus Christ prescribes; he uses to take men off from the opinion they have of their own way. His manner is to let men see they are sick, to convince them of sin befo●● 〈◊〉 apply healing medicines. All those Minis●●● that desire to have their endeavours successful must do so likewise. People must be contented to suffer their condition to be known, to suffer themselves to be made sick, that so they may be cured. This is Christ's way, this is a safe way, this must be our way. Though such kind of preaching put you to some present trouble, yet it will be to your eternal advantage. Your sores cannot be healed comfortably till you see them to be sores and festered sores. You must be contented to suffer the ploughings of the Law, that you may be prepared for the comforts of the Gospel. You must be contented to be cast down, that you may be prepared for raising up. You must be contented to be led to the gates of hell, that you may be brought to the Kingdom of Heaven. Better a great deal to go to Heaven through Hell, then to sail through an imaginary Heaven, and land at the dark stairs of Hell in the end. Doct. 5. Those that find themselves to be spiritually sick, shall find Jesus Christ a Physician ready to heal them. No Physician was ever so ready to heal a sick brother, as Jesus Christ will be to cure a sinsick sinner. We find in the Gospel that Christ was very willing to heal those that came to him sick of bodily infirmities. We do not, that I remember, read of any one that was sent away uncured, that earnestly begged his help either for themselves, or any of theirs. The Leprous, the Paralytic, the Demoniac, the Lame, the Blind, those that were sick of Fevers, those that had bloody issnes. Whatever sicknesses men had, they obtained favour, Matth. 4. 23. Christ ever valued the soul above the body, therefore he will be much more ready to heal the sicknesses thereof. He healed many of the sick Publicans, when they saw their diseases; As Zacheus, Matthew, etc. And he will be to the end of the world, ready to afford the same mercy to any that are or shall be in their condition. Three things are here to be unfolded by way of Explication. 1. What it is to be spiritually sick of sin. 2. That Christ will be ready to heal such. 3. What are the reasons of this readiness. 1. To be sick of sin, comprehends these six particulars. First, A true sight of our sinful condition. That man who never yet had the sight of his sinful estate, was never yet truly sick of sin, the soul must be convinced that it is in a sinful estate. Thus it was with the Publican, Luke 18 13. He acknowledged himself to be a sinner, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Nor is all sight of sin sufficient: but that sight of sin which is an ingredient of spiritual sickness, must have these two properties. 1. It must arise from the Word of God. This was the foundation of the Apostles sight of sin, Rom. 7. 9 When the Commandment 〈…〉 sin revived▪ and I died. Thus 〈…〉 th●usand, Acts 2. 37. 〈…〉 ●●●ked in their hearts. The sense of sin did arise from ●ou●● thing which was delivered to them out of the Word of God. No other light besides this divine light will discover sin so as to make the soul sick of it. 2. It must extend to sin in the root, as well as to sin in the branches. I mean original birth-sin, as well as actual sin. Possibly the sight of sin may arise first from some actual transgression. So it was with those Converts, Acts 2. 37. that bloody act of theirs against Jesus Christ, was the first sin they saw. Actual sins are more obvious to the eye then original sin. This is a sin lying under ground, more remote, at a greater distance from the cognizance of a sinner, therefore peradventure some actual offence first is set upon the conscience, but sooner or later doth this actual sin bring to the sinner's conscience, the sight of that sin, which is the root both of this and of all other actual sins; namely, that body of death, that law of the members, as the Apostle calls it. Rom. 7. 23. Which continually warreth against the Law of the mind. Secondly, A serious apprehension of the misery and danger the soul is in by reason of sin discovered. No man is sick of sin till he see the danger which sin hath, and which it is likely further to plunge him into. Thus it was with those Converts, Acts 2. 37. The question they propound, What shall we do to be saved? doth inply clearly enough, that they looked upon themselves, as men in a state of damnation in their present condition. And indeed the same Word of God which discovers sin, doth discover wrath also as the wages of sin, so that the sick sinner is one that lies under the apprehension of wrath, which he expects suddenly to fall upon him. Thirdly, Compunction and contrition is wrought in the soul by reason of sin. The heart throbs and aches by reason of that miserable state which by sin he is brought into. Thus it was with those Converts, Act. 2. 37. They were pricked in their hearts; their spirits were full of grief and vexation, to remember what they had done, and what they were like to suffer. Thus it was with the Publican, Luke 18. 13. He smote his breast, saith the Text; his heart was overwhelmed with grief, shame fear, sorrow. There was a mixture of all these passions in him at once. Thus it is with all those that are spiritually sick. This is that which our Saviour calls labouring, and being heavy loaden, Mat. 11. 28. Sickness when 'tis seen, is evermore accompanied with pain and anguish. Fourthly, Dis-satisfaction with the present condition. This follows upon the former; And you will find it hath ever been in such as have seen their spiritual sickness. What is the meaning of those questions which were propounded by the three thousand, Acts 2. 3●. By the Jailor, Acts 16. 30 And by Paul, Acts 9 6. Do they not clearly evince that they were unsatisfied with their present estate? It was no pleasing thing to them to continue any longer in that condition. As if they should have said, 'tis no abiding in this estate. 'Tis such a kind of reasoning as the four Lepers had among themselves, when the famine was so raging in Samaria, 2 Kings 7. 3. Why sit we hear until we die? Whatever the success or event be▪ 〈◊〉 must think of some other course. Just so i● is with a conscience-wounded sinner, he cannot be contented with that estate. Though he know not how to get out, yet he cannot be content to abide there. Fifthly, Despair of deliverance by any thing in himself. He that is sick of sin, looks upon himself as utterly unable to help himself. This is that which is called in another place spiritual poverty. And, saith Calvin, Nemo spiritu pauper, nisi qui in nihilum apud se redactus. Thus it was with those sick sinner's beforenamed. Their ask so seriously what they must do, did clearly imply that they themselves knew not what to do? something they thought must be done, and yet they knew not what it was. No man is truly sick, but he that doth clearly see that in regard of himself, he is both helpless and hopeless. Self-insufficiency is one ingredient of spiritual sicknesses. Self-denial and soul sickness are evermore companions. This is clear from the Publicans confession and prayer, Luke 18. 13. He goes out of himself to God, acknowledging that if ever he was healed, he must be healed by mercy. Sixthly, A willingness to take any course God would have him, so he may be healed. This is implied in that question so often mentioned, Acts 2. 37. Acts 9 6. Acts 16. 30. They are very ready to follow the advice of God given by his Ministers for a speedy cure. Cut them, launce them, scar them, bleed them, purge them, any thing to free them from sin, any thing to save them from wrath, which is ready to devour them. They will stick at nothing, let God take his own way, and use his own medicines; whatever he prescribes, they are resolved to drink it down be it never so bitter, be it never so unsavoury, be it never so contrary to their corrupt constitution. They hope he can heal them, they are willing he should use his own method for the healing of them. This is the first thing, wherein spiritual sickness consists. 2. That Christ is ready to heal such sinners as these. This appears three ways. 1. He inviteth such to come to him for cure. The invitations of Christ are not empty compliments as the invitations of men often are, but real things. He is not in j●st, but in good earnest, when he bids men repair to him. Never did one friend send to another with so much heartiness, as Christ doth to men. Now we shall find him inviting sinners under this qualification. That's a famous place in Mat. 11. 28. Come unto me all ye that labour, and are heavy loaden, and I will give you r●st. And again, Esay 55. 1. Ho every one that thirst●th, come ye to the waters, etc. Who is he that thirsteth, who is he that hath no money, but such sinners as I have described? These are the patients which Christ invites. 2. He hath promised to take care for the curing ●f such. The promises of Jesus Christ are not false, ambiguous, or fallacious as the promises of men too frequently are. He is the faithful witness, the Amen, Rev. 3. 14, All his words are spoken in simplicity and verity. Now 'tis his promise to cure heart-wounded sinners. That in Mat. 11. 28. hath an express promise annexed to the invitation. The promise of refreshing or giving rest, is as good ●● if he had said, I will heal you. To this agrees that in Mat. 5. 3, 4, 6. Poverty of spirit, mournfulnesse of spirit, hungering and thirsting do all go in into the description of the sickness of the soul, and to each of these doth Christ make express and full promises of spiritual healing. Christ's Promise is the best security Heaven or earth can afford. 3. God the Father hath promised it in Christ's behalf. You will many times find that the Prophets which have prophesied of him before his incarnation, have by God's appointment, and in Gods Name engaged themselves that he should heal such sinners. That is a very full place amongst others, Esay 42. 3. that it's meant of Christ, is clear from Matth. 12. 20. where this text is applied to Christ, and it's applied to him upon this account, that he healed the man with a withered hand, v. 10. 13. and multitudes of other diseased persons, v. 15. whereupon this of the Prophet is brought in, Behold my servant, etc. A bruised reed shall he not break, etc. The words are a Meiosis, more is understood then is expressed. He shall not bruise, the meaning is, he shall strengthen it, he shall not quench, the meaning is, he shall cause it to flame, and nourish it. By the bruised reed, and the smoking flax, we are to understand such sinners as are bruised, and bowed down under the sense of their great wretchedness; these sinners Christ will be ready to cherish. You have it set out by another Metaphor, Chapter 40. 11. He shall carry the lambs, and gently lead them that are with young. Who are the lambs, and such as with young, but broken-spirited Christians that are overwhelmed and pressed down with the apprehension of their own misery? Christ will be so fare from neglecting these that he will put them in his bosom, a place of warmth, tenderness and security. 3. Why Christ is so ready to heal such sinners. 1. He doth it in obedience to his Commission. God the Father, when he sent him into the world, gave him a very special charge concerning these persons. He was on purpose anointed to the place and office of a Physician, that he might take care of such as these. You may read his Commission set down at large, Esay 61. 1, 2, 3. There you have the Patients described, and the Physic applied, and the Authority enjoining and enabling. The Patients are described by such terms as set out the sensibleness of their condition. The meek, the , the captives, them that are bound, them that mourn in Zion, them that sit in ashes, them that are under the spirit of heaviness. The cure is set down in expressions suitable to the nature of these sicknesses. To the meek good tidings, to the broken hearted binding up, to the captives liberty, to them that are bound, the opening of the prison; to them that mourn, comfort, the oil of joy; to them that are in ashes, beauty; to the spirit of heaviness, the garment of praise. The Authority enjoining, this is the Divine unction of the Father by the Spirit. The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me, the Lord hath anointed me. So Esay 50. 4. Jesus Christ is a very exact observer of his Father's Commandment. He hath his 〈…〉 not only in his hand, but even in hi● 〈◊〉 Psalm. 40. 8. in the midst of his bowels. Now because God hath in so peculiar ● manner recommended these to his ●are, therefore doth he apply himself to them for their cure. 2. From the instigation of his own mercifulness. Jesus Christ is very tenderhearted, he is full of the bowels of compassion. The Apostle calls him a merciful and faithful High Priest, Heb. 2. 17. He could not be a complete High Priest, if he wanted either of these. Now being so merciful and compassionate, he will not turn away his bowels from them that are in so dejected a condition. This is rendered as the reason why he was so ready to heal the wounded traveller, Luke 10. 33, 34. When he saw him he had compassion on him, and bound up his wounds. Jesus Christ hath lost none of his tenderness by going into heaven. He is still touched with the sensible feeling of our infirmities, Heb. 4 15. this inclines him to this readiness. 3. That he may not lose the glory of that work which he hath begun. The humbling and convincing of proud sinners, is as truly the work of Christ as the restoring of humbled sinners. 'Tis his work to prick the heart as well as to comfort the heart. Now if he should humble and convince a sinner, and then leave him, and proceed no farther, he would lose the honour of what he hath done. The soul doth not hearty praise Christ for conviction, till conviction be carried on to conversion. The soul so long as it abides only under the pains of conviction apprehends no love, but only wrath and anger, and so long as the love of Christ is unseen, the glory of Christ is not proclaimed. Now Christ will not lose the glory of the first work, therefore is he so careful and ready to carry on the second work. The Uses of this Point. 1. Let this preserve all that are in such a condition from despair. Satan's great plot upon convinced and humbled sinners, is to drive them to despair. As he endeavours to heighten, and harden unbroken sinners to presumption, so his great design is to affright humbled sinners to despair. This Doctrine is a good preservative against such temptations; you that see sin and complain of your spiritual sicknesses, know this to your comfort that as Christ hath prepared you for healing, so he will be ready to heal you. Object. I have been a long time under these heart-pricking convictions, and yet cannot find any healing; my wounds are as wide and as deep as ever they were. I have lain many months, yea many years under the apprehensions of sin and wrath, and yet am not healed. How shall I believe this Doctrine? Sol. 1. Many sinners are healed, who do not apprehend themselves to be healed. Many wounded sinners will not believe themselves to be healed, unless they could find no scar or spot of sin upon them. They think they are not healed of sin, 〈◊〉 they are not quite delivered both from the being, and acting of sin. They even look to find as perfect healing on earth, as they shall have in Heaven. But we must know that a person may be healed, both of the guilt of sin by Justification, and of the dominion of sin by Sanctification, and yet still find many sores of sin upon, and new sores breaking out every day in him. Paul was healed, when he cried out, O miserable man that I am, who shall deliver me from the body of this death? Romans 7. 24. David was healed, and yet he cries out, My wounds stink and are corrupt through my foolishness, Psalm 38. 5. and again, verse 7. My loins are filled with a loathsome disease, and there is no soundness in my flesh. When the love of sin, the secret delight in sin, the allowance of sin, the commanding rule of sin are removed, though there continue many wounds and scars too upon the soul, the cure of sin is wrought, and that which is wanting shall perfectly be finished. 2. Many sinners keep themselves from being healed by their own default. They do keep terror and apprehensions of wrath upon their souls, because they will not close with the promises of the Gospel. Though the comforts of the Gospel be held out never so clearly, and with never so much perswadingnesse, yet they will have none of them. They are not humbled enough, as they think, they are not so prepared as they should be, therefore they will not come to Christ to close with him as with a Saviour, nor apply the promises of the Gospel, but reject them, and put them away as none of their portion. This is the case of abundance of sinners. Is it any wonder if such say, they are not healed? 'Tis because they will not be healed. They are not worthy of mercy, and therefore they will have none. They do not consider that all our worthiness stands in the sense of our own unworthiness. They do not consider that they do not come to bring fullness to Christ, but to draw out of Christ's fullness, John 1. 14. if such sinners would but lay aside this spiritual pride, and close with Christ, because they see they are unworthy of him, they should find that he would in a short time spiritually heal them. For he is willing to heal, and willing to do it speedily. Jesus Christ never did, never will put any sinne-lamenting sinner to any unnecessary trouble, to any unnecessary delay. 2. Let all the people of God, especially the Ministry of God be ready to follow Christ's example. When you see or know of any soul that is wounded with sin, apply what healing medicines you can, that they may be healed. 'Tis given in charge to the Ministers of God, both in the Old and in the New Testament, Esay 35. 3. and 1 Thes. 5. 14. As it is cruel mercy to prostitute the comforts of the Gospel to proud sinners, so is it great cruelty to withhold the cordials of the Gospel from such sinners as are burdened with their sins. Jesus Christ will take it very kindly at any man's hand, that will help forward the curing of a wounded sinner, he expects it at th● 〈…〉 his Ministers. As they must be 〈…〉 secure sleepy sinners, so they must be ●●●●basses to mourning sinners. A wounded spirit i● an insupportable burden, Prov. 18. 14. The more insupportable the burden is, the greater charity is it to be a means to support the spirit under it. 3. Let this be a Motive to all sick sinners to come to Christ. This is enough to persuade you to come to him, because there is none else can heal you. You must either come to him, or else you must die in your sins. But this is more, he is willing to heal you. There is a natural shyness in sinners, that see their sin to come to Christ. 'Tis hard to drive them. Cast away this sinfulness, slothfulness and come to him, cast yourselves at his feet, and say, Lord heal us. Object. 1. I have been a sinner of a very great magnitude. Sol. 1. Not greater than Christ hath cured. Not greater than he can cure, Esay 1. 18. Esay 55. 8, 9 2. Did ever Christ upbraid any with the greatness of their sins, that did see them and bewail them? 3. Make them not greater, by refusing the Physician which God hath sent from his bosom to cure you. Object. 2. I have continued long in them. 1. They are not of so long a continuance as some that Christ hath cured. 2. Make them not of longer continuance by staying still in them. Object. 3. I fear the time of healing is past. 1. While Christ calls, the time is not past. 2. 'Tis a sin for any man to think the time pas●. 3. He can heal thee at the last gasp. Adventure on sin; 'tis better to die coming to (were it so) then running from Christ. You have both his promise and his oath, that he will not cast you out. He that came to call sinners to repentance, will not reject repenting sinners. JOHN 8. 12. I am the light of the world. XII. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth. Lon. May 30. 1652. IN the former Chapter we read of the cruel severity of the chief Priests and Pharisees against V 32 our Saviour. He had by the excellency of his preaching gained much upon the affections of the people that resorted to hear him; very many believed on him, saith the Text, and said, When Christ cometh, V 31 will he do more miracles than these which this man hath done? The chief Priests and Pharisees hearing that such things were murmured among the people, presently send away Officers to apprehend his person, and bring him V 32 before the Council. The Officers instead of bringing Christ's person, were so taken with his preaching, that they return with a full testimony both of his Person and Doctrine. Never V 46 man spoke like this man. Whereupon the Pharisees are so enraged, that they presently denounce Execrations upon all that adhere to him. Nicodemus who was one of the Council stands up; and by a political Argument V 49 staves them off from any further proceed against Christ, till they had heard him speak. He doth not directly defend either the person or Doctrine of Christ, but ●y a prudent and sober Argument, labours that all further dispute about him might be laid aside, till according to the Law of God, they had heard him, and received full proof of his actions. This doth incense their envious hearts not only against Nicodemus, but even against his Country also. And thereupon V 52. by the wonderful power of God, the Assembly is broken up, not without some tumultuous confusion. And every man went to his V 53 own house. Our Saviour that night departs from Jerusalem, and lodgeth in the Mount of Olives, Chap. 8. 1. a place not fare from Jerusalem, whither he was wont oft to re●ort. He would not lodge in so bloody and ingrateful a City, nor did he ever lodge in Jerusalem again (as Chemnitius observes) till the night before his Passion. The inhabitants of Jerusalem, for fear of their Governors▪ dared not receive him into their houses, and Christ knowing their malice, would not trust himself amongst them; and therefore departs to the Mount of Olives, partly to refresh his body with necessary rest, and partly that he might have more liberty for meditation and prayer. The next day our Saviour comes early in the morning to the Temple, and there sits down, as his manner was, to teach the people. V 2 Though they sought to take away his life, yet he still endeavoured to save their souls, and therefore comes early to teach in the Temple. The Scribes and Pharisees understanding that he was teaching in the Temple, thinking to find an occasion V 3. 4. against him, brought to him a ●oman taken in the Act of adultery, and desire to know his judgement in the case, 〈…〉 the Law of Moses, she 〈…〉 or no. Our Saviour knowing 〈…〉 declines to be a Judge in the case▪ ●e came not into the world to be a political Judge, and therefore will not determine either one way or other. But though he will not be a Judge▪ yet V 6, 7 will he be a spiritual Physician, and therefore that he may convince them of their hypocrisy speaks thus. He that is without sin among you, V 7 let him cast the first stone at her. These words so work upon their consciences, that they depart one by one as men self-condemned▪ and leave Jesus alone, and the woman standing in V 9 the midst. Our Saviour after he had given some spiritual counsel to the woman, dismisseth her, and returns to preach again to the people, V 10, 11 from which work he had been hindered too long by this impertinent act of the envious Scribes and Pharisees. The first Doctrine he delivers to them is contained in the Text, I am the light of the world. Here are two words to be explained a little, Light, World. Light. This word is taken in Scripture two ways. 1. Properly. 2. Metaphorically, or improperly. First, Properly. For that noble quality which enlightens the world, called the light of this world, John 11. 9 Lux est claritas & splendour in corpore luminoso, vel extr●● corpore luminoso exiens, quae & lumen dicitur. This natural ●ight was the first perfect visible creature that God made. It was the first day's work, Gen. 1. 3. Secondly; Improperly, or metaphorically. And so it's put for several things, as they carry some resemblance to light, viz. 1. The word of God, Psal. 119. 105. 2 Pet. 1. 19 2. For the Ministers of God. Mat 5. 14. 3. For regenerate men, Eph. 5. 8. 4. For the state of conversion, Act. 26. 18. 5. For prosperity and comfort, Esth. 8. 16. Psal. 97. 11. 6. For deliverance from trouble, Esay 9 2. 7. For all outward good, Job 30. 26. 8. For the glory of heaven, Col. 1. 12. 9 For knowledge, Dan. 5. 11. Esay 60. 3. 10. For God's special favour, Psal. 4. 6. 11. For posterity, Prov. 20. 20. 1 Kings 11. 36. 12. For God himself, 1 Job. 1. 5. 13. For Christ; so 'tis used in the Text. In what respects we shall afterwards see. The World. The Greek word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, M●ndus; from that real and orderly digestion, and composition of things that are in the world. God hath made all things in number, weight, and measure. The world is an orderly beautiful piece. It's used here (some think) to take away the difference between Jews and Gentiles. Others think it's taken for the world of the Elect: But I rather think in this place, it's taken for all sorts of men to whom this light is offered. This benefit, saith Calvin, is not offered to one, or a few, but to all the world: though few receive it, yet the tender of it is made to all, according to that of our Saviour, Mark 16. 15. The words are a Proposition; In 〈…〉 1. The Subject. Jesus Christ. 2. The Predicate. The light of the world. 3. The Copulate, joining these together, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, All put together make this Observation. Doct. That Jesus Christ is the spiritual light of the world. Jesus Christ in three respects is the natural light of the world as he is God. 1. He created the light. The first light that ever shined in the world was his creature. The Sun, Moon and Stars, which are the vessels of natural light, are the works of his hands. He as well as the Father is that Jehovah, who at first said, Let there be light, and there was light, Gen. 1. 3. For all things were made by him, and without him was not made any thing that was made, John 1. 3. All the luminaries of heaven, which carry the light of nature abroad, are his creatures. 2. He preserves the light. The sin of mankind would extinguish those vessels of light▪ those lamps of the world, did not the Lord Jesus Christ by his Divine power and Providence keep them burning. When the Sun is set, and darkness spread upon the world, it would never rise again if Christ did not give it a Command. 3. He it is that created the eye of man, and endued it with power to set the light. It is he that (as God) form the eye of man, and gave it power to behold the light of the Sun. It is he also that by his providence opens the eye, when it is by sleep shut up in darkness. These windows of the body would be pitched up for ever, if Christ did not open them morning by morning. David's prayer, Psal. 13. 3. must be our daily prayer, Lighten mine eyes, lest I sleep the sleep of death. In all these respects, Christ according as he is God, is the natural light of the world. And as Mediator he is the spiritual light of the world. He was so when he was on earth and that both by his Doctrine, and by his example. And he is still the spiritual light of men. The Scripture doth often affirm this of Christ. See a few places, John 1. 9 that was (speaking of Christ) the true light which lighteth every man that cometh into the world, John 12. 35, 36, 46. What can be more express? The Prophets who Prophesied of him, spoke of him as a light, Esay 42. 6. I give thee for a Covenant of the people, for a light of the Gentiles. And Esay▪ 49. 6. I will give thee for a light to the Gentiles, that thou mayest be my salvation to the end of the earth. He is therefore compared to the daystar, Luke 1. 78. To the Sun, Mal. 4. 2. As all natural light is collected into the vessel of the Sun, and by it dispensed to the world, so all spiritual light is gathered together, and placed in Christ the Sun of righteousness, and by him communicated unto all those whom God hath given him. In the opening of this Doctrine, I shall handle three things. 1. Wherein the proportion between Christ and light stands. 2. How Christ doth dispense the light which is in him. 3. How Christ is differenced from all, ●ther lights. First, the resemblance between Christ and light stands in seven things. 1. Light hath a manifestative quality. It doth discover and cause to appear things that do in darkness lie unseen. Darkness is a thick veil and shadow under which things and persons are concealed, but light removes that shadow, and shows both itself and every other thing in its own nature. When you would see what a thing is, if you do not know it, you bring it forth to the light, and then it appears. Whatsoever doth make manifest, the same is light, Eph. 5. 13. Jesus Christ in this respect is well compared to light. He discovers and makes manifest to men that which they never saw before. How many rare mysteries hath Christ discovered to the sons of men? When he came into the world, he revealed those secrets that before were either not known, or not so fully known. The Apostle speaks of this, Eph. 3. 2. 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9 When Christ comes to a soul, what discoveries doth he make there? (1) That sin which lay hid for many years is now manifest; that pride, that unbelief, that covetousness which was not discovered before, is now made manifest. The very secrets of the heart are made known when this light begin; to shine, 1 Corinth. 14. 25. The soul wonders, that so much wickedness should be so long undiscerned. (2) That shining beauty which is in grace, which was not before discerned, is now made manifest. He sees godliness to be another kind of thing than he ever apprehended it to be. He sees a loveliness in every duty of God's worship, a loveliness in every act of holiness which he could have not believed, so that he is able to say with the blind man restored by Christ; This I know, that whereas I was blind, now I see. Christ hath the discovering quality of light. 2. Light hath a Directive virtue. It guides men in their way. The Traveller by the benefit of the light, sees what path to keep which way to turn to his intended journey. Our Saviour mentions this effect of light, John 11. 9, 10. Now Christ is fitly called a light in this regard. He it is that doth direct the sons of men in the way to life. And therefore he is called, not only the light by which we see, but the guide that leads us, Luke 1. 79. Yea, he is called not only the light and the guide, but the way in which we walk, John 14. 6. Jesus Christ is sent by his Father from heaven, to direct his Elect to heaven. He is the great Pilot of his Church, that doth steer it through the tempestuous seas of this world to the Haven of glory. 3. Light hath a Penetrating virtue. Light is of all creatures that are material, the most immaterial; it is of so subtle a nature, that it conveys itself into the least crevise. You can hardly make any fence so close, as wholly to keep out the light. Jesus Christ hath a penetrating and searching power. No heart so close, but his eye is in it; no conscience so dark, but he sees to the bottom of it. See what the Apostle saith of him, Heb. 4. 13. All things are naked and open to his eyes, and every creature is manifest in his sight. 4. Light hath a cheering and 〈…〉. The light contributes much 〈…〉, and growth, and life of 〈…〉 creatures. Light and motion are the c●me of that heat which the heavenly bodies send down upon the earth. Light is that instrument whereby all the influences of heaven are communicated and dispensed to the world. The motions of nature are both quickened and comforted by the light, and by it all the births of nature are cheered and comforted. Jesus Christ, hath a cheering, comforting and quickening virtue. 'Tis by influences from Christ spiritual life and comfort are obtained and preserved. The Prophet speaks of this virtue of Christ, under this very Metaphor of light, Mal. 4. 2. All that spiritual liveliness, and briskness that believers have at any time in their hearts, is from the beaming wings of Christ the Son of righteousness. He is a heart-chearing, a heart-warming, a heart-quickening Saviour. 5. Light hath a Purifying virtue. Fogs and Mists that are gathered in darkness, are dispersed and scattered when the light comes. When a candle is lighted and set up in a room, if there be any damps, they gather about it. Light is the fining pot of Nature. The world would be an unwholesome Pest-house if it had not light. Jesus Christ hath a purifying and cleansing virtue. By virtue from him it is, that those nasty filthinesses of sin which are in the soul, are purged away, Heb. 8. 14. All the Levitical, Ceremonial purifications used in the Law, were types of him. The Prophet compares him to a refiner, and purifier of silver, Mal. 3. 3. By his blood he purifies the soul from the guilt of sin. By his grace he cleanseth the soul from the filth of sin. The Prophet compares him to a fountain set open for purification, Ezek. 13. 1. All that ever were, all that ever shall be cleansed from the filthiness of sin, are cleansed by Jesus Christ. 6. Light is of an undefilable nature. Though it pass through sinks, and the most polluted places, yet it contracts no defilement. It cleanseth all things, but is defiled by nothing. It is a quality so spiritual, that nothing can fasten upon it to pollute it. Jesus Christ is fitly resembled to light in this respect. He is not capable of any defilement. He assumed sinful nature without the least sin. He had the likeness of sinful flesh, Rom 8. 3. but not the least sin in his flesh. In the days of his flesh he did as a spiritual Physician, repair to all sorts of sinners, but he carried away from them no pollution at all. He conversed with Mary Magdalen, with Zacheus the Publican, and other Publicans and sinners without the least taint of corruption. He was born, he lived and died in a corrupt generation, in a very Pest-house of sin, without the least tincture of sin. He lived and died holy, harmless, undefiled, and separated from sinners, as the Apostle saith, Heb. 7. 26. 7. The nature of the light is hard to be known. The Philosophers are much troubled about the defining and describing of it. 'Tis not a substantial form, because it is perceived by the sight, which no substantial form is. 'Tis not a body, because then when the light passeth through a perspicuous body, two bodies would be in one place, which is against 〈…〉 and reason. Nor is it an 〈◊〉 from a luminous body, for then the Son by his continual shining would be deprived of ●ig●t; but it is an accidental form, or a patible quality, and so very hard to be described. The Scripture speaks of the difficulty of searching out the nature of the light perfectly by any mortal man, Job 38. 19, 20, 21, 24. Only he who is the Father of lights doth perfectly understand it. Jesus Christ is not perfectly to be understood by any living man. Who can declare his generation, as he is the Son of God? Esay 53. 8. Who can declare his conception exactly, as he is the Son of man? the Holy Ghost hath overshadowed it, Luke 1. 35. He that created the flesh of Christ, is only able perfectly to understand the manner of it. Who is able to declare the mystery of the hypostatical union of the two natures in one person exactly? We believe these things, comprehend them perfectly we are not able. His Name is wonderful, Esay 9 6. there are such wonderful mysteries in the nature of this light, as no man, no creature can fully and perfectly comprehend. Secondly, Christ dispenses this light these two ways. 1. By the preaching of his Gospel in the public Ministry thereof. The Ministers are called Stars; and the Ministry or preaching of the Gospel, is that Orb in which this light shines, and by which it is communicated and dispensed to the world. We preach Christ crucified, 1 Cor. 1. 23. Where the Gospel hath never been preached, this light hath never yet shined. This is the chariot in which this glorious light is carried about ordinarily in the world, 2 Cor. 4. 3, 4, 5, 6. 2. By the virtuous efficacy of his Spirit in the Ministry. The most powerful preaching of Christ that can be, will be to no purpose without these inward workings of the Spirit. By the Spirit of Christ three things are done. (1) The blindness of the mind is removed. The holy Ghost causes the scales to fall off the eyes. (2) A visive faculty is bestowed. This is that which the Apostle calls the enlightening of the eyes of the understanding, Ephes. 1. 18. (3) Power is given actually to close with the light. The soul is enabled to follow the light, or to walk in the light as our Saviour's phrase is, John 12. 35. So that by these two means this light is communicated. By the preaching of the Gospel, the object is made present; and by the Spirit of Christ the object is made visible, the faculty of sight is bestowed, and a power of following the light is created. Thirdly, Christ is differenced from all other lights, viz. Prophets, Apostles who are called lights, Mat. 5. 14. He is differenced from all them five ways. 1. They are lights only Ministerially. They are lights only as they do by their office hold out this light. They are lights, as the candlestick may be called a light, because it carries the candle where the light is. But Christ is a light of and in himself; He is a light, not Ministerially, but Originally. The fountain of light. 2. They are small lights. Christ i● 〈…〉 light. They were but like little ●●thing 〈◊〉, Christ is as a great Torch which teacheth from heaven to earth. They are light as the Stars are light, a little glimmering, borrowed light. Christ is light as the Sun, and therefore he is called, The Son of righteousness, Mal. 4. 2. All the Prophets and Apostles were but Scintillulae lucis, little sparks of light, mere glow-worms, but Jesus Christ is an immense incomprehensible light, Esay 9 2. 3. They are lights that have some darkness in them. The clearest and brightest of the Prophets and Apostles were not without some darkness and obscurity. But Jesus Christ is light, and in him there is no darkness at all. Christ is a light that hath no snuff in him. He ever burns and shines brightly. 4. They were lights that could not give sight. They were not able to make men either see their light, or follow their light. They could not give eyes to the blind; but Jesus Christ is such a light as can give sight. He can open the blind eyes. He can overpower the soul to follow the light. 5. They were setting lights. They when they had run their course left shining, they were wasting, decaying lights. John Baptist was a burning and shining light, but now he is neither, as to this world, only his example and Doctrine shines still in the Scripture. But Jesus Christ is an everlasting light. He hath been shining ever since that promise made to Adam, Gen. 3. 15. and he shall be a light for ever and ever. He is the light of grace here, and he shall be the light of glory in heaven. The Uses are, Information. Exhortation. Consolation. 1. Information. In four particulars. First, Behold the necessity of Christ. He is as necessary for the soul, as light is for the body. Light is a very needful and pleasant thing. Jesus Christ is as necessary as he is pleasant. Secondly, The miserable condition of such as want an interest in Christ. Whether they be Nations or Persons, their condition is marvellous sad. They are indeed in a state of darkness. The Scripture affirms all to be in darkness that are without Christ, Eph. 5. 8. Ye were sometimes darkness, etc. Luke 1. 79. Esay 9 2. The people that sat in darkness have seen a great light. Where this daystar did never yet shine, 'tis yet midnight with that soul. A dark condition is a very miserable condition. The misery of it will appear in three particulars. (1) A dark condition is a condition of fear. Those that can be bold in the light, are usually surprised with fears in darkness. A black day is a terrible day, Job 3. 5. Let the blackness of the day terrify it. Those that are without Jesus Christ are subject to many terrors and fears, which the children of light are delivered from. The Scripture makes mention of horrible dread which the wicked are exposed unto. The name of Pashur may be given to every one that is without Christ, Magor Missabib, Jer. 20. 3. because they are liable to such shaking panic fears, Prov. 28. 1. The ●●cked 〈◊〉 when no man pursueth them. God threatens fears to the wicked as their portion, Leu. 26. 3●. I will send a faintness in their hearts, the sound of a shaken leaf shall chase them. Wicked men are sometimes without actual shake, they have some kind of Joy, Peace and Security. But [1] They are always liable to fears. They are under guilt, which lays the foundation of fear. [2] Their peace, when it seems to be most strong and settled, is presently upon the least spark of God's anger thrown into their consciences, turned into terror. We have an instance of it in Belshazzar, Dan. 5. 5, 6. The least manifestation of God's anger dashes all their joy, and creates great trembling in their spirits. The Prophet sets out this terror by an excellent Metaphor, Esay 5●. 20. The sea is sometimes so calm and smooth, that you may cast a dye upon the face of it, but one quarter of an hour's tempest puts it into a dreadful combustion. (2) A dark condition is a misguiding condition. 'Tis full of wander. When men want the light of this world, how do they misled others? how easily are they misled by others? He that walketh in darkness (saith our Saviour) knoweth not whither he goeth, John 12. 35. Those that are without Jesus Christ, are in a spiritual maze or labyrinth. They misled all that follow them, they are misled by every blind guide that goes before them. Men that are without Christ are great wanderers. You may easily carry them into the most dangerous ways. This is the true reason of all those sad handling, and deviations of men from the truth of God, and from the old ways of holiness which are at this very day. Though they pretend not only light, but a greater measure of light than others have attained unto; yet the truth is, they want this true light, this celestial light, and therefore are carried away after the shining of every ignis fatuus, that Satan casts in their way. They wander from verity to falsehood, from a seeming strictness to profaneness, from one corrupt principle to another, till they turn mere skeptics, mere Atheists, without all Religion. The Apostle calls them, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Judas 13. to whom, if they return not from their wander, is reserved the blackness of darkness for ever. (3) A dark condition is a condition unfit for action. We call darkness blind man's holiday, because in darkness a seeing man can work no more than a blind man. When that fearful darkness was over the land of Egypt, they did not stir from their seats for three days together, Exod. 10. 23. Man goeth forth to his work and labour until the evening, Psal. 104. 23. When the black shadow of the night hath drawn the curtain of nature over the world, then are instruments of working laid aside. Those that are without Jesus Christ are unfit for any spiritual work. They can neither pray, nor repent, nor believe, etc. Whatever work of this nature they take in hand, they spoil it utterly. They mar all the work of God for want of light, John 15. 5. The Apostle tells us that the natural man doth not understand the things of the Spirit, neither can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned, 〈…〉 to polish● a jewel a● 〈…〉, as man that i● 〈…〉 is able handsomely to perfect any 〈…〉 This is the second inference, the misery of men without Christ. (3) The excellency of Jesus Christ. Light is a very excellent and glorious creature. Truly light is pleasant, saith Solomon, and a joyful thing it is for the eyes to see the Sun, Eccl. 11. 7. Jesus Christ is an excellent and precious person. He is very pleasant and desirable to those that have eyes to behold him. He is all things spiritually to the soul which it wants, which it can desire; bread, drink, physic, life, raiment, light, all in all. The Scripture speaks much of his glory and brightness. No creature comparable to the light for glory. God is therefore said to be clothed with light as with a garment, Psalm 104. 2. Christ is unglorious to the eyes of blind men, so the Prophets foretold, Esay 53. 2, 3. But to them that have eyes to see him, he is a very glorious person. Jesus Christ hath a fourfold excellency above other lights. First, They are created lights. The Sun, Moon and Stars, the vessels of light are but creatures, Gen. 1. You read of the time and manner of their creation. But Christ is an uncreated light. The humanity indeed is a creature, but the Divinity which doth enlighten the humanity is not a creature. Athanasius calls him light of lights, very God of very God. He is the Father of Lights in regard of his Divinity. Secondly; They are lights that cannot give 〈◊〉. Bring men that are blind to the Sun, let it shine with his greatest splendour upon them, and they will not be recovered. The light of the Sun hath dazzled, and helped to put out many seeing eyes, it never restored to sight one blind eye. But Jesus Christ is a light that gives sight to the blind. He is an enlightening ●ight, he doth by his shining upon the soul, create in the soul a faculty of seeing, which it never had before, 2 Cor. 4. 6. When this light shines in the heart, the light of the knowledge of God is created. Hence the Apostle calls Christ a light that enlighteneth every man that cometh into the world, Joh. 1. 9 Thirdly, They are lights only to the body. The soul is not better for the light of the Sun. But Christ is a spiritual light▪ he is a light to the conscience, to the will, to the affections, to the whole inward man. Fourthly, They give light but in one place at once. The Sun shines but in one Hemisphere at once. 'Tis night with us, when 'tis day▪ with our Antipodes; and when the Sun shines there, it is darkness with us. But now Jesus Christ shines as a light in all places of the world, at one and the same time. He can cast his beams when he pleaseth all the world over. Christ shines in England and in America, at one and the same moment. And he hath told us of a time when he will give light to all the world. This is the third inference, Christ's excellency. (4) Behold from hence the excellency of the Gospel. Jesus Christ is the light of the world as he is held out in the Gospel. The Gospel is the Candlestick in which this Candle is set, the Gospel is the O●● in 〈…〉 There is no other sufficient and 〈…〉 discovery of Christ besides the Gospel. There are three lights which God hath ●●●●●ed to the Heathen. The light of Creation, Rom. 1. 19 20. The light of righteousness, which the Schools call Synter●sin. The light of a natural conscience, Rom. 2. 15. Now although these be true lights, yet they are not sufficient lights. They make a discovery of a Godhead unto men; Rom. 1. 19, 20. They discover so much to men▪ as to ●eave them without excuse, Rom. 1. 20. but they cannot discover a Saviour to man. They cannot discover a Mediator, God and man in one person. None of the wise Philosophers of the world▪ that had studied the mysteries of nature, and attained to very great experience in them, were able to find out reconciliation by Christ. No, no, the Gospel is the only ordinary way of this discovery John 5. 39 Search the Scriptures. They are they which testify of me, Rom. 1. 16. 17. I am not ashamed of the Gospel of Christ; For therein is the righteousness of God revealed from faith to faith, So 1 Cor. 1. 21. After that in the wisdom of God, the world by wisdom knew not God, It pleased God by the foolishness of preaching to save them that believe. Now than the Gospel being the only standing-way of discoverning Christ to men, it must needs be a very excellent thing. Hence it is that the Gospel is called a light as well as Christ, Psal. 119. 105. Thy Word is as a lamp unto my feet, etc. And 2 Pet. 1. 18, 19▪ We have a more sure word of prophecy, etc. Herein lies the great glory and dignity of the Gospel, that it is the only mediate fixed Candlestick, in and by which Jesus Christ the true light is discovered and made known. This is the first Use. Use 2. Exhortation. It commends sour things to us. 1. Bless God for this light. We have very great cause to bless God for though natural light, that he hath set up so glorious a Torch as the Sun is, to give light to the inhabitants of the earth. What cause have we then to bless God for this spiritual light, that this daystar from on high hath visited us? We might have wandered in darkness as the Heathen do, if this light had not in the glorious Gospel shined amongst us. Bless God every day for this light, especially you that have Christ not only a light to you, but a light in you. You that have this Sun risen, and shining in your hearts, in and by conversion, you have cause to bless God. Many shall be damned and perish that have Christ as a light to them, but they shall eternally be saved that have Christ the true light shining in them. How much cause had the Israelites in Goshen to bless God, that had light in their dwellings, Exod. 10. 23. when there was thick darkness in the land of Egypt? much more cause have you to bless his great Name, that the Lord Christ is a burning light set up in your hearts, when as abundance that live under the same light you do, are still in the darkness of an unconverted estate? Ye were sometimes darkness, but now are ye light in the Lord, Eph. 5. 8. This 〈…〉 loud, cordial, lasting, everlasting praises to God and Jesus Christ, that this light is made a saving light to you, when it is a damning light occasionally to very many. 2. When ever you see the light, remember Jesus Christ. When you open your eyes in the morning, and behold the light of the Sun, than thin● of Christ the true Sun of righteousness. When you see the necessity of light, when you see the benefit of light, then think of the necessity and benefit which men receive by Jesus Christ. He is far more useful than the natural light, in as much as he enlightens the soul. God would have us to spirituallize the whole Creation. There is hardly any creature which is of special and common use, but it doth or may serve as a ladder on which we may ascend into Heaven, and be brought nearer to God: bread, water, garments, the rain, the dew, the light, and a thousand other creatures do daily preach some spiritual Doctrine to us. It will be happy for us if we can take out spiritual lessons from earthly things. 3. Improve the light. In three things. (1.) Be not contented that Christ is a light to you, but labour that he may be a light within you. Get Christ into your hearts, into your consciences. 'Tis damnable to live in darkness, even when the light of the creatures shines, Rom. 1. 20. 'Tis double damnation to live in darkness, where Jesus Christ the true light shines. Arise, shine, for the light is come (saith the Prophet) to the Church, Esay 60. 1. If you be not enlightened savingly by this light, it had been better for you, you had never heard of it, that you had never seen it. Better you had never seen this pillar of fire, than not to be savingly enlightened by it. (2) Be sure to walk in the light. This is our Saviour's counsel, John 12. 35. What is it to walk in the light, but to translate the light into our life! To walk as children of the light, Ephesians 5. 8. To walk in the light of Christ's example; To walk according to the direction of Christ's Doctrine. To walk regularly, evenly, inoffensively, to have our conversation as becometh the Gospel, Philippians 1. 27. This is the way to honour the light; this is the way to communicate the light to others. He that walks as Christ walked, holds out this light to the world; a holy Conversation makes a Christian as a golden Candlestiks to hold ou● Christ to such as do not see him. (3) Acknowledge from whence all your light comes. That you have the light of knowledge, the light of saving grace, the l●ght of spiritual comfort, it is from Jesus Christ. He is the fountain of all true spiritual light. The light you have is a beam of this Sun; You had never enjoyed one spark of it, had not Christ freely communicated it. (4) Receive nothing as light, but what comes from Jesus Christ. That that thwarts Jesus Christ, is not light but darkness. That which comes not from Christ's Word, is not light, but darkness. Men ta●● of much light now adays. They 〈…〉 light, darkness light; Well, the 〈◊〉 way to judge of true light, is to bring it to Christ; and to bring it to Christ, is to bring it to the Scriptures. There it is that Christ shines, there it is that truth shines. A written Revelation from Scripture is more sure than an immediate Revelation from Heaven. So the Apostle tells us, 2 Peter 1. 18, 19 I must try all Revelations by Scripture. Now the touchstone is more sure than that whi●h is tried by it. There are some things which men cry up as lights, which quench Christ the true light, the doctrine of the Socinians, Arminians, Papists, etc. Use 3. Consolation. This may comfort the children of God in all their present darknesses. The Saints of God are in this life under many darknesses. They are under the darkness of sin, not under the power of it, Colossians 1. 13. Yet they have still some of this darkness in them. They are under the darkness of ignorance, for they know but in part. They are under the darkness of outward affliction, Micah 7. 8. They are under the darkness of spiritual discomfort sometimes, Esay 50. 10. Well, here is your comfort. Christ is light in all these respects. He is a full light. He is a communicative light. He is a light always present. Go to him in all these cases, depend upon him; put him in mind of this Name of his, and you shall find that he will turn your darkness into light. He will be a light to deliver you, to instruct, to comfort you, to quicken you. He hath received all the light he hath as Mediator, that he may communicate it to you. HEB. 13. 20. — Our Lord Jesus Christ that XIII. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth. Lon. Aug. 8. 1652. great shepherd of the sheep. THis verse is a part of the Epilogue, or conclusion of the whole Epistle. The conclusion gins at ver. 18. and it reacheth to the end of the Chapter. He had ver. 18, 19 entreated their remembrance of him: in this verse as an Argument to persuade them, he falls a praying for them. The thing he prays for on their behalf, is laid down ver. 21. Make you perfect, etc. The person to whom he prays, is God, whom he describes by that glorious title, The God of peace. The Arguments he hath to support his faith for the Audience of his prayer, are these three. First, the power of God; this he expresseth by one great act of his power, The resurrection of Christ from the dead. The second is, from Christ's office or relation to the Church for whom he prays, He is the great Shepherd of the sheep. He prays in his Name who was nearly related to the Church, therefore he did not doubt of audience. The third is the way whereby he expected his requells to be granted, The blood of the everlasting Covenant; he came to a God of peace by a Mediator through a Covenant of blood, therefore he did not fear the speeding and issuing of his requests. The words which I have read, have two things in them which shall be the parts of the Text. 1. A description of the people of God. They are sheep. 2. A description of Christ in relation to them. That great Shepherd. Sheep. This word is taken in Scripture either Properly or Metaphorically. Properly, for that kind of creatures which are known by this name. Improperly or Metaphorically, and so it hath a double signification. It's taken sometimes for harmless and innocent people. So it's used, 2 Sam. 24. 17. 2. For the Elect of God especially, such of them as are regenerated, and called, And so it's used in this Text. Shepherd. This word is likewise used in a Proper, and in a Metaphorical sense. In a proper sense, it's used for such as keep and feed flocks, whether they be flocks of sheep, or of other . In this sense Abel is called a shepherd, Gen. 4. 2. The sons of Jacob that kept , are called shepherds in this sense, because they dealt in sheep and other , Gen 46. 32, 34. In this sense Moses is called a shepherd, Exod. 3. 1. And David before his anointing to the office of a King, Psalm 78. 70, 71. In a Metaphorical sense, and so it's referred to other persons and emplouments, as they carry some resemblance to this office. As, 1. Magistrates are called shepherd● 〈…〉 hath this name given him of God, Esay. ●4. ●●. Thus Moses the Ruler of Israel is called 〈◊〉 shepherd of God's flock, Esay 63. 1●. 〈…〉 Agamemnon, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 'Tis an usual expression in Scripture to call Magistrates, Shepherds, Jer. 6. 3. The shepherds with their flocks shall come unto her. That is, foreign Princes with their soldiers prepared for War. So Micab 55. We shall raise against him seven shepherds, and eight principal men. 2. Ministers. Governors of the Church are called shepherds, Jer. 3. 15. I will give you pastors, or shepherds after mine own heart, Jer. 17. 16. I have not hastened from being a pastor, or shepherd from following thee, Esay 56. 11. speaking of the slothful Ministers, he saith, They are shepherds that cannot understand. And the usual notion whereby Ministers are set out in the New Testament is, Pastors and Teachers, Eph. 4. 11. There is a great affinity between the work of a Minister, and the work of a shepherd. 3. God himself is called a shepherd. David gives him that name, Psal. 23. 1. And again, Psal. 80. 1. He is called, the shepherd of Israel; because his care of Israel hath great resemblance to the care of a shepherd over his flock. 4. Jesus Christ is called a shepherd, as in many other places, so in this Text. 'Tis him of whom we are to understand this Text, Our Lord Jesus, that great Shepherd. He is called, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, to distinguish him from all other shepherds, who in comparison of him are very small and inconsiderable shepherds. Thus much for Explication. The Observations are two, according to the two Metaphors, viz. 1. The people of God are sheep. 2. Jesus Christ is the great Shepherd of these sheep. Doct. 1. The people of God are sheep. 'Tis a very usual Metaphor whereby godly persons are described in Scripture. Sometimes they are called God's sheep, Ezek. 34 6, 11, 12. Sometimes they are called Christ's sheep; so frequently, John 10. and john 21. 16. Feed my sheep, saith Christ to Peter. And sometimes they are called sheep without any mention of the owner of them. Take but two or three Texts for farther confirmation, Psal. 74. 1. Why doth thine anger smoke against the sheep of thy pasture, Psal. 79 13. So we thy flock, and sheep of thy pasture, Ps. 100 3. We are the sheep of his pasture. In the handling of this Point, I shall open two things. 1. In what respects they are compared to sheep. 2. How they come to be sheep. First, They are like sheep in five respects. 1. Sheep are very harmless and innocent creatures. Wolves, they tear, and hurt, and do mischief; but sheep are innocent and inoffensive creatures; they neither by't with their teeth, nor kick with the heel as other creatures do. Innocent and harmless persons are called sheep in Scripture, 2 Sam. 24. 17. These sheep what have they done? The people of God are fathomless and innocent generation, though the world looks upon them as turbulent, etc. The● know it is the Will of God that they be harmless and blameless, Phil. 2. 15. and they desire that they may so walk. They desire and endeavour that they may walk without offence, that no man may receive the least detriment, or prejudice by them, either in temporals or spirituals. You may see this in the Apostle Paul, Act. 24. 16. the same desire is in all the sheep of Christ; and if they do through mistake or inadvertency harm any, they are never at rest till they have made them reparation and satisfaction. 2. Sheep are meek and patiented Creatures. The sheep is an emblem of meekness. The sheep suffers the shearer to take his fleece, and the butcher his blood, without the least frowardness or resistance. The meekness of the lamb is grown into a Proverb. Quum fervet maximè, tam placidum quam ovem reddo. Terent. The people of God are a patiented and meek people. They are called in Scripture the meek of the earth, because they excel in this grace, Psal. 76. 9 Zeph. 2. 3. They can endure losses, bear afflictions, suffer persecutions for the Name of Christ without impatience. They do not render reviling for reviling, nor railing for railing. Yea, they repay sweet for bitter, blessing for cursing. When Shimei rails on David, Come out thou man of blood, etc. how meekly doth he bear it? Let him curse, for God hath bid him curse David, 2 Sam. 16. 10. When he was so unnaturally used by his Son Absalon, how sweetly doth he subject himself and kiss the rod! Psal. 39 9 A ch●●●e of God may sometimes fall into a sir of frowardness and impatience, as jonah did. Even meek Moses was once too much transported with passion, Numb. 20. 10, 11. but they are much grieved for such angry heats. The frame and bent of their hearts is towards the grace of meekness; and what the heart of a person would be, that God interprets it really to be. Wicked men are men of blustering and turbulent spirits, but God's people are of a calm placid temper. 3. Sheep are clean Creatures. Swine they use to wallow in filthy and miry places. But sheep desire and delight to preserve themselves clean, they love pure streams and green pastures. The people of God are a clean and holy generation. See how the Holy Ghost describes them, Psal. 73. 1. Our Saviour calls them the pure in heart, Mat. 5. 8. They study holiness, they pray for holiness, they allow no spot, yea they are hearty grieved when they do bemire themselves, and are never at rest till they be cleansed again. See the Prophet David, when he had fallen into the mire and defiled himself, how earnest he is with God for cleansing, Psal. 51. 2. and again, v. 7. and yet again, v. 10. Create in me a clean heart O God. He that hath the nature of a true sheep of Christ in him, though he may fall into sin, yet he cannot lie and wallow in uncleanness, as the wicked do. 4. Sheep are simple creatures. Some kind of bruit creatures are very cunning and crafty, as the Fox, the Ape, etc. but the sheep is of a simple nature. Ye use to call silly men sheepish men. The people of God are a simple people, no● only with●●● 〈…〉 without guile, Psal. 32. 2. That 〈…〉 of their Father jacob, Gen. 25. 2●. it is 〈…〉 all his posterity in their proportion, they are men. Though they have hypocrisy in them as they have other corruptions, yet they are not hypocrites. They know not, nor are they desirous to learn the art of dissimulation, equivocation. They cannot look one way, and row another; they love not to have oil in their mouths, and swords in their hear●s. They desire to be sincere, without mixture. They cannot carry fire in one hand, and water in the other. They are strangers, and they desire to be strangers for ever to those doublings, and fraudulencies, and subtle artifices which hypocrites use. They can pray, and do pray with David, Psal. 119. 8. Let my heart be sound in thy statutes, etc. Their tongue and heart go both one way; they desire that God would keep their hearts right, and they desire that their tongue may be the interpreter of their heart; they choose to act, not according to principles of carnal policy, but the rules of Gospel piety; they had rather be the meanest of Christ's Disciples, than the highest of M●chiavels Scholars. 5. Sheep are creatures of a tractable nature. They are easy to be led. A child may drive a flock of sheep with more ease, than many can a herd of other . The people of God are of a ductile, tractable nature. They are more easily guided then other men. Show them what the mind of God is, let them have the Rule clear, and then a little child may lead them. We have a Gospel prophecy of the l●●enesse which grace works upon the hearts of men, when it comes in power upon them, ●say 11. 6. Other men cannot be ruled by all the importunity that God and men use. Though precept ●e upon pre●ept, and line upon line, Esay 28. 10. yet they will be extravagant and lose; but godly men are of a ductile frame. They desire that God would lead them, and guide them in his way, and they are willing to be led. They will not resist truth, they will not stand out against convictions as other men do. They are pliable and yielding to all divine Revelations from the Word of God. No man shall lead them by his fancy or opinion without a Rule, though he be never so wise, or never so seemingly godly; but any man shall guide them, and turn any way, even an enemy, an inferior, if he can bring a sufficient Authority from God's Word. Show us the Father, and it sufficeth. Secondly, How they come to be sheep? They are not so by nature; for by nature they are Goats, Wolves, Tigers. They have not one property of a sheep in them by nature. They are as bad as the worst by nature, Eph. 2. 2. How then a●e they sheep? 'Tis by Grace and Regeneration. Jesus Christ the Lamb of God communicates his nature to them by his Spirit, and so of Goats makes them Sheep. He infuseth into them a new nature, and so makes them sheep. 1. God chooseth them for his sheep. 2. Christ purchaseth them. 3. Having chosen them from eternity, and purchased them, he doth in time by his Spirit change their natures, bring them into his fold, and puts all the good properties of sheep into them; whereas, they we●● 〈…〉 makes them harmless; 〈…〉 froward, he makes them patient 〈…〉 were filthy, he makes them cle●●e 〈…〉 they were hypocritical, he makes them p●●●-hearted; and whereas they were before un●●ly, he now makes them tractable. The Uses of this Point. 1. The great difference between converted and unconverted. The one are Flowers, the other are Weeds; the one Light, the other Darkness; the one Wheat, the other Tares; the one Goats, the other Sheep. Grace puts a great difference between man and man, Prov. 12. 26. 2. Let all of us labour that we may be sheep. Beg of Christ that he would remove the wolvishnesse of thy nature, and make thee a sheep. At the day of judgement all men would be glad to be placed among the sheep, Matth. 25. 32, 33. 3. Let all the people of God carry themselves as sheep. Study those things which I named before, be sure they be found in you, otherwise you cannot have any hopes that you are sheep. And to those let me add two or three duties more, which are found in all the sheep of God and Christ, viz. (1) Labour to be profitable. Sheep are very profitable creatures Their flesh is for food, their fleece is for clothing, their milk is for nourishing; their very excrements are profitable, the Husbandman finds benefit even by them. A believer should be a profitable creature. It's said of Onesimus, that after he was 〈◊〉, he became a profitable branch, 〈◊〉 11. Christian's should endeavour to be profitable every way as sheep are. You should ●eed others by your knowledge, you should nourish others by your comforts, you should refresh others by your graces. All your speeches, all your actions should some way or other tend to the benefit of your brethren. An unprofitable sheep is a contradiction. 'Tis a glorious thing to profit others. 'Tis one end of all that good which God hath bestowed upon you. The manifestation of the Spirit is given to every man to profit withal, As the Apostle saith, 1 Cor. 12. ●. (2.) Labour to be fruitful. Sheep are a very fruitful creature, they do much enrich him that keeps them, they often bring forth twins, Cant. 4. 2. Believers should be fruitful; Rich in good works, 1 Tim 6. 18. Filled with the fruits of righteousness, Phil. ●. 11. A Christian should be like th●se sheep, which are mentioned Cant. 4 2. Christ feeds his sheep in large pastures, and in fa● pastures, therefore they should bring forth good fruit, and much fruit. (3) Labour to be sociable one with another. No creature's are of a more sociable nature than sheep; they feed together, and ●old together, and live quietly together. The sheep is a rare emblem of unity. Believers should in this be like sheep, they should maintain love and unity amongst themselves. This grace, love, and unity and oneness of mind is much pressed in Scripture, Eph. 4. init. Phil. 2. init. Biting and devouring one another, is not to be like the sheep, but rather like the wolf. The greater noise the devouring creatures make, the closer do sheep keep together. 1. O that Christians would be 〈…〉 this property. Fearful things are 〈…〉 them that make divisions in the Church of 〈◊〉. Vid. Rom. 16. 17, 18. 2. How great is the advantage which Gods people will get, by uniting amongst themselves! First, unity is their strength. Fellow-Travellers, while they keep together, strengthen one another against invaders; if they divide, they are easily destroyed. Secondly, unity is their glory, Psal. 133. 1. Pearls are called uniones (some say) because they are seldom found two together; others say to denote the preciousness of union. Unity amongst God's people is the best pearl they can wear, Cant 4. 9 Thirdly, unity makes way for the communication of gifts, Eph. 4. 15, 16. Fourthly, remember the communion of Saints, 1 John 1. ●. Fifthly, remember how often Christ prayed for it, John 17. 21, 22, 23. 'Tis his great honour; only we must know that all our union must be in the truth, union in the Lord; otherwise it is not the union of sheep, but the union of robbers, Prov. 1. 10, 11, 12, 13, 14. Doct. 2. The Lord Jesus Christ is the great Shepherd of these sheep. In many places of Scripture the name and office of a Shepherd is attributed to Christ. Consider these that follow, Esay 40. 11. He shall feed his flock as a Shepherd. 'Tis a prophecy of Christ, as the context shows, Ezek. 3●. 23. God promiseth Christ under this 〈◊〉 I will set up one Shepherd over them, and ●● shall ●eed them; even my servant David; And again, Ezek. 37. 24. David my servant shall be King over them, and they all shall have one Shepherd, Zech. 13. 7. Awake O sword against my Shepherd, etc. Smite the Shepherd, and the sheep shall be scattered; 'Tis applied to Christ, Mat. 26. 31. Our Saviour himself doth give himself this name. John 10. 11, 14, 16. I am the good Shepherd, etc. The Apostle Peter calls him so, 1 Pet. 2. 25. The Shepherd and Bishop of our souls, and Chap. 5. 4 He calls him, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The chief Shepherd: when the chief Shepherd shall appear, ye shall receive a Crown of glory that fadeth not away. Two things I shall open by way of Explication. 1. The parallel between Christ and a shepherd. 2. Why Christ is called That great Shepherd. First, the parallel between Christ and a shepherd, stands in these five particulars, viz 1. A shepherd ●●ed this stock. 'Tis his work to provide both pasture and water for his sheep. Pastor ● Pasc●nd●, Ezek. 34. 2. Should not the shepherds feed the flocks? A good shepherd will take care that his flock may have both grass and water. When they have eat one place bare, he drives them to another; when one fountain is dry, he leads them to another; he had rather want bread himself then that his sheep should want provision. He feeds them with his own flesh and blood, John 6 5. Jesus Christ provides sufficient food and nourishment for his sheep. Three things 〈…〉 (1) He hath provided Ordinance 〈…〉 very Ordinance is a spiritual 〈…〉 fountain for the feeding of Chris● 〈…〉 Psalmist speaks of this, Psal. 23. 2. He 〈…〉 to lie down in green pastures; he leadeth me beside the still waters. What are those pastures of tender grass? What are those waters of quietness, but the Ordinances of the Gospel, the fields where Christ's sheep feed, the rivers where they drink? The variety of the Ordinances shows the variety of ●eeding, the richness and fullness of the Ordinances, shows the plentifulness of Christ's feeding: here are many pastures, and every pasture so rich, that it can never be eaten bare; here are many streams, and every stream so deep and broad, that it can never be drawn dry: the sheep have been eating in these pastures ever since Christ had a Church on earth, and yet they are as full of grass as ever. The sheep have been drinking at these streams ever since Adam, and yet they are brim full to this very day; & they will so continue, till the sheep be above the use of them in heaven. (2) He hath provided shepherd● to dispense these Ordinances. The sheep can neither feed themselves, nor water themselves, unless they have some to help them. The Ministers of the Gospel do by virtue of their office, open these pastures, and lead the sheep into them; they roll away the stone from the mouth of these Wells, and draw water for them, that they may drink and be satisfied. The Apostle tells us, that Pastors and Teachers are given of Christ, for the edification of his Church, Eph. 4. 11, 12. This was the work of the prophets in their 〈…〉 Apostles and Evangelists in their generation, and of Pastors and Teachers, the present Ministers of the Church; yea, we shall find how severely Christ bathe charged them, under the pain of his highest displeasure, to be diligent in feeding the flock. See 2 Tim. 4. 1, 2. and he ●ath alured them by the most glorious promises, that they should be careful in this work, See 1 Pet. 5. 2, 4. and John 21. 15, 16. And he furnisheth them with gifts and abilities for this very purpose. Vid. Luke 12. 42. (3) He doth by his Spirit bless the feeding which he hath provided. He hath promised to be present with the sheep and shepherds, when ever they come to feed in these pastures, and drink at these waters; he hath promised (I say) to be present to bless their fo●d and water for the good or their souls. He promised it, Mat. 28. ult. and he doth to this day make it good, he doth walk, and he will walk in the midst of the Golden Candle sticks, to bless the seeding of the sheep to the end of the world. He hath purchased the Holy Ghost to be bestowed both on the sheep and shepherds for this very purpose. 2 A Shepherd knows 〈◊〉. He knows the number of his sheep▪ and he knows them particularly 〈…〉 sheep. Those phrases which are 〈…〉 concerning the sheep's p●ssing 〈…〉 rod, ● ev. 27. 32. and of passing under the 〈◊〉 of him that tel●eth them, Jer. 33. 13. show ●●e knowledge that good Shepherds have of their flocks: they know one of their own sheep, though it be in the midst of a strange flock; Jesus Christ knows his sheep exactly. He knows his people, qu●t sint, & quinam sint, both the 〈…〉 ticular persons, John 10. 11. 〈…〉 dungeons, prisons, though the 〈…〉 off, and the skin torn by persecution, yet 〈◊〉 they are within the knowledge of Christ. Consider four things. First, He knows them as they are given to him by the Father in his eternal Election. God the Father hath given all the Elect unto Christ from eternity, john 17. 6. By virtue of this donation doth Christ know them. He hath taken them by number from the Father, and he is to surrender them by number to him again. Their names are all written from eternity in the Lamb's book of life, Rev. 21. 27. while this book continues, they cannot wear out of the knowledge of Christ. Secondly, He knows them, as he sees in them his own image. Every sheep of Christ doth partake by grace of the image of Christ. There is a conformity of likeness between him and them. His Father's Name is written upon their foreheads, Rev. 14. 1. What is this Name of God but that Divine nature, which is from Christ communicated to every sheep of the fold? So long as this Name abides on their foreheads (and it shall abide for ever,) they cannot wear out of the knowledge of Christ. Thirdly, He knows them as he sees the sprinklings of his own blood upon them. Every sheep of Christ is washed white in the Lamb's blood, Rev. 7. 14. They are clothed with his righteousness for the justification of their persons. They have his merits in which they are invested. Now so long as this garment remains 〈…〉, and it can never be worn off, or ●●ollen off; Jesus Christ must needs know them. Fourthly, He knows them, as he remembers the service they have done fox him in the world. Every sheep of Christ that hath attained unto years of discretion, hath with care served Christ in its generation. They have often prayed to him, they have often worshipped him, they have to their very uttermost laid out themselves for his glory in the world, etc. Jesus Christ hath recorded and set down all their good actions; and as long as he remembers their works, he cannot forget or be ignorant of their persons. This we may gather from that which stands on record, Mat. 25. 34, ●5, etc. They have fed him in his hungry members, they have clothed him in his naked members etc. Christ will never forget these holy actions; therefore he can never forget the persons of them, by whom they were performed. They have both done for him, and suffered for him, therefore he knows them, and will know them 3. A Shepherd preserves his st●ck. 'Tis the work of ● Shepherd to defend his sheep. David bazarded his own li●e, to de●end his sheep from the invading ●●on, and ●●venous bear, 1. Sam. 17. 34. Shepherds watch their flocks by night as well as by day, to preserve th●m from the devouring creatures. So did Jacob, Gen. 31. 40. So did those Shepherds to whom the birth of Christ was first preached, Luke 2. 8. Jesus Christ is the desender of his sheep; he preserves them carefully from them that would devour them. The Devil hath been waylay them, and attempting upon them ever since the fall of Adam; and yet the eye o● 〈…〉 was so diligent and watchful, 〈…〉 ●ver able to get the least lamb o● 〈…〉 shall he ever be able to gain one o● 〈…〉 they be all folded up in heaven. The sheep of Christ are all sealed in their foreheads; so we read, Rev. 7. 3, 4. Why are they sealed? First, they are sealed for distinction. Secondly, they are sealed for secrecy. Thirdly, they are sealed for security. Neither men nor devils can break open this seal. This similitude is used, Cant. 4. 12. A garden enclosed, a spring shut up, a fountain sealed; under all those expressions is set out the fence which Christ makes about his sheep for their preservation. Though Christ sometime suffer their bodies to be torn and devoured by men, and though he suffer their souls to be assaulted, yet he will not suffer their souls to be destroyed. He did once lay down his life for them, John 10. 11, 15. and having died for them, he will preserve them. There is a six-fold defence which Christ sets upon every sheep for his preservation from Satan. (1) His death. The grave of Christ is a fold, in which the sheep sleep safely; his Sepulchre is a hedge about the Church, I mean the virtue and merit of his death. Jesus Christ by his death hath overcome the Devil and all his Host, Col. 2. 15. he hath taken him captive, and delivered the sheep out of his hands. Now so long as the death of Christ is in force, (and in force it shall be for ever and ever) the sheep shall be defended. The sea of Christ's blood doth encompass every sheep of the fold; and Satan must either wade through, or dry up 〈…〉 before he can annoy the sheep, as 〈…〉 eternal salvation. Roar and rage he may, mine or tear in pieces he cannot; the bottomless sea of Christ's blood flows continually about them. (2) His intercession. The Scripture makes mention of the Advocateship of Christ for his people, Heb. 7. 25. He lives for ever to make intercession; therefore he is able to save, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. This Advocateship of Christ hath three properties. First, it is full. Secondly, 'tis constant. Thirdly, 'tis effectual. This intercession is the s●eeps safeguard. Christ must ●e outed from the work of mediation, before any of his sheep can be eternally hurt; and outed he cannot be, for his Priesthood is an everlasting Priesthood, Ps. 110. 4. Thou art a Priest for ever, etc. (3) The presence of Christ. We learn from Scripture that Jesus Christ is ever present with his sheep; he is not one moment absent from the fold; ●e by his spiritual presence lodgeth with them every night, and walks with them all the day. Of this presence of Christ the Holy Ghost speak●, Rev. 14. 1. He stands on the Mount Zion, he stands not in a running posture, but in a watching posture. The devil must drive Christ from his standing, before he can snatch away any of the sheep, for he stands there as a guard to them. (4) The mystical union between him and the sheep. The Scripture makes mention of this union, John 17. 23. I in them, and Thou in me. Every sheep grows in the Shepherd's side, as a member of his body. Now this union is an indissoluble union. As the natural union between the Son and the Father can 〈…〉, so neither can the 〈…〉 Christ and the sheep. 〈…〉 and mighty hedge about the sheep▪ 〈…〉 must drag Christ to hell, before he can 〈…〉 any of the sheep thither; for they are bone of his bone, and flesh of his flesh. (5) The promise of Christ. Jesus Christ hath engaged his Word, and this engagement is recorded in the Scriptures, that the gates of Hell shall not prevail against the Church, Ma●. 16. 18. This promise is not a rash, indiscreet; but a deliberate, sober, advised promise. 'Tis not the promise of a fraudulent person; but of a faithful Saviour: for he is the Amen, the faithful and true witness, Rev. 3. 14. This promise is the Church's safety. Satan must disannul this, before he can devour the sheep; and disannulled it cannot be, for his Word endureth for ever in heaven. (6) His recommending of them to his Father. Jesus Christ a little before his death, made his last Will and Testament. In this Testament amongst other things he did solemnly comm●nd the tuition of his sheep to his Father's care, entreating him by all the dearness between them, that he would preserve them from the devil, and all his evil designs against them. This is set down fully, John 17. 11. 15. he had received them from the Father upon his recommendation, v. 9 and he had kept them safe while he was with them; now he entreats the Father, that as he had kept them upon his recommendation, so he would now likewise for his sake undertake the tuition of them, v. 12. While I was in the world, I kept them, etc. So long as Christ's Testament is in force, so long as God 〈…〉 of Christ's bequeathment; and accept of i● he will, for ever the sheep shall be safe. 4. A Shepherd gathers his sheep when they are s●attered. When either by dogs, or storms, or by their own voluntary wand'ring they have been dispersed; the Shepherd's work is to gather them again, Ezek 34. 12. Jesus Christ is a good Shepherd in this respect; the sheep are wanton, they wander and stray: Christ reduceth them, brings them to the fold. How often doth every sheep wander? so often as they wander. doth Christ reduce them. You know the parable, Luke 15. 4, 5, 6 etc. And he will never leave, till he have gathered them into heaven, where they shall scatter no more. He gathers them from their first dispersion in unregeneracy, when they wander upon the mounts of profaneness and unbelief, etc. When they are scattered by persecution, temptation, etc. he still gathers them. He gathered them when they were scattered in Babylon; in the dispersion in the Apostles days, of which you read, Acts 8. He hath Gentile sheep scattered, Jewish sheep dispersed; both these will he gather: the Gentiles, John 10. 16. the Jews, 2 Chr. 16. 6, 7, 8, 9 One end of the Ministry is to gather the scattered sheep, who were never converted. One end of the Ministry and discipline, is to gather them that wander, after conversion. See the office of Christ to this purpose, Eph 1. 10. He is the Centre in which all things meet. All are to be gathered together by him, to him and in him; his meaning is, all the Elect are gathered to a head, as the word signifies, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, in Christ who is the Head of the body; and at the● day 〈…〉 he will gather them all 〈…〉 that they shall be free from 〈…〉 Mat. 25. 31, 32, 33, etc. 5. Shepherds are to heal their sheep, Ezek. 34. 4. Christ is a healer. First, by his promises; they are oil. Secondly, By his threaten. Thirdly, by Church-censures, Christ's physic; that's wine, Luke 10. 34. Secondly, Why Christ is called That great Shepherd? This I told you, was a discriminating note to put a difference between him and all other shepherds; both those that went before him, and those that should succeed him to the end of the world. There is a vast difference between Christ and other shepherds. It stands in the eight following particulars. 1. In regard of the dignity of his person above others. All other shepherds were only men, Prophets, Apostles, Evangelists, Pastors and Teachers; the best of them were but men. Though many of them had gifts and abilities extraordinary, yet they were but men; but this Shepherd is both God and Man. He is the Son of God, as well as the Son of Adam. Never was there any shepherd in the Church before him; never shall any arise after him, of whom it can be said, this Shepherd is equal with God. This is said of Christ by the Father himself, Zech. 13. 7. Awake O sword, against the man that is my fellow, saith the Lord of Hosts, smite the shepherd. No shepherd beside this, had the honour to be by oneness and identity of nature, the fellow and companion of God. 〈…〉 the great Shepherd, in regard of the gr●at 〈◊〉 ●e hath. Other shepherds, although they had many of them singular abilities, both for feeding and ruling; yet in respect of the abilities of Christ, they were but small. Other shepherds, though they were richly furnished, yet they had not any of them all kinds of gifts. God scattered his gifts and graces amongst them, in some of one sort, in others of another sort, to maintain unity amongst them. See what the Apostle saith to this purpose, 1 Cor. 12. 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10. Some of them did excel chief in one thing, some in another; and then none of them had any other than a stinted and measured portion either of gifts or grace; so the Apostle tells us, Rom. 12. 3, 4, 6. those that had the miraculous gift of healing could not heal that way when they pleased; Trophimus have I left at Milesum sick, 2 Tim. 4. 20. Paul would not have left him sick, if he could have cured him miraculously. But now this great Shepherd ●ath ●ll kind's of abilities; he is as good at one part of the Pastoral work as at another; the gifts which were scattered amongst the other shepherds, do all meet in this Shepherd: he is as good at feeding as at ruling, and as good at ruling as at feeding. To one shepherd is given the Word of wisdom, to another the word of knowledge, etc. 1 Cor. 1●. ●. but now all these are equally given to Christ: he is as exact in the word of wisdom, as in the word of knowledge: he can perform equally, exactly the work of the Pastor, and of the Teacher. And then as he hath all kind of abilities, so he hath an unlimited fullness of all, for John 3 34. God giveth not the Spirit by measure unto him. He hath not only the fullness 〈…〉 but of the fountain; the fullness 〈…〉 head dwelling bodily in him. And then 〈…〉 all the abilities of other shepherds are 〈◊〉 themselves, but from him; but the abilities of Christ are from himself. The Divinity hath filled the humanity with all those gifts which it hath received for the work of a Mediator. 3. He is the great Shepherd in regard of his propriety in the sheep. Jesus Christ is not only the Shepherd of the sheep, but the owner of the sheep also. He often calls them his sheep, Joh. 10. He is the possessor of the sheep, as well as the feeder of the sheep. Other Shepherds are only shepherds, not proprietors. They are forbidden to carry themselves as Lords over the sheep, ● Pet. 5. 3. The sheep are said to be theirs only in a Ministerial way, as the care and charge of them is committed to them; but they are Christ's in an hereditary way: the Father hath given them to him, John 17. 6. He hath by his own blood purchased them, Acts 28. 20. and they have voluntarily dedicated themselves to him for a possession; they have by the Baptism dedicated themselves to Christ. Other shepherds are only servants, but Christ is the Lord of the flock. This is that which the Apostle mentions, as the difference between Christ and Moses, Heb. 3. 5, 6. Moses was faithful in all his house as a servant, but Christ as a Son over his own house. 'Tis the horrible pride of that man of sin, that he dares to call himself the head of the Church, because this title is only proper to Christ. 4. Other shepherds are sheep as well as shepherds. 〈◊〉, Apostles, Evangelists, and all the 〈◊〉 which succeed them, are sheep as well as, shepherd's. They are shepherds Ministerially in regard of the Church; but they are sheep Really in regard of Christ. They have as much need of feeding, watering, and governing as any of the sheep have; by the same Ordinances by which they feed others, are they themselves fed; by their preaching and praying, they instruct, encourage, and comfort themselves as well as others. But now Jesus Christ is only a shepherd; he feeds others, but hath no need of being fed himself. He teacheth others, but he himself hath no need of being taught. Preaching, Prayer, Sacraments, all other Ordinances, are as useful for other shepherds, as they are for the sheep; but they are not at all useful or necessary to Christ. When he was on earth, he made use of them, to show his obedience to the Law, to teach others their duty, to sanctify them to others that should make use of them; he wanted them not then. He stood in need of nothing for which the Ordinances were appointed; much less doth he stand in need of them now: but all other shepherds did stand in as absolute need of the Ordinances as the sheep did. 5. Christ is the great Shepherd in regard of his Dominion over all other shepherds. He is as truly the Lord of the shepherds, as of the sheep. He is the Master of all the Shepherds which ever were in the Church, or which shall be in the Church, to the end of the world, Eccles. 12. 11. (1) They received their Authority from him, He made them shepherds of the flock, Eph. ●. 11. He hath set them over his 〈…〉 ●●vested them with all the power they hav● 〈◊〉 that do not come into Pastoral office; and authority by him, they are not shepherds, but thiefs, John 10. 1, 2. (2) They are to act, and administer all they do as shepherds, in his Name, and in his Name only. All acts of feeding, all acts of ruling are to be done in the Name of the Lord Jesus. When Paul excommunicated the incestuous person, he did it in this Name, 1 Corinth. 5. 4, 5. In the Name of our Lord Jesus, (saith he) and by the power of our Lord Jesus deliver such a one unto Satan. All Church acts of Government are to be done by the Shepherds of the Church in Christ's Name, and by power derived from Christ. And then (3) They are to be accountable to him for all their misdoings. He will judge them for all their miscarriages, either towards one another, or towards the flock. 6. Christ is the great Shepherd in regard of the success he can give to what he doth. Other shepherds may lead the sheep to the pastures, or drive them to the waters, but they cannot make either successful to the sheep. They cannot give digestion, concoction, growth, 1 Cor. 3. 7. But now this great Shepherd is able to do all this: he can give the sheep an appetite to eat and drink, and he can by his blessing, make their eating and drinking successful. He can make the sheep strong, and lusty, and vigorous. He can exercise discipline, and give them an heart to submit to it, and to be bettered by it: He can lay a plaster to their wounds, and when he hath done so, can say, the wound shall be healed. He can call them from their wander, and speak so effectually, that they shall return and wander no more. 7. He is the great Shepherd in regard of the great jurisdiction he hath over the sheep. All other shepherds that ever were or shall be, have but a limited power, they cannot do what they will; they cannot make any rules for the ordering of the flock; nor can they teach any doctrines to the flock, but what Christ hath taught, 1 Cor. 11. 23. But now Jesus Christ the great Shepherd hath a boundless, illimited Authority. He can do what he pleases with the sheep; he can, he hath made what Laws pleased himself for the ordering of the sheep. He can cut, lance, wound, put them into fat pastures, into barren pastures, as he pleases. His Dominion is absolute over them. 8. He is the great Shepherd in regard of the latitude and extent of his jurisdiction. Other shepherds are shepherds over particular flocks; but Christ is the universal Shepherd, the whole Catholic Church is his flock; he is the universal Shepherd of the Church. That which the Pope falsely and treasonably challengeth to himself to be the Universal Bishop▪ is most truly affirmed of Christ. The Apostles were shepherds to the universal Church where they came, but it was only to the Church that was in their generation, but Jesus Christ hath been, and still is th● Universal Shepherd in all generations. He was t●e Shepherd of the Church in the Prophet's time, he was the Shepherd in the Apostles days, and he will be Shepherd to the e●d of the world. This the Psalmist foretells by way of Prophecy, Psal. 72. 8. His dominion shall be from sea to sea, and from the 〈…〉 of the earth. Ever since the Church wa● C●rist was Shepherd; and while God hath 〈…〉 in the world, Jesus Christ will continue to be the great Shepherd thereof, Eccles. 12. 11. The Uses concern both the inferior shepherds, and the whole flock of sheep. First, Concerning the shepherds. Here are five duties. 1. This may teach them to act for Christ. It becomes all the Ministers whom Christ hath made shepherds, to consider that Christ is the great Shepherd. They are but ministerial, inferior, subordinate shepherd's; therefore whatever their parts be, whatever interest they have in the hearts of the sheep, they are still to remember that Christ is the great Shepherd, and that it is their duty to lay out all their abilities and interest, in gathering together the sheep unto Christ. This is the character of a true shepherd, in all his actings to serve the great Shepherd who●e servant he is. John Baptist is an eminent pattern for this; he did not serve himself but Christ, and therefore was contented to be diminished, to be nothing, so that Christ the great Shepherd might be exalted. See that famous Text, John 3. 26, 27, 28, 29, 30. He humbles himself to the dust, that by his falling Christ might rise. 2. This may tea●h them, not to Lord it over the sheep. Ministers though they be shepherds in respect of the sheep, yet they are but sheep in respect of Christ. This Caution the Apostle gives them upon this very account, in 1 Pet. 5. init. The great Shepherd may do what he will, but the inferior shepherd must not do what he will, but what Christ will, 2 Cor. 4. 5. 3. This may encourage them in hoping for reward from Christ. The great Shepherd doth take an account of the diligence and faithfulness of inferior shepherds: and if they be faithful in their work; whatever their success be, the great Shepherd will abundantly reward them. He that hath called himself the great Shepherd, knows what belongs to the work of a shepherd, and therefore he will consider him according to his work. This the Apostle tells the shepherds, 1 Pet. 5. 1, 2, 3▪ 4. 4. This should teach them to go to this great shepherd, both for Pastoral Abilities and for success. As they should learn to carry themselves in the managing of their Pastoral work by Christ's example the great Shepherd, to be diligent, painful, watchful, affectionate as he was; so they should, when they want strength, wisdom, encouragement, go to him. The great Shepherd who hath set them on work, will both strengthen them in the work, and bless them with success, though not so much as they desire, yet with so much as shall make them cheerfully go on with their work. 5. To learn of Christ, meekness, patience, painfulness, faithfulness, forbearance, love to some, bearing with infirmities. Zeal to preach with authority, impartiality, courage, self-disregarding. Secondly, concerning the sheep. Here is both Instruction and Consolation. I. Instruction; they may learn three lessons from hence. 1. Be ruled and governed by Christ. It 〈…〉 shepherd's work to govern as well as to 〈◊〉, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies both to feed and to rule. The sheep is to follow the shepherd; Those that are Christ's sheep in truth, do follow him, John 10. 4. They follow him without disputing, they follow him without murmuring, they follow him universally. It doth not become a sheep of Christ to refuse the Shepherd's conduct. The Shepherd is wiser than the sheep; they will err if they follow their own counsel, they cannot wander if they follow Christ. The sheep are safe while they follow Christ, he never led any of his sheep into dangerous places. When you hear the voice of the great Shepherd, be sure to yield obedience. We are to obey the voice of subordinate shepherds, yet no farther than they teach Christ's commands; but the voice of the great Sheperd is to be obeyed in all things. Let me add but this one word to persuade you to it; Jesus Christ will not be a feeding Shepherd, where he may not be admitted to be a ruling Shepherd; the discipline of Christ is an act of mercy to the sheep, as well as his feeding. 2. Create no other shepherds then what Christ sets over you. Christ is therefore called the great Shepherd, because he appoints other shepherds under him to feed the flock. 'Tis the duty of Christ's sheep to adhere to these shepherds, and to reject all others though they come in Christ's Name. This hath been the practice of Christ's sheep heretofore, John 10 5, 8. The sheep did not hear him. So Cant. 1. 7. Why should I be as one that turneth aside by the flocks of thy companions? Who are those companions of Christ? false shepherds who come in Christ's Name, pretending themselves to be the companions of Christ, when indeed they are nothing less. 'Tis the casting off (as much as lieth in us) the Authority of the great Shepherd, to make to ourselves, or to follow an●●ther shepherds then what Christ sends. But how shall we know such shepherds as are sent of Christ? First, If they preach Christ's Doctrine, and that only. He that preacheth that Doctrine that Christ never taught, is no shepherd sent of Christ. Secondly, ●f 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 b● according to Christ's life. He that live 〈◊〉 to the life of Christ, is not really to be look●●●on as a shepherd of Christ. Thirdly, If he enter in according to Christ's Rule. He that entereth not in by the door into the sheep-fold, but climbeth up some other wa●, the same i● a thief and a ●obber. They are our Saviour's own words, John 10 1. 2. We read in Scripture but of two ways of sending shepherds by Christ; the one was by immediate commission, as Prophets, Apostles, Evangelists were sent. This kind of Mission was ever accompanied with extraordinary gifts, either of miracles, or foretelling things to come; whosoever will plead this call, must show it by extraordinary qualifications. The other according to eslablished Gospel Rule from Christ, by the Ministry of the Church, viz. by Ordination through the imposition of the hands 〈◊〉 Presbyters, of which we read●, 'tis 1. ● 1 Tim. 5. 22. 1 Tim. 4. 14. Acts 13. init. Acts 14. 23. I shall say but this one thing to set this duty upo● 〈◊〉 Christ's blessing cannot be expected to 〈◊〉 long with those shepherds which he never created, jerem. 23. 32. They shall not profit this people at all. 'Tis spiritual thievery for any man to make himself a shepherd after his own fancy, and to hear such, is to be accessary to this spiritual theft, John 10 8. 3. In all things carry yourselves as the sheep of this Shepherd. First, Hear his voice. John 10. 3. Secondly, Love his pastures. Rejoice in, and be thankful for that way of feeding, which he hath established in his Church. Christ could have appointed a more externally glorious way of feeding his sheep: but this plain way of feeding is most for his glory, best for your good. The Ministry of men best suits with the feeding of men. Thirdly, Bring forth fruit to him. Who feedeth a flock and eateth not of the milk of the flock, 1 Corinth. 9 ●? Do Christ what service you are able. This Shepherd hath bought you with his blood, and he seeds you with his blood: so great a shepherd should have great increase of his sheep. Fourthly, Know him. 'Tis the honour of Christ's sheep that they are known of him, and it is their property, that they know him, john 10. 14. You must not only know him in his natures, offices, etc. but you must acknowledge him. When he is reviled, reproached, opposed, yet then must the sheep acknowledge him. When its death to own him, yet then 〈◊〉 you ●●●dly, openly acknowledge him. He that will not acknowledge the great Shepherd here, shall not be acknowledged by him as a sheep hereafter. Fifthly, reject not those shepherds which he sends, 1 john 4 6. Luke 10. 16. II. For Consolation. This Title of Christ the great Shepherd, is very comfortable for every sheep. 1. That he will provide subordinate shepherds. Though Christ be the great Shepherd, yet the Church wants subordinate shepherds. He feeds the sheep not immediately, but by the Ministry of inferior shepherds. Now he that gave them will preserve them. He will continue them, he will increase their gifts, he will bless them with success. For your good he hath given them, for your good he will uphold them; only you must by prayer importune him so to do. The earnest prayer of the sheep to the great Shepherd, will procure a blessing upon the endeavour of the subordinate shepherds. 2. In case of your present weaknesses. Christ is a healing Shepherd. You are weak, infirm, ready to miscarry. Well, know this for your Comfort, that Christ the great Shepherd will heal your wounds, will consider your infirmities. No sheep are more carefully tendered by the shepherd then the weak and wounded sheep, Esay 40. 11. He shall gather the lambs with his ar●e, and carry them in his bosom, and shall gently lead them that are with young. And then 3. In case of wander and stragling. You are ready to run from the fold; you wander through your ignorance and blindness. Well, the great Shepherd will gather you with his Arm; his Arm is very long, he ●an 〈…〉 ever the shepherd will do for 〈…〉 will do for you. But I am unworthy, 〈…〉 that made you sheep when you were 〈◊〉 will not suffer you to want any thing that is needful for sheep. Though you be unworthy to be used like sheep, yet Christ is so faithful, that he will fulfil towards you all the duties of a good Shepherd. He is a good Shepherd, as well as a great Shepherd, john 10. 11. JOHN 15. 5. I am the Vine, ye are the branches. XIV. SERM at Mary Wolnoth. L●● Octob. 1●. 1652. OUr Saviour in this Chapter treats ●hiefly of three things. 1. Here is an exhortation to his Disciples, that they would continue constant in that faith, into which they were implanted. This is from verse 1. to verse 8. 2. An exhortation given them to abound in good works, especially in that duty of mutual love one to another; this is from vers. 8. to verse 18. 3. Encouraging arguments against the fear of persecution, and the hatred of the world; this is from ver. 18. to the end of the Chapter. His exhortation ●o constancy and perseverance in the faith, is pressed by the parable of the Vine and Branches. As the Branches when they are planted into the Vine, do continue in it, so those that were by faith, and the Doctrine of the Gospel plan●ed into Christ, aught to continue in him and bring forth fruits. The uttering of this parable, is thought by Piscator, to be occasioned upon the 〈…〉 by our Saviour and his Discip●●● 〈…〉 thorough the City. It was 〈…〉 from the beholding of 〈…〉 teach spiritual Doctrines. From the woman of Samaria's coming to jacobs' Well to dr●w wa●●r, our Saviour takes occasion to speak f●lly of the water of life, john 4. 7, 10. From the Disciple● entreating of him to eat meat, he takes occasion to preach of his zeal in promoting his Father's work, john 4. 32, 34. From the People's flocking about him for material bread, he takes occasion to speak of the bread of life, john 6. 27. And here from the sight of a vine, as he went up and down in jerusalem, he takes occasion of preaching himself to be the true Vine. That this Sermon was preached as he walked in the City, may (saith Pisc●tor) probably be gathered from ver. 1. Chap. 18. Where it is said, that when he had spoken these words, he went forth with his Disciples over the brook Kedron; This going forth (saith he) cannot be understood of his going forth of the house (for chap. 14. ver. last, he went out of that before) but of his going forth out of the City, where he had preached this Sermon as he walked up and down. It is not much material where this Sermon was preached, though it is more likely, that it was preached in some house, then in the streets of the City; especially if that be true which some conjecture, that that prayer, Chap. 17. which belongs to this story, was prayed at the institution of the Supper, it is not (I say) much material. 'Tis Christ's Doctrine wherever it was preached. In the words of the Text we have two things. 1. A de●enption of Christ in relation to believers. I 〈◊〉 th● Vine. 2. A dese●●ption of believers in relation to Christ. Ye are the Branches. By Vine we are to understand not the vineyard or place planted with vines (though the Greek word here used, as Calvin notes, doth sometimes signify a vineyard,) but we are to understand it of the vine, or plant itself; especially of the root of the vine into which the branches are ingraffed. By Branches we are to understand those slips which are by him that keeps the vineyard ingraffed into the stock of the Vine. The words afford a double point. 1. That Christ is a Vine. 2. That believers are Branches of this Vine. Doct. 1. That Jesus Christ is a Vine. We are not to understand it in a proper sense, (for Christ, to speak properly is neither vine, nor door, nor rock, etc. but the eternal Son of God, who is both God and man in one person.) but we are to understand it in a Metaphorical sense; he is so called by way of resemblance: there is a very great similitude between Christ and the vine. Twice expressly doth our Saviour in this case call himself a Vine, v. 1. I am the true Vine. and v. 5. I am the Vine, and many times covertly in those expressions of abiding in him, to which he exhorts his hearers. For the opening of this Metaphor, I shall show three things. 1. In respect of which, 〈…〉 called a Vine. 2. Wherein the resemblance 〈…〉 what respects Christ is so● Why he is 〈◊〉 ●led so? 3. The excellency of Christ above all other vines. 1. For the first. Christ is compared to a Vine in respect of both natures. Although some resemblances do relate more chief to the Divine Nature, and some more chief to the humane; yet the general is to be understood in respect of both natures. Christ is a Vine in respect of the whole person, as he is Mediator, God and Man. It will be made evident by this Argument. Christ is a Vine in that respect and latitude, in which Believers are Branches ingraffed into him. Now the union between Christ and believers is not between them and the humanity of Christ only, nor between them and the Divinity only, but between them and the whole person: Not only is the soul of a believer united to the soul of Christ, nor the flesh of a believer to the flesh of Christ; but the whole person of every believer is united to the whole person of Christ. This is the first particular. 2. In what respects in Christ a Vine? In four respects. 1. In regard of the meanness of his outward condition. The Vine is not like the Cedar for height, nor is it comparable to the Oak for strength, 'tis but mean to the outward view. Jesus Christ when he came into the world, did not come with any great outward pomp and glory. There was indeed a star at his birth, that ●●●ught the wise men from the East to worship him, but for his outward condition generally it was very mean: he was born in a stable, laid in the manger; he was born of a mean Virgin, and his life was but mean here on earth. His Kingdom is not administered with that outward state and splendour that earthly Kingdoms are. Jesus Christ did decline all outward glory and greatness. See what the Prophet foretells concerning him, Esay 53. 2. He shall grow up before him as a tender plant, and as a root ●●t of a dry ground, etc. The reason of this is that which he himself gives to Pilate, John 18. 36. His Kingdom was not of this world. He came not to be Ministered unto, but to Minister, Mat. 20. 28 He came to make others great, but to make himself little; to fill others, but to empty himself, Phil. 2. 7. He came in the form of a servant to be trampled upon, to be reviled, disgraced, and at last crucified. External pomp was not suitable to such a design. This is our first resemblance. 2. In regard of his fruitfulness. The Vine is a fruitful plant. Thought hath little pomp, yet it 〈◊〉 much plenty. The fruitfulness of it appears three ways. 1. It brings forth pleasant fruit. No plant ●ields more delightful fruit then the Vine; the grape i● delightful; the wine is a very pleasant thing: and what is that but the blood of the grape, D●ut. 32. 1●? 2. It yields profitable fruit. The blood of the grape, if it be moderately and seasonably taken, doth warm the heart and cheer the spirits. It doth as the Scripture speaks, make glad the heart of man, Psal. 104. 15. 〈…〉 repairer of natures detays. ●ts both food and Physic. 3. It yields great plenty of frui●. Other 〈◊〉 bring forth single fruit, they bring forth by one and one. But the Vine brings forth clustery. There are sometimes hundreds of berries in one cluster, and many of those clusters upon one Branch. The Scripture useth the Vine to set out plenty of increase. Thy wife shall be as the fruitful Vine upon the walls of thy house, Psalm 128. 3. So Hos. 14. 7. Jesus Christ may well be compared to the Vine for fruitfulness, in all these respects. 1. He brings forth pleasant fruit. All the fruits that grow upon Christ are very pleasant, Cant. 2. ●. I sat down under his shadow (saith the Church) with great delight, and his fruit was sweet to my taste. All the trees of Paradise did not afford such pleasant fruit as grows on this Vine. Consider what the fruits of this Vine are, and it will be granted that they are pleasant. I will name some of the fruits of this Vine. I shall present you with four clusters by which you may judge of the rest. First, the fruits of his death. There are many particulars in this cluster, I name but six. 1. The satisfaction of Divine Justice. The appeasing of God's anger towards the Elect, Esay 53. 6. Christ by his death did as perfectly satisfy the demands of justice as though God had never been offended, he made full payment. 2. The reconciliation of believers to God. He hath not only paid what justice required, but he hath perfectly made agreement between God and the sin●er; that now thorough, Christ God is as well appeased, and is become as perfect a friend to the believer as he was to Adam i● Paradise. God hath not in his heart the least grudge towards his person. Of this the Apostle speaks, Eph. 2. 14, 15. and Col. 1. 21, 22. 3. The working out of a complete righteousness for the sinner. Such a righteousness as that the sinner may with a holy boldness challenge the Law of God to find fault with it. Of this the Apostle speaks, Rom. 5. 17, 18, 19 This is called in divers respects righteousness of God, Rom. 1. 17. The righteousness of faith, Phil. 3. 9 Rom. 4. 13. The righteousness of Christ, Rom. 5. 18. 4. The destroying of him that had the power of death. Of this you may ●eade, Col. 2. 15. and Heb. 2. 14. Satins supremacy over the soul is abolished, and the captived soul made the Lords freeman. 5. The sweetening and perfuming of the grave, and the freedom of the sinner from the fear of death. This fruit is mentioned by the Apostle, Heb. 2. 15. 6. The kill of the power of sin. Christ by dying for sin slew sin, so as that it can never damn any of the Elect. Of this you m●y read, Rom. 6. 4, 6. Secondly, the ●ruits of his resurrection. These are many; I shall set a few before you; these four. 1. Spiritual vivifi●ntion. The soul of a believer is raised up and empowered to walk in ●●●●nesse of life. This the Apostle applieth principally to the resu●●● 〈…〉 2. 12, 13. You being de●● i● 〈…〉 He ●ath quickened together 〈…〉 2. An assured evidence 〈…〉 from sin. This the Apostle 〈…〉 resurrection of Christ, Rom. 4. 25. He was 〈◊〉 again for our justification. The resurrection of Christ from the grave is a full proof that all the debt is paid; the discharge of the prisoner is a clear testimony of the discharge of the debt. The Prophet puts them together, Esay 53. 8. He was taken from prison and from judgement. And hence the Apostle argues against those that deny the Resurrection, 1 Cor. 15. 17. If Christ be not raised, we are yet in our sins. 3. An Argument of the resurrection of our bodies at the last day. If the Head be raised, the body shall not lie for ever in the grave; the Resurrection of Christ is a pledge of ours, as the first fruits were unto the Jews a pledge of the ensuing harvest. The Apostle alludes to that, 1 Cor. 15. 20. And therefore the Apostle saith, that Believers are raised up together with Christ, Ephes. 2. 6. They did rise in their representative when Christ was raised. 4. The Confirmation of our hope of heaven. This fruit of Christ's Resurrection the Apostle sets down, 1 Pet. 1. 3. We are begotten again to a lively hope, by the Resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. The Doctrine of Christ's Resurrection is the nourishment of the grace of Hope. Thirdly, The fruits of his Ascension. This is a very rich cluster. I shall name a few, these five. 1. Leading captivity captive. The Apostle mentions this, Eph. 4. 8. By returning to heaven from whence he came, he did publicly ●ar●y his spoil with him, he did declare that ●ll the enemies of our salvation were perfectly brought under. As great Conquerors, when they have subdued their enemies, do lead captive those whom they have overcome; so Christ the great Captain of our salvation, did by his Ascension let his people see that their spiritual enemies were all eternally vanquished. 2. The conferring of Ministerial gifts, yea of the office of Ministry on his Church. Of this the Apostle speaks, Eph. 4 8. The Ministry of the Church is a fruit of Christ's Ascension. And 'tis as possible to pull him out of Heaven, as to destroy that which he so solemnly settled at his Ascension. 3. The more plentiful effusion of his Spirit upon his Church. Of this fruit of his Ascension our Saviour speaks, John 16 7. If I go not away, the Comforter will not come; but if I go away, I will send him. Christ when he departed, poured forth his Spirit in greater plenty than ever it was before, to supply the want of his bodily presence. And then 4. Preparations of Mansions for his members. This fruit is mentioned, John 14. 3. As a man when he hath espoused a wife, provides a house for her abode against the day of marriage: so Christ having espoused the Church, goes to heaven beforehand to make all things ready for their entertainment against the marriage day. 5. An assured evidence of their corporal Ascension. Christ ascended and 〈…〉 as the forerunner of his Chur●●; 〈…〉 The Apostle tells us that Christ 〈…〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Not only for ou● 〈…〉 our stead to give us an undoubted 〈…〉 that we● also shall personally entertain▪ the ascension of the head, is the praeludium of the glorification of the members. Fourthly, The fruits of his Intercession. These are very many. I shall name these four. 1. Assurance of the Application of all his benefits. Whatsoever Christ purchased by his death, ●e doth actually apply to the Elect by his intercession. The Prophet puts them together, Esay 53. ult. This is one fruit of Christ's intercession; believers are sure to be put into full possession of all that which Christ hath merited for them by his bloodshed. This some make to be the meaning of that Scripture, John 14 3. They refer it to his intercession. Christ by his satisfaction obtained for the Elect a right to heaven, and by his intercession he doth actually apply it to them. 2. The superseding and stopping of all Accusations made against them. The Law accuseth, Satan pleads the Law against believers, and hence accuseth them. Christ is interceding continually at God's right hand to invalidate all these accusations; There can no sooner come in any complaint, but Christ throws it out. Of this fruit of his intercession the Apostle speaks, Rom. 8. 33, 34. 3. Manuduction into the presence of the Father with boldness. Christ is at God's right hand for this very purpose, that when ever a believer hath any request to pre●er to God, he may take them by the hand and bring the● to the Father with confidence. This fruit of his intercession is set down by the Apostle, Heb. 4. 14. 16. 4. Assurance of the acceptance of our weakest services. This fruit of his intercession is mentioned, Rev. 8. 3, 4. The ascending of the incense out of the Angel's hand, before God notes the complacency that God takes through Christ in the obedience of his Saints. Put these together and see whether Christ do not bring forth pleasant fruit. All the Vineyards in the world cannot show such grapes for pleasantness as these are. 2. He brings forth profitable fruit. The wine that comes out of this Vine, doth cheer, and refresh and strengthen, and make glad, and that not the outward man, but the soul and conscience also, which no other wine can do. If I should go over all these fruits again, and show you the advantage which believers have by them, you would then say they were profitable fruits. Healing fruits and strengthening fruits, and quickening fruits. They remove all fears, they bring in all joy, etc. 3. He brings forth plenty of fruit. I have named many, but I have named but a few in respect of what I might name. All the graces of his Spirit are the fruits which he brings forth, saith, love, meekness, perseverance, etc. All the promises are his fruits; eternity will be too short to measure all the fruits which grow on this Vine. This is the second resemblance. 3. In regard of the shadow which he casts over the Church. The Vine is a shadowy plant, it is in regard of the 〈…〉 fittest of any plant for shadowing. 〈…〉 Arbours of the vine. Micah 4. 4. 〈…〉 shadow to his Church. The Scripture calls hi● a shadow, Esay 32. 2. A hiding place from the wind, a covert form the tempest, the shadow of a great rock in a weary land; the words are spoken of Christ, as is clear from the first verse, Behold a King shall reign in righteousness: he who is there called a King, is afterwards called a shadow; I sat under (Cant 2. 3.) his shadow: so Jesus Christ is called the Churches only shadow. 1. He is a shadow to defend them from his Father's wrath. God is in himself a consuming fire. So the Apostle, Heb. 12. 29. His anger is declared against all the sins of men. He can as well cease to be, as cease to be displeased against sin in whomsoever it is. Now Jesus is the Believers shadow to preserve him from being burnt by his wrath. Yea, Christ hath by satisfying his Father's Justice for sin, quenched this wrath as to believers; and this satisfaction is such a thick shadow, that whensoever the believer retreats to it, and sits under it, the wrath of God cannot reach him to hurt him, the Screen of Christ's perfect satisfaction doth continually stand between God and the believer to preserve him from the fury of Divine anger. The wrath of God must kindle upon Christ before it can kindle upon the believer; and upon Christ it cannot kindle. He hath once born the wrath of God, and by bearing it hath for ever quenched it. Since Christ hath made himself a sacrifice for sin once, God hath many ways declared that he is well pleased with him. Abide under his shadowy vine, ye that are believers, the wrath of God cannot come nee●e you. 2. He is a shadow to defend them from the de●is● rage. Satan is full of rage against the godly. They have broke out of his prison, they have renounced his service, they have proclaimed perpetual war against him and his kingdom, they have by the grace of conversion blotted his Name out of their hearts, this fills him with rage against them. He is continually waylay them, he is daily fight with them, he never ceaseth to tempt them, that he may destroy them 1 Pet. 5. 8. Jesus Christ is a shadow to preserve his Church from the fury of this destroyer. By his death he hath broken his head, Col. 2. 15. By his intercession he doth safeguard his from all the attempts he makes upon them, Luke 22. 31, 32. The devil must overcome Christ, he must pluck off all the leaves of this Vine, before he can devour the soul of a believer. Retreat to Christ by faith when Satan hunts you, and continue here, and you may laugh at Satan and all his assaults. 3. He is a shadow to defend them from the fury of men. The world is a bitter enemy to the servants of Christ. They cannot walk after the fashion of the world, they cannot but reprove the wickedness of the world, both by their lives and by their speeches too as they have occasion. This makes the men of the world mad against them; you may see this both in the Old and in the New Testament. In the Old Testament, Gen. 19 9 they were ready to tear Lot in pieces, because he reproved their filthy wickedness. In the New Testament 〈…〉 4. because the godly cannot drink of 〈…〉 ●●ters they do, therefore do they 〈…〉 Jesus Christ is a shadow to preserve them from the world's fury. He did by his death obtain victory, as well over the world as over the devil, John 16. 33. and he doth shadow his Church in the world from the rage of the world. Some particular members of his Church are perhaps overcome by the world, but the body of the Church can never be overcome; And for the particular persons or Churches that are ruined by them, their ruin tends to their own personal salvation, and to the preservation of the whole body; the blood of particular persons or Churches is a sanctified seed which tends to the enlargement of the Church Universal. 4. In regard of the influential Communications from him to the Branches. This is that which is especially meant in this place; believers are compared to the Branches, Christ to the Vine. As the Vine doth communicate sap and nourishment to the Branches, so doth Christ communicate spiritual sap and nourishment to believers. All the Church's springs are in Christ, Psal. 87. 7. Believers have nothing but what comes from him, Believers can do nothing that is good, but by assistance from him. He is the strength of their strength, the wisdom of their wisdom. God hath put all their stock and portion into his hands. They have their dependence on him, they have all their supply from him: This is that which is laid down ver. 5. of this Chapter, Without me, or severed from me ye can do nothing. Of this I shall speak more in the next Doctrine. 3. The excellency of Christ above all other vines. He hath the pre-eminence in these seven respects. 1. Christ is a Vine immediately of Gods planting. Other Vines are the plantations of men. 'Tis true, In the Creation God did by the Word of his power without the help of any creature, cause the Vine as he did all other plants to spring, Gen. 2. 4, 5. But since the creation of man upon the earth, these plants are the work of his hands. We read of a vineyard planted by Noah after the flood, Gen. ●9. 20. and we see that since, to this day, vines are still set by the hands of men. But Jesus Christ ●s the mere plantation of God alone, God prepared him a body, Heb. 10. ●. God appointed him for the work of Redemption. It could never have entered into the heart of man, nor into the understanding of Angels to have planted the Son of God as a Vine, for the bearing and feeding of mankind. This is that which our Saviour himself declares, v. 1. of this chapter. I am the true Vine, and my Father is the Husbandman. This order of grace, that Christ should be the head of life and salvation, that the Elect should be ingraffed into him and saved by him, is appointed and set by God alone. He is the author of this Divine husbandry; Men wonder at it, the Angels of heaven do to this very day admire it, and shall admire it to eternity; but God himself is the only Inventor, and Author of it. It is a work of Gods doing; and it is, and will be, and aught to be marvellous in our eyes, Psal. 118. 23. Behold I ●ay in Zion for a foundation, a stone, a tried stone, etc. Esay 28. 16. This foundation had never been laid, this Vine had never been pla●●●● 〈…〉 self had not done 〈…〉 dry. 2. Christ is a Vine that doth 〈…〉 ●●rish. Other vines are not always 〈…〉 depth of Winter, they have neither leaves no● fruit; when the vintage is over they are empty vines. But Christ is a Vine that i● continually green; the vintage is never over with this Vine, he knows no● winter. Jesu● Christ yesterday, and to day, and the same for ever, Heb. 13. 8. He keeps his vigour and freshness from generation● to generation. Jesus Christ flourishes now as gloriously as ever he did since the first day he was planted, and he will be as green and lively to the end of the world as now he is. A few years put an end to the life of all other vines; they have their infancy, a time when they do not bear; and they have their full growth, a time when they are in their height; and they have their old age, a time when they are past fruit: but Christ knows no such changes; he did bear fruit the very first moment of his planting, and there will never be a time when he will cease bearing. It is always vintage-time with Jesus Christ. Never did the eye of man see him empty, never shall eye see him withering. He is called a tree of life, Rev. 22. 12. because neither mortality nor old age shall ever betid him. 3. Christ is a Vine whose fruits never abate. Go to the fullest vine that ever grew upon the earth, and pluck off but one cluster, and there is a cluster less; if you take away but one berry, there is a diminution. But Jesus Christ knows no abatement. All the Patriaches, all the Prophet●, all the Apostles, the Sa●nts i● the Ol● Testament ever since Adam, the Saints in the New Testament to this day have been feeding upon him, and yet there is not one cluster less than there was at first. He hath not lost one berry since his first plantation. The reason is that which the Apostle mentions, Col. 2. 9 In him dwelleth all the fullness of the Godhead bodily. Fullness is in Christ, all fullness is in him, all fullness is in him bodily, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that is personally, not only in regard of efficacy and assistance as in the Saints, but in regard of hypostatical and personal union, and then all this fullness dwells in him, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, dwells in him inseparably, dwells in him undecayingly. ●ather never so much fruit from this Vine, and yet he still retains his fullness. We beheld his glory (saith the Evangelist) full of grace and truth, John 1. 14. All the old Saints had been eating of him since Adam to that day, and yet he was still full of grace, and so he continues as full as if his fruit had never been touched with hands, nor tasted by any of his Elect. 4. Christ is a Vine of greater ext●●tion than other vines. Earthly vines are but of a small compass. A few yards will measure both their length and breadth; but Christ is a Vine of great dimension, his Branches reach all the world over. He hath some Branches in all Nations under heaven, Rev. 7. 9 This Vine spreads itself into all the quarters of the world, Asia, and Europe, and Afric●, and America; this Vine grows in all these parts of the world. The Universal Church is the Vine-yard, this Church is dispersed throughout all Nations, and every member of this Church▪ is an 〈…〉 Vine. 5. Christ is such a Vine as 〈…〉 of his Branches. Other vines are often 〈…〉 their branches, even of those branches th●● were truly ingraffed; every child can rob ●● of its branches. But this Vine can never lose a Branch: some branches there are that are seemingly ingraffed, they are ingraffed only in regard of visible profession, these may be broken off and burned, yea they shall be, ver. 6. of this Chapter. But for the Branches that are really implanted, they can never be taken away. All the strength of men and devils is not able to divide one Branch from the Vine. Every Branch of the Vine doth tend to the mystical perfection of the Vine; the Saints are the fullness of him that filleth all in all, Eph. 2. ult. He cannot lose one of them without empaiting himself. The devil hath been plucking and hewing, but he was never yet able to break off the weakest Branch. 6. Christ is a Vine whose fruit seeds the soul. Other vines they only bring forth fruit for the body. The outward man is cheered and nourished by the grape, and by the liquor of the grape. But now Christ is a Vine whose fruits are for the soul. Wine for the conscience, for the soul, comes out of the fruit of this Vine. When the heart is cold by reason of inward fears, this Wine warms it: when the heart is heated by reason of violent temptations, this Wine will cool it; when the soul is ready to die, this Wine will revive it. 7. Christ is a Vine whose fruits never surfeit. The fruit of all material vines, if it be taken immoderately, breeds distempers and sicknesses. Noah drunk of the Wine of his vine, yard and was drunk; Gen. 9 21. many bereave themselves of their health and of their wits too, by the excessive use of the fruit of the vine; we have too many examples of this. But the fruits of this mystical Vine have no surfeiting quality. A man cannot take too much of them. Eat O friend drink yea drink abundantly O beloved, Cant. 5. 1. The sickness and the death of the soul ariseth not from the immoderate using, but from the refusing of the fruits of this Vine. ●. 8. A Vine that never costs any of his fruits. He brings all his fruits to perfection. The Uses of this Point. 1. This may help us to understand that speech of Christ, when he saith, This is my body, and my flesh is meat indeed, etc. John 6. 53, 54, 55. The Papists understand it in a proper sense, as if the bread were changed into the substance of his body, etc. They are angry with the Protestants because they will not believe it. Amongst many reasons which overthrow that fond interpretation; this and such like other figurative speeches may help us to understand that. Christ sometimes calls himself the light, sometimes the door, and here the Vine; not as if he were substantially changed into these things, but to show the spiritual resemblance which is between him and these corporal things. Why there should be any more change of substance, when Christ saith, this is my body, then when Christ saith, I am the door, I am the Vine, I cannot see, but God hath upon the blind Papists fulfilled that threatening, 2 Thes. 〈…〉 ●●dicially blinded their 〈…〉 antiscriptural opinions 〈…〉. 2. See the excellency; and 〈…〉 All these comparisons are but to convince 〈◊〉 carnal souls of Christ's transcendent excellency, Christ hath in a spiritual sense all the good properties of the Vine, and of all the fruits of the Vine. He hath all the excellencies of Wine. I name four. (I.) Wine nourisheth. It helps digestion. Christ is a great nourisher, the soul would decay and dwindle to nothing, if Christ did not continually nourish it and feed it. (2.) Wine is a comforter, Psal. 104. 15. Jesus Christ is the great comforter of the soul. When the soul droops and languisheth, when it's cast down and dejected, the love and presence of Christ doth cheer it again, Ps. 21. 6. David confesseth it in Ps. 23. 3. He restoreth my soul. Jesus Christ is the souls restorer. (3) Wine emboldeneth. Being a spiritual creature it doth raise the spirits, and being moderately used, puts courage into the fearful. Jesus Christ doth embolden the soul His presence and his grace fills the soul with a holy courage; he that was fearful, dares now speak for God, and act for God; the very tidings of Christ's coming expels fear from the hearts of his people, Esay 35. 3, 4. There is no true valour in the soul till Christ be there. All the souls confidence is built on Christ, and on Christ alone. We have no boldness in prayer, no boldness in approaching to God in any Ordinance, but is communicated by, and from Jesus Christ, Heb. 10 19 (4) Wine is healing. Some kind of wines are prefer bed for the healing inward of distempers, etc. The Samaritan poured oil and wine; Luk. 10. 34. Christ is a great heals, he heals broken hearts and wounded spirits, and all inward distempers whatsoever. There is no health in the soul till Christ be there. Unto you that fear my Name, shall the Sun of righteousness arise with healing in his wings, Mal. 4. 2. Christ is that tree of life whose leaves are for the healing of the Nations, Rev. 22. 2. Christ is an excellent and precious person. Never look upon the Vine, never see the fruit of the Vine, but meditate on Jesus Christ. JOHN 15. 5. Ye are the branches. XV. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth. Lon. Octob. 24. 1652. I Go on to the description of believers in reference to Christ, as it is laid down in these words; Ye are the Branches. The Observation will be this, viz. Doct. That all true Believers are spiritual Branches ingraffed into Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ is the royal Stock, and all Believers are mystical Branches of this Stock. The Scripture asserts this privilege in many places, Rom. 6. 5. If we have been planted together in the likeness of his death, we shall be also in the likeness of his Resurrection, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Christ is there compared to the Root, and Believers to the Branches or Cions that grow in this Root. Erasmus therefore translates it very fitly, Insititii, ingraffed or implanted. The Apostle sets down this mystery under another apt similitude of the foundation-stone of a house, and the superstructory stones, Eph. 2. 20, 21. Christ is compared to the foundation, and the Believers to stones built upon that foundation. Ye are built upon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles, Jesus Christ himself being the chief corner stone, in 〈◊〉 the whole building fitly framed together 〈◊〉 ●nto ●● holy Temple in the Lord. There are 〈◊〉 ways of being Branches of Christ. The one is by external profession only. In this respect, all that are members of the visible Church are Branches of Christ. Thus the Apostle saith, that all the Gentiles when they were called into the Church by the preaching of the Gospel, were graffed into Christ, Rom. 11. 17. the Metaphor is often used in that Chapter. This is not that engraffing which I shall now handle. For though it be an honour and privilege to be a branch of Christ in this general way, yet is it not a saving privilege. A man may be a Branch of Christ in this respect, and yet at last be cut off and burned. So our Saviour saith in the verse after the Text. The other way of being graffed or made a Branch of Christ, is by the grace of union. Thus all true Believers, and only true Believers are made Branches. This is that which the Apostle elsewhere calls being members of Christ, Eph. 5. 30. and dwelling in Christ, John 6. 56. and putting on Christ, Gal. 3. 27. That they are made Branches of Christ, besides these testimonies of Scripture, it will appear from the Sacraments, both of Baptism and the Supper. This is the plain language of both the Sacraments. 1. Baptism speaks it. 'Tis the seal and sign of this engraffing. This is clear from two texts before cited; the one, Rom. 6. 5. If we have been planted together into the likeness of his death, How is that? see verse before. We are buried with him by Baptism unto death. The other i●, Gal. 3. 27. As many of you as have been Baptised into Christ, have put on Christ. Nor as if all baptised persons were really made Branches, but because this is sealed in Baptism as the privilege of all Believers. They are as certainly made Branches of Christ invisibly and mystically, as all that are baptised are made members of the Church visibly and externally. 2. The Supper of the Lord doth also speak it. Our eating and drinking of Christ Sacramentally is a seat and pledge of our being ingraffed into him spiritually. This is clear from that Text I cited before, John 6. 56. He that eateth my flesh, and drinketh my blood, dwelleth in me, and I in him. We are therefore nourished by his flesh and blood, because we are united to his body. In the handling of this Doctrine two things are to be opened by way of Explication. 1. How we are made Branches of Christ. 2. What benefit we have by being so. For the first, How men are made Branches of Christ. There are three things which concur to this work of the souls engraffing into Christ. The Word of God, The Spirit of God, Justifying Faith. 1. The Word of God. The Word preached is the ordinary and common mediate instrument, whereby this great work is wrought. By this Word is the soul first cut off from the wild stock of corrupt nature, and planted into the true Olive-tree, or Vine, Jesus Christ. Hence the work of planting is in Scripture attributed to the Ministers of the Gospel, 1 Cor. 3. 6, 7. I have planted, saith the Apostle, Apollo watered. God indeed is the great Planter. So v. 1. of this Chapter. I am the true Vine, and my Father i● the 〈◊〉. He is the Master-Planter, the Ministers are subordinate-planters; We are labourers together with God. 1 Cor. 3. 9 They are so called, because by the Word preached, this great work is done, This the Prophet clearly affirms, Esay 61. 1, 2, 3. The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me, because the Lord hath anointed me to preach Christ; that they might be called trees of righteousness, the planting of the Lord. These mystical trees are Gods planting; but the instrument whereby they are made such trees, is the Word preached. Hence the Word is called the incorruptible seed of regeneration, 1 Pet. 1. 23. As all the Trees and Plants in the first Creation were set, and sprung up by the Word of God, Gen. 1. 11, 12. So are all these mystical Branches ingraffed by the Ministerial Word. 2. The Spirit of God. The Holy Ghost is the immediate Instrument whereby the soul is ingraffed. It is the Spirit which gives efficacy to the Word, both to cut off the soul from the stock of nature, and to implant it into the Stock of grace. The Word would never be able to tear off any person from his first root, if it were not edged and streng●hred by the Spirit of God. The Scripture calls the Holy Ghost the finger of God, Luke 11. 20. compared with Mat. 1●. 28. He is so c●●●ed as for other reasons, so for this, because he is the immediate instrument whereby God works in the hearts of his creatures. Particularly for this work of engraffing the soul into Christ, the Holy Ghost is affirmed to be the immediate instrument 1 Cor. 12. 13. By one Spirit are we all baptised into one body, etc. and have been all made to drink into one spirit. And again, Eph. 2. 21, 22. where the Apostle speaking of this great mystery under another resemblance, saith, that in Christ we are builded an habitation of God through the Spirit. The same Spirit which builds us upon Christ into one Temple, doth engraff us into Christ as one Vine. 3. Faith. This is the immediate instrumental cause on man's part. Faith is an uniting grace, it knits the soul to Christ, and Christ to the soul. Faith is an incorporating grace, it doth as it were embody the soul into Christ, making it one with Christ, and Christ with it. This is that which the Apostle saith. 1 Pet. 2. 4, 5. To whom coming as to a living stone, etc. Ye also are built up as lively stones, etc. Two things are observable in that Text. First, that the Saints are built together upon Christ the foundation-stone, an holy house to God. Secondly, how Christ and they are cemented together into one building; this is by believing, set out by the expression of coming, which is used ordinarily for believing, as Mat. 11. 28. The Spirit of God first works saith in the heart of a person through the Word, and then the soul is by the Spirit through faith ingraffed into Christ, and made a lively Branch. For the second particular, What advantage the soul hath by being a Branch of Christ, I shall here follow the Metaphor. The same advantage the Branch hath by being ingraffed into the Stock, hath a Believer in a spiritual sense by being ingraffed into Christ. I name these five. 1. Spiritual supportation. The Branch hath this benefit from the Stock into which it is ingraffed, that it is born up and supported by it. The Branch doth not bear the Vine, nor doth it bear itself, but is born of the Vine. A believer hath supportation from Jesus Christ. We stand on Christ's legs, not on our own. I can do all things (saith the Apostle) through Christ that strengtheneth me, Phil. 4. 13. The strength of the Branch is in the Vine; so is the strength of a Believer in Christ. Who is this that cometh out of the Wilderness leaning on her beloved! Cant. 8. 5. I laid me down and slept, (saith David) I awaked, for the Lord sustained me. Many blasts pass over a believer, many violent concussions and shake is he exposed unto, partly by reason of sin, partly by temptations from the Devil, from men; in all these shake he hath sustentation from Christ into whom he is implanted. My grace (saith Christ to Paul) shall be sufficient for thee; for my strength is made perfect in weakness, in 2 Cor. 12. 9 A believer may with confidence go to Christ, and pray for support in all his weaknesses. A believer may go to Christ and challenge support. Christ would never have made thee a Branch, if he had not intended to support and strengthen thee, Esay 41. 10. there are repeated promises of sustentation. I will strengthen thee, I will help thee, I will uphold thee. In doing, in suffering, in dying is a believer supported by Christ. A believer never wants support; but when either through pride he will not have it, or through slothfulness he will not 〈…〉 Jesus Christ. 2. Spiritual nourishment. The Bran●● doth not give nourishment to the Stock, nor doth it nourish itself, but it receives nourishment from the Stock. A believer hath nourishment from Jesus Christ. The Root feeds the Branch, it conveys its sap to each Branch, whether it be great or little, whether it be nearer the Root, or at a farther distance from it. Christ conveys proper nourishment to every believer. The Apostle speaks of this, Col. 2. 19 The whole body from Christ by joints and bands hath nourishment ministered; the Ordinances are the joints and bands by which nourishment is carried, but Christ is the great treasury from whence it is carried. He nourishes Faith, he feeds Hope, he nourisheth love, etc. Of his fullness have we all received, and grace for grace, John 1. 16. Every grace a believer hath, would die and whither, if it did not receive daily nourishment from Jesus Christ. 3. Spiritual increase. The branch receives its Augmentation from the Vine. The graft when its first implanted, is very small; a child may break it with one of his fingers: but by abiding in the Stock it grows till it come to perfection. All a Believers increase is from Jesus Christ. 'Tis by and through him that we grow from infancy to a perfect man. Two Texts of Scripture do fully set out this benefit of our implantation; The one is, Col. 2. 19 In him the whole body having nourishment ministered, increaseth with the increase of God. The other is, Eph. 4. 16. Where the Apostle tells us, that by and from Christ the whole body being fitly joined together, and compacted by that which every part supplieth, maketh increase of the body. That their knowledge is stronger than it was at first, that the habits of grace are strengthened, etc. This is by virtue of their implantation into the Vine. Christ is the believers breast; the believer by sucking at the breast, grows from a child to a young man, from a young man to an old man in Christ. 4. Spiritual fructification. The fruitfulness of the Branch is from the fullness of the Root. The Stock sends out its sap to every Branch, and so every branch buds, and blossoms, and brings forth fruit Abeleevers spiritual fruitfulness is from Jesus Christ. Christ sends out his sap and fatness to him, and then he doth according to his kind, bud, and blossom, and bring forth fruits in his season. This is that which follows immediately after the Text; He that abideth in me, and I in him, the same bringeth forth much fruit, for without me ye can do nothing. 'Tis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, separated from me ye can do nothing. David, Psalm 1. 3. tells us from whence our fruits spring, namely from our implantation. He shall be like a tree planted by the rivers of water, which bringeth forth his fruit in his season. So Psal. 92. 13. 14. Those that be planted in the house of the Lord, shall flourish in the Courts of our God. They shall still bring forth fruit in old age, etc. This preeminency these mystical trees have of the natural. Old age makes the natural tree barren; but it makes the mystical tree the more fruitful. Consider what God saith to his people, Hos. 14. 8. From me is thy fruit found. This the Church acknowledgeth, when she calleth them Christ's fruits, Cant. 4. 16. They are borne by the Church, 〈…〉 produced by Christ. The● 〈…〉 fruits in regard of benefit, but 〈…〉 Christ's fruit in regard of production. The Creation, the Preservation, the ripening of 〈◊〉 are from Christ. They are our fruits in regard of Inhaesion, but they are Christ's fruits in regard of Procreation. That Christian is either blinded with ignorance, or filled with malice, or swelled with pride, who will not acknowledge his spiritual fructification to be from Christ. 5. Spiritual fellowship. The Branch by virtue of its engraffing into the Stock, hath fellowship with the Stock, it doth partake of all the good of the Stock. A believer by virtue of his implantation into Christ hath spiritual fellowship with Jesus Christ in all his good things. God is faithful (saith the Apostle) by whom ye are called into the fellowship of his Son Jesus Christ, 1 Cor. 1. 9 He that is a Branch of Christ is spiritually married to Christ. Hos. 2. 19, 20. I will betrothe thee unto me for ever, in righteousness, in judgemene, in loving-kindenesse, in mercies, and in faithfulness. Marriage gives the wife an interest in all the good things of her husband. His honours, his riches, his relations are now related to her. Her name is set upon all the goods which are marked with her husband's name; where he is Caius, she is Caia; where he is Master, she is Mistress. By our implantation into Christ, all his possessions are ours. His honours are ours, we are called by his name; He Christ, we Christians. His riches are ours, his relations are ours; I ascend to my Father, and your Father; to my God, and your God, John 20. 17. Hereby, 1. We communicate with Christ in his death, Rom. 6. 5. All the fruits of his death are ours, only by reason of our engraffing into him. 2. Hereby also we communicate with Christ in the fruits of his resurrection, Rom. 6. 5. We shall also be in the likeness of his resurrection. Hereby, 3. we have communion with him in his life, Rom. 6. 8. If we be dead with Christ, we believe that we shall also live with him. He will be for ever unto us a spring of spiritual life. Because I live, you shall live also, John 14. 19 Herein do these spiritual Branches differ from the natural: a natural branch may die, though the Root live; but a spiritual Branch of Christ, can never die while there is life in Christ his Root. Hereby, 4. Do we participate of the Spirit of Christ; the Spirit of Christ is ours, because we are Branches of Christ, in 1 Cor. 6. 17. He that is joined unto the Lord, is one Spirit. Consider but one Text, which doth fully show our spiritual fellowship from this very ground. 'Tis 1 Cor. 1. 30. Of him are ye in Christ Jesus, etc. There are three things in this text. First, that believers are in Christ. Secondly, that their being in Christ is from God's Donation, Of him are ye in Christ. Thirdly, that by virtue of their interest in Christ it is, that they come to have fellowship with Christ; he is to them wisdom, etc. because they are in him. He is their wisdom, as he hath revealed salvation to them, as he guides them in the way of salvation. He is their righteousness, as he hath perfectly obeyed the Law commanding, and as he hath fully satisfied the Law 〈…〉 Sanctification to them, as he hath 〈◊〉 them his Spirit to renew them by regeneration; and he is their Redemption, as he shall raise the● up at the last day, and glorify them. Th●● much for Explication. The Uses of this Point are of three sorts. 1. Information. 2. Exhortation. 3. Consolation. 1. For Information. 1. We may learn from this Metaphor, the nature of the union that is between Christ and believers. The Doctrine of our spiritual union with Christ, is a stupendious mystery, therefore the Holy Ghost makes use of natural similitudes to set it forth. Among others he makes use of this of the Vine and Branches. Which teacheth us three properties of this Union. (1) That it is a Real union. The Branches and the Vine are not united appearingly, but truly. Christ and a believer are united, not imaginarily, but really. Though it be an invisible union to the eye of sense, yet it is visible to the eye of faith. Though it be a spiritual union, yet it is a true union. Hence it is that the Name of Christ is communicated to all his members, 1 Cor. 12. 12. so also is Christ. Not Christ personal, but Christ mystical. If the union were not in reality, Jesus Christ would never impart his name to any of them. 2. That it is a very strict union. The union between the Vine and Branches, is not a lose union, but a close union; by virtue of this union they are made one tree. The union between Christ and a believer is a very close union. They are not united together as a wooden leg is united to the body, only by external bands and ligaments; but as the natural leg is united to the body by inward bands, by those influences of Spirits, Animal and Vital, which descend from the Head to the members. The believer is not tied to Christ only by the bands of an outward profession, but made one with Christ by a real incorporation. Christ and the believer are made one, not by mixture, as water and wine are made one; but by marriage, as the husband and wife are made one. Next to the union of the three persons in one nature, and the union of the two natures of Christ in one person, this spiritual union between Christ and the believer is the most glorious. This is the first inference. 2. We may from hence learn the high descent of true Believers. They are of a very eminent extraction. However they be mean in regard of their natural birth, yet in respect of their spiritual birth they are nobly descended. They are the offspring of the great family of heaven. See what the Apostle saith of them, 1 Pet. 2. 9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. What Heraldry is comparable to this! They are buds of the celestial Vine. They are Branches of Christ; and by virtue of their union with Christ they come to be made one both with the Father and the Holy Ghost, John 17. 21. That they may be all one with us. They are of the blood royal of heaven. They are of ●in to all the persons of the 〈…〉. 'Tis an honour which the 〈…〉 Heaven are not advanced unto. To which 〈◊〉 the Angels said Christ at any time, 〈…〉 Vine, ye are the Branches? Though they he above us in regard of their nature, yet are we above them in regard of our union. T●●e Saints are not contemptible persons: whatever they be as men, yet as Saints, as new men, they are better descended then the best bor●e of the Sons of men. This is the second Inference. 3. That it is an union wrought by God, not by us. What doth the Branch contribute to its union with the Root? What do we contribute to our union with Christ? we neither cut off ourselves, nor graft in ourselves. Man is passive in his first conversion, Ephes. 2. 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 2. For Exhortation. I shall direct it first to them that are Branches; Secondly, to all others that grow upon their first Stock. 1. To the branches of Christ. I have from this Doctrine these four things to commend to them, which I would entreat them to lay to heart. (1) That they would be very thankful for this great privilege. Bless the Lord that hath made you branches. Ye are not branches by your natural birth, but ye are made Branches by your spiritual birth. There is this difference between the natural branches and the mystical. The natural branch is ordinarily better than the stock into which it is ingraffed. Your gardiner's, if they can but get a good graft; they care not much how mean the root be. A crabtree is good enough to grass upon; but here it is quite contrary: the Stock is better than the Branches. The best of us by nature are wild vines, as the Apostle saith of the Gentiles, Rom. 11. 24. We were cut out of the Olive-tree which is wild by nature; the more cause have we to admire the goodness of God the great Husbandman, that such crabbed, sour, knotty, crooked branches as we were by nature, should be implanted into such a sweet, glorious, honourable root as Christ is. Behold here (as the Apostle saith concerning the implanting of the Gentiles) the goodness of God, Rom. 11. 22. Our visible external implantation is a very great mercy, our spiritual implantation far greater. We were made Branches of Christ. When we were by nature very unfit; When we were very unwilling; And When others as good as the best of us, were passed by, and suffered still to grow on the sour stock of nature. Bless God for your rooting in Christ; your rooting in him is the ground of all other blessings. This is the first. And then, (2) That they would be fruitful. The Scripture calls frequently for plentifulness of fruit from the Saints of God, Phil. 1. 11. he would have us to be filled with the fruits of righteousness. Great reason there is why it should be so. We are ingraffed into a fruitful Vine: God may well expect we should be fruitful Branches. Read what the Prophet speaks by way of prediction concerning this very thing, Ezek. 47. 12. By the river shall grow all trees for meat, etc. We should be careful to fulfil this Prophecy. God may 〈…〉 made us branches of such a Stock, 〈…〉 very fruitful branches. We may well 〈…〉 our implantation, if we be not 〈…〉 in is the excellency of the mystical 〈…〉 that they are not any of them barren. 〈◊〉 believers fruitfulness doth greatly honour 〈◊〉 the Husbandman, and Christ the Vine; 〈◊〉 his unfruitfulness dishonours both, John 1●. 8. Herein is my heavenly Father glorified, that ye bring forth much fruit, etc. Fruitfulness doth distinguish between the nominal disciple, and the real Disciple. He that is a Disciple indeed, is a fruitful Disciple. We are therefore made Branches that we may be fruitful. Of all branches the Vine branch is good for nothing if it be not fruitful. I beseech you be fruitful. Let the fullness of the root appear in the fruitfulness of the Branches. And be sure of this, that ye bring forth the fruits of the Stock. Here is another difference between the natural branch, and the mystical. The natural branch brings forth its own fruits; not the fruits of the stock into which it is ingraffed, but the fruits of its own kind: but the mystical Branch must bring forth the fruits of the root, the fruits of Christ; His meekness, his patience, his heavenliness, etc. The end of this and all other privileges is our fruitfulness. So the Apostle tells us, 1 Pet. 2. 9 Ye are a chosen generation, etc. To what end? That ye should show forth the virtues of him that called you out of darkness into his marvellous light. This is the second. And then, 3. That they ●●●ld be very holy. Take heed of wickedness you that are the Branches of Christ. Mean and sordid employment is not fit for persons that are of noble or royal descent. Sin is an unmeet employment for a Branch of Christ. Holiness becometh thy house O Lord for ever, Psal. 93. 5. The Apostle presseth it from this very Doctrine, 1 Cor. 6. 15. Shall I take the members of Christ, and make them the members of an harlot? God forbidden. For a Branch of Christ to lie, or cheat, or defraud, how unseemly! For shame, let it not be so. He that is borne of God sinneth not, 1 John 3. 9 He that abideth in him sinneth not, ver. 6. He sinneth not that unpardonable sin; He committeth no sin as others do, with delight, with allowance, with deliberation, etc. Either disown sin, or disown to be Branches of Christ. When Satan tempts you, when the flesh stirs you up to sin; say to them, and say with resolution of spirit, such dishonourable employment is very unfit for him who is a Branch of Christ. Let them that are branches of the devil do the devil's work, but let them that are branches of Christ do the work of Christ. He that saith he abideth in Christ, ought himself so to walk, even as he walked, 1 John 2. 6. And then, (4) That they would acknowledge their whole dependence to be on Christ. The branch doth not depend upon itself, but upon the Vine. All a believers dependence should be on Christ. 1. On him we depend in point of fruition. God hath laid up all that ever we shall have in Christ; All that the branches receive, they receive from the root. All the good which a believer shall have, it is from Christ. Out of his fullness have we all received, John 1. 16. And then, 2. On him we depend in 〈…〉 the good we receive is from him 〈…〉 we do is done by him; he is the 〈…〉 good, both in a Passive sense, and in 〈…〉 sense, Without the ye can do nothing, John 〈…〉 It is very unseemly, and very in congruous 〈◊〉 Branch of Christ to deny his dependence o● the root, either by Word or Action. To expect any thing but from and through Christ, to go about to do any thing without power derived from Christ, is to deny our dependence on him. And he that denies his dependence on him, shall have no benefit by him. Christ in you the hope of glory, Col. 1. 27. He that will have either glory or grace any other way then through Christ, shall certainly come short either of grace or glory. He that will undertake to perform any action, to encounter any temptation without actual rolling himself on Christ, shall find the action too hard, the temptation too strong for him to encounter. A Christian may do all things when Christ doth strengthen him, but he can do nothing till Christ enable him. 'Tis a dangerous thing not to depend on Christ. These two inconveniences follow upon it. First, He that doth not acknowledge his dependence on Christ for what he doth will not give Christ the glory of what he doth; And what Sacrilege is it to rob Christ of his glory? And then 2ly. He that will not acknowledge his dependence on Christ doth stop up the currant of the grace of Christ to himself. If we withhold our acknowledgements, Christ will withhold his outflowing. Let this persuade all Christians to own their dependence on Christ. And then, (5) Strengthen your union with Christ more and more. Grow farther and farther into Christ. The Apostle speaks of growing up into Christ, Eph. 4. 15. A believer, as soon as ever he is implanted, is inseparably united; but yet the union may be strengthened. As the tree shoots up in height, so the root grows downward in depth; and every branch, the longer it grows in the stock, the more firmly is it united. A believer must get faster and faster hold on Christ every day. He must strengthen his faith in Christ daily. As our faith is strengthened, so is our union with Christ strengthened. The Apostle tells us this in that Col. 2. 6, 7. As ye have received Christ Jesus the Lord; so walk ye in him, rooted and built up in him, and established in the faith. As our faith is established, so is our union established. Every Sermon, every Prayer, every Sacrament should cause us sink deeper and deeper into Christ. Thus for the Exhortation as it respects them that are Branches of Christ. 2. To them that are not branches. That they would endeavour to be implanted. I know a Christian is merely passive in his first conversion; the grace of conversion is preventing grace, yet something may be done. The Word of God, I told you, is the mediate instrument of our implantation. Wait constantly on this Word; when ye come to it, lift up your hearts to God, and get others to join with you, that God would cut you off from the stock of the wild vine, and implant you into Christ. Sigh after Christ; when Christ lays hold on you by his Spirit to cut you off, do not resist. Cut yourselves off from sinful acts, and God may cut you off from a sinful cool. This is 〈…〉 ●●hortation. 3. For Consolation This Doctri●● 〈…〉 are branches of Christ affords many 〈…〉 of Comfort. There are four springs, 〈…〉 to believers, arising from four priviledge●▪ which redound to them from this relation the●● stand in to Christ. As 1. Surely Christ will be very sensible of all the wrongs which are done you. They come very near to Jesus Christ, that lay violent hands upon his branches. There is sympathy between the Root and the branches. There is sympathy between Christ and believers, Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me, Acts 9 4? He that hacks and hews the branches, is injurious to the stock that bears them. He that hews and hacks at a believer, doth hue at Christ who is the Root of a believer. And 2. Surely Christ will revive you under all decay and die. Believers, these mystical hranches have their winter's as well as the natural branches. They lose their verdure and greenness sometimes through sin as other trees do. Well, here is your comfort, Christ your stock will send out his sap, he will by the communications of his influences, restore you to your lustre and greenness again: He will cause a fresh and beautiful Spring to succeed a drooping Winter: He will make you fresh and gay after all your spiritual witherings and failings. The Root owes this to the branch, to revive it, to convey sap to it. Jesus Christ having undertaken this work and office, to be the Church's Stock, doth owe this to every believer, to communicate sap and moisture to him. God hath put fullness into him that he might send out to all the branches. David had once lost his greenness; Peter was foully withered; many other Saints have languished; but Christ hath sent out his moisture and revived them again He restoreth my soul (saith David) and leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for his Names sake, Psal. 23. 3. A branch of Christ may promise to himself that he shall have spiritual restore from Christ after spiritual languish. Christ may for a time let his branches whither, but he will not let them die. And then 3. Surely Christ will bear thee up in all shake. Believers meet with may sore tempests in this world, they have storms and earthquakes; fightings without, and fears within. Jesus Christ will not suffer you to be broken off by any of these storms. In this, the mystical branches exceed all the natural. They may be broken off from the stock, but those cannot. You have seen sometimes strong arms of mighty trees, broken off by strong winds, mighty thunders, etc. But let it lighten and thunder never so violently, Christ will secure these branches; Once a Branch, and ever a Branch. Simon. Simon, Satan hath desired to lift thee, etc. Luke 22 32. He that will pluck off a branch must first pluck up the root. While the stock hath strength to bear the branches, they shall be borne up; only two things the Branches must be careful of. 1. They must importune Christ by their prayers. They must beg of him what they want, and he will bestow what he hath promised. Jesus Christ cannot deny importunate prayer. 2. They must clasp about him by faith. Faith is the soul▪ 〈…〉 Jesus Christ. A hand 〈…〉 from Jesus Christ. And 〈◊〉 4. Surely Christ will 〈…〉 in glory. Christ is a Root of glory as 〈…〉 grace. We are implanted into Christ in g●●ce, in order to our implantation into glory, 〈◊〉 we are made meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light, Col. 1. 12. He that is in Christ by grace, shall be with Christ in glory, Col. 3. 4. Luk. 1. 69. Hath raised up an horn of salvation. XVI. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth. Lon. Aug. 29. 1652. THese words are a part of that holy Song or Prophecy, which was uttered by Zacharias the father of John Baptist, after the use of his speech was restored to him. God was pleased to deprive him of the use of his speech for a time, that he might correct him for his unbelief, as you read, v. 20. of this chapter. The occasion was this; An Angel of the Lord is sent to him, as he was burning incense in the Temple, to inform him that his wife Elizabeth should conceive and bear him a son, v. 13. Zacharias knowing that both himself, and his wife were now so old, that according to the ordinary course of nature they could not expect seed, doth in an unbelieving manner desire a sign from the Angel, ver. 18. the Angel gives him a sign; which was not only a sign, but inflicted upon him as a punishment; Thou shalt be dumb and not able to speak, ver. 20. The child being born and circumcised on the eighth day, according to the Law, God remembers his servant, and opens his mouth 〈…〉 so long shut, 〈…〉 God fills his hear● 〈…〉 by virtue of which 〈…〉 which gins, v. 68 and 〈…〉 80. This prophecy hath two parts, 〈…〉 Preface or Introduction. 1. That that concerns Christ, v. 68 to v. 76. 2. That that concerns John, v. 76. to v. 80. (1) Concerning Christ, there are two things uttered. 1. He blessed God for the Mission of Christ. v. 68 Blessed be the Lord God of Israel, for he hath visited his people. 2. He shows the benefit the Elect have by this sending of Christ. This is two fold. First, Redemption. This is amplified by many words which signify one and the same thing. He hath redeemed his people, he hath raised up a horn of salvation, etc. Secondly, Sanctification. This is set down v. 74, 75. That he would grant us, that being delivered, etc. We might serve him without fear in holiness and righteousness, etc. (2.) Concerning John there are likewise two things Prophesied. 1. The nature of his office; He should be an extraordinary Prophet, v. 76. 2. The work of this Prophet, with the success he should have in his work, v. 76, 77, etc. Thou shalt go before the face of the Lord to prepare his way, etc. God that had raised him in an extraordinary manner, would bless him with more them ordinary success, Many of the children of Israel shall he turn unto the Lord his God, as the Angel had told him, 〈◊〉. The words which I have read, are a part of that Prophecy which is uttered concerning Christ. They are a glorious title which Zachary gives him before he was borne. A horn of salvation. From which title we gather this Note. Doct. That Jesus Christ is a horn of salvation to the Elect. God hath raised him up for this very purpose, to be unto his Elect an horn of salvation. God hath raised up (saith he) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, he was not yet raised, but the time now drew near; God had promised it. Faith looks on what God hath promised, as a thing already done. And then this phrase [In the house of his servant David] is added, to show the accomplishment of the promise of Christ made to David God had often promised David, that he would raise up one out of his loins, to sit upon his Throne, and that his Kingdom in Christ should be a perpetual Kingdom, Jer. 23. 5. Jer. 30. 9 Now at this time, the Kingdom of David was even cast down, the Sceptre was even departed from Judah; the promises of God made to David seemed now to fail, his Kingdom was even broken, therefore is Christ said here to be raised in the house of David, because in Christ the Tabernacle of David was raised up, which was even fallen, according to that Prophecy, Amos 9 11. And therefore Christ is called also the horn of David, Psalm. 132. 17. because he was raised up to fulfil the promise made to David, for the perpetuation of his Kingdom. And he is called the horn of the house of Israel, Ezek. 29. 21. 'Tis a 〈…〉 interpreters generally 〈…〉 his Elect an horn of salvati●●. In the opening of this, three 〈…〉 be explained. 1. What salvation is here meant. 2. Why Christ is called a horn of ●●●vation. 3. How he comes to be a horn of salvation to the Eect, to deliver them. Christ is salvation, 1. Privatively. Christ is salvation, 2. Positively. 1. He is a horn of salvation Privatively, in three respects. 1. In respect of sin. 2. In respect of Satan. 3. In respect of men. 1. In respect of sin. Sin is a thing which doth much endanger the souls of the Elect. 'Tis indeed the only great endangerer. Neither the devil nor men could endanger them, if it were not for sins which betray them into the hands of both. There are three things in sin from which the Elect need to be saved. (1) The guilt of sin. Gild is the obligation of the sinner to deserved punishment. This doth every sin expose the sinner unto, Leu. 5. 1, 2, 3, 4. Now Jesus Christ is salvation to them in respect of this. He hath taken all their guilt upon himself, and so freed them from it, so that though there be upon them simple guilt, yet none that shall for ever redound upon the person. The Apostle speaks of this salvation, T●●. ●. 14. He gave himself for us, that he might red●●me us from all iniquity. This is that which the Angel tells Joseph from the interpretation of his name, Mat. 1. 21. He saves them from then sin, by being made sin for them, as the Apostle speak, 2 Cor. 5. 21. From hence is the justification of our persons in God's sight. (2) The Dominion of sin. The Dominion of sin is the sovereignty and command which sin exerciseth over all men by nature. Hence it is that they are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. The Apostle useth this expression, Rom. 6. 16, 17. To whom ye yield yourselves servants to obey, his servants ye are to whom ye obey, etc. Now Christ is a horn of salvation to them in this respect, for he doth by the communication of his Spirit undermine and abolish the Lordly dominion of sin, and by the infusion of grace, and the communication of the Divine nature to them, cause them to become the servants of righteousness. Of this the Apostle speaks, Rom. 6. 18. Being made free from sin, ye became the servants of righteousness. This is the work of Sanctification. Of this the Apostle speaks, Tit. 2. 14. Who gave himself for us, that he might purify us unto himself, etc. Christ takes off the yoke of sin, and puts on the neck the yoke of grace. This the Apostle fully expresses, Rom. 8. 2. The Law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus, hath made me free from the Law of sin and death. (3) The condemnation of sin. The wages of sin is damnation, Rom. 6. ult. Jesus Christ is a horn of salvation to his 〈…〉 for he hath 〈◊〉 the wine 〈…〉 anger, and suffered the 〈…〉 their sins for them. Of 〈…〉 speaks, in 1 Pet. ●. 2●. Who his 〈…〉 sins in his body, etc. And the 〈…〉 affirms, Rom. 8. 1. That there i● 〈…〉 to them that are in Christ Jesus. Thus in respect of sin Christ is a horn of salvation. 2. In respect of Satan. Satan is a sworn adversary to the Elect. He goeth about continually like a roaring lion, seeking how he may devour them, 1 Pet. 5. 8. There are three things in respect whereof Christ is salvation to them from Satan. 1. The Dominion of Satan. The Elect are by nature as well as others the bondslaves of Satan, Eph. 2. 2. they are his servants by nature, and by their own voluntary sinfulness they have enslaved themselves to his bondage more: Of this the Apostle speaks, 2 Tim. 2. 26. Now Jesus Christ is salvation to the Elect from this estate. He doth at the conversion of the Elect, cut the cords and unloose the chains, by which the devil holds them fast in bondage. Of this our Saviour speaks, Luke 11. 21. By his death he did triumph over him, Col. 2. 15. and at the moment of our conversion, he doth actually put us into the possession of this victory. Acts 26. 18. He doth then turn us from the power of Satan unto God. 2. The temptations of Satan. Satan as he tempted Christ the Head, of which we read, Mat. 4. 1, 2, 3. so doth he not cease to assault and tempt all his members. The more visible Christ's image is in any person, the more violently doth the devil assault him. The Apostle speaks of this as in many other places, so fully in Eph. 6. 12. Now in this respect Christ is salvation to them. He stands by them, that these temptations may not prevail over them. He interposeth himself between them and the teeth of this roaring lion; that he may not have his will on them. Of this our Saviour speaks, Luk. 22. 31, 32. 3. The accusations of Satan. The devil is called in Scripture, The accuser of the brethren, Rev. 12. 10. and he is a diligent creature at this work, for he accuseth them day and night before the Lord. There are many imperfections and weaknesses in the children of God, they do too often step aside out of God's way, we have too many sad instances of the truth of this in Scripture which I need not name. The Devil takes occasion from these to accuse us, not only to men, but to God. He that turns every stone to hurry us into sin, doth when he hath overcome us, represent all to God against us in the ugliest shape he can, that he may hinder mercy from us. Yes, he is so malicious, that when he can have nothing visibly to lay to our charge, he will pretend something, as we see in the case of Job, Chap. 1. 9, etc. Ch. 2. 4, etc. Christ now is a horn of salvation to us in this respect; He stands continually pleading for us at God's right hand; as soon as Satan puts in a Bill, Christ puts in an answer, and so doth cast out and nullify all his Accusations. Thus is he salvation to them in respect of Satan. 3. In respect of ●●n. 〈…〉 by men, both in the●● 〈…〉 spiritual estate. 1. In their outward 〈◊〉. Men 〈…〉 against them: they 〈…〉 because they 〈…〉 image, they have so much of the 〈…〉 Because I have chosen you out of the 〈◊〉, therefore doth the world hate you, John 15. 19 The great ones of the world, they rise up often against them, and vex them, etc. Now Christ is salvation to them in this regard. Sometimes breaking the horns that devour them. Sometimes melting the hearts of their devourers, making their enemies their friends. Sometimes removing them from them that would break them; always delivering them from the evil and hurt of the attempts made against them, turning them for their greater and best good; He makes their vinegar better than their wine. Of this the Apostle was confident in his own case, Phil. 1. 19 This shall turn to my salvation, through your prayer and the supply of the Spirit of Jesus Christ. Christ is a horn even of temporal salvation to the Elect in this regard. He makes your troubles as good friends to you as your comforts; He makes your worst conditions work together for your best good. 2. In your spiritual estate. Christ is salvation to you from men in two respects. First, In regard of the corruptions of the world. Wicked men give wicked examples, and by the example of one wicked man others are corrupted. Now albeit the Godly are sometimes infected, in regard of some particular acts; yet are they saved from the general corruptions of wicked men, amongst whom they live. Jesus Christ keeps them from soiling themselves as others do. This is that which is recorded of the Angel of the Church of Pergamus, Rev. 2. 1●. and of those few in Sardis, chap. 3. 4. Th●s was Noah saved in that corrupt age in which he lived, Gen. 7. 1. Secondly, ●n regard of the evil counsels of men. Wicked men are of the same mind with the devil their father. They are daily tempting, enticing, alluring and persuading the godly to walk with them in their ways. Joseph was tempted by his Mistress, Gen. 39 7. This is put in amongst the Catalogue of the sufferings of the old Martyrs, that they were tempted, Heb. 11. 37. Christ the great Counsellor of his Church saved all these from yielding to such temptations. Though they are sometimes ensnared, yet they are again brought off by Christ from those ensnarements, and Christ gives them power afterward the more to resist them, and to abhor them. II. Positively, Christ is salvation. 1. In respect of grace. 2. In respect of glory. Jesus Christ is eternal salvation unto the Elect. All that salvation which hath been mentioned before, is in reference to this which is the upshot of all. He therefore saves them from sin, from the devil, from men, that he may bring them to this eternal happiness. He is called in Scripture eternal life, 1 John 5. 20. The Author of eternal salvation, Heb. 5. 9 The salvation of Israel, Psal. 53. 6. The Captain of our salvation, Heb. 2. 10. To show that this eternal 〈…〉 from him. 1. He hath merited this salvation for the Elect: 'Tis his purchase. 2. He keeps it for them, and them 〈…〉 1 John 5. 11. 3. He will actually put them into full possession of it, when he returns from heaven in the latter end of the world; of which he speaks, John 14. 3. Thus much for the first particular, namely the extent of that salvation, of which Christ is said to be an Horn. He is the salvation of the Elect Privatively from all evil; Positively to all good, till he have brought them to heaven the place of eternal salvation. 2. Why Christ is called an Horn of salvation. That we may come to the full understanding of this, let us consider how the word is used in Scripture. Now we find that this word doth Metaphorically denote two things especially. 1. Glory and dignity; So we find it used, Lam. 2. 3. where the Church complaining of the misery which had befallen her, hath these expressions, The Lord hath cut off in his fierce anger all the Horn of Israel, That is, whatsoever was glorious or excellent in Israel, God hath now removed. So we may see clearly if we read the first verse. The Lord hath cast down from heaven unto earth the beauty of Israel, he hath covered the daughter of Zion with a cloud, etc. and then it follows, He hath cut off all the Horn of Israel. The glory of God manifested in his appearings, when he brought Israel out of Egypt, is expressed by this Metaphor, Hab. 3. 3, 4. His glory covered the heavens, etc. His brightness was as the light, He had horns coming out of his hand, etc. So Psal. 9●. 10. My Horn, saith the Psalmist; shalt thou exalt like the horn of an Unicorn; that is, thou shalt increase my glory and dignity. 2. Serength and Power. So 'tis used, Lam. 2. 17. He hath set up the horn of thine Adversaries, saith the Church, that is, he hath increased the power and strength of thine Adversaries. So when God threatens to weaken the power of Moab, he doth it by this Metaphor, Jerem. 48. 25. The Horn of Moab is cut off, and his arm is broken. The breaking of the arm doth fully expound the cutting off of the Horn. And when God promiseth to give his people power to subdue their enemies; he useth this expression, Micah 4. 13. Arise and thresh, etc. for I will make thine horn Iron. Now then when Christ is called an Horn of salvation, the meaning of the Holy Ghost is, 1. The glory of his salvation. 2. The strength of his salvation. First, The glory of his salvation. Jesus Christ is a glorious Saviour; and the salvation which he brings to his people is a glorious salvation, in three respects. 1. Consider the person of Christ. God raised up many horns of salvation for his people, when they were in distress. The History mentions them, Neh. 9 27. According to thy manifold mercy thou gavest them Saviour's which saved them. Gideon, and Jepthah, and Samson, etc. they are called Saviour's, because they saved instrumentally the people of God from their enemies. But they were but mean Saviour's in respect of Christ, his person 〈…〉 They were but men; He God 〈…〉 person. Though his glory was 〈…〉 eyes of carnal men, yet they that had spiritual eyes did behold it, John ●. 14. We 〈…〉 glory, the glory as of the 〈◊〉 begotten of the Father. If the person of Christ be compared with the persons of other saviours, it will appear that he is a glorious Saviour. All other horns of salvation were but wooden horns, Christ is a golden Horn of salvation. 2. Consider the nature of the salvation itself. 'Tis spiritual salvation, 'tis eternal salvation. All those horns of salvation, which were raised up in sundry ages for the defence of the Church, were but horns of outward salvation, and of temporary salvation. They saved only the outward man, and that neither but for a time. The Church was in as much peril after they had wrought salvation for them, as ever they were before. When Gideon was dead, the children of Israel fell into as great danger as they were in before. So after the death of Jepthah, and after the death of Samson, they were overwhelmed with as great hazards as before, as you may read in the story in the book of Judges. But now Christ is a Horn of salvation to their souls, as well as to their bodies. He saves them from their spiritual enemies, Sin, Satan, as well as from men. He saves them from the wrath to come, 1 Thes. 1. 10. And then he saves them for ever. The Church never can be, never will be in that danger again as they were before this Horn of salvation was raised. He hath for ever perfected them that are sanctified, Heb. 10. 14. 3. Consider the glorious manner of the working of this salvation. Never any salvation so glorious at this. There are three things in it. (1) He saved the Elect by his own power. The power by which all other horns of salvation delivered the Church, was by a power one of themselves; the strength they had was none of their own, but the power by which Christ saved, and still saves his Church, is from himself; the Divinity impowered the Humanity, Psal. 98. 1. His own right hand, and his own holy Arm hath gotten him the victory. (2) He saved the Elect solely. Other horns of salvation had the concurrence of many besides themselves, Gideon, and Jepthah, and Samson, etc. They blew the trumpet and gathered multitudes, to assist them in the battles which they fought for the salvation of the Church. All Israel came after them: But this Horn of salvation wrought the Church's deliverance alone, Esay 63. 3, 5. I have trodden the winepress alone, etc. He had no other Horn to help him; He entered the field, and fought the battle alone, and by himself obtained the victory. 3. He saved the Church by his own death. Other horns of salvation delivered the Church by the death of the enemy. Ehud slew Eglon, but he himself did not die, judges 3. 21, 22. Gideon show Zeha and Zalmunna the enemies of Israel, Judges 8. 21. but he himself was not slain. But now this Horn of salvation got the victory by dying, his Cross was his Conquest. He triumphed over principalities and powers on the Cross, as the Apostle speaks, Col. 2. 15. He subdued all the horn of the 〈…〉 of his blood. 〈…〉 life, his grave is our victory. 〈…〉 do fully prove that Jesus 〈…〉 salvation; that is, a gloriou●●●lvation 〈…〉 first. Secondly, The strength of his 〈…〉 Christ is a strong Saviour; the salvation 〈…〉 he works for his people hath strength in it. He hath raised up a mighty salvation for us; so some translations render this text. To this agrees that of the Prophet, Psal. 89. 19 I have laid help upon one that is mighty, I have exalted one chosen out of the people. When God committed our salvation to Christ, he committed it to one that was mighty. Christ is not a reed of salvation, but a rock of salvation. A strong Redeemer, as the Scripture calls him, jerem: 50. 34. Consider four things. 1. What strong enemies Christ was to vanquish, that he might save us. (1) He was to save us from sin. Now sin was very strong, it grew fast and deep in the heart. Sin is interwoven in the very constitution of every man. Christ could not save the Elect, if he did not pluck up the very roots of sin. He was to save them from the guilt, from the power, from the filthiness, yea from the very being of sin. Had he not been very strong, he could not have subdued such a potent enemy as sin was. (2) He was to save them from the devil. The devil is called in Scripture, The strong man, yea, the strong man armed, Luke 11. 21. One devil hath more strength than all the men in the world, and there are many Legions of devils which are in the possession of the Elect by nature. The devils are called principalities and powers, for the greatness of their strength, Eph. 6. 12. Jesus Christ, if he had not been very strong, could never have routed these mighty spirits. Consider, 2. The manner how he was to save us. He was to bear and undergo the wrath of his Father for his Elect; a heavy burden, which they were notable to bear. The grappling with sin and Satan was but easy in respect of this, to bear the wrath of God without sinking. The Prophet speaks of this, Esay 53. 5, 6. all the punishment of the sins of men was laid on Christ. He treadeth the winepress of the fierceness and wrath of Almighty God, Rev. 19 15. There it's spoken of him as the Executioner of his Fahters wrath, but he did first tread it as a sufferer. And he did bear all this alone. And he was to undergo it without sinking and fainting. Had he not been a strong salvation, he had perished under this burden. To bear the wrath of God, is a greater work than the subduing of all the devil's strength. He could have done this by a word; but to satisfy the justice of his Father, could not be done without his personal suffering. Consider 3. The multitude of the persons he was to save. Thousands and millions, an innumerable multitude the Scripture affirms them to be, Rev. 7. 9 All the Elect of God which did then live; yea, all that had been, all that should be to the end of the world. Had he not been a strong Saviour, he could not have saved so many. And (which doth show his strength more) All these were at first unwilling to be saved by him. The Elect, when Jesus Christ 〈…〉 them, and to apply the salvation 〈…〉 which he hath merited for them, are 〈◊〉 unwilling to be saved; they run away from him, they like their condition so well, that they desire not to be removed out of it. They ●●ject Christ, yea they fight against Christ and the salvation that he brings, until he have subdued their hearts, and of unwilling made them willing, by the power of his irresistible grace. And then they willingly and freely adhere to him; Draw us, and we will run after thee. Consider 4. The perfection and fullness of his salvation. His salvation is a complete salvation. This is that which the Apostle saith, Heb. 7. 25. He is able to save 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the uttermost, o● to perfection. What is it to save to the uttermost or to perfection? 1. 'Tis to save the whole man. 2. 'Tis to save from all evil to all good. 3. 'Tis to save to eternity. Jesus Christ doth perfectly save in all these respects. He will never leave off his Elect till he hath brought them to glory. Christ is called a Horn of salvation, because he saves both Offensively and Defensively; he saves his people, and wounds his enemies, It's a Metaphor from horned creatures, which do save themselves, and offend their assailant. Thus much for the second particular; Why he is called an Horn of salvation. 3. How Christ comes to be an Horn of salvation. This is expressed in this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, God hath raised him up. This phrase notes these three things. 1. God's decree whereby Jesus Christ was from eternity designed to this work. The Scripture ●●lls that by a solemn Decree of all the three Persons, Jesus Christ the second person, was designed for this work of salvation. He was set apart by the determinate Counsel of God, to be the Author of salvation unto the Church. The Psalmist speaks of this, Psal. 2. 6, 7. Yet have I set my King, etc. I will declare the Decree; the Lord hath said unto me, Thou art my Son, this day have I begotten thee. 2. God's Mission of Christ. As he was before all time appointed for this work; so he was in the fullness of time sent to accomplish it. In the fullness of time God sent forth his Son made of a woman, made under the Law, to redeem them that were under the Law, Gal. 4. 4, 5. Of this Mission the Prophet speaks largely; Esay 61. 1, 2, 3. The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me, etc. He hath sent me to bind up the broken hearted, etc. To this belongs that solemn public promulgation of the Father, whereby he proclaimed Christ as his salvation to the world, Mat. 3. 17. by an immediate voice from heaven, This is my well beloved Son. 3. The Act of God in furnishing Christ with such qualifications as might render him fit for such a work. As he established him by his Decree, and by his public Mission sealed him for this work; so he did furnish him with all those qualifications which were necessary for the carrying of it on for the good of his Elect. This furnishing of Christ relates to two things. 1. The preparing of a body for him. A humane nature was necessary for him, that was to be the salvation 〈…〉 must be made to Justice by the 〈…〉 that committed the trespass. And 〈◊〉 besides the Divine Nature was not capable of saving that way that salvation must be wrought, namely by suffering. God therefore fitted Christ with a body, in which body by the grace of personal union the Godhead was caused to dwell. Of this the Apostle speaks, Heb. 10. 5. Sacrifice and meat-offering thou wouldst not have, but a body hast thou fitted me. 2. By conferring upon the humane nature fullness of all those spiritual qualifications and endowments which were necessary for him, to the carrying on of his work. Strength, wisdom, judgement, mercy, love, patience and many other graces were needful for this work of salvation. God therefore furnished Jesus Christ with all these, Esay 11. 1, 2, 3. And as he had variety of all these graces, so did God bestow upon him a fullness, of all these; not a limited, stinted fullness, as he bestowed upon others; but an unmeasurable fullness of all grace; A fullness of redundancy, which from him might flow out to all the Elect for the filling of them with a fullness of sufficiency. Of this the Scripture speaks, John 3. 34. and john 1. 16. In all these respects God hath raised him up to be a Horn of salvation. Thus much for the opening of the Doctrine. The Uses of this Doctrine. Use 1. For Information, in two things. First, The miserable condition of those that are without jesus Christ. Who are without Christ? Not only Jews, and Turks, and Pagans, but all unbelievers in the Church. Whosoever is without true saving faith, is without Christ. 'Tis faith that makes Christ Actually ours Faith unites us to Christ, and Christ to us. Their misery is very great. Christ is a horn of salvation, the only Horn of salvation; he that is without Christ, is without salvation: God hath put the salvation of men into Christ's hands, 1 john 5. 11. He hath given us eternal life, and this life is in his Son. And he that hath the Son hath life; but he that hath not the Son hath not life, ver. 12. God himself cannot save him that is without an interest in Christ. He hath set down this way of salvation, and he cannot deny himself. It is a question amongst the Schoolmen, whether God could have saved sinners without Christ's satisfaction. They generally conclude upon good grounds that he might; but now 'tis not so much as a question. God hath resolved, that whosoever is saved, shall be saved by Christ; and without mutability, he cannot save men another way. Better never to have seen the light, then to die without an interest in Christ. And he that doth not believe truly in him, hath no saving interest in him, john 3. 18. How shall I know whether I do truly believe or no? I shall here to help you, lay down a twofold note of true faith. 1. It is a heart-purifying grace. This effect of faith the Apostle mentions, in Acts 15. 9 Whosoever hath true faith in Christ, will find his heart purified and cleansed thereby. The efficient cause of the purification of the heart is the Spirit of God, who is called the Spirit of Sanctification, 2 Thes. 2. ●3. The 〈◊〉 cause is Christ's blood; 1 Iohn ●. 7. The instrumental cause is faith. This grace purifies the hear●● as it is an instrument whereby the blood of Christ which purifies, is conveyed to the soul▪ and as it doth take hold upon the promise of cleansing; the promise is, I will sprinkle clean water, Ezek. 36. 25. Faith applies this promise and improves, and so purifies the heart. If you have not purification of heart, you have not faith; and if you have not faith, you have not Christ as a Horn of salvation. Now that heart may be said to be purified, that hath these three properties. 1. If it bewail impurity. Impurity that is truly lamented, is in God's account as if it were removed, Rom. 7. 23, 24. If thy pollution be thy greatest burden, thy heart is purified in God's sight. 2. If it be cautious of every thing that may defile. A heart that is purified, dares not willingly come near any defiling puddle, it will avoid occasions, temptations of defilement, job 31. 1. Carefulness of shunning defilement is an infallible note of purification. 3. If it be through inadvertency defiled, it will not be quiet till it be made clean. A purified heart cannot lie in any uncleanness when God hath once discovered it to him. Thus David, when he saw his pollution, with what earnestness doth he run to the Laver that he may be washed? Ps. 51. 2, 7. 2. Saving faith hath very high and precious thoughts of Christ. This character is laid down by the Apostle, in 1 Pet. 2. 7. No unbeliever can truly have precious thoughts of Christ, nay they have low thoughts of him, as 1 Pet. 2. 7, 8. and Cant. ●. 9 Try your faith by this note. Now if Christ be truly precious; (1) He shall reig●● and rule over thee. His precepts will be as precious as his promises. His Sovereignty will be as precious as his sacrifice; his yoke will be as desirable as his merits; the Apostle opposeth saith and disobedience, 1 Pet. 2. 7. Where Christ is disobeyed, he is not believed in. (2) If Christ be truly precious to thee, his dishonours will pierce thy soul. The dishonours done to him in his truths, worship, government, will be a greater grief to thy heart then all the dishonours that are done unto thyself. (3) If Christ be truly precious to thee, it will be thy meat and drink to do him any service. Thou wilt make it thy study to set him up, and to make him great where ever thou comest. (4) If Christ be precious to thee, all his Ordinances will be precious. Thou wilt have a high esteem of his Word, of his Sacraments, of his Sabbaths, and that for his sake, who hath instituted these things. If it be not thus with thee, thou art an unbeliever; and if an unbeliever, thou hast for present no saving interest in him that is the horn of salvation. Secondly, The impossibility of the perishing of any of the Elect. Their eternal salvation is a thing of absolute certainty. They can never perish. They may seem to be lost sometimes in their own apprehension. I said (saith Jonah) I am cast out of thy sight, Jonah 2. 4. He was in his own eyes, as if he had been a castaway 〈…〉 impossible it should be so, as in other 〈…〉 so in this, because Christ is the horn of their salvation. He that hath wrought their salvation is able to preserve salvation for them, and them for salvation. If Christ be able to save you, ye shall be saved. When you look upon that in yourselves, that may seem to hinder your salvation, look upon that that is in Christ to maintain your salvation. You shall be as certainly saved, as Christ himself is saved. Father, I will that they whom thou hast given me may be with me where I am, that they may behold my glory, etc. John 17. 24. Your salvation is now fully accomplished; he that was able to accomplish your salvation, is able much more to apply it now it is accomplished. Consider these seven Notions to make this out. (1) Christ will not lose the merit of his blood, nor be deprived of the end of his death; and he must do both these, if one of his Elect should miss of salvation. (2) Christ did not conquer for the Devil, but from the Devil; Christ will not be at the charge and cost of redemption, and when he hath done, suffer the devil to go away with the spoil. (3) Christ will not impoverish himself to enrich the Devil; and impoverished he should be, if one of the Elect should perish: for every Saint helps to make up his mystical fullness. So the Apostle tells us, Eph. 1. ult. (4) jesus Christ will not rob his Father to enrich the Devil. Now if any Saint should perish eternally, God himself would be rob; for every Saint i● his inheritance, Ephes. 1. 1●. The Lord Christ (5.) will not suffer the Spirits Temple to fall into the eternal possession of the Devil. Now the Elect are the Temple of the Holy Ghost, 1 Cor 6 19 (6) Christ will not empty Heaven to fill Hell. Every Saint helps to fill heaven. (7) Christ will not bear a Name in vain. He will neither mock himself, nor mock his Father, nor his people. Now if he should be called an Horn of salvation, and not actually his Elect of salvation; he would be the greatest mock that ever was in the world. 2. Use. Reprehension. Those are to be blamed that erect other horns of salvation. 1. The Papists; they do set up their own works as a horn of salvation; at least they join works and Christ together, as concauses of salvation; the Scripture lays the whole merit on Christ, they lay a part of it on works. Greater dishonour than this cannot be done to Christ. If he be of himself sufficient, what needs the addition of other things? but he is sufficient, Heb. 1. 3. chap. 7. 25. Hear what the Scripture saith concerning those that look for salvation by works, Gal. 5. 4. As many as seek to be justified by the Law are fallen from grace. How did it fall out with Israel that followed after the Law of works? the Apostle will tell you, Rom. 9 30, 31, 32. Yea I shall add this; Jesus Christ will be a horn of destruction to those who will not make him the sole horn of Salvation. 2. Much like to these are many ignorant Protestants, who think to be saved by their duties, by their prayers, and by their repentance 〈◊〉 men should consider, that Christ must 〈◊〉 them from the guilt of all their duties, as well as from the guilt of their sins. Our holiest services have a mixture of unholiness in them. Domine lava lachrymas, was Augustine's prayer. And it must be ours. The filth of our holy things must be expiated by Christ, 'tis through him that they are accepted. You may read this Gospel in the Ceremonial Law, Exod. 28. 36, 37. The holy services we do are not accepted, because of any worth that is in us or them, but because of the engraved plate which is upon the forehead of Christ. 3. Use. Exhortation. 1. This should provoke all sinners to close with Christ. The great work of the Ministry is to bring Christ and the soul together. They are the friends of the Bridegroom, and it's their office to woe sinners to come in to Christ. Here is encouragement enough in this text. He is a horn of salvation, a horn of Gods raising; fly to him for salvation; salvation is to be had in Christ, salvation is to be had no where else, Acts 4. 12. Under the Law offenders did fly to the horns of the Altar, 1 Kings 2. 28. He that flies to the horns of this Altar shall be sure to be safe. Only two things must be observed. (1) All sin must be cast away; The wicked man must forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts, Esay 55. 7. Jesus Christ will not be a horn of salvation to an impenitent sinner. He came not to save men in their sins, but to save them from their sins, Mat. 1. 21. (2) Christ's own terms must be embraced. Christ came not to save men upon any terms, but upon his own terms. Now the terms of the Gospel are, A voluntary resignation of our solvet to be at Christ's disposing: To do his Will, to submit to his Sceptre. The soul must say, as Saul did to Christ, Lord, what wilt thou have me to do? Acts 9 6. That soul that doth cast away sin by repentance, and surrenders himself to Christ, to be in all things ruled by him, shall, whatever his condition hath been before, find Christ an horn of salvation to him. Do not say, my sins are great, etc. The greatest sin thou didst ever commit, is thy so long standing out against Christ, John 3. 19 Murder, Adultery are great sins; but the souls refusal to come in to Christ is a greater sin: those are sins only against the Law; this is a sin against the Gospel, this is a sin against the Remedy, this is a sin that binds and continues the guilt of all thy other sins upon the conscience. He that doth not close with Christ, saith one of these things; either that he hath no need of Christ, or else that Christ is not able to save him. 2. This teacheth God's people whither to go, when their salvation is endangered. Sometimes Satan by hot temptations, sometimes corruption by its violent out-breaking, do so exceedingly prevail upon the servants of God, as that in their apprehension their salvation is in a great hazard; they fear the Crown will be plucked away from them. God lets them come into such jeopardy, that they may exercise all their graces, and thrive the faster. They pray, they watch, yet Satan gets ground; sin overpowereth them, so that the● 〈…〉 to conclude, that the hope of 〈…〉. In such case your only refuge must be to 〈◊〉 is horn of salvation. David when sin was 〈◊〉 hard for him, goes to God, Psal. 65. 3. We must fly to this horn, and by his strength defend ourselves, and vanquish our enemies. There are several branches of this Horn, which must be improved at such a time. His Death, his Resurrection, his Ascension, his Intercession; All his Attributes, all his Promises, these are several little horns growing out of this great Horn. This Horn will give you strength to overcome, this Horn will keep what he hath purchased for you. He hath pushed down Satan, sin, the world already; and if they get head again, he can easily subdue them. He is not only the Horn of your salvation, but the Captain of your salvation, Heb. 2. 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. It was his freewill at first to undertake it: but having undertaken it, 'tis his office to perfect it. When salvation is at a hazard; go to him, fight in his Name, and he will give you victory. 3. Bless the Father for Jesus Christ. This holy man that penned this song, he gins it with praises. Blessed be the Lord God of Israel, for he hath visited and redeemed his people; and hath raised up an horn of salvation. Never think of a horn of salvation, but have in your hearts and mouths a Benedictus Dominus. If every thought of heart were a rapture, we could never sufficiently extol the love of God in raising up Christ for us. Especially, if he have made Christ an horn of salvation to us in particular. What storms did Christ go through? what deeps did he wade over, that he might be to us an Horn of salvation? He that is not thankful for Christ, can be truly thankful for nothing. When God gave Christ, he gave all. naturalists speak much of the Unicorns horn; Christ is the true Unicorn. 4. Do not, O ye servants of God, despondingly fear the attempts of your enemies. God's Church, though it be the world's great friend, yet meeteth with many enemies; many bloody horns are goring at it to destroy it; Look into all the ages that are past, and you will find it. Pharaoh was a horn, and a bloody one. Nabuchadnezzar was a horn. You read of four horns, Zech. 1. 18, 19 In the New Testament you read of horns; Herod, the Heathen Emperors; these were bloody horns. You read of a little horn, Dan. 7. 8. This is Antichrist. Oppose this horn of salvation to all these horns of destruction. 1. This horn is longer than they; they reach to one Kingdom, he the world over. 2. This horn is stronger than they. 3. This horn is longer-lived than they, Vid: Micah. 4. 12, 13. No horn hath yet been able to stand. None shall, Psal. 75. 8. 10. That horn of Christ, that with one push overthrew many Legions of Devils, is it not strong enough to bring down men? PSAI. 72. 6. He shall come down like rain upon XVII. SERM. at Mary Wolneth. Lon. Novem. 14. 1652. the mown grass. THis Psalm was penned by David, as appears from v. 20. It was composed by him a little before his death, when he had made his son Solomon King. Upon the occasion of Adonijahs rebellion, we read in 1 King. 1. 33, 34, etc. that Solomon was by the appointment of David anointed King of Israel and Judah. David having set him in his Throne, doth in the close of his life make this Psalm, wherein he doth prophetically foretell, and accordingly prays for the prosperity of him and his Kingdom, under which he doth also Prophecy of the felicity of Christ's Kingdom, of which Solomon was a type. Here are some passages which cannot be properly understood of Solomon, or his Kingdom; but are chief to be understood of Christ and his Kingdom, as that in ver. 7, 8, 17, etc. He shall have dominic●●. His Name shall endure for ever. Therefore it is to be expounded of Solomon and his Kingdom as they were typical of Christ the true Solomon and his Kingdom. Here are three parts of the Psalm. 1. Matter of petition, v. 1, 2, 3. 2. Matter of Prophecy, v. 4. to 18. 3. Matter of praise, v. 18, 19 The Text falls under the second head, which I called matter of Prophecy. David doth describe by the Spirit of Prophecy the Kingdom of Solomon, but especially the Kingdom of Christ, which was prefigured by Solomon's Kingdom. This Kingdom is described two ways. 1. By the righteousness of it, v. 4. There are both the parts of righteousness. The defending of the good; He shall judge the poor of thy people, and save the children of the needy: The punishment of the wicked; He shall break in pieces the oppressor. 2. By the blessed fruits of it. These are several, as namely, 1. The holy fear and reverence of God, ver. 5. They shall fear thee as long as the Sun and Moon endure, throughout all generations. 2. The propagation of his Kingdom by the calling in of the Gentiles, ver. 8, 9, 10, 11. He shall have dominion also from sea to sea, from the river to the world's end. 3. The great blessing which should accrue to his Subjects, and the great glory of the King. This is v. 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17. He shall redeem their soul from deceit, etc. 4. The great increase and edification of his Church. I name this last, because it is in the text, and the verse following the text. He shall come down like rain, etc. In which we have. First, a Prophecy of Christ's communications to his Church. He shall come down. Secondly, the nature of this communication. As the rain, as the showers. He shall come down. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There is a fourfold descending of Christ which the Scripture mentions. 1. His incarnation, the manifestation of himself in the flesh. 2. The abasing of himself in condition. He did not only assume humane flesh, but all the natural infirmities of our flesh; he took upon him the form of a servant, lived in the meanest and lowest condition of the sons of men. Of this descension the Apostle speaks, Phil. 2. 6, 7. 3. The subjecting of himself to death. His abiding under the power of the grave for three days and three nights. This is the lowest piece of his descension. Of this the Apostle speaks, Eph 4. 9 In that he ascended, what is it but that he also desconded first into the lowest parts of the earth? These descensions or come down of Christ are included one in another. When he took our nature upon him he did truly descend. Not as if the Divine nature came where it was not before, but because God did in the incarnation of Christ, manifest himself after such a manner as he never had done before; For God cannot properly be said to ascend or descend; he being a most simple and spiritual Essence, is not moved from place to place as creatures are, but he is said to ascend or descend in regard of the manifestation of his presence, either by the effects of his presence, or by visible species or shapes, which appearing or disappearing, he is said to ascend or descend. Although men might look upon his descension as having re●erence to his incarnation▪ Yet (4) There is another descension which we shall rather expound this of: the distillations of his grace, and spiritual blessings upon his Church. These indeed are glorious descensions. When Christ lets fall the influences of his grace, then doth he come down in a glorious manner. Every drop of grace is a Metaphorical descension. Christ doth spiritually come down, when he lets any spiritual virtue drop down in his Ordinances upon the souls of his people. Of this kind of descension the Church speaks, Esay 64. 1. Like the rain. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Some think our English word water comes from this Hebrew word matar, because they are so near in sound one to another. Rain is the distillation of a moist cloud, which being dissolved by the heat of the Sun▪ and by the collision of other clouds, sends down its water to the middle Region of the air. The reason why it falls down by drops, and doth not come like a torrent, is because the cloud is not dissolved all at once, but by little and little. Upon the mown grass. Detondere, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Hebrew word used here hath a double signification. It signifies a shorn fleece of wool, and it signifies a meadow newly mown. This hath occasioned divers readings; some read it, He shall come down like the rain into a fleece of wool. So the Septuagint: they that follow this reading make it an allusion unto the dew that fell upon gideon's fleece, Judge 6. 37, 38, 39 when all the land beside was dry, and again upon the rest of the land when the fleece was dry▪ 〈…〉 read it according to our translation. He shall come down like the rain upon the mown grass, This seems to be more agreeable to the meaning of the Holy Ghost; especially because of the clause following, which is added by way of Explication. As the showers that water the earth. As the showers. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Rain and showers differ only as less and more; rain signifies smaller showers, and showers signify greater rain, Deut. 32. 2. Raine falling in multitude of drops is called a shower. That water the earth. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word Zarziph, which is here translated water, is only used in this place in all the Bible; it signifies to water by dispersion, to water by drops. The showers are dispersed in drops all over the face of the earth, in a very regular and artificial way. God hath divided (saith Job) a water course for the overflowings of waters, Job 38. 25. The rain is from the cloud spouted out by drops after such a manner, that every part hath its share. Thus much for Explication. The Observation is this. Doct. Jesus Christ is to his Church as the rain to the mown grass, as the showers of rain that drop down upon the earth. Jesus Christ is the spiritual rain of his Church. Jesus Christ is a mystical shower to the hearts of his people. When God gave Christ out of his bosom, he did then, if ever, rain a golden shower upon the world. The Prophets do use this Metaphor in their predictions of Christ, Esay 45. 8. Drop down ye heavens from above, and let the skies pour down righteousness, etc. Though it be expressly a prediction of that great return of the Church from their captivity. Yet as Calvin well observes, it relates to the spiritual Kingdom of Christ, when all this should be completely fulfilled; The heavens did never drop down salvation, they never reigned righteousness so abundantly, as when they reigned down him who is the Lord our righteousness. In the handling of this Doctrine I shall open three things. 1. What that is which in Christ may be compared to the rain. 2. Wherein lieth the resemblance between Christ and rain. 3. Wherein lies the disproportion: there I shall show how Christ excels all other rain. For the firste This Metaphor of rain doth relate to three things of Christ. It respects three particulars. 1. It hath relation to his Doctrine. It is usual in Scripture for Doctrines to be compared to the rain. My Doctrine (saith Moses) shall 〈◊〉 at the rain, my speech shall distil as the dew, 〈◊〉 Ordinarily the preaching of the Prophets Deut. ●●. ● ●● c●lled Dropping, Ezek. 20. 46. Drop thy word ●oward the south, and Prophecy, Ezek. 21. 2. Drop ●●y word toward the holy places, Prophecy against the land of Israel. I find divers Expositors interpreting that Text of Christ's Doctrine. Saith chrysostom, the coming down of the rain upon the grass, or upon the fleece of wool, as he renders it, signifies the preaching of Christ in the Synagogue. And certainly Christ's Doctrine (if ever the Doctrine of any person) may be well compared to the rain. His Doctrine is from above, and it hath all the properties of rain. The Prophet makes the comparison, Esay 55. 10, 11. 2. It hath relation to the spiritual Government of his Kingdom. The administration of judgement is many times set out by the descending of the rain. Job speaking of himself as a Magistrate, useth this Metaphor, Chap. 29. 22, 23. My speech (saith he) dropped upon them, They waited for me as for the rain, and they opened their mouth wide as for the latter rain. Evil Governors are compared to a parching drought whereby the estates of the Subjects are withered, they are like those destroying Gardeners that pluck up the very roots of the herbs, but good Governors are like Gardeners that do daily water the flowers, and so cause them to thrive. Jesus Christ is such a Governor as seeks the wealth of all his Subjects, he drops down rain upon them, whereby they are multiplied and increase. The Prophet speaks of this, Hos. 6. 3. His going forth is prepared as the morning, he shall come unto us as the rain; as the latter and former rain unto the earth. Christ's government tends not to the impoverishing, but to the enriching of his Subjects. In his days shall the righteous flourish, verse after the Text. Jesus Christ is not a waster, but a waterer of the spiritual estates of those that are under the Government of his Sceptre. The Psalmist compares his Sceptre to dew, Ps. 110. 3. It hath relation to the influences of his Spirit. The influences of Christ's Spirit are compared to the rain. The Prophet useth this Metaphor to set out the distillations of his Spirit upon his C●u●●h, Joel 3. 18. It shall come to pass in that day that the mountains shall drop down ●●to ●i●e, and the ●ill● shall flow with milk, etc. When Jesus Christ h●d communicated▪ his Spirit to the Church▪ See wh●t she saith, Cant. 5. 5. I opened to my beloved, and my hands dropped with myrrh, and my fingers with sweet ●●●●lling myrrh up●n the handles of the lock. Christ did there come down as the rain; by the secret virtue of his Spirit, he caused many precious drops to fall upon the soul of his Church. Calvin expounds this Text of the secret distillations of Christ's grace upon his people; so that whether we respect Christ's Doctrine, or his spiritual Government, or the secret influx of his Spirit; in regard of all these doth he come down as the rain upon the mown grass, and as the showers that water the earth. This is the first thing. Qui respectus. For the second, Quae propo●tio, Wherein stands the resemblance between Christ and rain. I shall mention three particulars. 1. The rain is the immediate and proper work of God The Scripture doth by this put a difference between the true God, and Idols, Jer. 14. 22. Man can neither set abroach the vessels of heaven to cause rain, nor can he stop them when God hath set them abroach. The key of the rain hangs at God's girdle. Man may speak long enough to the clouds before they give a drop of moisture, but if God do but lift up his finger they are dissolved. As he brings forth the wine our of his treasures, so doth he draw the rain out of his Cellars. Jesus Christ comes down like the rain in this respect, for he is the immediate and proper gift of God. This rain had never fallen from heaven, if God had not of his own accord bestowed it; had all the Angels of God been convened in an Assembly, how to restore lost man, they could never have found out this way. The Scripture attributes the whole work of giving Christ to God alone. My Doctrine is not mine, Joh. 7. 16. but his that sent me. His Doctrine is from God John 12. 49 His Sceptre is from God, Psal. 110. 2. His King he is called, Psal. 2. 6. He prepared him a body, Heb. 10. 5. This rain hath no Father but God alone. 2. The rain is very useful to the earth. Jesus Christ is very useful to his Church. Consider this in five particulars (1) The rain hath a cooling virtue. When the air is heated through the scorching beams of the Sun, the rain doth refresh and cool it; we find a great cooling after one night's rain, even in the heat of Summer. Jesus Christ hath a cooling virtue, when the soul burns with lust, when it is scorched with fiery temptations, one shower from Jesus Christ cools it again. Jesus Christ by the droppings of his Doctrine, and by the secret distillations of his grace, quencheth the unholy heats of the soul. God complains of his people; that they are as an Oven heated by the Baker, Hos. 7. 4 The best of God's children find in themselves such inordinate heats. Sometimes they burn with worldliness, sometimes they are hot with envyings, sometimes they rage with passion and distempered anger. Jonah had a flame of anger in his soul, when he fell so foul upon God, Chap. 4. init. There's no way to extinguish such burn, but by the cooling drops of Jesus Christ; he sends down a shower upon the heart, and ●o brings it to its own temper again. How did Christ cool Paul when unconverted, Acts 9 1, 3, 4. (2) The rain hath a mollifying nature. When the earth is like iron under our feet by long droughts or hard frosts, a few good showers supple it, and make it tender, Psalm. 65. 10. David speaking of the earth, saith, Thou makest it soft with showers. Jesus Christ hath a softening virtue; sometimes the heart is hardened by the deceitfulness of sin. The soul is like the frosty earth, no hammers will break it, no judgements will dissolve it; at such a time a few drops from Jesus Christ will soften it. The heart of Peter was once grown as hard as a stone, he denies Christ, forswears Christ, curses himself if ever he knew him, Luke 22. 55, 56, etc. no sooner doth Jesus Christ open the cloud, and rain upon him, but he melts into tears, v. 61. The heart of the Church was once frozen very hard. Christ comes and knocks, she sleeps, he continues knocking, she gives him a scornful answer, Cant. 5. 2, 3. no sooner had he let fall some drops of mirth, but she is softened, v. 4. Before, her bowels were troubled at his knocking, but now her bowels are more troubled that she made him knock twice. Christ's Word and his Spirit have a softening power and virtue; the unconverted hardness of the heart is mollified by this rain. If Christ would but now drop a few drops from heaven, the veriest flint in the Congregation would be turned into a fountain of waters. How comes the stony heart to be turned into an heart of flesh, but because these showers fall upon it? One good shower of this rain upon the heart of a Judas would make it like melting wax. And then, 3. The rain hath a cleansing virtue. A good shower makes the very channels clean, store of rain makes the very sinks sweet. You observe the fields have a sweet perfume after rain. Jesus Christ hath a cleansing and sweetening virtue. Those hearts that are as filthy as sinks, those souls that are as nasty and stinking as your common shores, after a good shower of this rain, are both clean and fragrant. Marry Magdalen was a very sink of sin, she was full of devils; yet when this rain fell powerfully upon her, how clean was she? See what the Apostle saith, 1 Cor. 6. 9, 10, 11. What a company of filthy creatures are these? Fornicators, Idolaters, etc. yet v. 11. one good shower washeth these clean. Christ hath a cleansing virtue. Let the soul be never so leprous or filthy, a few good showers from him will make it clean; The Prophet calls him a fountain for sin and for uncleanness, Zech. 13. 1. And then, (4) The rain hath a fructifying virtue. The feed which is sown doth not thrive, the grass in the pastures doth not grow, if God withhold rain. All the labour of the husbandman comes to nothing, if either the former or the latter rain be denied. The Psalmist sets out this virtue of the rain, Psal. 65. 9, 10, 11, 12, 13. want of rain brings a famine upon the earth. Those three years of famine, which followed one after another in the days of David, were occasioned by want of rain, 2 Sam. 21. 1. compared with v. 10. The sons of Saul were to be hanged, till God by sending rain, did signify that he was appeased. The rain is the very life of the fruits of the earth; the clouds are the sucking-bottle of the fruits of the earth; they dwindle if these bottles continue for any space stopped up. See Jer. 14. 4, 6. There is in Jesus Christ a fructifying virtue. He makes the barren soul bring forth, and be a fruitful mother of children. See v. 16. after the text, John 15. 5. He that abideth in me and I in him, the same bringeth forth much fruit. The Word of Christ is a fructifying word. The Spirit of Christ is a fructifying Spirit; the Church is acquainted with the fructifying virtue of Christ, therefore she goes to him, Cant. 4. 16. if Christ do not rain, there will be no fruits: but if Christ will drop down his dew, the pastures will be green. All the labour and pains of the spiritual husbandman will come to nothing, if the rain come not down from Christ. And if he please to pour down showers, let not the Eunuch say, I am a dry tree. Though your heart be as dry and withered as the rod of Aaron was; yet if Christ will rain upon it, it shall both bud, and blossom, and bring forth Almonds. The husbandman useth to say of his corn in a time of long drought, that it is stocked, yet that corn when the rain comes, will shoot up. Grace is sometimes stocked in the soul; yet if Christ rain plentifully upon it, i● will get up and gather strength again. David's grace was stocked, when he lay sleeping in his blood, and uncleanness, for so many months together; yet when God opened this cloud and poured moisture upon him, he revived. (5.) The rain hath a recreating 〈◊〉. It causes a gladness and cheerfulness in the heart● of men, and it begets a kind of briskness in the sensitive creatures: the birds chirp, the beasts of the field rejoice in their kind: yea, there is a kind of joy in the very inanimate creatures. The Prophet speaks of this in Psal. 65. 13. The pastures are clothed with flocks, the valleys are covered over with corn: they shout for joy, they also sing. When rain comes after a long drought, there is melody made by all creatures in this lower world. Jesus Christ hath a cheering virtue, he doth fill the soul with joy when he comes down into the soul. The heart that was dead, and dull, and heavy, is made pleasant and joyful, when these showers fall upon it. When Jesus Christ comes to the soul, he brings joy to the soul, Esay 9 3. They joy before thee, according to the joy in harvest, and as mon rejoice when they divide the spoil. When the Eunuch had his soul bedewed with this rain, He went on his way rejaycing, Acts 8. 39 The ground of his rejoicing you may see, v. 32, 33, 35. Philip had acquainted him with Christ, and Christ upon Philip's preaching had reigned down a soaking shower upon his soul, that created a holy gladness in his heart. Christ is the only cheerer of the heart. He can remove spiritual melancholy, he can take off spiritual heaviness, and put unspeakable joy into the soul. 'Tis true, many of the members of Christ want spiritual joy. This ariseth either from the restraining of this rain, or from their not discerning of this rain. When ever the distressed soul shall come to the feeling of these showers, it will rejoice and be no more sad. The Doctrine of Christ is a cheering Doctrine. The whole Doctrine is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Doctrine of good tidings. All the Ordinances of Christ are cheering Ordinances. I will make them joyful in my house of prayer. God hath planted Jesus Christ as a root of joy to his people. As he is a plant of salvation, so he is a plant of consolation, no joy is either real or lasting, which is not bottomed upon Jesus Christ. That soul that hath received this rain into his heart shall have some joy here, and he shall have everlasting, full, soul-satisfying joy in Christ, and with Christ, and from Christ in the other world. This is the second, Christ is like rain in respect of usefulness. 3. Christ is like the rain, if we consider the manner of its descending. There is a great similitude between the manner of Christ's descension upon the soul, and the descension of the rain upon the earth. I shall instance in seven particulars. First, The rain comes down successively and gradually, now a little and then a little. The rain doth not fall down all at once; but it comes now a shower, and then a shower, as the earth stands in need of it. God pierces now one cloud, and then another in a pleasant succession. Jesus Christ comes now a little and then a little, as the condition of the soul requires. A drop in one Ordinance, and a drop in another Ordinance. A shower falls in this Sermon, and a shower at another Sermon. This is that which the Prophet mentions, Esay 28. 10. Precept must be upon precept, line upon line, here a little and there a little. Now one comforting influence comes down and then another; now one quickening impulsion, than another; now one promise is reigned down, then another. (1) Jesus Christ would have his people in a constant dependence on himself. (2) He would have them wait constantly upon every Ordinance. (3) He would not have them surfeit, either upon his Doctrines or comforts, therefore he observes a succession in his distillations of good things upon them. (4) He would have every Doctrine, and every comfort soak into their hearts, Luke 9 44. (5) Christ would have nothing lost, which he is pleased to bestow. (6) Christ would endear every drop of his grace to his people. (7) The souls of his people are like narrow mouthed vessels, they cannot receive much at once without spilling. (8) We are such bad husbands, that Christ dares not trust us with much at once. For these and such like reasons, doth he cause all he gives, to distil in a way of succession. Jesus Christ doth in a way of wisdom, parcel out all the good which he raines down upon the souls of his people. Secondly, The rain comes down irresistibly. When God doth by his Word of command speak to the cloud to distil its moisture upon the earth, it is not in the power of all the creatures in heaven and earth to hinder its falling down. As the clouds cannot open their own veins till God give the word, no more can they ●●●●ch themselves when God sets them a bleeding. Jesus Christ comes down upon the hearts of men with an irresistible power and efficacy, whether we understand it of his Doctrine, or of his Sceptre, or of the influences of his Spirit, he doth descend with a forcible and mighty power. His Word is called a powerful Word, Heb. 4. 12. The Word of the Lord is quick and powerful, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. His Sceptre is called a Sceptre of strength, Psal. 110. 2. The Lord shall send the rod of thy strength out of Zion. His Spirit is a Spirit of might, and it's said to work mightily in the hearts of his people, Col. 1. 29. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Let Pelagians and Arminians talk what their wild fancy dictates, of the resistibility of grace; the Scripture mentions no such thing: the rain will come down whether men will or no; and let the earth be never so hard, it will soak into it. When Christ by his Word and Spirit descends, it is with a mighty power, that the soul is not able to resist it. I shall show the power of Christ's Word, Spirit and Sceptre, in three great works; Conviction, Conversion, Consolation. To speak particularly to these. 1. For Conviction. When Christ comes down with an intention, thoroughly to convince the conscience, of sin and righteousness; the soul though it may stand out for a time, yet it is through the mighty smitings of Christ's Word and Spirit so powerfully overruled, that it cannot but yield: we have an instance of this in Paul, Act. 9 6. Jesus Christ doth with such an invincible evidence come upon his conscience; that though he was in a violent motion carried on in a contrary course, yet he yields up himself as a prisoner into his hands, crying out, Lord, what wilt thou have me do? He hath no strength to stand out any longer, nay not so much as to dispute it with Christ. Of this convincing power the Apostle speaks, 1 Cor. 14. 24, 25. Jesus Christ, when he comes down with a purpose to bridle the conscience, doth deal so effectually, that the proudest sinner is brought upon his knees, and made to pass sentence against himself. Yea, with such a mighty power doth he come down upon the soul, that even those who are not savingly brought in, have their mouths stopped, and are unable to say any thing for themselves. Thus it was with those that brought the woman taken in the act of Adultery, to Christ, John 8. 9 They were so mightily convicted by the Word and Spirit of Christ, that they were not able to abide in his presence, but shrunk away one by one as men self-condemned. Thus it was when Christ descended in the word of Stephen, Acts 6. 10. Though they would not yield, yet they were so powerfully convinced, that they could not resist the Spirit by which he spoke. Christ doth so demonstratively smite the conscience, that carnal reasoning hath no door of evasion. Of this powerful conviction we may understand that of the Prophet, Esay 11. 4. Where speaking of Christ he saith, that he shall smite the earth with the rod of his mouth, and with the breath of his lips shall slay the wicked. When Christ sets upon the work of conviction; he comes with so much efficacy; that he smites some to submission, all to silence. 2. For Conversion. When Christ descends upon the soul in the work of Conversion; what strength doth he put forth? the strong holds of sin are battered down, every high thing that exalts itself against the knowledge of Christ, is brought into captivity, to the obedience of his Sceptre, 2 Cor. 10. 4. Devils are cast out of the possession which they have kept for many years without the least disturbance. Strong lusts are mortified, and the very constitution of the soul is changed. What aileth thee O thou sea, that thou fleddest, thou Jordan that thou wast driven back? ye mountains that ye skipped like rams, etc. Ps. 114. 5, 6. The Prophet speaks those words of the powerful entrance of the children of Israel into Canaan. The like is done by Christ in the conversion of a sinner. Jordan is driven back, the whole course of the soul is altered, The mountains skip like rams; There are many mountains in the soul of a sinner, as p●ide, unbelief, self-conceitedness, Atheism, profaneness, etc. These mountains are plucked up by the roots in a moment, when Christ gins the work of Conversion. See how the Prophet doth allegorically set out the powerful descension of Christ in this work, Esay 11 6, 7, 8. The wolf shall dwell with the lamb, etc. All the woolvish, ravenous and brutish qualities and affections of the soul are powerfully subdued and brought under. All that have known a person before, wonder at the great change which is wrought, and he wonders more at himself then all others can do. Christ put his bridle of power into his lips, and turned the current of his soul he scarce knows how. When Christ came upon the heart of Elisha, what a mighty power was put forth, 1 Kings 19 19, 20, 21. Elijah casts his mantle upon him, the Spirit of Christ descends in that action, and see how the man is changed. He left the oxen and ran after Elijah, forsakes all his friends to wait upon the Prophet. When Christ by his Word and Spirit descends upon the heart of the Jailor, what a strange work is wrought upon him! Acts 16. 33, He takes the Apostles the very same hour and washes their stripes. Had any one that had overnight seen him beating the Apostles so cruelly as he did, told him, well, before the morning-light thou shalt wish that all those stripes had been upon thy own body, thou shalt before the Sun arise wash those bloody stripes with thy tears; would not he have thought him mad? and yet all this came to pass. Jesus Christ comes down with so much power, that though the will would stand out against him, yet it cannot resist. Many a person comes to Church, perhaps with an intention to laugh at the Preacher; Christ pours down a shower upon him, which hath so much power, that he that came a scorner, departs a mourner. Zacheus is upon the Sycamore tree, Jesus Christ lets a few drops upon him, and he is so powerfully subdued, that he comes down speedily at the first call, Luke 19 5, 6. Matthew sits at the Excise-office gathering tribute▪ Christ raines down but one shower, and that hath so much power, that the man leaves all and follows him, he cannot stay to take one man's money more, he ariseth from his profitable seat, and runs after Christ, Matth. 9 9, 10. Peter and Andrew are busy (as Christ passes by) mending their nets: Christ distils a few drops upon them in that call of his, Fellow me and I will make you fishers of men, and how mightily are they overpowered! they will not stay one tide more, yea they will not give another stitch, but arise and follow him, Mat. 4. 18, 19, 20. 3. For Consolation. When Christ comes down with a purpose to comfort a sadded heart, he comforts it with power. See the promise, Esay 66. 13. I will comfort you, and ye shall be comforted. The Consolations of the Word and Spirit of Christ come with such efficacy, that the soul cannot shut them out, the mourning is presently turned into dancing. The Consolations of Christ are called strong consolations, Heb. 6. 18. not only in regard of the matter of them, but in regard of the reception of them; where ever they come, they come with strength. Hannah is in bitterness of Spirit for a time; Jesus Christ doth but, as she is at prayer, pour down a few fresh drops upon her; and she goes away, and is no more sad, 1 Sam. 1. 18. Marry Magdalen stands at the Sepulchre full of sorrow, she weeps many a brinish ●eare, John 20. 11. Jesus Christ doth but open the cloud and drop a few drops upon her, and what j●y is in her heart? Take the most melancholy and persive sinner: though he be like Rach●l that would not be comforted, yet one promise of Christ reigned down upon him, and set on by his Spirit, will make him lay aside his mourning garments. Though Ministers cannot answer the objections of sorrowing Christians, ye● Christ can answer them so powerfully, that the soul shall have nothing to answer again. This is the second particular. Thirdly, The rain comes down voluntarily, undeservedly. The Prophet tells us how the dew and showers fall; They tarry not for man, nor wait for the sons of men, Micah 7. 5. The rain doth not expect any humane concurrence or causality. Though it come down upon us, yet it comes down without us. The rain descends for our advantage, but not for our deserving. The distillation of Christ comes down undeservedly on our part. The soul meets with many a shower from Christ, when it deserves no such thing. The good either of Christ's Doctrine, or his Sceptre, or his Spirit are not merited by us. Should we have no rain from Christ till we did deserve it, we should suffer an eternal drought. The first grace of Christ is preventing grace. I am found of them that sought not after me, Esay 65. 1. And all the after-grace of Christ, is undeserved grace. We do as little to deserve the influences of Christ, as we do to deserve the distillations of the clouds. All that Christ doth for us is only from the mere motion of his own grace, Esay 55. 1. Of his own will begat he us by the word of truth, James 1. 18. We must say, Grace, grace to all the soul-fatning drops that come from Christ. He forgets that Christ comes down as the rain, that dreams of merit. All the sons of men want Christ, but none of the sons of men can deserve Christ. Fourthly, The rain comes down unexpectedly. Sometimes when the sky is black with clouds, the wind riseth and driveth them away without so much as a drop: At another time the rain falls plentifully when no shower is expected. Jesus Christ comes down upon the souls of his people many times, when they look for no influences from him; the Church observes this, Cant. 6. 11, 12. I went down into the garden of nuts, to see the fruits of the valley, and to see whether the vine flourished, and the pomegranates budded. Or ever I was ware, my soul made me like the chariots of Aminadab. Here a shower fell upon her head when she did not look for it. The soul sometimes comes to an Ordinance full of misgiving thoughts, expecting no good; and before it depart, it's wet from top to toe with the distillations of Christ's Spirit. The Church found it so, when she had the least reason that could be to expect it, Cant. 5. 5. She might have expected to have found flames of brimstone in regard of her deal with Christ, and behold she finds the droppings of sweet-smelling myrrh. Sometimes in the night-watches Christ raines upon the soul, when it, never expects any such thing. David made his bed to swim, Psalm 6. 6. he could not have watered his couch with his tears, if Christ had not first watered his heart with his grace. Sometimes the soul comes to the Throne of grace parched with hardness, perhaps as dry as the rock in the Wilderness, and Christ suddenly sends down a shower, that it goes savourly weeping from his presence. Did not our hearts burn within us, while he talked with us by the way? Luke 24. 32. Jesus Christ did des●end suddenly upon them while they were in conference with him. Sometimes a servant of God takes the book of God into his hand, when his soul is dry and withered, and before he hath read half a Chapter, he finds the clouds melting, and his soul bedewed with a shower of grace, never did a shower comedown so suddenly, as the grace of Christ hath sometimes comedown upon the soul. Fifthly, The rain comes down not for its own benefit, but for the benefit of the earth. What advantage hath the cloud by all the moisture that drops down from it? It empties itself that it may enrich the ground. Jesus Christ doth by his Word, and Spirit, and Sceptre, descend for the benefit of men. His Doctrine, the influences of his Grace, are for the enriching of his Elect. Christ came down at first in his incarnation for our sakes, 2 Cor. 8. 9 and all his other descensions are for our good. For the filling of our empty souls, for the quickening of our dead souls, for the comforting of our straitened and distressed souls, it is that Christ comes still down into the world. His preaching, his knocking, his striving is only and merely for our benefit. What profit is it to God, that thou are righteous? Job 22. 3. Christ hath no more advantage by all the drops he sends down upon thy soul, than the clouds have for all the showers they let fall upon the earth. Sixthly, The rain comes down variously sometimes after a more stormy manner, sometimes after a milder manner. Christ comes down sometimes by promises, comforts, enlargments in a way of mildness; sometimes he descends in a way of severity, by rebukes, threaten. The Church hath as much need of stormy showers as milder showers, of cold rain as of warmer drops. Christ's more angry drops are as useful for his people, as his more pleasant drops. His chiding and frowning distillations make his comforting droppings more sweet. His milder showers comfort us, but his stormy showers try us more; If Christ should not rebuke us as well as comfort us, he would indeed lose us. The great rain of his anger keeps us from straggling, when ●he small rain of his love occasions us to wander. Seventhly, The rain comes down plentifully. Not a drop or two, but whole showers. Though it come not down all at once, yet as much comes down as is useful for the earth. Jesus Christ comes down plentifully, he doth not scant the soul, he doth not give one comfort, but many comforts. Eat O friends, drink abundantly, Cant. 5. 1. He hath enough in him to give. The soul wants more than a little. He is not niggardly, but bountiful, therefore he gives plentifully; and then as the rain falls down in many places at once, so doth Christ. All the earth for many miles together is sometimes reigned upon at o●e and the same time; the rain waters many fields at once. Jesus Christ comes down abundantly; he can, if he please, water many souls, yea many Congregations at once. So many Churches, so many Fleeces; so many Congregations, so many Pastures. Christ can rain upon this Congregation, and he can water other Congregations at the same time. Jesus Christ, if ●e please●● an send down such a shower as shall water every Congregation, yea every soul in the world a● one and the same time. As the drops of a shower cannot be numbered, no more can the drops which fall from Jesus Christ upon his Church. If we receive not plentifully from Christ, 'tis because we ask not plentifully. For the third particular. Quae disproportio? And here I shall show the excellency of Christ above all material rain, in six particulars. 1. Christ comes down from the highest heavens. The rain descends from the visible heavens. Philosophers divide the air into three Regions; the highest, the middle, and the lowest Region. Now they all hold that the rain descends only from the middle Region: there it is generated, and from thence it descends upon the earth. But now Jesus Christ comes down from the invisible Heavens. There he sits at the right hand of God, Acts 5. 31. and from thence doth every drop which distils upon the hearts of men descend. This is that which Peter tells the Jews, Act 2. 33. Being by the right hand of God exalted, and having received of the Father the promise of the Holy Ghost, he hath shed forth this which now ye see and hear. All the good of his Word, of his Sceptre, of his Spirit, comes down from the Heaven of heavens. There the royal throne is, and from thence doth the rain fall. You must look above the highest Region of the air, yea above the highest star in the firmament, if you expect any drop from Jesus Christ. 2. The rain that descends upon the earth, doth first ascend from the earth. A cloud which is the womb of the rain, is a cold and moist vapour exhaled by the heat of the Sun, out of the earth or waters, into the middle Region of the air, where it is by the cold condensed, and there hangeth, till by the heat it be dissolved into a shower. So that the showers which do drop upon the earth, are first drawn out of the earth, Psal. 135. 7. But now all the drops which distil from Christ, are generated in heaven. Jesus Christ is not beholden to the earth to furnish him. What ever he distils, either in his Word, or by his Spirit, is originally in and from himself. Out of his fullness have we all received, and grace for grace, John 1. 16. Christ doth not exhale vapours from the earth, but sends down vapours from himself to the earth. All his materials are in himself, and from himself; if Jesus Christ could not rain upon us till we did furnish him with materials, we should be out of hopes of receiving one drop from him to the day of our death. We can furnish him with materials for fire and brimstone, but the ingredients of his comfortable rain are from himself alone. 3. The rain is not necessary at all times. There are seasons when the husbandman craves no rain. He is sometimes afraid of showers, and wishes for Sun shine rather than showers. As snow in Summer and rain in harvest, so honour is not seemly for a fool, Prov. 26. 1. But now Jesus Christ is never unnecessary. This rain can never fail unseasonably. There's no time but the drops of Christ's doctrine come welcome to the soul. There's no moment wherein the influences of Christ's Spirit are not grateful to the soul. That day that is not a rainy day, is a mournful day. The earth may be too full of rain, but the soul can never be too full of this heavenly moisture. Si dixisti sufficit, periisti. 4. The rain is sometimes hurtful to the earth. Immoderate rain is as prejudicial as immoderate drought. A poor man that oppresseth the poor, is like a sweeping rain that leaveth ●● food, Prov. 28. 3. As parching heat doth sometimes dry up the fruits of the earth: So excessive rain doth often drown the fruits of the earth. Sometimes men and are drowned; sometimes houses with their inhabitants are swept away by overflowing showers. But now Jesus Christ is never prejudicial to the soul. If ever this rain do any annoyance to men, it is by accident, because it is not received or improved. The distillation of Christ's Doctrine is sometimes the savour of death, 2 Cor. 2. 15. but this is only because men are not bettered by it. The Sceptre of Christ doth break many in pieces, Psalm 2. 9 but this is because men do not submit to it. The influences and strive of Christ by his Spirit, are sometimes the occasion of the hardening of men's hearts, and so consequently of their destruction: but this is, because they do resist and oppose them. This rain hath intrinsically no hurtful destructive property in it. If it ever prove destructive, it is because of some evil quality in them upon whom it falls. 5. The rain is no distinguishing Argument between good and bad. It falls promiscuously upon the righteous and unrighteous. This our Saviour tells us, Matth. 5. 45. The rain indeed sometimes falls in one place, when it doth not fall on another, Amos 4. 7. but on whatsoever City or Village it falls, it comes down equally on all. As fat drops fall upon the sluggards field, as upon the field of the most diligent man. But now this spiritual rain is more distinguishing. Though all where the Gospel is preached have the same common Doctrine, and all have some common influences of Christ's Spirit, yet there are special drops distilled upon the Elect, which others never partake of. Some are hardened, others are softened; some are reigned upon to conversion, others are reigned upon for obduration; some are melted and dissolved, others are stiffened and enraged. The peculiar drops of special grace are not communicated to all alike from Jesus Christ. Arminians may talk of Universal grace, that Christ doth no more for Peter then for Judas; but the Scripture speaks of peculiar grace which is not communicated to all. Why is it that thou wilt reveal thyself to us, and not unto the world. John 14. 22. There is hidden Manna which Christ never intended to bestow on all. There are secret drops which Christ lets fall on one soul in a Congregation, and doth not distil upon others. This rain falls with a most exact distinction. He hath mercy on whom he will have mercy, (saith the Apostle Rev. 2. 17. ) and whom he will he hardeneth, Rom. 9 18. Christ hath excluded some from the benefit of his prayers, John 17. 19 And they that are shut out of the benefit of his prayers, are excluded from the saving merit of his blood. His propitiation is not extended further than his mediation, 1 John 2. ●, 2. The peculiarity of the descending of this rain is clearly showed by our Saviour in the answer he gives to that question of his Disciples, concerning his preaching to the people in Parables, Mat. 13. 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15. Though the rain of Christ's Doctrine fall down indifferently upon all, yet the special grace of understanding, applying and improving that Doctrine, is not given unto all. 6. The rain can make nothing spring where nothing hath rooted. The showers are able to make both grass, and corn, and other plants grow up; but if either the earth be barren, or if there be no foundation of roots, the showers can do nothing; the rain can make nothing grow up out of rocks. It cannot make wheat grow where none was sown. But now Jesus Christ doth not only make seed grow where seed is sown, but he makes seed grow where none was sown. Christ by the drops of his Doctrine, and by the influences of his Spirit, makes the rocks bring forth fruit. He doth not only cause plants to spring in good soil, but by the dropping of his grace, turns a barren soil into a fruitful soil; one good shower from Christ will make the barren Heath as good ground as the fruitful valley. The Word of Christ is called seed, 1 Pet. 1. 23. it doth not only make seed grow, but it is seed itself. Christ by raining down, turns the Thorne-tree into an Appletree. He changes the thistle into wheat. Other rain brings up something where something was, but this rain brings up something where nothing was. Other showers bring forth figs from Figtrees, but these showers bring forth figs from thistles. Other rain brings up a crop where a crop was sown, but this rain brings forth a crop where none was sown. Those three thousand you read of Act. 2. 37. had not one root in them when Peter began to preach; but before he had done raining upon them, their hearts were a nursery of all living plants. The Uses of this Point. 1. How justly may Christ expect fruitfulness from his people. My beloved (saith the Prophet) had a vineyard planted in a very fruitful hill. And he fenced it, and gathered out the stones, etc. and he looked that it should bring forth grapes, Esay 5. 1, 2, 3. It is but equal that they that live under Christ's Doctrine and Sceptre, and under the influences of his Spirit, should bring forth both good fruit, and plenty of fruit; the people of God are compared to a tree planted by the rivers of water, which bringeth forth his fruit in his season, Psal. 1. 3. Christ is spiritual rain, he is both cleansing rain and fattening rain. They that live under such droppings, will be one day found inexcusable, if they be not very fruitful; those pastures that are manured every year, if they have seasonable Sunshine and showers, are laid open to the wild champion if they be not fruitful. Remember seriously that of the Apostle, and lay it well to heart, Heb. 6. 7, 8. No Argument can be used to plead for those that live under these fat showers without abundance of fruit. 2. Behold the necessity of Christ. Is not rain necessary for the ground? are not seasonable showers necessary for the fields and pastures? can any plants live long if they be not watered? No more can any plants that are in the soul live without continual supply from Christ. The Doctrine of Christ is not unnecessary, the Sceptre of Christ is not unuseful, the influences of Christ's Spirit are not in vain. Christ in all these respects is as necessary to the soul, as the rain and dew are to the earth. He is either blind, or proud, that doth not see an absolute necessity of Christ. Egypt is fruitful though it have no rain; the yearly overflowings of the river Nilus is instead of showers. Jesus Christ is as the river Nilus to our Egypt: did not he by the overflowing streams of his grace water our hearts, they would neither bud nor blossom, nor bring forth; He is both the husbandman that plants our fruits, he is the soil that bears them, and he alone is the rain that waters them. Never think of the need the earth hath of the rain, but meditate of the need your souls have of the droppings of Jesus Christ. 3. How blind and wicked are they that are offended at the Doctrine of Jesus Christ! When Christ was on earth, many were scandalised at his Doctrine. And there are many still even amongst Christians, that are offended at it. He is to this day a stone of stumbling, and a rock of offence, to them that stumble at his Word, Rom. 9 33. Men find out many ways of stumbling at the Doctrine of Christ. To instance in a few. (1) Some are offended at the strictness of his Doctrine. Christ by his Doctrine doth condemn, not only the outward acts, but the inward motions of sin in the heart, Mat. 5. 28. He commands the plucking out of the right eye, etc. Duri Sermones durioris Magistri, have some said of these Precepts, which are indeed the commendation of Christ's Doctrine. (2.) Some are offended at the simplicity of his Doctrine. Thus the wise Greeks were offended at him. The Apostle mentions this, 1 Cor. 1. 17. 18. They were of opinion that Tully and Demosthenes did far excel the Doctrine of Christ for eloquence. (3) Others are offanded at the spirituality of his Doctrine. They think his Doctrine is too mystical and sublime. This was that which made many take offence at him, John 6. 51, 52, 60, 61. They thought it was a strange kind of Doctrine, that Christ should give them his flesh to eat. (4) Others are offended at the Divisions which follow upon his Doctrine. Though the Doctrine of Christ be in itself a Doctrine of peace, yet accidentally meeting with the corruptions of wicked hearts, it's an occasion of division, Luke ●2. 49. I am come to send fire on the earth, and Matth. 10. 34, 35. Think not (saith our Saviour) that I am come to send peace an earth. I am not come to send peace, but a sword, etc. These accidental divisions which follow upon Christ's Doctrine, cause many to be offended at him; And if any can receive his Doctrine, yet they are offended at his Government. This is a general offence, Psal. 2. 2. 3. Let us break their bonds asunder, etc. His Sceptre is too strict, too severe, etc. Let all that are offended with Christ any way, know that these are groundless offences. They are Scand●la accepta, not scandala data. For Christ comes down not as poison to destroy men, but as the rain to preserve and nourish men. Take heed therefore of being offended at Christ; remember he comes down, both in his Doctrine and Government, not for the ruin, but for the salvation of men. Christ hath all the good properties of the rain, but none of the bad properties. Whosoever is offended at him, is offended at his own mercy. 4. Lay your hearts open to receive the distillations of Christ. When any of this rain descends, let the vessels of your souls be set wide open to receive it. When Christ drops in his Doctrine, when Christ distils upon you by his Spirit; let your hearts be in a readiness to drink it in. The rain doth no good unless it be taken in. All the drops of Christ will do you no good, if you do not take them in. When men are beleaguered in a City and want water, they set out all their vessels, when a shower comes, that no drop may be lost. God's children are in this world as in a besieged City; you want rain, O let not one drop of Christ fall besides you. Open your mouths wide, that you may take in, yea take down all the pleasant drops of Christ. Two things are necessary for those that would have this rain. First, they must get under the cloud. The public Ministry is the cloud by which the rain droppeth, Esay 5. 6. abide where you see these clouds gathering thickest. And when Christ drops down through these clouds, be sure your vessels be set out uncovered to receive falls. 5. What a miserable condition is it to be without Christ! It's made the top of all misery, Eph. 2. 12. He that is without Christ is as parched land without rain. The Scripture threatens with▪ holding of rain as a sore judgement, Amos 4. 7. I have withheld the rain from you, when there were yet three months to the harvest. 'Tis threatened as a judgement against them that came not up to keep the feast of Tabernacles, that on them there shall be no rain, Zech. 14. 17. If it be so sore a judgement to want the natural rain; what is it to want this spiritual rain? Pity such as want Christ, more than you pity those that want other rain. 6. When ever you see a shower fall down upon the earth, meditate on Jesus Christ. For this reason doth Christ resemble himself to all these things, that we might have remembrancers every where to put us in mind of him. Let every drop of rain be a natural preacher, to put some serious thought of Christ into your hearts. 1 PET. 2. 6. Behold, I lay in Zion a chief corner XVIII. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth. Lon. Decem. 19 1652. stone, elect and precious. THe Apostle at the second verse of this Chapter, doth earnestly entreat the scattered Jews, to whom he writes this Epistle, that they would as new borne babes receive the sincere milk of the Doctrine of the Gospel. He presseth this by many Arguments; As 1. God had appointed this to be the soul's nourishment. The milk of the mother's breast was not more nourishing to the newborn Ver. 2. infant, than the Doctrine of the Gospel is to the souls of regenerated Christians. 2. God had sanctified these to be the means of their spiritual growth. As the child grows by sucking the milk of the breast, so do Christians grow by drinking in the Doctrine of Ibid. the Gospel. 3. The Doctrine of the Gospel contains in it the sweetness of the love of God and of Jesus Christ towards them that believe, he that hath tasted of this sweetness cannot but thirst after Ver. 3. it. 4. By receiving into their hearts this doctrine, they should have the closer communion with Jesus Christ. To whom coming as to a living stone, ye as lively stones are built up, etc. This he confirms by an argument taken out of the Old Testament, which is here cited and improved to illustrate the thing in hand. This is in the Text, wherefore it is contained in the Scripture; Behold I lay in Zion, etc. Two things are considerable in the Text. 1. The denomination or little given to Christ. A chief corner stone. 2. The Explication of this Title by the properties of it. These are two. 1. He is an Elect or chosen stone. 2. He is a precious stone. I shall first begin with the denomination, A chief corner stone. The sum is this. The Church of God is here compared to a spiritual edifice, or building; Every true believer is compared to a mystical stone in this building; And Christ is here resembled to the Corner stone. The Note from that first particular will be this, viz. Doct. That the Lord Jesus Christ is the chief Corner stone of the spiritual structure of God's Church Both Prophets, and Apostles, and Christ himself, give ample Testimony to this truth. 1. The Prophets which were before Christ do bear witness to this. See Esay ●8 16. From this Testimony my Text is borrowed. Behold I lay in Zion f●r a ●●undation a stone, a tried stone, a precious corner stone, a s●●●e foundation. And the Prophet David long before him, Psalm 118. 22. speaking of Christ hath these words, The Stone which the bvilders refused, i● 〈…〉 b● Headstone of the Corner. 2. The Apostles which succeeded Christ, they concur with the Prophets. See that famous Testimony which is given before the greatest of Christ's adversaries, by Peter and John two of his Apostles. Though Peter was the only spokesman, yet doth John also agree with him, Acts 4. 10, 11. Be it known to you all, and to all the people of Israel, that by the Name of Jesus of Nazareth, doth this man stand here before you whole. This is the Stone which was set at nought by you bvilders, which is become the Head of the Corner. Hear also the Testimony of Paul, which is both full and clear to this purpose, Eph. 2. 20. Ye are built upon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles, Jesus Christ himself being the chief Corner stone. 3. We may add to these the Testimony of Christ himself, hear it from his own mouth, as it is recorded by three of the Evangelists, Mat. 21. 42. Mark 12. 10. Luke 20. 17. Jesus said unto them, did you never read in the Scriptures, the Stone which the bvilders refused is become the Head of the Corner? In the mouth of all these witnesses is this truth fully established. Two things I sha●l here open. 1. In what respects Christ is compared to the Corner stone. 2. How he excels all other corner stones. 1. For the first. Christ is called the Corner stone in four respects. 1. In regard of sustentation. The corner stone doth uphold the whole building: if the corner of the house fall, the whole structure comes to the ground. The Holy Ghost speaking of the slaughter of Jobs children, saith, There came a wind from the Wilderness, and smote the four corners of the house, and it fell upon the young men, and they are dead, Job 1. 19 Some stones may drop out of the middle of the building, and yet the building may stand, but if the corners or foundation shrink, the whole fabric is dissolved. Jesus Christ is the susteiner and upholder of his Church. Therefore he is called the foundation stone, as well as the corner stone, Esay 28. 16. He is the great pillar that bears up his Elect. The Church's peace, the Church's grace, the Church's comfort, the Church's salvation are all upheld and maintained by him. Solom●n reared up two pillars of brass in the Porch of the Temple, the one he called Jachin, that is, he shall establish; the other Boaz, that is, strength, 1 Kin. 7. 21. These two Pillars amongst other things did typify the invincible stability and strength of the Church, whereof the Temple was a sign and figure. The Lord Jesus Christ is to his Church, both Jachin and Boaz; he is both the establishment, and the strength of his Elect; he is that golden pillar that bears up all. The Poets have a fictitious conceit of Atlas a great Astronomer, that he bears up the heaven upon his shoulders; That's but a fable, the great body of the heaven is a burden insupportable to any creature. Jesus Christ is really the great Atlas, that bears the whole burden of the Church with all its concernments upon his shoulders. Eliakim was in this a type of Christ, the Prophet saith of him, Esay 22. 21, 22, 13, 24. that he shall be fastened as a nail in a sure place, and he shall be for a glorious throne to his Father's house; And they shall hang upon him all the glory of his Father's house, the offspring and the issue, all vessels of small quantity, from vessels of cups to all vessels of flagons. This Eliakim was a figure of Christ, for Rev. 3. 7. that which is here promised to him, is attributed to Christ; These things saith he that hath the key of David, he that openeth and no man shutteth, and he that shutteth and no man openeth. He is that golden nail, upon whom all the concernments of the Church both small and great do depend. From vessels of cups to vessels of flagons, all hang upon him. The Prophet Esay foretelling his birth, doth attribute this to him, Chap. 9 6. When he saith, that the Government shall be upon his shoulder. God hath devolved the whole care and weight of his Church upon him, and upon him must we roll it. 2. In regard of Union. The corner stone is that Medium by which the walls of the house are united into one building. Pull out the corner stones, and the two sides of the house are separated one from the other. Jesus Christ is he and he alone that doth unite the several stones of the spiritual building one to another. This may be considered two ways. (1.) In reference to the uniting of the Jews and Gentiles. Before Christ, the Jew and Gentile were divided and separated one from another. This separation did commence and begin after the return of the Israelites out of Egypt into Canaan, which place was assigned unto them by lot, as we read in the book of Joshuah. Then were the Jews in a more conspicuous manner form into one Polity or Commonwealth, and from that time the separation began. That which made this separation was the Ceremonial worship which God established in that Church or Nation, according to which they and their posterity were to worship God. This separation continued from that time, until the death and resurrection of Christ. During all this long tract of time, there was a manifest separation between the Jew and the Gentile, But now Christ hath as a corner stone made a firm union between these two, so that the Jew and Gentile are brought together under the same worship. This is done by the abolition of the Ceremonial Law. Christ hath taken down this wall of separation, and so made both one Church. The Apostle treats largely of this, in Eph. 2. 13, 14, 15, 16. He is our peace who hath made both one, and broken down the middle wall of partition between us, etc. The Jew and the Gentile are now made one house by the death of Christ. (2) In reference to the spiritual union of beleeleevers one with another. We read often in Scripture of spiritual fellowship and communion between believers. The Apostle, Phil. 2. 1. speaks of the fellowship of the Spirit, and Phil. 1. 5. He makes mention of their fellowship in the Gospel. So 1 John 1. 7. saith the Apostle, If we walk in the light as he is in the light, we have fellowship one with another. This spiritual communion or fellowship doth consist, First, In mutual affection one to another. One Saint loves another, though they have never seen the faces one of another. Secondly, In participation of the same graces and privileges. They are all like one another: They partake of the same gifts, of the same Graces; the same Reconciliation, the same Adoption, the same Sanctification; the same Salvation that belongs to one, belongs to them al. This is that which the Apostle mentions, Eph. 4. 4 5, 6. From hence it is that the Scripture calls the salvation of the Elect, Commonsalvation, Judas 3. because its common to all the Elect. The same graces which are wrought in one Saint, are wrought in another, though perhaps different in degree. Thirdly, In the performing of mutual offices one to another. They pray one for another, they give thanks for the good of one another, they grieve for one another's evils, they bear one another's burdens, they rejoice in one another's comforts, they supply one another's wants, both outward and inward as far as they are able. The Apostle speaks of these mutual offices, which believers by virtue of that fellowship which is between them own one to another, in that, 1 Cor. 12. 26 Now it is in and through Christ, that union and communion of Saints one with another is made. Our communion with Christ is the foundation of our mutual communion which we have one with another, John 17. 23. I in them and thou in me, that they may be made perfect in one. 'Tis this uniting corner stone that brings every particular stone of the building into one. For our mutual union one with another, is in him who is the head of the union. The Apostle speaks fully to th●s, in Eph. 1. 10. That he might gather together in him all things, both which are in heaven, and which are in earth. The Greek word is very significant, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, to gather to a head. All the Saints of God that are, were, or shall be, both those that are gloriously triumphing in heaven, and those that are yet militant on earth, are gathered together to a head in Jesus Christ. Membership with him is the foundation of mutual membership which we have one with another. This is the second. 3. In regard of Direction. The corner stone is that which gives the bvilder's direction, how to lay and place all the other stones. If the several stones of the wall be not laid level to the corner stone, the whole building is spoiled. He that would build right, must have his eye to the corner stone. Jesus Christ is a believers Direction and Rule in all spiritual things, that which is not done by Christ's Command, or example or by some direction from him, is not well done. Learn of me (saith our Saviour) for I am lowly, and meek-hearted▪ and ye shall find rest to your souls, Mat. 11. 29. Jesus Christ is the believers pattern. His Word and his example we must have an eye continually upon, if we would not miscarry. He that saith he abideth in Christ, he ought so to walk as he walked. 1 John 2. 6. Lay all things levelly to Christ, and then act vigorously. I have given you an example, that ye should do as I have done to you, John 13. 15. Nothing will either be lasting or comfortable, which doth not run parallel with the line of Christ. 4. In regard of Beauty. Skilful bvilder's place the strongest stones in the corner, because of bearing; and the fairest stones, because of beauty. If the corner stones be graceful, the whole building is the more comely, Psal. 144. 12. More Art is bestowed on the corner stone, then on any other part of the building. jesus Christ is the beauty of the spiritual building. If this one stone were taken away, the whole building would be an uncomely heap. One Christ hath more beauty in him then ten thousand Sain●s. Psalm. 45. 2. Thou art fairer than the children of men. The fairest Saint is but an Ethiopian, if compared with Christ. He is in respect of his beauty compared to the Lily and Rose, which are the most beautiful of all flowers, Cant. 2. 1. The blind world looked upon him as deformed, Esay 53. 2. There is no form nor comeliness in him, but those that know him, admire his beauty. Look upon him in his Divine Nature, and so he is more beautiful than the Sun. Look upon him as man; and so he is exceeding beautiful. No doubt but his body, for the outward feature of it was very comely. 'Tis a Rule which Divines have. That which God doth immediately, he doth most exactly. And for his soul, that had more grace in it then is in all the sons of men laid together. His soul was unsoyled by sin, and it was richly furnished with all grace. God shown more of his Art and skill in jesus Christ, then upon all the stones of the building besides. The beautiful Angels are black, if compared with Christ. This is the first particular. 2. For the second. Christ differs from all other corner stones in five respects. 1. He is a living stone. The corner stones of all material buildings are inanimate. But Christ hath life in him, 1 Pet. 1. 4. He hath life in himself, and he communicates life unto the whole building. From him all the stones of the spiritual house are called lively stones, ver. 5. Ye also as lively stones are built up a spiritual house. 2. He is a stone of God's immediate laying. God himself did both polish and place this stone. Other corner stones are fashioned and laid by men, but this is fashioned by God himself. This is in the Text, Behold I lay in Zion a chief corner stone. He is therefore called by the Prophet, Dan. 2. 34. A stone cut out of the mountain without hands; that is, without the hands of men. There was no humane help for the polishing of this stone, God himself is the chief and only Architect. 3. He is a Corner stone that can never drop out of the building. Other corner stones will in time loosen and fall: the corner stones of that Temple did at last fall, but this corner stone can neither fall, nor be weakened. Christ sticks as fast now, as he did the first day he was placed. 4. He receives no strength from the other stones. All material corner stones, as they strengthen the building, so they receive strength from the building. The other stones are some defence to the corner stone: but Christ receives no strengthening from any stone of the building. What need hath Christ of support? If he had, what can weak Saints do to support him? The Saints help to strengthen one another, they contribute no strengthening at all to him. 5. Christ is a Corner stone that reaches from the bottom to the top. In other buildings there are many corner stones, because no one is large enough to serve for all: But Christ is so large that there is no need of any other. The building is a carrying on every day, and will be, till all the number of the Elect be brought in: but let it rise never so high there will not need one corner stone more. If there were but one corner st●n● in other buildings, the whole structure would be spoiled. This spiritual structure would he spoilt, if there should be one corner stone more. One Christ supplies the need of the whole Church. 1 PET. 2. 6. A chief corner stone, elect, precious. XIX. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth. Lon. Decem. 26. 1652. I Proceed to the Application, which is for Information. which is for Exhortation. which is for Consolation. 1. For information. It teacheth seven lessons. 1. The perpetssity of the Church. The Church of Christ is a stable building; it may shake, and totter, and be ready to fall, but it cannot utterly fall. The Church of God may err both in Doctrine and manners. The best of men are but enlightened and sanctified in part, there is a remainder of blindness and ignorance in their mind, and of rebellion and stubborness in their wills and affections, therefore they may err both in Doctrine and manners. The Church of Ephesus is charged by our Saviour, that she had left her first love, Rev. 2. 4. The Church of Galatia is said to be removed to another Gospel; And that which befalls Chap. 1. 6. one or two Churches, may befall an hundred Churches. Our Divines prove against the Papists, that general Counsels have erred. The Church of God may sometimes he hide under persecution, it may want the public preaching of the Word, with the public Administration of the Sacraments. Our Divines prove against the Papists that the Church of God is not always so apparently visible as they would have it. In the days of the Prophet Elijah, the Church of God was under a great eclipse. See what he saith, 1 King. 19 10. The children of Israel have forsaken thy Covenant, etc. The Church was very low, when so intelligent a Prophet could not find one besides himself that cleaved to God, yet what answer doth God give him v. 18? Yet have I left me seven thousand in Israel, all the knees that have not bowed to Baal, and every mouth which hath not kissed him. Hear what the Prophet Azariah saith to King Asa to this very purpose, 2 Chron. 15. 3. For a long season Israel hath been without the true God, and without a teaching Priest, and without Law. As the Sun and Moon do not always visibly shine out to the world, but sometimes suffer an eclipse, so doth the Church of God; yet nevertheless the Church of God can never be utterly exterminated. If we consider the nature of the thing, the Church may be abolished, and cease to have a being in the earth; but if we consider the Decree of God, so the Church can never cease. God ever had since the promise made to Adam in Paradise, a Church in the world, and he ever will have a Church in the earth, till all the members thereof be made triumphant in heaven. The gates of hell shall never prevail against it, Mat. 16. 18. It may be brought low, but it cannot be thrown down. These material fabrics, where the Church of God meet for holy worship, may be through the fury and covetousness of men be taken down, that one stone shall not be left upon another. See how the Church complains of the havoc made by those Sacrilegious invaders, Psal. 74. 7, 8. The Church was not destroyed, though the Temple and Synagogues were destroyed. This spiritual building of the Church shall stand, though all other structures fall. The great reason is, because Christ is the foundation and corner stone. Other buildings may fall though the foundation stand; but this building cannot fall, unless the foundation be destroyed. 2. That the Church of God is a very glorious building. Amongst many other titles which are given to the Church, this is one; it's called a glorious Church, Eph. 5. 27. It shall be glorious when it comes to heaven, of which that Text is properly to be understood; And it is glorious even here on earth. I am black, but comely, O ye daughters of Jerusalem, as the tents of Kedar, as the curtains of Solomon, Cant. 1. 5. A glorious and high throne from the beginning is the place of our Sanctuary, Jer. 17. 12. All the Edifices and Palaces on earth, are but ugly cottages, it they be compared with this spiritual building, the Church. The Temple of Solomon was the most excellent fabric that ever the earth carried, It's called a glorious and beautiful house, Isa. 64. 11. and yet that was but a type of this building. See how it is described in the Revelations, chap. 21. 10, 11, etc. It must needs be glorious, because all the stones are living stones. Every stone hath the glory of God on it, and then besides, which makes it beautiful indeed, Christ himself is the corner stone. How glorious must that building be, where Christ himself lies as the foundation stone! To be the least stone in this building, is far better, then to be the greatest pillar of any material building. 3. The Believers union with Jesus Christ. The Scripture doth frequently tell us the mystery of the spiritual union of Christ and Believers. They are not only one by participation of gifts and graces; they are not only one in will and affection, as the members of the Primitive Church are said to be, Acts 4. 32. but there is a real spiritual union between them. ●in them, and thou in me, John 17. 23. This Privilege is proved, as by other express Scriptures, so by this Metaphor; As the corner stone, and the superstructories are united in one building; so Christ the corner stone, and all the living stones built upon him are made one mystical house. The Apostle mentioneth this from this very similitude, Eph. 2. 20, 21. Christ and believers are made one holy Temple; only there is this difference between that union, which is between Christ the corner stone and the living stones, and the corner stone and superstructory stones of material buildings: Every believer is as nearly united to Christ as any believer. In other buildings some stones are more nearly united to the foundation than others are; but in this building every Believer is equally united to Christ the corner stone. 4. The horrible pride of the Papists. They are so intolerably proud, as to apply this Title to the Pope, making him the corner stone of the Church. They apply that in Esay 28. 16. to the person of the Pope, as if he were the foundation of the Universal visible Church. They say that the Pope is in the Church as the Sun is in the firmament, and that the ruining and shaking of the Pope, would be the shaking and ruining of the whole Church. The Scripture teaches us a better foundation. Both Prophets and Apostles were ignorant of this Romish foundation; they built not on the Pope, but on Christ, Eph. 2. 20. The Pope is the corner stone of the Apostatical Church, not of the Apostolical Church, He is the foundation stone of the adulterate Church, not of the chaste Church; he is the foundation of the Synagogue of Satan, not of the Spou●e of Christ. The Church would be sure to fall, if it had so weak and so wicked a foundation as that man of sin is Christ did not say, upon thee Peter, but upon this rock will I build my Church, Mat. 16. 18. Peter, whose successor the Pope boasts himself to be, did publicly preach Christ, not himself the corner stone, Acts 4 11. It is no honour, but a great disgrace to be a stone of that building, whose foundation stone is the son of perdition. 5. Behold from this Text the truth of the two natures of Christ. The Scriptures teach that Jesus Christ is both God and man. Both these natures are asserted in this Text. The Divinity is confirmed from the close of the verse, He that believeth on him shall not be confounded. If Christ were not God, it were idolatry to believe on him. No mere creature is without sin, to be relied upon without sin. And then the truth of his humanity appears from hence, that he is the corner stone of the spiritual building. He could not be a part of the spiritual house, if he were not of the same nature with the other stones of the building, so often as you read faith in Christ required, believe his Godhead, and as often as ye hear him called the corner stone of the Church; believe the truth of his manhood. 6. The greatness of Christ's strength. The Scripture doth attribute Almighty power to Christ as well as to the Father. His name shall be called the mighty God, Esay 9 6. The strength of Christ appears by the great works he hath done and doth do. He set up the world by his power, Without him was not made any thing that was made. John 1. 3. He doth by his powerful providence govern the world; Providence belongs to Christ as well as to the Father; My Father worketh hitherto, and I work, John 5. 17. And then his power appears in this, that he is the chief corner stone that upholds the Church; if there were not Almighty power in him, such a burden would break him to pieces. Next to the bearing of his Father's wrath; no such heavy burden, as the sustaining of all the concernments of the Church. Consider what a vast fabric the Church is, it's a very huge building. And then consider what potent enemies it hath, a world of wicked men, legions of powerful Spirits; and then consider how weak every stone is in itself. And then consider the multitude of its concernments, and it will appear, that he that bears up this building, must needs be a person of vast and infinite strength. Thou hast laid strength (saith the Prophet) on one that is mighty, Ps. 89. 17. 7. The nearness of Christ to his Church. The Name of the Lord is called Jehovah Shammah, Ezek. ult. ult. Christ hath promised to be with it for ever, Mat. 28. ult. He seems sometimes to be far off, to try how his people will carry themselves in his absence; the nature and ingenuity of the child is best seen in his Father's absence. But though he seem to be at a distance, yet he is near; he may be out of their sight, but he is never out of their call; The Lord is near to all them that call upon him. This Metaphor showeth this, the corner stone is not fare off from the roof, and yet Christ is nearer to his people, than the corner stone is to the next stone of the building. He is not only with them, but in them, john 17. 23. Thus much for Information. 2. For Exhortation. It commends these four things to all us Christians. 1. Take heed of building upon any other foundation. The Evangelist makes mention of a double foundation, which our Saviour speaks of at the close of his Sermon on the Mount, Matth. 7. 24. 26. The rocky foundation is only one, namely Jesus Christ, or which is all one, faith in Christ. The sandy foundation is manifold. Some build their hopes of salvation on their good works. This is the foundation of the Papists. They hope to be saved by their doing. They may do well to consider what the Scripture saith of this foundation, Luke 17. 10. And Romans 9 30, 31, 32, 33. building on works is not a divine, but a humane foundation. Some build upon outward profession. This is the foundation of carnal professors. They may do well to consider what our Saviour saith, Luke 13. 26, 27. Some build upon their good meanings. They have as good a heart to God as the best. This is the foundation of ignorant Protestants. Whatsoever foundation of salvation, grace or comfort, besides Christ, is laid, is a sandy foundation, and will appear to be so at the day of judgement. The Apostle cuts off all other foundations besides this, 1 Cor. 3. 11. He did not speak ignorantly, for he saith, v. 10. that he was a wise Masterbuilder. They are not wise Master-builders, but ignorant butchers that build, or teach others to build, either hope of comfort, or of salvation upon any other foundation. In one word, all foundations of salvation besides Christ, how spacious soever they be, will prove at last foundations of damnation, Arminian, Socinian, Popish corner-stones will moulder. 2. Acknowledge upon whom all your spiritual good doth depend. All your graces, all your comforts, all your privileges are bottomed on Christ. Christ lies as the foundation of all. The Scripture affirms all our good to be bottomed on Christ. Our Election, Eph. 1. 4. Our justification, Eph. 5. 1. Our Adoption, Eph. 1. 5. Our Salvation. He is called not only a Saviour, but salvation in the abstract, Esay 62. 11. say ye to the daughter of Zion, behold thy salvation cometh. What ever good we have, or hope for, it is for Christ and from Christ. He is made to us of God wisdom, righteousness, sanctification, redemption, as the Apostle saith, 1 Corinth. 1. 30. that you sink not, it is from Christ alone. 3. Cast the care and burden of all your concernments by faith on Christ. There are two Texts of Scripture enjoining this duty; the one is in the Old Testament, the other in the New. That in the Old Testament is in Psalm 55. 22. Cast thy burden on the Lord, and he will sustain thee. That in the New Testament, is in 1 Pet. 5. 7. Casting all your care on him. Those two words Burden, Care, take in all our concernments whatsoever. There are many burdens, as, a burden of sin, a burden of duty, a burden of suffering, a burden of loss, a burden of success, issues and events are a heavy burden sometimes. Lay all this on Christ. And then how many cares is a believer liable unto? A crowd of cares comes in daily. Cast these by an act of faith on Christ. He is the corner stone, he hath undertaken to bear the burden of all. You honour him, as well as ease yourselves, by casting all on him, the stress of all. 4. Be stable. Steadfastness is often commended to Christians, as 1 Corinth. 15. ult. Be steadfast, unmovable, and 2 Pet. 3. 17. Let those stones totter and shake, that have a shaking foundation. The instability of believers is some disparagement to Christ, the corner stone on which they are built. 3. For consolation. This may comfort believers. 1. Against their own weakness. Who that knows his own heart, but finds his graces weak? Every temptation shakes him, as if it would shake him to pieces. Remember to thy comfort, Christ is the corner stone of thy grace, as well as of thy salvation. He hath strength though you be weak. 2. In case of the totter of the Church. Such blasts arise sometime to threaten its ruin. Remember the corner stone; yea he is the corner as well as the corner stone. 1 PET. 2. 6. Christ the chief corner stone, elect, and XX. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth. ●ond. Jan. 16. 1652. precious. I Proceed to the properties of this Cornerstone, First, it is an Elect stone. Secondly, 'tis a precious stone. For the first, Elect. This word hath a double signification. It signifies choice, excellent. And it signifies elected, or chosen. Gerhard thinks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, in this place is used not participially for elect or chosen, but nominally for excellent and precious. But I rather conceive that it is here used participially, for elected or chosen. This signification have our Translators given it. I am induced to think it is so used here for two reasons. 1 Otherwise this and the next word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, would signify one and the same thing. And it's not probable that the holy Ghost in such short speeches should use two words to signify the same thing. 2. Because ver. 4. of this Chapter, where the same words are used, this word signifies not choice, but elected o● ch●●●n, for so it's said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Now this Text is but a recapitulation of what is there said. It refers to the act of God in choosing Christ for the corner stone of the Church. The point is this. Doct. That jesus Christ is chosen by God for the corner stone or foundation of the Church. God the Father hath elected him for this service. Here are two things to be opened. 1. What this election hath reference to. 2. Why Christ was thus elected. 1. For the former. This election refers to four of acts God concerning Christ. 1. To his eternal designation of Christ to this work. The everlasting determination of God was, that Christ should perform this office in and for his Church. Of this our Apostle speaks, in 1 Pet. 1. 20. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 2. To his public mission. As he was foreordeined before all time, so he was publicly sent in the fullness of time, Gal. 4. 4, 5. The Scripture often mentions the mission of Christ, Esay 61. 1. he hath sent me, etc. 3. To the divine unction. God hath anointed the humane nature, filled it with all grace and with abundance of grace for this work. The Prophet speaks of this unction, Esay 61. 1. and more fully, Esay 11. 2, 3, 4. This is that which our Saviour calls, Gods sealing of him, John 6. 27. This sealing refers to two things. First, the solemn appointment of God. God hath authorized him publicly under his broad seal for this work. Secondly, God hath furnished him for the work, by communicating to him the fullness, the unmeasurable fullness of his Spirit. For the Spirit is not given to him by measure, John 3. 34. 4. To the public testimony given by God to Christ. God hath given very solemn Testimony and approbation to Christ. (1) By audible voices from heaven, once at his baptism, Matth. 3. 17. A second time at his tranfiguration, Mat. 17. 5. (2) By serious recommendation of him in the Gospel to men, that they should rely upon him. The Evangelist makes mention of this 1 john 5. 10, 11. 2. For the latter. The great moving cause is, his mere mercy to his Elect. No other was able, Christ was sufficient to discharge this great work. Out of his rich love did God choose him, upon this hinge all turns, john 3. 16. But if the reasons be demanded why Christ should have such solemn election, etc. These may be considered. 1. The offices which Christ undertook, did call for this divine Election; he was to be Prophet, Priest, King, fit therefore it was that he should be thus solemnly set out. Prophet's must be sent, else they are none of Gods, jer. 23. 21. Christ was a Prophet, therefore he would have a formal Authorization from him whose Prophet he was, Deut. 18. 18. Christ was a King Psalm 2. 6. Therefore fit he should be sufficiently authorized, hence is that, Psalm 110. 1. Christ was a Priest, therefore he must be lawfully consecrated, Heb. 5. 4, 5, 6. no man taketh this honour, etc. 2. Else that which Christ did would not have been accepted of God, nor would it have been meritorious for his Church. It would have been sacrilege for Christ to have made himself a corner stone, if God had not chosen him for the work. This is my well beloved Son in whom I am well pleased, Matth. 3. 17. God would not have been well pleased with Christ, if he had not elected him for the work he undertook. And then 3. For the comforting of Christ, in undergoing that which he was to suffer for the carrying on of this work. He must endure the wrath of God, the contradiction of sinners, before he could be the corner stone. Divine appointment comforts a man in the hardest sorrows, Gen. 31. 9 Thou saidst, return to thy country. The consideration of this, strengthened and comforted Christ in all he suffered, John 18. 11. The Uses of this. 1. The Father and holy Ghost have a hand in the work of man's salvation, as well as Christ, we scarce take notice of the Father in the work of redemption, as if he only did look on and approve what Christ did, he acts in it as well as Christ; he chose Christ, he sent out Christ, he fitted Christ for this great work. Though the second person was he that was incarnate, yet both the first and third person concur and contribute to the work. The divine election is the first wheel that moves in this work. 2. That the work of our salvation by Christ, is not a rash work. 'Tis not a work of inconsideration, or precipitancy, but a serious work. There was much deliberation, and consultation about it. Here is mention of electing Christ. It's a work of infinite and unsearchable wisdom. The mystery of godliness the Apostle calls it, 1 Tim. 3. 16. The manifold wisdom of God, Ephes. 3. 10. here is depth of wisdom in this work. 3. That the Elects salvation by Christ is a work well pleasing to God. It's called the pleasure of the Lord, Esay 53. 10. It is a great contentment to God to see it carried on; it cannot be otherwise, when he himself hath elected Christ to it. That which a man chooseth and contrives, he is pleased when it is carried on. God that hath chosen Christ for the foundation, will carry on the work in his hand. 4. Why Christ is called Gods Elect and God's Servant, Esay 42. 1, 2. not as if he were inferior to God in regard of his divine nature, Zech. 13. 13. Phil. 2. 6. but because he is chosen of God to be the foundation; He is chosen to be the head of the Election, all the Elect are chosen. 5. Let us with confidence cast ourselves on Christ. Can we choose better than God hath chosen? 'Tis an undervaluing, not only of God's love, but of his wisdom to choose another foundation. God will take it ill if we reject his choice. Adventure on him you may. Believe and trust in him without doubting. He that hath elected Christ, will not reject those that accept and rely on Christ. The Election of God will mightily aggravate the refusal of Christ. Encourage faith by this, He that believeth in him shall not be ashamed. 6. Very great comfort to them that have built on Christ. God doth not choose mouldering stones, but firm stones. If God have any wisdom to choose, Christ is sufficient to bear all their weight. He hath laid help on one that is mighty, Psalm 89. 19 Let what blasts will come, this Elect stone will hold. 1 PET. 2. 6. XXI. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth. Lon. Febr. 13. 1652. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Precious. I Go on to the second property of this corner stone, as it is laid down in this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, precious. The word here used 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, signifies that which is of great worth or value in itself, and that which is much prized and esteemed by another. A thing and a person may be valuable in itself, and not valued by others. And then a thing may be highly in itself esteemed, which is of no great worth; but this word signifies both, That it denotes the worth of things or persons, you may see, Luke 14. 8. When thou art bidden to a wedding, sit not down in the highest room, lest a more honourable man then then be bidden of him, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. That it signifies the valuation, or high esteem of things or persons appears from Phil. 2. 29. The Apostle writes to the Church about Epaphroditus that they would receive him, and (saith he) hold such in reputation, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; make much of such, let them be dear to you. 'Tis opposed to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which signifies one of no esteem or account amongst men. The Observation is this. Doct. That Jesus Christ the chief corner stone of the Church is exceeding precious. As he is a stone of Gods choosing, so he is a choice stone. He is therefore precious because he is of God's choice. Christ is a corner stone precious in himself, and it is our great sin, if he be not precious unto us. Christ is not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, precious, but he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, of very great price, Matth. 13. 46. What is that pearl of great price, but Jesus Christ himself, for the obtaining of whom a wise Merchant will readily part with all that he hath. Nothing is worth a man's All, but Jesus Christ. But in comparison of him, all things (even the best) are nothing worth. Jesus Christ is a precious stone, as well as an elect stone. In the handling of this Doctrine, I shall open two things for Explication. 1. In what respects Christ is precious. 2. Why he is so meanly esteemed by the greatest part of men. 1. For the first. Christ is precious in four respects. 1. He is precious in the account of God. Jesus Christ is the delight both of the Father and of the holy Ghost. God values him as a pearl of great price. (1) He is in Scripture called the Son of his bosom. The only begotten Son who is in the bosom of his Father, John 1. 18. As men and women show their esteem of jewels and pearls by wearing them at their bosom, so doth God testify his high esteem of Christ by laying him in his bosom. The Son of God never was, never will be out of the bosom of the Father. (2) The public testimony which God gave from heaven to Jesus Christ at his baptism, is an evidence of the high esteem he hath of him, Mat. 3. 17. This is my well beloved Son in whom I am well pleased. (3) He is so precious in God's account, that the Father will accept of none but through him, nor will he reject any, whom he recommends to him. (4) The great design of God in the Gospel is to put honour upon Christ. He commands all men to honour the Son as they honour the Father. All the good he bestows upon men is in Christ and through Christ alone. (5) The Father would never have put such a trust into his hands, as the redeeming and saving of the Elect, if he had not been of precious account in his sight. (6) His present session at God's right hand in heaven, is a full and manifest proof how dear he is to him. God hath set him there as a testimony of the highest account of him, 1 Pet. 3. 22. 2. He is precious in the esteem of the Angels. The Angelical host did him honour at his birth, Luke 2. 13, 14. They tuned their instruments and sang with a loud voice, Glory be to God in the highest. As God hath commanded them to worship him, Heb. 1. 6. so they do continually worship him. They are ready at his beck to do his will. They do ascend and descend upon the Son of man, John 1. 51. Not as if they ministered to Christ alone, but because out of respect to Christ, and to do him honour, they do at his command go forth to serve his Church as he gives them charge. The Angels worship the Son with the very same aderation wherewith they worship the Father. Christ is very high in their books. 3. He is precious in the esteem of the Saints. Whether ye take it of the Saints triumphant, or of the Saints militant; for the Saints triumphant, see how they adore him, Rev. 5. 8, 9 And the Saints militant, they have an high esteem of him. They glory and triumph in him. They venture their whole salvation upon him. They disesteem all other things in respect of him. I account all things (saith the Apostle) but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord, Phil. 3. 7, 8. They are joyful when they can have communion with him. See what follows in the verse after the Text, unto you that believe he is precious; he is but a nominal believer that doth not account Christ precious. See how the Church speaks of him, Cantiles 5. 10. He is white and ruddy, the chiefest of ten thousands. 4. He is precious in himself. This I shall show you in these three particulars. 1. In the glory of his person. Never did such a person appear in the world as is Jesus Christ. He is truly God, and truly and properly man. The Divine and humane Nature never hypostatically met in any person, besides the person of Christ. The Apostle saith of him; that he is the brightness of his Father's glory, and the express image of his person, Heb. 1. 3. He is the head of principalities and powers, Col. 2. 10. The highest and most glorious of the Angels being compared to Christ, is but a dark and a fullied creature. He excels the Angels in the glory of his person, far more than they do the meanest of men. All the Divine attributes are appropriated to Christ as he is the Son of God, as well as to the Father. He is eternal, Micah 5. 2. His go forth are from everlasting. He is immutable as the Father is; Heb. 1. 12. He is omniscient, Heb. 4. 13. He is omnipotent, Esay 9 6. In one word, he is as God every way equal to the Father, Phil. 2. 6. There are such mysteries in the person of Christ, as shall be matter of admiration both to men and Angels to all eternity. There is in Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, though not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, identity of person, and diversity of natures, and these united without composition and confusion, both natures retaining their distinct properties, and yet both making but one person. This is the first. 2. In the glory of his qualifications and endowments. Jesus Christ is endued with such rare gifts and graces as never any before. See how the Scripture expresseth it, Psalm 45. 7. God even thy God hath anointed thee with oil of gladness above thy fellows, Col. 2. 3. In him are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge, Col. 1. 19 It pleased the Father, that in him all fullness should dwell. The fullness of grace in Christ excels the fullness of all other persons in these three respects. 1. In him are all kinds of fullness. He hath not only the fullness of parts, but the fullness of degrees also. The best of the Saints have only the fullness of parts. There may be additions made to their fullness. But in Christ is fullness of degrees. There can be no additions made to his fullness. The Spirit which is given to others in measure, is given to Christ without measure, John 3. 34. And then 2. In Christ there is the fullness of redundancy as well as the fullness of sufficiency. All other persons have only a fullness of sufficiency. The Angels albeit they want nothing which is agreeable to their estate, yet they have no overplus to redound to others. But now in Christ is the fullness of redundance; he hath not only the fullness of the vessel as others have, but he hath the fullness of the fountain, whereby he is able to communicate unto others, Zech. 13. 1. A fountain shall be set open for sin and for uncleanness. He hath the fullness of the root, the fullness of the heap, the fullness of the Sun. Hence it is that men are invited to him, to be made partakers of his fullness, Esay 55. 1. All the fullness that is in the Saints, is communicated from him to them, according to that of the Evangelist, John 1. 16. Of his fullness have we all received, and grace for grace. 3. All this fullness which is in Christ, is in him after a peculiar and special manner. The Apostle sets this out by that phrase of dwelling, Col. 1. 19 That expression notes a threefold difference in fullness, as it is in Christ, from fullness, as it is in the Saints. (1) 'Tis in him originally. That fullness which is in the Saints, is in them derivatively. They have it from another, Christ hath his fullness from himself. The Divinity doth fill and replenish the humanity with all kinds of grace. (2) 'Tis in Christ essentially. As he is God, his fullness is his essence. Therefore doth the Apostle say, that the fullness of the Godhead dwells in him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, bodily, Col. 2. 9 that is, personally and essentially. (3) 'tis in him unchangeably. It is maintained constantly at the same height. It doth not abate, nor is there any potentiality of abating. It's always high tide with Jesus Christ. That fullness which is in the Saints, is the fullness of a dish, which is abated, if one drop be taken away; but the fullness of Christ is as the fullness of the fire, which though it kindle hundreds of sticks, yet is not abated; or as the fullness of the Sun, which though it send down its beams continually upon the world, yet the light of it is not darkened. Never any person endowed with so many excellencies in such a measure after such a manner as Jesus Christ. No perfection can be named or imagined, which is not to be found transcendently in Jesus Christ; wisdom, beauty, meekness, patience, heavenliness, etc. All Christian virtues are called the virtues of Christ, 1 Pet. 2. 9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, both because they were all eminently in Christ, and because as they are in the Saints, they are communicated from Christ. This is the second. 3. In the worth of his sufferings. The Scripture calls the blood of Christ, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, 1 Pet. 1. 19 'Tis precious, not only because of the dignity of the person who shed it, called therefore the blood of God, Acts 20. 28. but because of the great value and merit of it, and because of the precious effects of it. By the virtue of this blood which Christ shed, remission of sin is purchased, the redemption of the Elect is perfected, Rom. 3. 25. Heb. 9 12. By his own blood he entered once into the holy place, having obtained eternal redemption for us. By the preciousness of this blood is God and man reconciled, Col. 1. 20, 21, 32. By this blood is the conscience sanctified, Heb. 9 14. By this blood is the way to heaven opened for all the Elect, Heb. 10. 19 The sufferings of Christ are so precious, that if ten thousand worlds were, there would be redundancy of merit in Christ to save them all. This is the third. 2. For the second. Christ is so meanly esteemed of by men, of the greatest part of men, because of three things, viz. Ignorance, Pride, Prejudice. 1. They are ignorant of him. The greatest part of the world is quite blind in spiritual things, 1 Cor. 2. 14. As in other spiritual things, so in this of the worth of Christ. A blind man can see no more excellency in a precious stone then in a common stone. A blind Christian can see no more worth in Christ, then in another person. This you may see from that question, which is propounded by the daughters of Jerusalem, Cant. 5. 9 What is thy beloved more than another beloved, O thou fairest among women? etc. Their very question bewrays their ignorance; had they known any thing of him, they would not have said, What is thy beloved? The wisdom of the Gospel, whereby Jesus Christ is made known, is hidden wisdom, 'Tis wisdom in a mystery, 1 Cor. 2. 7, 8. which none can understand but those that are savingly enlightened. This ignorance of Christ under which the greatest part of men are held, ariseth (1) Partly, from the negligence and slothfulness that is in men. They are idle and will not take pains to study the Word of God, which sets out Christ. They cast the Scriptures from them. Our Saviour saith, John 5. 39 That the Scriptures testify of him; men do not search this blessed book as they should; either they read not at all, or else they read superficially; they do not pray that God would discover Christ to them in and by the Word. Hence they are ignorant of him. (2) Partly, from their Atheistical unbelief of what they hear reported by others. Though they cannot but hear sometimes the reports of Christ in the public Ministry, yet they will give no assent of faith to them, but oppose and reject them as the fancies of men. This is that which the Prophet allegeth, Esay 53. 1. Who hath believed our report, and to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed? Ex iis qui Evangelicum audiunt vix centesimum quemque fidelem fore, saith Calvin upon the place. Scarce the hundreth part of those that hear the Gospel do yield a cordial assent to the Gosspel. (3) Partly, from a judiciary hand of God upon them. God usually punisheth voluntary blindness with a penal and judiciary blindness. This is that which the Prophet is taught of God, Esay 6. ult. Go and preach to this people, saying, Seeing, ye shall see, and not perceive; and hearing, ye shall hear, and not understand, etc. The Apostle makes application of this Text, to the unbelieving Jews, who would not receive what he had with so much clearness proved concerning Jesus Christ, both out of Moses, and out of the Prophets, Acts 28. 23, 24, 25, 26. When men that live under the Gospel shut their own eyes, God doth ratify it by an act of his justice, and saith, Be thou blinded for ever. When a man hardens his own heart, God is pleased to ratify it in heaven, and saith, Let that heart never be softened. See that of our Saviour to this purpose, John 12. 37, etc. Now because men neglect the study of the Gospel which shows what Christ is, because they refuse to assent to, and close with what the Ministers of God report out of the Gospel concerning Christ, because God punisheth the voluntary blinding their eyes, with a judicial blinding, therefore do they remain ignorant of the preciousness of Christ. And because they are ignorant of him, therefore they disesteem him. 2. Their pride. The greatest part of men, even of those that live under the Gospel, are puffed up with arrogancy and self-conceit. They dream that they are in so good a condition already that Christ cannot make them better. They are full of vain confidences; some fleshly boasting or other they have in their hearts; some carnal City of refuge they erect for themselves besides Christ, and this makes Christ less precious to them then he would otherwise he. We are the circumcision saith the Apostle, which worship God in the Spirit, and rejoice in Christ Jesus, and have no confidence in the flesh, Phil. 3. 3. He that creates any fleshly ground of confidence to himself (and all confidences are fleshly which are not bottomed on Christ;) such a man will not much rejoice in Christ Jesus. Now there are in the minds of men abundance of false confidences and carnal imaginations; the Apostle hints at them, though he do not expressly name them, 2 Corinth. 10. 4, 5. There are many significant words used by the Apostle, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, munitions, fortifications, strongs holds, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, reasonings. Abundance of fond reasonings are in the minds of men; they reason themselves into heaven upon very poor and slender premises. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, strange heightenings of themselves have men in which they rejoice, which will be found groundless another day, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Swarms of foolish thoughts have men by nature, which they bandy up and down in their souls. One man makes wealth his strong hold; Another reasons himself into heaven because of some Church Privilege; A third is mightily heightened upon his civil righteousness; A fourth thinks all is well with him, because others have a good opinion of him. Every man by nature abounds with some or all of these. Therefore is Christ so mean and inconsiderable in their esteem. 3. They are prejudiced against Christ. Though no man hath any reason or good Argument against Christ, yet have they many prejudices which they take up against him. And these prejudices lay him low in their hearts. What those prejudices are, I shall name when I come to handle that in the eighth Verse, where Christ is said to be a stone of stumbling, and a rock of offence. I shall show what prejudices men have against his Doctrine worship, followers, etc. And while prejudices lie against Christ, he will never find that esteem which is meet. A man can never think highly of any person or thing against which he hath taken up a prejudice, though they be never so deserving. Ahabs' prejudice against the Prophets of the Lord, would not suffer him to hear them, 1 Kings 22. 8. 1 PET. 2. 6. XXII. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth. Lon. Febr. 20. 1652. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Precious. I Proceed to the Uses which are 1. Information. 2. Examination. 3. Exhortation. 1. For Information. This teacheth a twofold lesson. 1. The exceeding great glory of the Church of Christ. The Scripture tells us that the Church of God is a glorious body. Though the Church (taken in its more large acception, as it contains all visible professors) be in many respects less glorious, because o● the mixture that is in it, it being a field, wherein is both wheat and tares; Mat. 13. 24 25. Mat. 3. 13. Mat. 13. 48. a barn floor, wherein is both good corn and chaff; a net, in which are fishes good and bad; yet the Church of God, more strictly taken for the number of them that are effectually called the invisible Church, is a very glorious society; The Apostle calls it a glorious Church, Eph. 5. 27. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. It's glorious as in regard of the holiness of the members, so chief in regard of Christ the glorious foundation. A house whose corners are laid with precious stones, and whose superstructory stones are all lively stones, must needs be glorious. Never such a building in the world as the Church of God is. See how the Evangelical Prophet describes it, Esay 54. 11. O you afflicted, tossed with tempests and not comforted, behold I will lay thy stones with fair colours, and lay thy foundation with Saphires, etc. 'Tis much like that description which is made of it, Rev. 21. 10, 11, 12 etc. Every thing which is in the Church makes for the glory of it. Glorious in its members, who are clothed with the glory of God; glorious in regard of the worship which is there used, and of the Ordinances there dispensed, in regard of the Doctrine there there maintained. Calvin I remember, understands by those precious stones mentioned, Esay 54. 11, 12. The variety of the gifts and graces of God to his people. Paul understands by the same precious stones the doctrine taught in the Church, 1 Cor. 3. 11. The Church is glorious, both in respect of the doctrine, and of the various gifts and graces of God dispensed amongst the members of it. But the great glory of all lies in the foundation-stone, Jesus Christ. That must needs be a precious building, which hath its foundation on such a precious stone as Jesus Christ is, who it as far above all precious stones, and a great deal more, than they are above common stones. For the setting out of this, consider how Christ excels all other precious stones. 1. He excels them in largeness. Other precious stones are but of a small dimension, and of a very little weight. You may put many of the largest, that ever were seen, into a small Cabinet, but Jesus Christ is very great. As God, he is infinite without dimension, filling heaven and earth with his presence. See how the Prophet speaks of the infiniteness, and incomprehensibleness of Christ in regard of his divine nature, Esay 40. 12, 13. Who hath measured the waters in the hollow of his hand? and meted out the heaven with a span? and comprehended the dust of the earth in a measure, and weighed the mountains in scales, and the hills in a balance. That all this is spoken of Christ, appears from verse 11. where he is prophesied of, as the Shepherd of his flock. 2. He excels them in duration. Other pearls and precious stones are of a perishing nature, they may be defaced, broken, dissolved; they may lose their beauty. There's a day coming when they shall be melted away into nothing. Cleopatra dissolved a pearl of very great worth, by the Art of Chemistry, and drank it at one draught to her Antonius. But Jesus Christ is a durable precious stone. Neither time nor eternity will be able to dissolve this stone; His beauty cannot be lost or dimished; He never will have any flaw, or crack, or spot in him, in the eyes of those that are able to judge aright of him. His brightness is an unfading brightness. The heavens and the earth fade, and wax old like a garment, but Jesus Christ is still the same, and his years have no end, Heb. 1. 11, 12. And 3. He excels them in the multiplicity and perfection of his properties. There is not any precious stone that hath all excellencies and virtues in it. Some excel in one property, some are excellent for another virtue. Whether their medicinal virtues be considered, or their other excellencies, as their colour, their form, their roundness, etc. One excels most in this kind, another in that. But the virtues and excellencies of all pearls and precious stones meet in Christ. Whatsoever perfection is to be found in any created stone, the same is to be found in Christ. The properties of the Saphire, the Diamond, the Chrysolite, the Sardonix, the Amethyst, and of all other stones meet in Christ alone. And then they are all in him in a fare more transcendent manner than they are in any of these. His brightness is above the brightness of the Diamond, his whiteness far exceeds the whiteness of the Pearl. The medicinal and physical properties that are in Christ, are far more excellent than those that are in other precious stones. Some Pearls, they say, do strengthen the heart; others clear the sight; others remove the vertigo or dizziness of the head, and many other useful properties are recorded by learned men; but none of them are so excellent in any of these kinds as Christ is, for he removes and heals the distempers of the soul and mind, as well as of the body; he cures the spiritual eyesight, Rev. 3. 18. He cures the troubles of the conscience, which no other precious stone can do, being never so artificially used. He being rightly applied and taken, cures the soul of sin, removes guilt, which none other precious stone can do. The necklace of pearl cannot cure the wounds of conscience, the girdle of diamonds cannot remove tremble from the spirit; the costly jewel in the bosom cannot quiet the heart, throbbing for sin or God's departure; all this Christ can do. And 4. He excels them in this, that he hath no hurtful qualities. Other precious stones have a kill quality, powder of diamonds they say is poysonful, put in the bowels or throat, takes away life presently. But Jesus Christ hath no destructive quality. He is occasion of hurt to none, but to him that refuseth him. Put all these together, and it will appear, that the Church of God which is erected upon, and united unto such a precious foundation, must needs be a glorious Church. 2. The great riches of true believers. A member of Christ, how poor soever he is in regard of outward riches, yet he is the richest man in the world, for he doth possess Christ, who is a stone of invaluable worth. If you knew a man had an estate worth all the precious stones in the world, you would account him a very rich man. A believer hath one precious stone in his possession, which is of greater worth than all the precious stones, which now are, or ever were in the world. When other men boast of their jewels, do you boast of your Christ. When others tell you what rich sparkling diamonds they have, do you bring out this precious stone and lay it before them. When you hear other men speaking of the costly foundation of their houses, do you think what a glorious foundation your souls are built upon. He that wants Christ is the truly poor man, whatever he enjoys. He is rich, we say, whom God loves, he is rich that inherits Christ; if thou hadst thy house full of diamonds, thou wouldst judge thyself a wealthy man. If Christ be thine, thou hast much more. I counsel thee to buy of ●ne Gold that thou mayest be rich, Rev. 3, 18. 'Tis not the gold of the earth, but Christ's gold that makes men rich. Though thou hast no house to put thy head in, not a footbredth of land to tread upon, though thou hast not one penny in thy purse, yet if thou art a true believer, thou art more wealthy than the greatest Emperor or Monarch in the world, that hath not Christ for his portion. Thou hast a precious stone which will serve to spend upon to eternity, & never waste nor diminish. Thus much for Information. 2. For Examination. Let us try whether Jesus Christ be precious to us. Many are deceived in their thoughts about Christ. Abundance think they esteem him to be a precious stone, who do indeed account him but an ordinary stone. It will be necessary therefore to lay down some notes to distinguish a true esteem of Christ from a false esteem. I shall name these four, viz. 1. Whether you are willing to part with every thing you have, that you may enjoy Christ? Our Saviour lays this down as an evidence of a real prising of Christ, Mat. 13. 46. he went and sold all that he had and bought it. Not as if Christ were our purchase, for he is the Father's free gift, John 3. 16. but the meaning is, that he that esteems Christ as a pearl of price, will let nothing stand in the way between him and Christ; he will part with every thing, rather than go without him. By this the Apostle Paul evidences his esteem of Christ, Phil. 3. 7, 8. What things were gain to me, those I counted loss for Christ, etc. He that esteems Christ aright, will leave all his sins for Christ. He will leave his honours and preferments in the world, when he cannot keep them and Christ together: as that noble Marquis 〈◊〉 did, he will part with all his morality, civil righteousness, rather than not enjoy Christ. No terms are hard, no conditions difficult, so that Christ may be possessed. He that will not let every thing go that hinders him from Christ, doth not esteem Christ truly precious. That young man in the Gospel did declare that Christ was not precious to him, because he would not part with his riches to enjoy him, Luke 18. 23. He went away sorrowful, for he was very rich. 2. What desire have you of fellowship with Christ? He that esteems Christ precious indeed, thinks he hath never enough of Christ. The Church testifies her dear esteem of him, by her passionate desire of communion with him, Cant. 1. 13. Abundle of myrrh is my well-beloved to me, he shall lodge all night between my breasts. The breast is the place of affections. There the heart is, that shall be Christ's Chamber; precious stones that are valued, are laid up in the safest Cabinet. Where Christ is valued aright, he is laid up in the best Cabinet, the very heart. The soul that values him aright, is never weary of his presence. He will neglect no opportunity, he will miss willingly no meeting, where he thinks Christ may be found. Tell me, O thou whom my soul loveth, where thou feedest! Cant. 1. 7. Jesus Christ is much in the thoughts of him that truly esteems him; he is never at ease, but when Christ lies with him; he likes no discourse so well as that that hath Christ in it. He is a man even swallowed up with the meditations of Christ. 3. Is every thing of Christ precious to you? He that hath right appreciations of Christ, doth account him every way precious. His precepts are as precious as his promises; his life is as precious as his death; his holy steps are as precious as his blood. Many men think they account very highly of Christ, who do indeed account meanly of him. They cry him up in his sufferings and satisfaction, and cry him down as much in his obedience. The promises of Christ are sweet, but the precepts of Christ are bitter. His meritorious death is highly extolled; but his exemplary life is but meanly accounted of: his Priestly office is glorious to them, but his Kingly and Prophetical offices are contemptible. They would have Christ to save them, but they desire not Christ to sanctify them. They do indeed cry up Jesus, but they cry down Christ. They prise his blood, but they despise his graces. They like Christ's intercession, but they do not like his Sovereignty; they would have him glorify them in heaven, but they will not allow him to command them on earth. All such partial prising of Christ is no prising of Christ. As the right receiving of Christ is to receive him wholly, so the right prising of Christ is to prise him wholly. He is not prized at all, if he be any way despired. The Apostle tells us, that Christ is made unto us of God, wisdom, righteousness, sanctification, redemption, in 1 Cor. 1. 30. He that doth esteem him aright, must esteem him in this latitude; he is to be honoured as much as he is a Sanctifier, as he is to be honoured as a Redeemer. The Church values Christ wholly, Cant. 5. 11, 12, etc. His head, his lock●, his eyes, his hands, his lips, etc. Many do much value the hands of Christ by which he gives rewards, but they do not value the lips of Christ, by which he gives commands. A true prizer of Christ esteems his mouth as much as his hands, yea he esteems the precepts of his mouth as well as the promises of his mouth. 4. What opinion have you of those that are like Christ? It is an eternal truth, that whosoever hath a right esteem of Christ, cannot but value those that are like him, and that merely because they have his image. Hear what the Apostle saith expressly to this purpose, 1 Joh. 5. 1. Every one that loveth him that begat, loveth him also that is begotten of him. He that saith he looks upon Christ as precious, and hates them that are like him, is a liar, & the truth is not in him. God will set such men down not for the prisers, but for the despisers of Christ. Thus much for examination. 3. For Exhortation. This may commend several duties to us all. 1. Bless God for this precious stone. The more excellent Christ is, the more should our hearts he enlarged to bless God for him. How exceeding great is his love to his Church, that hath laid for their foundation such a precious stone as Christ is; had he not greatly and dearly loved you, he would not have parted with this precious stone out of his bosom. He had given you nothing, if he had not not given you Christ, and now you have Christ he will not deny you any thing. The Apostle argues strongly, Rom. 8. 32. He that spared not his own Son, etc. how shall he not together with him also freely give us all things? God hath taken away all ground of questioning other things, from them to whom he hath given Christ. He that gives a man freely his best jewel, will not stick with him for a few common stones. Let not a day go over your heads without praises to God for Jesus Christ. 2. Let this encourage every one to build on him. We have encouragement enough to build on him, because he is elected of God; and encouragement also, because he is so precious. Build not your salvation on those rotten stones of merit, or freewill, etc. but upon this precious stone Jesus Christ. He undoes himself, who leaves this precious cornerstone for any mean coner-stone which God hath never designed. He is an unwise Christian that refuseth a foundation of precious stone to build on a sandy foundation. 3. Whatever hath reference to Christ, let it be precious. The Apostle speaks of precious faith, 2 Pet. 1. 1. Faith is precious, because it lays hold on so precious a Christ, and on so precious promises, and because it works such precious effects, etc. We should have a care that that faith which hath to do with Christ be actively precious. 'Tis precious when it's right bred, and when it's active, when it's of the best sort. So love Christ with a precious love, not with ordinary, but with choice affection. Fear Christ with a precious fear. Obey Christ with a precious obedience, that is, obedience of the best kind. Worship Christ with precious worship. It will be another character that Christ is precious to us, when we have a care that every thing that refers to him be choice and precious. Cursed is the deceiver, saith the Prophet, Ma●. 1. 14. that hath a male in his flock, and sacrificeth to God a corrupt thing: for I am a great King; that's the reason rendered. God's greatness should make men offer of the best they have. Christ is a very precious stone. Whatever relates to him, its fit should be precious as he is precious. 4. Esteem more highly of him than you have done. Let your thoughts of him be raised and sublimate. Consider three things. 1. The more you prise him, the faster you will stick to him. He is easily seduced from Christ, that hath low thoughts of Christ. High appreciations will help us much against seduction. 2. The more you prise him, the better you will obey him. The esteem of a person maketh service done with more freedom of Spirit and readiness of mind. 3. The more you prise him, the more cheerfully will you suffer for him; respect of the person for whom we suffer, makes hard and heavy burdens light. Amor meus crucifixus. No reproaches will damp that soul to whom Christ is precious. 1 PET. 2. 8. A stone of stumbling, and a rock XXIII. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth. Lon. March 13. 1652. of offence. THe Apostle having in the former Verse declared what Christ is to believers; doth in this verse proceed to show what he is to unbelievers; he is to them a cornerstone, sanctified and appointed of God, to support and bear them up against all shake from within, and assaults from without; he is to these, through their disobedience and incredulity, a stone of stumbling, and rock of offence, upon which they dash themselves to pieces without recovery. Here are two words used, but they denote one and the same thing, only they are doubled, to show the certainty and reality of the thing threatened. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 do not much differ in this place. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may denote a single stone, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a multitude of stones. And then for the other words, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 & 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Though they do something differ in their Etymologies, yet as to the sense and meaning in this place they do not differ, as is well observed by Estius and other learned men. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, to dash against a thing, it signifieth a stone or any other impediment cast in a man's way, against which he dasheth his foot, and so stumbleth or falleth. And then for the other word, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, it comes from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to halt, and is used for any thing which is an occasion of rain. Stephanus observes, that it is a word peculiar to Scripture, never used in any profane Author. It signifies properly, as learned men observe the bridge in the trap, which by its falling down catches, the creature in the snare, and so ruins it; and from thence is used to denote any thing which is occasion to others of stumbling or falling in the ways of God. Now, offence or scandal is twofold. It is either Scandalum Datum, or Acceptum. Actiuè, or Passiuè. Offence given, or offence taken. 1. Offence given, or Active scandal, is, when the error or fault is on his part, which lays the scandal. This is twofold, Scandalum, Contristationis, Or Lapsus. Scandalum Contristationis. An offence or scandal of grief when any thing is done or said which gives just occasion of sorrow unto our brethren. Of this the Apostle speaks, Rom. 14. 21. and v. 15. Scandalum lapsus. An offence or scandal of falling is, when any thing is spoken or done whereby an occasion of sinning is given to our brethren. Of this the Apostle speaks, 1 Cor. 8. 9, 10, 11. This is done either by evil counsel, Mat. 16. 23. Rom. 16. 18. Rev. 2. 14. By evil example, Esay 9 16. Mat. 15. 14. Or by abuse of Christian liberty, in the use of things indifferent, Rom. 14. and 1 Cor 8. 2. Offence taken, or passive scandal, is, when things or words which are both good and seasonable, are by sinister and perverse malignity of mind made an occasion of offence. Thus the doctrine of Christ's crucifying was an offence and scandal to the Jews, 1 Cor. 1. 23. It was foolishness to the wise selfconceited Greeks, and it was a stumbling block to the malignant Jews. Now when the Apostle saith, Christ is a stone of stumbling and rock of offence. We are to understand it passively, not Actively. Christ Jesus, nor any thing of Christ, is no just occasion of offence to any; he lived and died without giving just offence to any. His counsel was good, his example was holy, his whole conversation was so ordered, that none could justly be offended at him. And yet through the wickedness of their hearts, many did then, and do still, to their own ruin, take offence at him. The Observation is this, viz. Doct. The Lord Jesus Christ is to wicked men a stone of stumbling and a rock of offence. Though Christ be in himself a precious cornerstone of Gods own appointment and choosing, yet do wicked men make him to be unto themselves a stone of stumbling, and a rock of offence. It's very common and ordinary for wicked men to be offended, and to stumble at Jesus Christ. Many places of Scripture do make mention of the offence which the wicked should take at Christ. See Esay 8. 14, 15. Though these words be not spoken directly, yet they are spoken typically of Christ. Adumbratus fuit Christus, qui non instar arcis, sed offendiculi potius Israelitis futurus erat, saith Calvin upon the place. Though Christ be in himself a Sanctuary, and be so to the elect, yet to the ungodly and carnal, he is both a stone of stumbling, and a rock of offence. As, many are gathered and saved by him, so shall many be broken, and snared, and taken because of him. To this agrees that old prophecy of Simeon concerning Christ, Luke 2. 34. Behold, saith he, this child is set for the fall and rising again of many in Israel, and for a sign which shall be spoken against. And as it was foretold of him, so we read in the Gospel, that it was fulfilled concerning him; many were causelessly offended at him. In the handling of this point, I shall open these two things. 1. What it is in Christ at which men stumble and take offence. 2. Whence it is that they do take offence. We shall show first the matter of the offence. Secondly, the occasion of this causeless offence. 1. For the first. There are many occasions of offence which men take at Christ, I reduce all to these three heads. First, some stumble and take offence at his p●rson. I mean the meanness of his person. This was the great stumbling block of the Jews. They looked for a Messiah of noble birth and Parentage, that should sway the Sceptre of David with much outward pomp and glory. They expected that all those prophecies, which speak of the glory of Christ's person, should have been literally fulfilled, therefore they took offence at him. His birth was mean, his parentage low and ordinary, his attendance small, his education and breeding contemptible, this made them stumble. The Prophet foretells this of the Jews, Esay 53. init. he shall grow up before him as a tender plant, etc. There is no form nor comeliness in him that we should desire him. They looked for outward splendour, and because they did not find it, they were offended. The Evangelist speaks fully of this, Mat. 13. 54, 55, 56, 57 Is not this, say they, the Carpenter's son, & c? They did not consider that the Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to Minister, that he came to be a servant, that he was made under the law, and therefore were scandalised at his meanness. We may add to this his shameful and ignominious death which he suffered, this was a great offence to the Jews. They do to this day upbraid Christians with that curse, Jer. 17. 5. Cursed is the man that trusteth in man, and maketh flesh his arm. Christ crucified is to this day a stumbling block to the Jews. Secondly, some stumble at his Doctrine. The Doctrine which Christ preached, and which by his appointment, is published, is very glorious, yet it is an occasion of offence to the world. The Arians are offended at the Doctrine of his Divine nature. The Manichees at the doctrine of his humanity. The Socinians are offended at the doctrine of his satisfaction. The Papists at his doctrine of justification by faith alone. The Pelagians and Arminians are offended at his doctrine, of nullifying the power of nature in things supernatural. The Antinomians stumble at his doctrine of the ratification of the moral law, etc. The Pharisees were offended at his doctrine against tradition, Mat. 15. 11, 12. But to come to particulars. 1. The strictness of his doctrine is a stumbling block to many. The doctrine of Jesus Christ is very strict, it condemns not only actual sin, but the very sinful rise of corruption in the heart. He that looks upon a woman, saith our Saviour, to lust after her, hath committed adultery with her in his heart, Mat. 5. 28. so v. 29. If thy right eye offend thee, pluck it out, and cast it from thee, etc. Duri sermones durioris Magistri, have some said of these words. They are hard say of a hard master. If we consider the duties of the Gospel, they are not only barely to be performed, but they are to be performed cordially, sincerely, else they are not accepted. Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind, and with all thy strength. Corrupt nature would have full swinge and liberty, the Doctrine of Christ will not allow it, therefore is offence taken at it. 2. The spirituality of his Doctrine offends others. The Doctrine of Jesus Christ in the Gospel is a very spiritual doctrine, John 6. 63. The words which I speak to you, saith Christ, they are Spirit, and they are life. 'Tis the honour of Christ's Doctrine, that it is not fleshly, but spiritual, and they that are spiritual love it, because of its spirituality. You may see the spiritualness, and efficacy of the Word, Heb. 4. 12. its quick, and powerful, and mighty in operation, sharper than a two edged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, etc. Now because men are carnal, they are offended at a spiritual word. The Apostle calls it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, James 1. 21. A carnal heart doth not love the word should be an engrafted word. They are contented it should come into their ears, but they do not love it should sink into their hearts, therefore are they offended at it. 3. The mysticalnesse of his Doctrine, is a stumbling stone to others. The Doctrine of Christ in his Gospel is a doctrine very mysterious, 1 Tim. 3. 16. 'Tis in many things above reason. The Doctrine of the Trinity of persons in the unity of essence, is above reason that God should be one, and yet three. The Doctrine of the the two natures in the person of Christ. These and many others are above reason. The doctrine of self-denial. The doctrine of losing a man's life to save it, the doctrine of regeneration, of the resurrection of the body, these are very mysterious. And because they are so, offence is taken at them, read John 6. 51, 52. how were the Jews offended, because he had preached that, except men did eat his flesh and blood, they had no life in them? They strove among themselves, saying, How can this man give us his flesh to eat? nay, not only the Jews, but many of the Disciples also were offended at this doctrine, v. 60, 61. The mysticalnesse and height of the Gospel, and doctrines of it do offend now to this day. 4. The simplicity of his doctrine is an offence to others. The Doctrine of Christ in the Gospel is laid down with great plainness. Though the Gospel be sufficiently Rhetorical, yet it is written with much plainness. The penmen of Scripture did purposely avoid the enticing words of men's wisdom, lest they should corrupt the hearts of men from the simplicity that is in Christ. 'Tis the excellency of the Gospel, that it is set down in plainness and simplicity. Painting is fit for harlots then for chaste women. Naked truth is best; if other dresses be put upon it, it is corrupted. The wise Greeks stumbled at this stumbling stone. They thought Tully and Demosthenes were more eloquent than the Apostles and Prophets. The Apostle speaks fully to this, 1 Cor. 1. 17, 18, 22, 23. Many are to this day offended at this very thing, they think there are not those strains of wit in the writings of the Apostles as are in other writings, when as the truth is, the highest eloquence, is the eloquence of God in the Scriptures. 5. The severity of his Doctrine is a stumbling stone to others. The Law and Gospel do both threaten damnation for disobedience, and impenitence. The axe is laid to the root of the tree, saith John, Mat. 3. 10. Every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit, is hewn down and cast into the fire. He that believeth not is condemned already, Mark 16. 16. Many are greatly offended at this. They would have smooth things, but they love not this severity. They do not consider that as the Gospel is severe against sin, so is it exceeding full of comfort to all penitent sinners. And then, 6. The consequences of his Dactrine is an offence to others. I shall only mention two things which do ordinarily follow the doctrine of the Gospel, they are these. First, reproaches and persecutions. Seldom do men receive the Doctrine of Christ in power, but the devil and his instruments raise persecution less or more against them. You may trace the Gospel by the blood of those that have professed it. They gnashed upon Steven with their teeth, saith the story, Acts 7. 52, 54. and at last stoned him with stones, that he died. Quid est predicare (saith Luther) nisi furorem populi in se derivare? To preach the Gospel, is to draw the fury of the world upon a man's self. And to profess the Gospel in sincerity and zeal, is to make a man's self a prey to the wicked. This offends many. Our Saviour foretells this. See two texts, Mat. 13. 21. and Matth. 24. 9 10. The presecution which hath followed upon Christ's Doctrine, hath made thousands scandalised at Christ. Secondly, Divisions and contentions. Though Christ be the Prince of peace, and his Gospel the Gospel of peace, yet accidentally, by reason of men's corruptions it causes great divisions, Luke 12. 49. I am come, saith our Saviour, to send fire on the earth, and what will I, if it be already kindled? so Mat. 10. 34, 35. These are not the effects, but the consequence of the Gospel, it meets with men's corruptions, which, because they will not have destroyed, they are enraged. This offends many. Hence some have profanely wished that the Bible were burnt, they have looked upon it as the great makebate, and incendiary of the world. Thus is the Doctrine of Christ made a stone of stumbling, and a rock of offence. Thirdly, Some stumble and take offence at his Kingdom. I mean not only at his internal Administration of his Kingdom by his Spirit in the heart, but also at the external administration of it. I shall reduce all I have to say to these two heads. 1. The government of his Kingdom. 2. The subjects of his Kingdom. 1. For the government of his Kingdom. Multitudes are offended at this. The Officers by whom he hath appointed to administer this Kingdom. Men do take much offence, though causelessly at these, decrying, reviling them as if they were not of God. Ye take too much upon you, ye sons of Levi? all the Lords people are holy, Numb. 16. 3. All men are Ministers, all may preach; there's no such office as Minister in the Scripture. There's no such thing as Ruler in the Church. The censures they also give offence to many. Admonition, Suspension, Excommunication, men are greatly offended at all these. The government is too strict, too severe, 'tis tyrannical, these are the bitter words of men. The holy Ghost foretold how men should stumble at the government of Christ's Kingdom, Ps. 2. 2, 3. Let us break their bond● asunder, and cast away their cords from us. Christ's government is a general offence. 2. For the subjects of his Kingdom. Men are offended at Christ, because of his subjects many ways. Consider these four things. 1. Many are offended at their paucity. Though Christ's subjects be many simply considered, yet comparatively they are but few. Narrow is th● way that leadeth into everlasting life, and there are very few that find it, Mat. 7. 14. Satan hath a hundred servants to Christ's one. Caleb and Joshuab only entered into Canaan of all the men that came out of Egypt. This causes many to stumble at Christ. Shall we be wiser than others? This one man came in to sojourn, and he will needs be a judge, say those sons of Belial concerning Lot, Gen. 19 9 It's a great scandal that so few come in. 2. Many are offended because of their meanness and poverty. Few of the great men of the world submit truly to Christ. Not many wise, not many noble, not many mighty hath God chosen, saith the Apostle, but the foolish things of the world, etc. 1 Cor. 1. 26, 27. Our Saviour did foresee that this would be an occasion of stumbling to men, therefore he lays in a caveat against it, Matth. 11. 4, 5, 6. Go and tell John, saith he, what you have seen and heard. The blind receive their sight, etc. and blessed is he that shall not be offended in me. The rich and wealthy oppose and reject Christ. Silk and Scarlet, Gold and Silver do very rarely follow Christ. This offends many, John 7. 48. say the Pharisees, have any of the Rulers believed in him, but this people that knoweth not the Law is accursed. 3. The miscarriages of which they are guilty. The best of Christ's subjects being but sanctified in part; and having such a subtle devil to assault, do too frequently miscarry and fall into sin. This causes many to be offended. Wicked men though they never observe the holy actions of the godly, yet they will observe their infirmities. One sin is more talked of then an hundred acts of holiness. This is a stumbling block to the wicked. See what God saith of David's sin, 2 Sam. 12. 14. They that would learn nothing by David's piety, did take offence at his sin. Though it be unreasonable that men should be offended at Christ for the failings of his servants, yet it is ordinary. 4. The sad Apostasy of those that have professed subjection to him. There are in Christ's family many rotten-hearted professors. The falling of these is an occasion why many are offended at Christ. Our Saviour speaks of this, Matthew 26. 56. The fall of such hardens the hearts of many against Christ and his Religion, John 6. 66. Thus much for the first particular, the occasion of this offence. 1 PET. 2. 8. A stone of stumbling, etc. XXIV. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth. Lond. March 27. 1652. SEcondly, Quae causa? How it comes to pass that so many are offended at Christ? The Reasons are such as these, viz. 1. Ignorance of Christ. Blindness is one great cause of natural stumbling, John 11. 9, 10. If any man walk in the night he stumbleth, because there is no light in him. The spiritual blindness of the mind is one principal reason why the world stumbleth at Christ. They know not the glory of his person, they know not the excellency of his Doctrine, they know not the nature of his Kingdom, therefore they take offence at him. This is that which the Apostle mentions, 1 Cor. 2. 8. This ignorance of Christ ariseth partly from want of studying his Word. They do not search the record which is given to Christ in the Scriptures; partly, from their infidelity, they will not believe the report given of him, by such a have the knowledge of him. The Prophet speaks of this, Esay 53. init. The world's blindness is the cause of the world's offence. Consult those two texts, and the trath of this will appear. The one is, Prov. 3. 21, 22, 23. The other is Mat. 15. 14. The blindness of the Pharisees did arise from the gross ignorance of the Pharisees. 2. Precipitancy and rashness. Though a man have eyes to see, yet if he be heedless and rash, his foot may stumble in a plain way. A careless eye occasions a stumbling foot. The greatest part of men are heedless in spiritual matters, They rush on as the horse rushes into the battle, Jer. 8. 6. The Scripture speaks of pondering the steps of our feet. 'Tis the Wiseman's counsel, Prov. 4. 25, 26. Most men neglect this counsel in the things of Christ. They walk at all adventure, turning their eyes, now this way, now that way, and through their carelessness and indiscretion in not examining things, they take offence and fall. The Apostles advice is, to try, and prove all things, 1 Thes. 5. 21. advisedness and deliberation in the matters of God is a special virtue. Most men are of a hurrying spirit, and this makes them stumble. 3. Heart distemperednesse. A man that hath either un intoxicated head, or a diseased body, soon stumbles. Wicked men have hearts full of distempers. There are many unmortified lusts in their hearts, which they are not willing to part with, pride, passion, uncleanness, etc. These are indulged. These they will not part with. They love some sin better than Christ, and because they cannot have Christ and their sins, they are offended. This is hinted to u in the text. Such as stumble at the Word, are said to be disobedient. He that allows any sin unrepented of in his heart, will sooner or later stumble at Christ. See Luke 16. 14. The Pharisees who were covetous, derided Christ. Our Saviour tells them they could not serve God and Mammon, and they being given to covetousness were scandalised, and derided him, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, they snuffed at him as the word signifies. Walking in uprightness, and being without offence are joined together, Phil. 1. 10. An bypocritical and profane heart will be a stumbling heart. He that walks up to the knees in mire may easily stumble. Wicked men walk up to the very loins in the mire of sinful distempers, and this causes them to be offended at Christ. The way of the righteous (saith Solomon) is made plain, Prov. 15. 19 It's raised up as a Causey. Godly men walk in plain even ways, wicked men walk in rough, uneven, miry ways, therefore they stumble at Christ. They are burdened with the load of sin, therefore they stumble. 4. Hatred of Christ. Hatred will take offence at every thing done or said by the person hated. As love doth interpret all to the best, so hatred interprets all to the worst. Ahab hated Micaiah, and therefore took offence at every thing he said. You may read the story, 1 Kings 22. 8. Now wicked men ha●e Christ with a perfect hatred. There is dissimilitude between Christ and them, and because of that cruel hatred. They are impure, Christ is pure; they are unholy, Christ is holy. As similitude breeds love, so dissimilitude creates hatred. You read, Luke 19 14. that Christ's own Citizens hated him. Christ is hated not only by foreigners, but by them of his own household. Where there is hatred, there will be offence, Mat. 24. 10. Many shall be offended and they shall hate one another. Till the soul lay aside its hatred it will not cease to stumble at every thing of, etc. 5. Unbelief. Infidelity is the cause of stumbling. This may be gathered clearly from the text compared with the foregoing ver. unto you that believe he is precious, but unto them that are unbelievers he is a stone of stumbling. Most men walk by sense, and not by faith▪ they see the outside of Christ in his Gospel, but they do not see the beautiful inside of Christ, they see that in Religion which appears unpleasing and bitter; but they want faith to see that which is sweet and lovely, therefore they are scandalised. 6. The bad example of others. Examples have a very great efficacy and operation, whether they be good or bad; good examples are great strengthenings to them that are good; and bad examples are great provocations to them that are bad, the Apostle speaks of this 1 Cor. 8. 10. Asahels' lying dead in the way occasioned a stop in the march of others, 2 Sam. 2. 23. One wicked man eyes the example of another, and because he sees that such and such were offended at Christ, especially if they be learned, wise, etc. he upon that very example takes offence likewise. Thus much for the explication. The Uses are for Information. Exhortation. For information. It teacheth us these four lessons. 1. This may fortify us against being dejected because of the offence which wicked men take at as causelessly. It is too frequent to see wicked men scandalised at the people of God even for their holy actions. They are offended with you for your prayers, for your non compliance with them in their sinful ways, for their strict observing of the Sabbath, etc. The Apostle mentions this, 1 Pet. 4. 4. The best actions of the godly are occasions of stumbling to the wicked. Well; this text may greatly help the people of God against being offended, so as to despond because of such causeless offence. If Christ was a stone of stumbling is it any great matter if we be stones of stumbling? If they were offended at Christ, will they not be offended at us? It is enough for the Disciple that he be as his master. God's people should take care that they give no occasion of stumbling to the worst of men; but if they will take offence at the holy practices, God's people should set but very little by such offences, Mat. 15. 14. especially considering the close of the text; whereunto they were appointed. 2. How unfit and incompetent Counsellors are wicked men in the matters of Religion? They may be Oracles in and about civil and worldly things, but for the things of Christ they are of no judgement or understanding. Christ is to them a stone of stumbling, they dash themselves in p●eces upon him. They reject him, they despise him both in his person and doctrine, and therefore are not to be consulted much less followed in their advice abort these matters. Artifice in su● arte consultation. 'Tis a vain thing to ask advice from men about those things wherein they have no skill. Wicked men have no spiritual true skill in the matters of Christ. They are more like to seduce us then ●n direct us in these matters. 'Tis unsafe to make them our Counsellors who are ●o prejudiced against the things of God. Who would put himself under the conduct of a blind man, especially in a way which he had never traveled? The mischief of a wicked heart. 3. There is nothing so good but a wicked heart will turn it to its own detriment. As there is no thing so bad but a gracious heart will suck some good out of it, so there is nothing so good, but an ungracious heart will suck some hurt out of it. A wicked heart is like a spider, it will contract poison out of the sweetest Rose. Nothing better than Christ, and yet a wretched sinful heart will make him a stumbling stone; Word, Ordinances, Promises, Mercies of all sorts are made pitfalls and snares by a naughty heart. A wicked heart undoes itself more by the mercies it receives then by all its evils. It's a fearful imprecation of David against the wicked, Psal. 69. 22. Let their table become a snare, etc. A wicked heart is of sinful ingenuity and wittiness to undo itself by the best things. 4. This may be some relief to the poor Ministers when they see men scandalised and enraged against their persons or doctrines. It's a great grief to their sp●rits to think how the truths they preach fall under contempt, the administrations of Ordinances divine quarrelled at: well, it was so with Christ, his person that was better than ours, his doctrine that was purer than ours, his administrations that were more glorious than ours were. If God will have his Ministers lie as stumbling blocks upon which sinful men shall fall so as to destroy themselves, they must be content if God will have them preach, men judicially to impenitency and hardness of heart, as Esay did Ch. 6. 10. they must bear it. Christ hardly preached a Sermon or made a prayer or dispensed any Ordinance but the greatest part of them that were present, were scandalised at him. He was set for the fall of many in Israel, as well as for their rising, Luke 2. 37. If God will have his Ministers to be so to any, it is not strange, especially because they are, and shall be a sweet savour to God, both in them that perish, and in them that are saved, 2 Cor. 2. 15. 2. For Exhortation. First, to the godly; and Secondly, to the wicked and ungodly. 1. For the godly. First, Bless God that Christ is not a stumbling stone to you. That neither his person, nor his doctrine, nor his Kingdom do offend you. The time was when you were offended with Christ as much as any; and if God should leave you to yourselves, you would stumble upon him again. That you are enabled to close with his person, to embrace his doctrine, to submit to his government without offence, is a mighty mercy, especially now, when so many are scandalised, Mat. 11. 6. Secondly, Labour so to carry yourselves, that ye may not occasion others to be offended at Christ, 1 Cor. 10. 32. Paul was very careful of it himself, Acts 24. 16 The sinfulness of Professors will make men take offence at Christ. The doctrine of Christ the government of Christ will be stumbled at, if you have not care of your ways more than ordinary. If you take not heed to yourselves, both in matter of opinion and practice, you will pave a way to make many fall upon Christ himself. Your miscarriages reflect dishonour both upon Christ's person and doctrine. Give no offence saith Paul to the Corinthians, 2 Cor. 6. 3. That the Ministry be not blamed; Christianity will be blamed, yea, Christ himself will be blamed, if you be not careful to avoid miscarriages. And besides you will be instrumental to damn the souls of your brethren for whom Christ died. Remember that of our Saviour, Mat. 18. 7. woe unto that man by whom the offence cometh. 2. For the wicked. Take heed of making Christ any longer a stumbling stone. It's a very sad thing to stumble at Christ. Let me show it you in these five particulars. 1. It's a very sinful thing. The sinfulness of it appears in this. (1) It's a charging of wickedness upon Christ. He that takes offence at Christ, what doth he but say, that there is something in Christ which is matter of exception? To make Christ a stumbling stone, is either to profess that Christ is blame worthy, or that thyself art foolish. What a high sin is it to asperse Christ the holy one with any miscarriage? he was holy harmless, undefiled separate from sinners, Heb. 7 26 And 2. It's the inlet to other sins. It hinders the soul, 1. From loving Christ with that love that love that is meet. 2 From obeying Christ. 3. From believing in Christ. 4. From recommending him to others. 5. From being thankful for Christ. 6. It turns the soul upon the sin of blaspheming and reviling Christ. 7 I● hinders the soul from suffering for Christ. He that stumbles at Christ is in the highway to all kind of sin against Christ; he may easily be persuaded to set up another Christ. 2. It's a very dangerous thing. It's dangerous in these two respects. For first, It makes all that Christ hath done or suffered of no effect to us. He that stumbles at Christ cuts himself off from all the merits and benefits of Christ's death, Resurrection, Ascension, Intercession. We may say of such a one, as Paul doth of circumcision, Gal 5. 4. Nay, secondly, It makes Christ, damnation to a person. That of our Saviour is a dreadful Text, Mat. 21. 44. To turn salvation into damnation will be a double damnation; better to have been damned without a Christ, then to be damned with a Christ; better a thousand times to have been destroyed without a Redeemer, then to be destroyed by a Redeemer; better to die without a Saviour, then to die by a Saviour. What should be done that we may stumble no more? 1. Get a clear knowledge of Christ. 2. Be acquainted with those that embrace him. 3. Be truly offended at sin. 4. Pray that God would root out of your hearts all occasions of offence. 5. Remember what Christ hath done for you, and what he is still a doing for you; His doctrines, his offices, his government; All that at which offence is taken, is for your benefit and salvation. 6. To take offence at Christ, is to stumble at God's wisdom, mercy, goodness in giving Christ, and in fitting Christ. MAL. 4. 2. The Sun of righteousness shall arise XXV. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth. Lon. April 10. 1653. with healing in his wings. THe Prophet Malachy hath in this book many contests with the Jews for several impieties which raged amongst them. At the thirteenth verse of the former Chapter he contends with them for their Atheism and blaspheming of the providence of God. Your words have been stout against the Lord, and ye have said, it is in vain to serve the Lord. They that work wickedness are set up, and they that tempt God are delivered. Amongst other answers which the Prophet gives to this blasphemous charge; he tells them there was a day coming, when God's deal shall be manifest, that they themselves should discern a clear difference between them that served God, and them that served him not, ver. 18. This difference which should be made between the godly and the wicked, is amplified in the first verses of this Chapter; for, Behold the day cometh, etc. His dealing with the wicked and disobedient, is set down fully, ver. 1. The day of the Lord cometh, that shall burn as an oven. This day, though it be particularly meant of the day of Christ's first coming, as is clear by the context, ver. 5. which is by our Saviour himself interpreted of John Baptist his forerunner, Matth. 11. 14. yet as some good interpreters think, it may have a further reference, namely, to the day of his second coming, when all this shall be fully accomplished. His dealing with the godly is set down, verse 2. 3. In which are two things. 1. The grea● happiness which the godly should enjoy in these own persons, verse 2. 2. The conquest they shall obtain over the wicked, verse 3. Ye shall tread down the wicked, etc. In the happiness which is promised to the persons of the godly, as it is set down, in this Verse we have these three things observable. 1. A description of their persons, unto them that fear my Name This is an ordinary and usual description whereby the people of Go● are distinguished from all others, Mal. 3. 16. Eccl. 8. 12. Isa. 50. ●●. 2. The author of their happiness. The Sun of righteousness. 3. The nature of their happiness. This is set down two ways. 1. Generally, he shall arise upon you. 2 Particularly, This is let down three ways. T●ere are three great blessings which they should enjoy by the rising of this Sun upon them. (1.) Spiritual healing. (2.) Spiritual freedom. Ye shall go forth. (3.) Spiritual increase. Ye shall grow up as calves of the shall. I shall wave the description which is here made of the persons of godly men. And proceed to the Author of their happiness, which is said to be, The Sun of righterusnesse, for it is to open this expression that I have now chosen this text; in the handling of which I shall have occasion to open the particular benefits which should accrue to the godly, healing, freedom, growth, The Sun of righteousness. The Sun is used in Scripture in a double sense. 1. Properly. For that creature which God hath set in the heavens, and called by that name, Psal. 136. 8. 2. Metaphorically, or improperly; and so it's used for several things, which carry some similitude to the natural Sun. And thus it's used several ways. First, for God's special favour, Psal. 84. 11. The Lord God is a Sun and shield. Secondly, for comfort, Job 30. 28. I went mourning without the Sun, that is, without comfort. Thirdly, for prosperity and settled peace. Esay 60. ●0. Thy Sun shall no more go down, neither shall thy Moon withdraw itself. Fourthly, for eminency and height of condition and state, Rev. 16. 8. The fourth Angel poured out his vial upon the Sun, which Mr. Mede makes to be the German Empire, the Papal Sun of the heaven. Fifthly, for Christ himself. So 'tis used in this text, he that is called the Messenger of the Covenant, chap. 3. 1. is here called the Sun of righteousness. The Observation is this. Doct. That the Lord Jesus Christ is the Sun of righteousness. Zacharias the father of John Baptist gives him a name parallel to this, Luke 1. 78. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The dayspring from on high hath visited us. In the handling of this Doctrine, I shall by way of Explication open these three things. 1. In what respects Christ is called the Sun. 2. Why he is called the Sun of righteousness. 3. How he doth excel the natural Sun. 1. For the first. Christ may be compared to the natural Sun in three respects. 1. In respect of his own person. The natural Sun hath a shadow of two excellencies which are in the person of Christ. As, (1) His glory and Majesty. Of all the visible works which God hath made, there is not any so glorious as the Sun; it's full of splend or, and glory: The Sun is Anima munds, the very soul of the world. The brightness of the Sun is so transcendent that the weak eye of man is dazzled with the beholding of it. See how David describes this creature, Psal. 19 5. He is as a bridegroom coming out of his Chamber. Never was any bridegroom, no not the greatest Prince in the world, in such attire on his wedding day, as the Sun is every morning at his coming out of his Chamber. So glorious is the Sun, that he draws all the eyes of men to look upon him at his appearing. The Lord Jesus Christ is a glorious person. The Sun is but blackness if it be compared with Jesus Christ. His face is ten thousand times brighter than the Sun when it is clothed in its best apparel. He is the bright shining of his Father's glory, and the express image of his person, Heb 1. 3. When he was transfigured upon the mountain in the sight of his Disciples, the text saith, His face did shine as the S●nne, and his raiment as white as the light, Matth. 17. 2. Can we but see the face of Christ as it is now shining at the right hand of God, we should say the Sun were but like sackcloth in comparison of it; how much more bright is he in his Godhead? this is so glorious, that no man can see it and live. The face of Jesus Christ is that which makes and constitutes the very glory of heaven. And then. 2. His omniscience. The Sun in the firmament travels up and down, and beholds every part of the world. David saith, there is nothing hid from the heat of it, Psalm. 19 6. Jesus Christ as he is the Son of God is perfectly omniscient. The Apostle speaks of his omniscience, Heb. 4. 13. There is no creature that is not manifest in his sight, etc. Yea, he sees every thing not by moving up and down as the Sun doth, but by one fixed and constant view. There can be no fence made to keep out the sight of his eye, he doth simul & semel, together and at once behold all creatures with all their motions, thoughts, and imaginations. This is the first. II. In respect of his effects and workings upon his people. There is a great resemblance between the Sun's effects upon the creatures, and Christ's effects upon his people. I shall instance in eight particulars. 1. The Sun hath an enlightening virtue. The Sun is the great luminary which God hath appointed and made to carry the light abroad to the inhabitants of the earth. The presence of the Sun makes day. The Sun is the great torch of heaven, by which men and other creatures see what to do, and where to go, Gen. 1. 14, 16. By his light we see it and all other things: Jesus Christ hath an enlightening power, and doth actually enlighten the hearts of men. The soul is by nature in darkness, and never sees till Christ beam down his light upon it. All men by nature in regard of spiritual light, are as that blind man was, John. 9 1. without any spiritual sight. They see neither sins, blackness, nor their own misery by reason of sin. They see not Christ's beauty, not graces excellency till their eyes are opened. They have thick scales upon their eyes, as Paul had before his conversion, Act. 9 18. Therefore they are called darkness, and their state a state of darkness, Eph. 5. 8. Now Christ gives them light. When he riseth upon them savingly, then, and not till then do they see their condition, and the way out of it, Eph. 5. 14 As the Sun is speculum munds, the world's looking glass; so is Christ speculum Animae, the souls looking glass. All spiritual light which is given to the soul, is in and through Jesus Christ. So the Apostle tells us, 2 Cor. 4. 6. The Gospel is the vehiculum lucis, the great chariot that carries this light abroad, but the fountain of it is this bright Sun of righteousness Jesus Christ. Spiritual illumination is Christ's work. This is that which the Evangelist saith, John 1. 9 John Baptist carried the ●orch, but Christ himself was the light. Till this Sun be up, the soul lies in gross darkness, but when it appears then light comes Presently, Esay 60. 1. When the glory of the Lord is risen upon the soul, then is darkness expelled, and the soul shines forth. The heart that is as dark as any dungeon; when the beams of this Sun are darted down into it, is as light as a Paradise. Christ turns Egypt into Goshen. And then, 2. The Sun hath a warming virtue. Though it be not formally hot, yet it is hot in its effect. Psal 19 6. The beams of the Sun warm the earth and the air, the bodies of the rational and irrational creatures. Experience teacheth that the Sun hath a heating power; the light and motion of it causes heat. The Lord Jesus Christ hath a warning virtue in him. The heart that is as cold as ye is heated and warmed by the influences of his Spirit into a good temper. The lukewarm heart, when Christ shines upon it is set into a burning heat. The beams which are cast from Christ in his Ordinances, put the cold soul into a spiritual sweat. We have an instance of this in the two Disciples, Luke 24. 32. They were in a freezing temper till Christ overtook them, but when they had continued a while in that spiritual sunshine, their hearts were put into a violent flame. Did not our hearts burn within us while he talked with us by the way? The forerunner of Christ tells the Jews, that he that came after him, did baptise men with the holy Ghost and with fire, Matth. 3. 11. Christ can kindle the sparks of grace which seem to be as dead, and put them into a burning flame. Many a Saint hath come to the Ordinances with his heart like the cold earth, and before he hath departed, Christ hath sent him away like a burning lamp; the cold water hath been put into a vehement boiling that the heart hath run over again, eruct●vit cor meum, Psal. 45. 1. Peter grew cold at the high Priests fire when the beams of Christ were withdrawn, but when Christ shone upon him his cold heart was heated, when Elisha had lain a while upon the Shunamites dead child, his flesh waxed warm, 2 King. 4. 24. Though a soul be as cold as death, if Jesus Christ do but once stretch himself upon it, it waxes warm. And then, 3. The Sun hath a comforting virtue. The Sun is in Scripture put for comfort, Job. 30. 28. To walk without the Sun is to walk without comfort; and Solomon tells us, that it's a pleasant thing for the eyes to behold the Sun, Eccles. 11. 7. Weak and sickly persons, when they are brought into the Sunshine, find their spirits cheered by it. The Lord Jesus Christ hath a heart-comforting virtue. He is the first inlet of comfort into the soul. He is the preserver of joy in the soul; and he it is that restores joy unto the soul after dejections and droopings of heart. Noah was herein a figure of Christ; see what his father Prophecies of him, Gen. 5. ●9. Jesus Christ is the true Noah, the great comforter of his people in all the griefs and sorrows of this world. Christ is the foundation of all true comfort to thy soul. Tolle Christum, tolle sol●●●um, that reconciliation which he hath made between God and man, is the very basis of all consolation. Whatsoever in God, in the Scriptures yields any comfort to the soul, is so on●y in and through Christ. that comfort which is not built upon Christ, is bastard comfort, which will end in terror. The Spirit of God is called the comforter, John 15. 20. his office is immediately to cheer the soul. How doth he comfort but even by making application to the soul of a sinner of that which is merited for him? All the arguments whereby the spirit comforts the heart are drawn from Christ, he seals up to the soul that Christ is his, and so fills it with comfort. And then, 4. The Sune hath a healing virtue, this is in the text. There would be no health amongst men or any other living creatures, if there were no Sun. The world would be a Hospital if the Sun were not. First, the Sun dries up cold moistures, exhales vapours which would infect the bodies of men and other creatures. Secondly the Sun helps on the growth and vegetation of all healing plants, and in both these respects hath healing in his wings. The Lord Jesus Christ hath a healing virtue; he heals both as medicine and Physician. His blood is the Physic that heals, and he himself is the Physician that applies it to the soul. The Scripture speaks of Christ as a healer, Esay 61. 1. He heals the soul of the guilt of sin by the grace of justification, and he heals it of the filthiness of sin by the grace of sanctification. The Prophet Esay speaks of this, chap. 53. 5. By his stripes we are healed. If Christ do but lay his hands upon the diseased soul, it is cured whatsoever infirmity be upon it. The very border of his garment, if it be but touched with a hand of faith, cures all the bloody issues of the soul. You have a rare cure done by the touch of Christ's garment, Mat. 9 20. There are thousands of souls in heaven that have found perfect cure of strange diseases under the wings of Christ. And then, 5. The Sun hath a melting and softening virtue. Though it patch and harden the clay, yet it softens the wax; the hot beams of the Sun melt the ye, and mollify the ground when it's frozen into hardness. The Sun when it was up melted the Manna, Exod. 16. 21. The Lord Jesus Christ hath a melting and softening virtue; if he do but send down one hot gleam upon the soul, it's dissolved and melted like wax. We have an example of Christ's softening virtue in Peter, Luke 22 61, 62. his heart was grown as hard as ye by his threefold denial of Christ, and yet one beam from the eye of Christ thawed this ye into tears. The Lord turned and looked upon Peter, and he went out and wept bitterly. Christ's eyes are like a flame of fire, Rev. 1. 14. These heavenly beams of Christ are able to turn the flintstone into springs of water. Those three thousand mentioned, Acts 2 37. were as hard as marbles, for they had their hands in the blood of Christ, v. 36. yet when Christ did shine upon them in the minstery of Peter, they are so soft that any frame may be put upon them, Men and brethren what shall we do? The Jailor, a rough hardened sinner that drew blood from the backs of the Apostles; yet when Jesus Christ did but spread his hot wings upon him even at midnight, how is he softened? Acts 16. 29. 30. he that was lately like a stone, is now like wax, any impression may be put upon him. There is not the most stiff necked sinner in this or any other Congregation, but if Christ put out his power, he can distil him into tears of repentance. And then, 6. The Sun hath a vegetative virtue, It doth bring on the growth of plants and flowers, and all vegetables. The Sun darws the sap from the root into the branches, and makes it thrust out into buds, blossoms, and fruit, and when the fruit is knit, it ripens it and brings it on to perfection. This is mentioned, Deut. 33. 14. To this Bildad alludes. Job 8. 16: He is green before the Sun, and his branch shooteth forth in his garden. Though the soil be never so good, and the husbandry never so exact, yet without the Sun nothing comes to perfection; the fruitfulness of the earth is to be ascribed to the Sun more than to the Earth or Tillage. Jesus Christ hath a vegetating virtue, he brings on the spiritual growth of every grace in the soul; did not this Sun send down his beams the spiritual plantation would come to nothing. The Scripture attributes all Christian growth to Christ; he is the root which feeds grace; All supply comes from him. God hath stored all our nourishment in Christ, from him to be communicated as we stand in need. The Apostle sets this out in two texts, Col. 2. 19 Ephes. 4. 16. And the Prophet in the text makes it one effect of Christ's rising upon the Saints. They shall grow up as the calves of the stall. You may thank Jesus Christ for the thriving of your graces, as well as for the planting of your graces, John 15. 5. And then, 7. The Sun hath a purifying virtue. When your garments are mouldy, you hang them out in the Sun; when your rooms are musty, you set open the windows to let in the Sun that they may be sweetened. Jesus Christ hath a purifying virtue, he makes the heart sweet, and he keeps it sweet. See how this Prophet describes him, Chap. 3. 2, 3. he is like a refiners fire, and like fullers soap, etc. When the heart hath gathered any defilement, when it grows mouldy and musty, there's no way to get the ill favour out; but to bring it under the shine of Jesus Christ. And then, 8. The Sun hath an elevating virtue. By the heat and power of the Sun are many things exhaled and lifted up from the earth, which otherwise would lie there; many meteors and impressions there are in the air, which are exhaled from the earth by the power of the Sun: Jesus Christ hath an elevating virtue, he it is that doth exhale and lift up the earthly hearts of men to heavenly things and heavenly meditations. The heart of man naturally is so deep buried in the earth, that if Christ did not by his heat which he sends down in his ordinances lift it up; it would never have one thought of heaven: he hath an attractive power to draw up the hearts of men to himself, John 12. 32. It is from Jesus Christ that ever you had one serious thought of heaven or heavenly things. The Apostle applies our spiritual raisedness to Christ, Col. 3. 1, 2. It is from Christ as the merit of it, and it is from him as the worker of it in us; the power of our spiritual resurrection at first is from Christ, and the power of Christ is that that helps us to raise ourselves higher from day to day; did not Christ send down his exhaling power, we should lie like stones and never ascend, he descends and then we ascend. III. Christ is called the Sun, to show the clearness of the Gospel worship, in respect of the legal dispensation God used towards the Fathers. This is calvin's Note upon the text; God did never shine so clearly to the sons of men in the person of Christ. The Ceremonial Law with all the appendices thereof, was but dark: Gospel worship is clear. The Apostle compares the Law to a shadow, Heb. 10. 1. that was but Moon light or star light, Gospel worship is Sun-light, 2 Cor. 3. 10. The Patriarches saw Christ, and hoped in him, and were saved by him as well as we, but it was more darkly: In the Gospel the heavens were opened wider than ever. God did never manifest himself so fully and clearly to the world as he hath done by Jesus Christ. The Apostle speaks of this Heb. 1. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Hence is that of the Prophet to the Gospel-Church, Isa. 60. 1, 2. 19 20. All former light was but like the dawning light of the morning in respect of this midday light of the Gospel. The Gospel Revelation is full, and perfect. John 1. 18. God was declared before, but never so fully as by Christ. The fathers looked for additions, but Christ brought to light the whole will of God: No further Revelation is to be expected till we come to heaven, 2 Pet. 1. 19 MAL. 4. 2. The Sun of righteousness shall arise with healing in his wings. SEcondly, for the second, Christ is called the Sun of righteousness in two respects; 1. In regard of himself. He is the holy and just one. He hath not, nor ever shall have the least spot of unrighteousness in his own person; he was born righteous and innocent: That holy thing that shall be borne of thee, shall be called the Son of God, so saith the Angel to the Mother Virgin, Luke 1. 35. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is more than 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. It hath the force of the abstract. And he lived and died righteous. The Apostle speaks of him, Heb. 7. 26. As of one holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners. He was without spot and without guile, made like unto us in all things sin only excepted. Satan himself, though he be the father of lies, and full of bitter enmity against Jesus Christ, is forced to give this testimony to him, that he is the holy one of God, Mark 1. 24. He could neither have redeemed himself from death, nor have saved us from the wrath of God, if he had not been perfectly righteous. 2. In regard of his Elect; He is their righteousness: so the Prophet calls him, Jer. 23. 6. Jesus Christ is the believers righteousness two ways. 1. He is their righteousness in regard of justification. It is through the Imputation of his righteousness unto them, that they are made righteous in the sight of God; God looking upon them as invested with the righteousness of Christ, accounts them righteous. Of this the Apostle speaks, Rom. 3. 21, 22, 25, 26. All are unrighteous in themselves, and it is through him alone that they come to be righteous. 2. He is their righteousness in regard of sanctification. Of this the Apostle speaks, 1 Cor. 1. 30. where he tells us, that Christ is made unto us, of God sanctification, as well as righteousness; Jesus Christ may be as truly called our righteousness of sanctification as well as of justification. He is so in four respects. (1) He is the meritorious cause of it, Eph. 5. 25, 26. Grace is as truly the purchase of Christ as glory; he hath brought holiness for us, as well as heaven: sanctification is no less the price of Christ's blood then salvation. We are 1 Cor. 1. 2. sanctified in Christ Jesus, propter Christum saith Piscator, i. e. propter satisfactionem illius. (2) He is the material cause of it. It is by the blood of Christ that the filthiness of the soul is done away. Christ's blood is the souls laver in which it is washed and made white, Heb. 9 14. And then, (3) He is the exemplary cause of it. Our sanctification is according to that copy or pattern of holiness which is in Christ himself. This is the meaning of that speech of the Apostle, Joh. 1. 16. As the print which is made upon the wall answers the engraving or stamp which is upon the seal; so doth the believers holiness answer our holiness of Christ, not in degree and measure, but in kind and quality. (4.) He is the efficient cause of it. 'Tis Christ that doth by his spirit through the Ordinances work holiness in his Saints. He stubs up the roots of sin and sets the routs of grace in the soul. Of this the Apostle speaks 1 Cor. 6. 11. And it is he that doth both preserve it and carry it on from one degree to another till it come to perfection. So that both in regard of his own person and in regard of his elect, he is called the Sun of righteousness. This is the second particular. 3 For the third. Christ excels the natural Sun in these eight particulars, viz. 1. The natural Sun shines but in one hemisphere at once. Though it circuit about the earth in a little time, y●t it doth not sh●ne in all places at once. Yea there are some parts of the world in which the Sun doth not shine for many months together. Though it be a great body, yet the wings of it are not large enough to compass the earth all at once, when it riseth to us it sets to our Antipodes, But now Jesus Christ is able to shine over the whole earth at once. Though there be many parts of the world in which Christ hath never appeared, yet his wings are large enough to overspread the whole earth. This Sun of righteousness shines in England and in America and all the Christian world over at the same moment of time. That which is said of the land of Judea concerning the King of Assyria, Esa. 8. 8. That the stretching out of his wings should fill the breadth of the land, is true of Christ in reference to the whole world; The stretchings out of his wings are able to cover the breadth of the whole world at one moment. 2. The natural Sun gives light but not sight. If a man want the benefit of seeing, he hath no more benefit by the Sun, in respect of seeing; then if there were no Sun at all, but the Sunbeams descend with never so much power upon a blind Bartimeus his eyes will not thereby be opened. But now this Sun of righteousness hath a power to give sight as well as light, he did in the days of his flesh open the eyes of many that were naturally blind you read of one, Joh. 9 of two others, Mat. 20. 30. 34. And he doth still open the eyes of them that are spiritually blind. It was he that by Ananias opened the eyes of Saul, Acts 9 17. The truth is, no man doth ever spiritually see till the beams of the Sun descend upon him, he is the spiritual dayspring that gives them power to see who are under the power of the gross darkness of sin and iniquity. 3. The natural Sun hath endamaging qualities as well as healing qualities. It is many times offensive and prejudiced both to men and fruits. (1.) It doth fully and deface the beautiful countenance of men, Cant. 1. 6. If the eye of the Sun do but look upon us directly, it changes the colour of the face into a sworthy hue. (2.) The hot beams of the Sun do sometimes by their vehement shining make men faint, when the Sun beat upon the head of Jonah, he fainted, Ch. 4. 8. (3.) The fruits of the earth are many times scorched and withered to nothing by the violent heat of the Sun, Mat. 13. 6. If God do withhold the rain, and send out the burning heat of the Sun, the fruits of the earth mourn and languish. But now Jesus Christ the Sun of righteousness hath no hurtful quality, his beams neither make the face black, nor the spirits faint. He ripens the fruits of grace in the soul, but he never withers them, his beams are destructive to none but to such as will not suffer him to shine upon them. Those fruits that have no root, Christ withers, but where there is root and ●p, the beams of Christ are never prejudicial. The Sun hath a hardening virtue, but Christ never hardens any, unless it be by accident, because they will not suffer his beams to enter into their hearts. 'Tis rather the want of Christ's beams, than the presence of them, that occasions hardening in any heart. 4. The natural Sun is the creature of this Sun of righteousness. Jesus Christ as he is God, made this Sun that shines in the Firmament, and put into it all the glory which is in it. For the Evangelist tells us, that all things were made by him, and without him was not made any thing that was made, Joh. 1. 3. He gave it both the light and heat which it gives to us. He hath set and appointed it the course which it runs, and which it hath run since its creation, and he doth by his providence order its setting and rising for the good of the world. He is the light of all that light which the Sun hath He is the fountain both of the being and preservation of all that influence which the Sun doth cause to descend upon the world. The dependence of the Sun of righteousness is upon himself, but the dependence of the natural Sun is upon him. 5. The natural Sun doth communicate his light and heat equally to all. He shines as much upon the house and lands of the wicked as he doth upon the righteous. He doth impart and dispense his influences alike to all, in the same manner and in the same measure. This our Saviour notes as an act of the bounty of God, Mat. 5. 45. But now it is not so with Jesus Christ the Sun of righteousness; He gives light and heat to one and not to another. Though all that live under the shining of the Ordinances do receive so much from Jesus Christ as is sufficient to leave them without excuse, yet doth he cause peculiar beams to fall upon the hearts of some which do not fall upon another. He shines upon one only to conviction, on another to conversion. He shines only upon the ears of some; He lets down hot gleams into the very hearts of others, 2 Cor. 4. 6. We have an instance of this in Paul, and those that were in company with him, Act. 9 6, 7. They saw the light, and heard a voice too, a confused voice which they did not understand, and therefore chap. 22. 9 Paul saith, they heard not the voice of him that spoke. They heard an inarticulate sound or a confused voice, but they knew neither who spoke nor what was spoken, therefore they heard the voice, and yet heard it not; but now Paul both heard the voice and understood it, and was converted by it, which we do not find recorded of any of the rest. Some common beams doth Christ cast forth upon all, but his special beams and influences are imparted to none but the Elect. Nor is this any derogation to the freeness of the grace of Christ, or to the fullness of it. The fullness and freeness of grace consists more in the greatness of that he bestows, then in the multitude of them that enjoy what he gives them: Read of hidden Manna, of a white stone and a new name which Christ gives to some and not to others, Rev. 2. 17. This Sun of righteness shines sometimes on one in a house and leavs the rest still in darkness. 6. The natural Sun is an inanimate thing. Though it be in some sense called the fountain of life, yet it is in itself without life. It hath neither the rational, nor the sensitive, nor the vegetative life. And in this respect the least-living creature is more glorious than the Sun; a living dog is better than an inanimate jewel. But now Jesus Christ is a living Sun. This Sun of righteousness hath life as well as light and heat, Joh. 1. 4. All that spiritual life which is in the soul is communicated from Christ, and preserved by Christ, the soul is dead till it be imbreathened by Jesus Christ. And hence it is that Christ is so often in Scripture called our life, as Col. 3. 3, 4. because he gives and maintains both the natural and spiritual life. Yea the brightest beam the soul ever had from Christ here, is but a little glimpse in respect of what shall be in heaven. There he shall shine. (1.) Perpendicularly. (2.) In all his strength. (3.) Without over-casting. 7. The natural Sun is the servant of men. It is called Shemesh in the Hebrew, from a root that signifieth to minister because it is the great servant of the world in giving light. But now Jesus Christ is not our servant, but our Lord, whom men and Angels must worship. It is gross Idolatry to worship the natural Sun. Job vindicates himself from it, chap. 31. 26. Josiah demolished all Sun worship in his reformation, 2 King. 23. 5. It's idolatry to worship the Sun, but its gross impiety not to worship Christ, the very Angels of heaven are commanded to worship him Heb. 1. 6. 8. The natural Sun is only useful for the time and state of this life. Whether the heavens shall be abolished and annihilated at the day of judgement or only renewed; is a great question amongst learned men. If they shall be only renewed (as they probably will be) yet they shall not be useful to men in that way they now are. The glorified bodies of the Saints have no need in heaven, of the light of the Sun to shine upon them as now they have, Rev. 2●. 5. The Saints in heaven shall be above the shining of Ordinances and above the shining of the natural Sun? Every glorified body shall shine as the Sun in the Kingdom of their Father. They shall be farther above the Sun, than the Sun is now above them. But the Sun of righteousness is useful in heaven; the Saints shall have the benefit of Christ's shining upon them for ever and ever. This Sun of righteousness shall cast his beams upon the soul and body glorified for ever, Rev. 7. 17. All the glory of heaven is communicated to the Saints through the Lord Jesus Christ. The uses of these are Information. Exhortation. Consolation. 1. For Information, It teacheth us these four lessons. 1. Behold from hence the glory of the Gospel. The Apostle calls it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the glorious Gospel, or the Gospel of glory, 1 Tim. 1. 11. The Gospel is exceeding full of glory; there's nothing in it but that which is very glorious. This is enough to proclaim the glory of it, because in it the Lord Jesus Christ is discovered; the Gospel is the Orb in which the Sun of righteousness shineth, it is the Chariot in which Christ rides. It is the Golden vessel which carries this glorious light about the world. The Gospel is the true Bethshemesh or house of the Sun: it is called the Word of Christ, Col. 3. 16. Because by this Word Jesus Christ is discovered and manifested to the world. David doth admire the heavens for this, that in them God hath set a Tabernacle for the Sun, Psal. 19 4. The Gospel is that glorious Tabernacle which God hath set and established for this great Sun of righteousness. Where the Gospel is not, Christ is not known, remove the Gospel, and Christ the Sun of righteousness is totally removed. 2. The exceeding great glory of heaven. The Scripture makes mention of heaven as of a glorious place. Amongst other things this shows the glory of it, that this Sun of righteousness shines in it, Rev. 21. 23. and 22. 3 This will further appear if we consider how far Christ's shining in heaven dazzels his shining here on earth. I will instance in these three particulars. 1. In heaven Christ shines upon the soul immediately. There is nothing to interpose between Christ and the soul; his shinings in this life are immediate through the Ordinances, We see his beams in this life through the thick glass of Ordinances, the Church tells us the manner of his shining in this life, Cant. 2. 9 We have his beams here only by reflection, but in heaven they are immediately darted down upon the soul. There is no Temple in heaven, Rev. 21. 22. Christ himself is the Temple. Now if the mediate beamings of Christ upon the soul he so glorious? What abundant glory will there be in his immediate shinings! 2. In heaven he shines with his full strength upon the soul. All have here on earth but small beams of this Sun; A beam in one Ordinance, and a beam in another, here a little and there a little, as we are able to bear it; the eye of the soul while it is unglorified, is not able without dazzling to look upon Jesus Christ shining in his full strength. Thou shalt see my back parts, but my face cannot be seen, Exod. 33. 22, 23. but in heaven the soul shall be able to take a full view of Christ's face, 1 Cor. 12. 12. All that ever we have seen of Christ in this world will be but darkness in respect of that full sight of his glory we shall have in heaven. 3. In heaven Christ shines without intermission. The soul here doth often lose the sight of Christ's face, every day is not a Sunshine day. There are some dark and gloomy days even to them that have the greatest interest in Christ, Esay 50. 10. but in heaven the Sun is always up. There are no clouds to Eclipse the light of Christ's face in that region. There's no night in heaven, Rev. 27. 25. That which causes the soul here to lose the sight of Christ shall not be in heaven. No sin enters into that holy place; if the immediate, perfect, uninterrupted shining of Christ can make a place glorious, heaven is a most glorious place. 3. The miserable condition of those that have no interest in Jesus Christ, The Scripture makes it the top of all misery to be without Christ, Eph. 2. 12. This text bears witness to it; How uncomfortable would the world be if there were no Sun? If God had not made the Sun, the world would have been but an uncomfortable prison. What a muse and astonishment are men put into when the Sun is Eclipsed but for a few hours? How doleful is their condition upon whom the Sun of righteousness hath never risen! They have neither spiritual light, nor spiritual warmth, nor spiritual healing, nor spiritual softness that are without Christ. They want both the righteousness of justification, and of sanctification that have not a saving interest in this Sun of righteousness. There are no people upon the earth that stand in more need both of your compassions and prayers than those that want Jesus Christ. And they are so much the more miserable, because they want eyes to see their misery. 4. That there is no righteousness either of justification or sanctification without Christ, he is called the Sun of righteousness in both these respects, and therefore till he arise upon the soul, it hath no righteousness in either of these respects. 1. For the righteousness of justification. The Papists they teach and maintain that a person must have in himself inherent righteousness to justify him before God's tribunal. They say that Christ's righteousness is not the proper cause of justification, but that whereby God is pleased to accept of the habits of righteousness in us, placing the matter of justification either in something habitually inherent in us, or flowing from us. This Doctrine doth divest Jesus Christ of this name which God hath here given him. He is called the Lord our righteousness, Jer. 23. 6. If he be our righteousness, than we are not our own righteousness. I would not be found, saith a good Divine, in the righteousness of the best prayers I ever made at the day of judgement. To take off men from this Popish doctrine, I shall lay down these Arguments against it. 1. The righteousness of God and the righteousness of man are opposed in Scripture as things inconsistent in the matter of justification, Phil. 3. 9 To mingle these two together, were to wear a garment of linen and woollen, which God forbade in his Law. He that submits to the one cannot submit to the other. So the Apostle teacheth us expressly, Rom. 10. 3. he that trusts to the righteousness of man cannot trust to the righteous▪ of God. Our righteousness is that which we do in obedience to the Law, but Christ's righteousness is that by which we are reckoned righteous in the sight of God. 2. If righteousness be by works than it is not of free grace but of due debt. This is the Apostles argument, Rom. 11. 6. The Papists answer this, by understanding, by works, there the works of nature and unregeneracy only, and not of works flowing from faith. But this is a mere falsehood; for the Apostle proves, Rom. 4. 2. that works flowing from faith cannot justify before God. Abraham was regenerate, Abraham's works were works flowing from faith, yet were not those works his righteousness but Christ apprehended by faith. 3. That righteousness by which and for which a person is justified must exactly answer God's justice. It must be so every way perfect, that justice itself can require no more, but the best of our works are imperfect and defective. They are so in our own sight, much more in the sight of God, Esay 64. 6. Not only our righteousness, but our righteousnesses are a silthy rag, Psal. 130. 4. David was a man after Gods own heart, yet doth he acknowledge that if God should weigh iniquity none should stand. Job had a very high testimony from God, Chap. 1. 1. yet he durst not stand upon such terms, Chap. 9 3. 15. 20. 30, 31. Nehemiah did many good works, yet he comes to a Psalm of mercy, chap. 13. 22. 4. This Doctrine makes a man his own justifier, which is contrary to Scripture. The Scripture ascribes the work of justification to God, Rom. 3. 26. and Rom. 8. 33. To make man's works the cause of his justification, is to make him a justifier, which is the work of God alone. 5. This Doctrine make● the merit and sacrifice of Christ either needless or insufficient. This is the Apostles Argument, Gal. 2. ult. To affirm either of these is a great wickedness. To say it was needless, is to make God cruel to his Son. Why should he pour out his blood if there was no necessity of it? To say it is insufficient, is to vilify his person, to contradict Scriptures which saith, he is able to save to the uttermost. 6. This Doctrine establisheth boasting. Now the great design of God in the justification of a sinner, is to exclude boasting, Rom. 3. 27. The Law of works lays a foundation of boasting, but the Law of faith excludes boasting. 7. This Doctrine robs the soul of all consolation, and leaves it unsettled and perplexed. A man can never be free from troubles that builds the hopes of his justification upon himself, Rom. 10. 6, 7. The scope of the Apostle in that place is to put a difference between the righteousness of the Law, and the righteousness of faith. Amongst other this is one, the righteousness of faith settles the heart; it saith not, who shall ascend, & c? It knows Christ hath ascended and descended, that he hath done all and suffered all, and so quiets the conscience: He that trusts to his own righteousness can never be settled, but will be still disputing. And therefore the Papists who cry up justification by their own works, cry down assurance of salvation. And they cannot do otherwise, for justification by our own righteousness and assurance of salvation are inconsistent. Thus I have proved the righteousness of justification to be from Christ. 2. For the righteousness of sanctification. This is also from Christ, he that is without Christ, is without sanctification. Till this Sun be risen upon the soul, there is no holiness in the soul. A Christlesse condition, is an unsanctified condition. A man must prove himself interested in Christ, before he can be able to assert his Sanctification; we are said to be sanctified in Christ, 1 Cor. 1. 2. you must thank Christ as well for the righteousness of sanctification, as for that of justification. Till these beams shine upon you, you have no grace in you. 2. For exhortation. 1. To all in general. 2. To you that have no interest in Christ. 3. To them that have an interest. 1. To all men in general; I would recommend two things. 1. Bless God for Jesus Christ. We have great cause to bless God for the light of the Sun, innumerable are those benefits we receive by this creature. 'Tis our guide, 'tis our life, by the influences of it nature is revived, the body is cheered and all things useful for our life are refreshed; the world had been an Egypt for darkness, a Wilderness for barrenness, an Hospital of diseases; if God had not made the Sun: the beauty of the creation would have been hid, the benefit of the creation would have been lost if this lamp of heaven had not been hung out: much more cause have we to bless God for his mystical Sun, Eph. 1. 3. This will be the work of heaven to all eternity, had not this Sun from heaven visited us, our condition had been as miserable as the condition of devils. 2. Never see the Sun but meditate on Jesus Christ. A spiritual Christian may learn very much Divinity from the works of creation. Though the whole book of Creation without that revelation of the Gospel could not have made Christ known to the world: the Philosophers turned over every page of that great book, but they could spell nothing of Christ out of it; Yet now, we that have the Gospel may help our knowledge of Christ by the book of creation. Christ is resembled to so many creatures that we can hardly see any creature, but it preacheth something of him, when your eyes behold the light of the Sun, when you feel the warmth of the Sun, when you perceive the influential virtue of the Sun upon the creatures, then think on Christ: the very Sun in the Firmament will rise up in judgement against us that have Christ revealed in the Gospel as a Sun, if we do not fill our hearts with daily thoughts of him. 2. To them that are without the saving beams of Christ. I have only one thing to press upon them. That they would endeavour that this Sun may shine upon them; yea, that it may shine into them be not contented to live without the Sun. I know it will be said, what shall we do that Christ may arise upon our hearts? 1. Be sensible of your want of Christ, he that sees and bewails his own darkness, will hardly die without light. One reason why Christ doth not shine upon us, is, because we think we have light in ourselves, we think we saw Christ without the Sun, therefore we are suffered to walk in blindness without the Sun. This our Saviour declares expressly, Joh 9 3●. 2. Stand in those places where the Sun usually shines. He that would have the Sun shine on him, must not keep in dark Cellars and Vaults, but must come into the open air. The ordinary place of Christ's shining, is where his Gospel is preached; the preaching of the Gospel is the East where this Sun ariseth, 2 Cor. 4. 4. 6. The Gospel is the Orb of this Sun; be that constantly waits here, will at l●st fee● the warm beams of Christ coming down upon him, especially if he make it his design to enjoy the beams of Christ in his Gospel. 3. Take heed of shutting your eyes when the Sun gins to appear. He that shuts his eyes will never see the Sun, though it shine in all its brightness. Stand with your eyes open, yea, with your eyes fixed, looking for Christ's appearing, and he will cause his beams at last to fall upon you. To you on whom this Sun hath arisen. I have things to recommend to you. 1. Do you w●lk as the children of the Light? Put away darkness, ignorance, blindness, and be full of spiritual light. God may well expect much light from those on whom Christ hath shined. Stumbling in a child of God is wors● then falling in another man. If you be ignorant of Gods Will of your duty you are inexcus●bl● because the Sun of light is risen upon you, 〈◊〉. ● 1. Ephesians 4 17, 18, 19, 20 2. G●● and keep 〈◊〉 warmth in your hearts. The Sun●e hath an heating virtue. Coldness of sp●●●t is a temper unbefitting a child of God. If a man be cold in winter when the Sun is at a great distance, 'tis more excusabl●; but to be cold when the Summer Sun shines hot upon him, argues great distemper. To be lukewarm when Christ is risen upon you, is inexcusable. Christ expects heat and fervency from you in all your duties, hot love, hot devotion, fervency of spirit in the service of God is expected from you, R●m. 12. 11. you will shame the beams of Christ, if you have not a holy warmth in all your services; My heart (saith David) was hot within me, Psal. 39 3. Ex omni parte caluit igne Dei, i. e. a-more Coelestium. A coldhearted Christian shames the Sun. 3. Be very fruitful. The Sun hath a fructifying virtue, it ripens every thing. Christian's must be careful that their graces be ripened: raw, lean, weak graces shame the beams of Christ; you must be sure to grow in grace, to perfect holiness, 2 Cor. 7. 1. 4. Keep your souls sweet. The Sun hath a sweetening virtue. A mouldy musty heart disparageth Christ, you must be as the smell of a field which God hath blessed. 5. Be raised up in affection to heavenly things. The Sun hath an exhaling virtue. Christian's must be higher than others, Revel. 12. 1. 6. Nourish spiritual softness. The Sun hath a mollifying virtue. A hard frozen heart is a shame to Christ. David's heart was like melting wax, Psalm 22. 14. Josiahs' heart was tender, 2 Kings 22. 19 A frown from God, an angry word from God, must melt a Christians heart. If your hearts be hard, Christ may justly draw his beams from you; if the Sun of righteousness doth not melt you, it is because you are clay, not wax 3. For consolation. Great comfort ariseth hence to godly men. 1. Against spiritual darknesses. Sometimes God's people see neither Sun nor Stars, Esay 50. 10. Well, be comforted, Christ is the Sun of righteousness, he will arise and scatter all those black mists that trouble you; your Sun is not set, it is only eclipsed, the light of it will shine again. 2. Against all your own unrighteousness. The servants of God find much unrighteousness and guilt in themselves: because of it they are cast down, and go heavily. Well, remember Christ is a Sun of righteousness, he is as full of righteousness as the Sun is of light, and his righteousness is for thy benefit. 'Tis as much thine, as if it were thine own. 3. Against the want of sublunary comforts. God's people have often but little of these things. Well, yet the Sun is up, what folly is it to complain for want of Moonlight or Starlight when the Sun shines! If God hath clothed you with the Sun, the want of Moon and Stars may well be endured. CANT. 1. 3. Thy Name is as ointment poured XXVII. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth. Lon. May 15. 1653. forth. THe scope of the Holy Ghost in this song is to discover the exceeding great love that is between Jesus Christ and his Church. We may see here Christ and his Church as it were striving who should express their love to each other most. At the second verse in this Chapter, the Church doth passionately desire to be made partaker of further Communion with Christ, Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth. Those who have once tasted of the sweetness of Christ's love are exceedingly carried out after a further degree of his love. The reason of this passionate desire is ver. 2, 3. namely, from the sweetness of his love. This is set out by a double comparison. 1. His love is better than wine. v. 2. 2. It's more than precious ointments. This is mentioned in the beginning of the third ver. Because of the savour of thy good ointments, and amplified further in the text, Thy name is as ointment poured forth. The words are a proposition in which we have, 1. The subject. Thy Name. 2. The predicate. Ointment poured forth. By the name of Christ, some would understand the Doctrine of the Gospel. So Ainsworth, by his name (saith he) is meant the Doctrine of grace, the Law of faith. His Doctrine is sometimes in Scripture called his Name, as the Isles shall wait for his Law, Esay 42. 4. Which is expounded, in his Name shall the Gentiles trust, Mat. 12. 21. And it is most certain that his Law is far more sweet than the most precious ointment. But yet by his Name in this place we are better to understand his person as it is set forth in the Gospel, his person is often called his Name, as Mat. 10. 22. Ye shall be hated of all men for my Names sake, and Act, 9 16. I will show him how great things be must suffer for my name's sake, that is, for my sake. The Observation is this. Doct. That Jesus Christ is like ointment poured forth. Jesus Christ is spiritual ointment. His Name both in the Hebrew and Greek signifies anointing, or anointed. He is called in Dan. 9 26. Messiah, which the Septuagint render 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, anointing. The Prophet Esay, chap. 10. 27. calls him the anointing. It is reported by Historians, that at the birth of Christ in Rome, a sudden fountain of Oil sprung up and flowed for a day and a night together, our Annotatours mention it in their Exposition of this text. The Oils or Ointments used in sundry cases under the ceremonial Law were some way or other typical of Christ the true ointment. In the handling of this Doctrine I shall open these four things by way of Explication. 1. In what respects Christ is compared to ointment. 2. Why he is compared to ointment poured forth. 3. How this ointment is poured forth. 4. How Christ excels all other ointments. 1. For the first. 1. Christ is ointment in regard of that divine unction wherewith he was anointed by God. The Scripture makes mention of Christ's being anointed with the graces of the Spirit as our Mediator. This was typified by the anointing of the Priests under the Law, especially of the high-Priest; you may read at large of the holy ointment, and of the anointing of Aaron and his sons with it, Exod. 30. 23, 24, 25, 30. It was also typified by the anointing of Kings and Prophets; ye may read much in Scripture of the anointing of these. Elisha was anointed to the office of a Prophet, 1 Kings 19 16. and Kings were also anointed. We read of David's anointing, 1 Sam. 16. 1. of solomon's anointing, 1 King. 1. 34. 39 All these were types of Christ, the great King, Prophet, and Priest of his Church, the anointing Oil did typify the graces of the Spirit, the anointing of Aaron with that Oil did typify Christ's anointing with the Holy Ghost. Our Saviour was anointed with the Holy Ghost, Esay 61. 1. This Peter mentions in his Sermon, Act. 10. 38. God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Ghost and with power. Now this ointment was shed upon the Lord Jesus in such great plenty, that he may well be called by the name of ointment, Psal. 45. 7. he had more of this spiritual ointment poured upon his humane nature, than all the Saints, put them altogether. The Spirit was not given him by measure, but above measure, Joh. 3. 34. He was from his conception filled with the holy Ghost; He was full of grace and truth, Joh. 1. 14. He had not only drops, but whole rivers of Oil poured upon his head; He may be denominated ointment from that abundance of spiritual ointment wherewith he was filled; his Godhead anointed the manhood with an unspeakable fullness, Col. 1. 19 And, 2. Christ is ointment in regard of the excellent virtues which are in him. He hath all the good properties of ointment. I name five, As 1. Ointment is very fragrant and odoriferous. Precious ointment yields a very sweet small. When the woman in the Gospel had poured her box of ointment upon the head of Christ, the text saith, the whole house was filled with the odour of it, John 12. 3. The Lord Jesus Christ is very odoriferous, he is sweet in himself, and he is exceeding sweet in the nostrils of his Saints; the perfume in the Law was type of him, Exod. 30 34. He doth perfume all persons and places where ever he comes. If there be but one drop of Christ poured upon the soul, the whole soul is perfumed with the smell of it. When Christ had but put his finger into the hole of the door, how was the hand of the Spouse perfumed as with sweet smelling myrrh! Cant. 5. 5. That soul wants its spiritual smelling which doth not find a sweetness in Jesus Christ. Every thing in Jesus Christ is very fragrant. (1) There is a fragrancy in his person. He is a bundle of precious myrrh, Cant. 1. 13. His life and holy conversation yielded a sweet smell in the world, Psal. 45. 8. All thy garments smell of myrrh, aloes and cassia. The graces of the Spirit, of which his life was full: His righteousness, meekness, piety, patience, what a sweet smell do they cast abroad in the Gospel to this very day! (2.) There is fragrancy in his death. His death was a sweet favour unto God, Eph. 5. 2. His dead body was enbalmed with sweet spices, John 19 39 not that he had need of any such; His body did never see corruption, Psal. 16. 10. So fragrant was the death of Christ, that he hath perfumed the grave, and made it as a bed of roses to all the Saints. (3) There is a sweet fragrancy in his intercession The intercession of Christ is so sweet, that it perfumes heaven itself. See how it was typified under the Law, Leu. 16. 12, 13. The odours of the sweetest incense are not so fragrant to the nostrils of men, as the odours of Christ's intercession are to God. So fragrant is his intercession, that the services of his people, which are unsavoury in themselves, come up as a cloud of incense before the Lord. See this Cant. 3. 6. It's spoken of the Church because it's the feminine gender, Quae ista? All this sweetness which is upon the Church and in her services, is, because they are perfumed with the incense of Christ's mediation. (4) There is a fragrancy in the word of Christ. The breath of Christ's mouth is sweeter than any perfume in the world: this is that which the Church mentions. Cant. 5. 16. His mouth or palate is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sweetnesses, so it is in the original; all his promises, all his precepts are very favoury. 5. There is a fragrancy in all his Ordinances, Prayer, Sacraments, Preaching, singing of Psalms are in themselves, and to a gracious heart, like sweet smelling ointment. The Church mentions this, Cant. 2. 3. No such sweet air bloweth under heaven as doth in the Church of God, where the Ordinances of Christ are dispensed in power and purity. In one word, there is nothing of Christ but is more sweet than the best ointment that ever was compounded by man. This is the first property of ointment, it's very sweet. 2. Ointment hath an exhilarating virtue. It cheers the spirits, and makes the heart glad. This is observed by Solomon, Prov. 27. 9 Ointment and perfume rejoice the heart. When Solomon exhorts men to a cheerful life, he makes mention of ointment, let thy head want no ointment, alluding to the custom of the ancients, who in their banquet and feast used such signs of joy. And the Prophet expressing the jovialty of those Epicures, Amos 6. 6. saith, they anoint themselves with the chief ointments. The Lord Jesus Christ hath a cheering virtue. The heart of a sinner is never truly merry, till it be anointed with the graces of Christ, and the comforts of Christ; Christ is the only remover of spiritual heaviness. The ointment is the only cure for spiritual melancholy, Mat. 11. 28. All spiritual refreshing is from Jesus Christ. He was anointed with the oil of gladness, that he might work gladness in the hearts of others. This work is committed to him by God the Father, Esay 61. 3. There's not one drop of the oil of joy, but what comes out of this great olive tree, the Lord Jesus; that gladness which doth not proceed from Christ, and which is not bottomed on Christ, is worldly madness, not true joy. He is called the consolation of Israel, Luke 2. 25. He hath laid the foundation of Israel's comfort, and he it is that doth convey to them all their comfort. 3 Ointment hath a mollifying and suppling virtue If there be any hard tumour or swelling upon the body, we use ointment to soften it. The holy Ghost alludes to this, Esay 1, 6. Where speaking of the state diseases, he saith, they have not been mollified with ointments. Jesus Christ hath a mollifying virtue, let a heart of Adamant be but once anointed with this ointment, and it becomes an heart of flesh. It was by this ointment that the hard heart of Manasseh was softened. God by his Spirit chafed this ointment into it, and it became tender. And it is by the Application of this unction through the warm hands of the Spirit of God that the stony hearts of sinners are softened from day to day. Thou that hast now a tender heart, wouldst have carried thy stony heart with thee to thy grave, if this precious ointment had not been spread upon it. 4. Ointment is of a shining nature. It hath a brightening and beautifying virtue. Those Virgins that were prepared for the Persian King, did use divers ointments to make themselves beautiful. Est. 2. 12. they used six months sweet odours, and six month's oil of myrrh. This oil, as those that writ of it say, had an abstersive virtue; it did help to get wrinkles out of the skin, and so to beautify the face and make it bright; Naomi therefore bids Ruth, when she sends her to Boaz to anoint herself, Ruth 3. 3. And David, speaking of oil, saith, it makes the face to shine, Psal. 104. 15. Warriors of old, that they might make their armour glister, and so render themselves formidable to their enemies, used to anoint them with oil; the Prophet alludes to this, Esay 21. 5. Arise ye Princes and anoint the shield. The Lord Jesus Christ hath a brightening virtue. As he is bright and beautiful in his own person, Psal. 45. ●. so he makes his people beautiful. Christ is very bright in his own person. There is no scar, no spot, no deformity in him. That which was said of Absolom, is much more true of Christ, 2 S●m. 14. 25. Though men that are blind see no beauty in him, as the Prophet complained long since, Esay 53 2. yet in the eyes of God, in the eyes of the Angels, in the eyes of the Saints he is singularly beautiful; And as he is bright in himself, so doth he beautify others. All the wrinkles of sin, all the spots of the soul are done away by means of this ointment. This ointment, if it ●e spread upon the soul, turns black●mores into Nazarites. All the brightness of the Saints is from hence, Ezek. 16. 14. Thou wast comely through my comeliness which I put upon thee. Hereby the old wrinkles of original sin, which are as so many deep furrows 〈◊〉 the soul, hereby the latter spots of actual sin are taken away as if they had not been: you may read much of the brightness and beauty of the Saints, Cant. 4. init. Cant. 7. init. All this beauty i● acquired by the application of this beautifying ointment. Jesus Christ is the Churches Golden anointing-pot; he that would have his spots removed, must daily drop this ointment upon his soul. This ointment if it be applied by faith will fetch off the red spots of cruelty, the black spots of discontent, the blue spots of envy, the heat spots of passion; it will put a shining lustre upon the soul. 5. Ointment hath a healing virtue, the Samaritan poured into the wounded man wine and oil, Luk. 10. 34. Wine for cleansing and Oil for healing; your Chirurgeons make much use of ointment search the Dispensatory for the truth of this; Jesus Christ hath a healing virtue. If the spiritual wounds of the soul, though they have been of long continuance, be anointed with this ointment, they are in a short time finely healed. Christ himself was that Samaritan, his blood was the wine that cleansed, and the Oil that healed those desperate wounds. There is no other balm in Gilead besides this ointment that can cure the least sore upon the inward man, without the application of this ointment you will certainly die in your sins. 2. For the second. Christ is compared to ointment poured forth, in three respects. 1. To show his communicativeness, Jesus Christ is ready to make distributions unto his people of all that grace and goodness which is in him, he doth not keep his grace and virtue within himself, but lets it drop down upon his members; the ●o● of ointment stands continually open that his Elect may take out of it according as they stand in need; the ointment which was poured upon the head of Aaron at his Consecration, ran down to the very skirts of his clothing, Psal. 133. 2. This was to typify the communicativeness of Christ. Jesus Christ hath received the ointment of the Spirit, not for himself, but that he might anoint all his members; and he is very mindful of the trust reposed in h●m; he received for his members, and he is willing they should receive from him, Joh. 1. 6. Many are willing to have the patrimony of others poured into their treasury, but they care not to pour out again; but Christ, as he was willing God should pour out grace into him, so is he as willing to pour it out upon us. 2. To show his exceeding fullness. Christ hath so much that he can spare for others. 'Tis poured out and yet it doth not decay, there is in Christ an undecayable fullness; he is like the widows cruse of oil, 2 Kings 4. 6. never leaves running till the soul want a vessel to receive him. 3. He is compared to ointment poured forth, because the fragrancy and other excellent virtues of ointment are best discovered in the pouring of it forth. Ointment in the vessel doth neither smell nor shine so as when it's poured out; the excellency of Christ lies in the using of him, when we come to pour out his graces, then, and not till then do we find the sweetness of them. Taste and see that the Lord is gracious, Psal. 34. 8. the graciousness of Christ is not apprehended till it come to be casted. 3. For the third, how Christ is 〈…〉 The great and ordinary way of 〈…〉 this name of Christ, which is ●● ointment. 〈…〉 Ordinances which he hath appointed, Preaching, Prayer, Sacraments, these are the means ●f ●●●●ing forth Christ; the Ordinances are as the ●●blaster Box wherein this precious ointment is kept; you read in Zech. 4. Of a golden Candlestick with two Olive-trees standing by it, etc. the Olive-tree is Christ, the Candlestick is the Church, the Lamps are the several members of Christ, the pipes which convey the Oil to the Lamps are the Ordinances of grace, Christ fills the pipes, and the pipes carry the Oil to the Lamps. The Ordinances are the Golden Cruse in which the Oil is kept, and by which it is defused to every particular Saint as he hath need. The preaching of the Gospel is called the bearing of his Name before the Gentiles, Acts 9 15. When the Gospel is preached and the Ordinances dispensed, then is the ointment poured forth. The Apostle gives testimony to this, 2 Cor. 2. 14. Thanks be unto God which maketh manifest the savour of his knowledge by us in every place. He that would smell the savour of Christ's ointment, must wait conscionably upon the Ordinances. The Ordinances are the consecrated pipes through which the Oil runs. 'Tis true, the Spirit of Christ fills these pipes, and makes them effectual to them that are saved; but yet the Ordinances are the instrumental. Every Prayer; every Sermon, every Sacrament conveys a drop of this ointment to the soul. He that turns away his face from the Ordinances, makes himself uncapable of tasting the ointments of Christ. CANT. 1. 3. Christ is as an ointment poured forth. XXVIII. SERM. at Mary. Wolnoth. Lon. May 22. 1653. FOurthly, for the fourth, how Christ excels other ointments; I shall open that in these five particulars. 1. He excels all other ointments in worth and value. Some ointments are of great value, but none ar● comparable to Christ. That ointment which 〈◊〉 poured upon t●e head of Christ, is said to 〈◊〉 ●●ry costly, John 12. 3. and yet it was but 〈◊〉 〈…〉 at three hundred Roman pence, v. 5. but 〈◊〉 is ointment of invaluable worth. All the ●●ld and silver on earth, all the pearls and diamonds in the world are not worth the least drop of this ointment. He that hath it would not part with one drop of it for ten thousand rivers of oil, he that wants it cannot purchase it for all the riches of the world; one drop of this ointment is worth a sea of other ointments. 2. He excels all other ointments in duration. The virtue of other ointments may be lost. Take the most fragrant ointment in the world, keep it with never so much care, yet it will corrupt in time. Other casual accidents may fall out which may corrupt it. You know what Solomen saith, Eccles. 10. 1. Dead flies cause the ointment of the Apothecary to send 〈…〉 savour. The best ointment 〈…〉 compounded by the art of man; may lose its 〈◊〉▪ and be offensive, but Jesus Christ is incorruptible ointment; he can never lose his savour, no time can putrify him, no accident can corrupt him. This ointment hath continued ever since the promise made to Adam, Gen. 3. 15. yet the virtue of it in every respect, is as precious as it was the very first day; his Name is as glorious, as fragrant, as beautiful, as shining now as it was when the Alabaster box was at first poured forth. The Psalmist sp●●ks of this very expressly, Psal. 72. 17. His Name shall endure for ever, his Name shall be continued as long as the Sun, and daily shall he be praised, all Nations shall call him blessed. 3. He excels all other ointments in his fullness. Other ointment is of a waiting nature, take but one dram of ointment out of the largest vessel, and there is an abatement; take but one drop out of a river of ointment, and there is a drop less, but this ointment doth not grow less by spending. Christ hath anointed thousands of his Elect in all the ages that are past, and yet the vessel is as full, as if one drop had not been taken out of it. This Olive tree hath been emptying itself for many ages into the golden bowl, and yet it continues running with as full a stream as it did the very first day. 4. He excels all other ointments in virtue and operation, this may be branched out into six particulars. (1) He anoints the soul as well as the body. Other ointments are poured only upon the outward man; the soul, the conscience is not the better for the multitude of ointments that are poured upon the body; the face of a person may shine with ointment, and yet his soul be black and filthy; but this ointment reacheth to the conscience and inward man. Yea, this ointment is principally for the inward man, the heart is the chief place on which this ointment is poured, 1 John 2. 27. the anointing which ye have received of him, abideth in you. Other ointments are outward ointments, that abide upon us, but this is an inward ointment which abideth in us. 'Tis unctio spiritualis. 2. This ointment hath the good properties of all ointments. Some ointments are fragrant to the smell, but they are not healing; others are healing, but they are not sweet: No one kind of ointment hath all excellercies in it; but now in Jesus Christ all excellencies meet together, the good properties of every ointment do all centre in Christ, he is equally excellent every way. You cannot say in what respect Christ is best, he is so excellent every way. 3. This ointment doth charge the very nature of the person upon whom it's poured. Other ointments cannot change a person from what he is. They cannot make a sinner a Saint, they cannot alter the nature of a person. But Jesus Christ changeth the nature of persons. If this ointment be poured upon the head of a sinner, he is presently turned into a Saint, if it fall upon a dead man, he becomes a living man; if a drop of this ointment fall upon a weed, it is presently turned into a flower When this ointment was poured forth on Soul, he became a Paul, from a Persecutor of the Gospel, he was changed into a preacher of the Gospel. This ointment turns a filthy Sepulchre into a curious garden, 〈…〉 an into a Nazarite as white a● show. 4. This ointment upon whomsoever it is poured▪ doth abide upon him for ever. A person may be anointed with material ointment, and in a short time lose all the sent and savour of it, as if he had never been anointed; but whosoever hath been once anointed with this ointment, will smell of it as long as he lives. If Jesus Christ do but drop one drop of this ointment upon the soul of an infant, he carries the savour of it with him to his grave, 1 John 2. 27. The unction which ye have received of him, abideth in you. The scent of this ointment may be very weak in the children of God, but it can never quite be lost. David once by his sin had brought such an ill savour upon his soul, that the smell of the holy ointment was almost quite lost. My wounds stink and are corrupt through my foolishness, Psal. 38. 5. yet after a while his old savour did return again, the fragrancy of his oyment did ovecome the ill savour of his sin. The soul and body may be separated, but Christ and the soul cannot be separated. 5. This ointment hath a present efficacy upon the soul. The effects which are wrought by other ointments are not so suddenly done. Ointment heals, but not in a moment; ointment makes the face smooth and clear, but it must have some convenient time: the Virgins which were to stand before the Persian King, must be anointed six months before their beauty was perfect, Est. 2. 12. hard swell are mollified by ointment, but not at one dressing. What ever operation the best ointment hath, it requires a convenient time to accomplish it. But whatever i● done upon the soul by this ointment, is done in a moment. ●● sooner is this ointment dropped upon the soul, but the spots are done away, it cures the most festered sore with once dressing. Assoon as ever the Application is made, the effect follows. One moment is as good as an age for this ointment. 6. The smallest quantity of this ointment is as effectual as the greatest quantity. A little of other ointment doth little or no good. A drop will not cure a wound, a small quantity will not perfume a great room, a drop or two will not supple a hard tumour. But now one drop of this spiritual ointment is as effectual for the main work as a whole ocean. One drop of Christ softens the heart. one grain of this ointment perfumes the soul. There is infinite virtue in every drop of Christ. He that is made partaker of any part of Christ, hath the merit and virtue of whole Christ. As our Saviour tells Peter in another case, john 13. 10. he that is washed needeth not to wash save his feet. He that hath the least measure of this ointment, shall as certainly find all the effects of it, as if he had the whose vessel poured upon him. 5. He excels all other ointments in the manner of composition. All other ointments are compounded and made by men; they are called the ointments of the Apothecary, Eccles. 10. 1. God created the materials, and he it is that hath given man skill and understanding how to make use of them, but the composition is made by men. But this precious ointment is not made by men, but by God. It is he that hath compounded this golden box of ointment. It was God that anointed Christ with the holy unction of the Spirit, Psal. 45. 7. and it is he that hath designed him to be ointment unto others. Yea, the truth is, this ointment is God himself. Though the humanity be a creature, yet the Divinity is the Creator. Christ is not only unguentum Dei, the ointment of God, but unguentum Deus, that ointment which is God himself. The Uses. These I shall draw 1. From the general Doctrine. 2. From the particular resemblances. First, In general. We may take notice of, 1. The excellency of Christ. He is compared in Scripture to all things that are necessary, and to all things that are pleasant and delightful. One great piece of the study of Christians in this life, is to search into the excellency of Christ; To know what Christ is in himself, and what he is to us comprehends a very great part of a Christians study in this life. Paul desired to know nothing but Jesus Christ and him crucified, 1 Cor. 2. 2. This one resemblance shows him to be a precious one, he is so excellent, that all the choice things in nature are made use of to shadow out his glory. His Name, saith the Prophet, shall be called wonderful, Esay 9 6. how wonderful is that Name which is composed of so many excellent things! 2. This should draw our hearts exceedingly towards the Lord jesus: It should beget in us desire after him and delight in him. Precious ointment; draw the affections of men towards them. The best ointment is but a drug to Jesus Christ. If we be not enamoured with him, we do despise him. He that looks on him as ointment, cannot but be greatly delighted in him. It follows in the text, Therefore do the virgins love thee, draw me, we will run after thee. That man doth not value Christ as ointment, that doth not love him and desire to be drawn after him. 3. The excellency of grace. 'Tis the graces of the Spirit in Christ that makes him compared to ointment; his sweet ointments are his meekness, patience, holiness and the rest of those heavenly graces. True grace is a choice thing, the Scripture compares it to the choicest things in all the world, Cant. 4 13, 14. Next to God, and Christ, and the Spirit; there's nothing in heaven or earth comparable to Christ. 4. That the grace of Christ is not a thing common to all. His common graces are communicated to all, his special grace is more confined. His Name is ointment. The holy ointment in the Law was poured upon none but upon consecrated things and persons. Exod. 30. 2●, 24, 25, 30. It must not be poured on man's fl●sh, v. 32. Christ is compared here to this ointment. A select number, the Elect of God only, those that are spiritual Priests, these, and these only ●e made partakers of Christ and his graces. Thu● much for the general doctrine. Secondly, particularly. First, from the fragrancy of Christ 〈◊〉 may learn four thing. 1. How unsavoury they are that want Christ. Wicked men have animam pro sal● their souls keep their bodies sweet, but what have they then to keep their souls sweet? the holy Ghost compares men that are in the state of nature to that which is most unsavoury, Psal. 14. 3. They are unsavoury both in their persons and in services, that want this ointment. A heart unanointed casts the worst smell of any corrupt thing in the world. 2. Acknowledge from whence it is that all your fragrancy proceeds. If there be any good smell upon your souls, it is because this ointment hath been poured forth upon you. Jesus Christ mentions the sweet smell of his Spouse, Cant. 4 10, 11. and indeed every believer is a sweet savour unto God. The precious ointment of the graces of Christ poured upon your head at your conversion, is the only reason of this good savour; 'tis great pride and ingratitude not to own it. 3. This teacheth us all how to make and keep the soul sweet. Satan labours to make it musty by breathing the ill air of sin into it, and if you would have it smell sweetly, you must anoint it with this ointment every day. Drop but every day a drop of this ointment upon it by prayer, meditation, or some other holy duty, and it will preserved sweet notwithstanding the thick fogs of sin and temptation. Carry Christ in your bosom, and you will smell very sweet in every company. 4. When ever you smell any sweet savour, think on Christ. The best use which we can make of perfumes and ointments, is to make them remembrancers to put us in mind of him who perfumes both earth and heaven. And then, Secondly, from the cheering virtue of this ointment, learn two things. 1. Wither to go for heart reviving. When you find your spirits dull and melancholy, when your hearts are tired out, and your souls languish, smell to this precious ointment, and it will revive you. It's Christ's work to revive the spirit of the humble, and to revive the heart of the contrite. The smell of the ointment, either of Christ's satisfaction, or of his promises, or of his intercession is the speediest and surest way to be rid from the power of spiritual heaviness. 2. Let them that have this ointment, maintain spiritual cheerfulness. God calls for spiritual gladness, as well as spiritual sorrow, Phil. 3. 1. A well grounded cheerfulness, honour's religion as much as holiness. The Scripture was written for consolation, as well as for conversion, John 15. 11. Rom. 15. 4. The Spirit is a comforter, as well as a sanctifier, John 15. 26. You that have this ointment, maintain a holy light-heartednesse. There is a vain mirth, and there is a sinful and sensual mirth, avoid these, but the holy mirth must be kept up. It's a disparagement to the holy ointment, to see anointed ones droop in the blackest seasons. And then, Thirdly, from the mollifying virtue of this ointment, learn two things, 1. The Scripture remedy against hardness of heart. It's a disease the best are troubled; with less or more; chafe this suppling ointment 〈◊〉 to it, and it will grow soft. This ointment was never used aright, but it did in time remove the spiritu●l hardness of the soul. 2. Ascribe all heart softness to Christ. Had not this suppling ointment dropped upon it, it had been stony to this present day. Fourthly, from the beautifying virtue of this ointment, learn two things, 1. What true beauty is. To be anointed with Christ, to be filled with his graces, to be made partaker of the divine nature, this is beauty, this is true beauty, this is lasting beauty, this is beauty that will commend us to God. 'Tis not he that hath the beautiful face, but he that hath the beautiful soul, that is accepted of God. And then, 2. He that would be beautiful, let him anoint himself with Christ. How vain are persons in painting their faces? Jezabels' daughters abound, 2 Kings 9 30. as if they would mend God's workmanship, it was formerly whores customs, Ezek. 23. 40. Anoint yourselves once with this ointment, and all others will be unpleasant. And then, Fifthly, from the healing quality of this ointment, learn two things. 1. To acknowledge how their sores were healed. Thou wast one full of wounds, now they are bound up and healed. Thou mayest bless God for this balsam of heaven, ●esus Christ, otherwise thou hadst died of thy wounds. 2. Get this ointment into 〈…〉 Wise men will not be without healing ointment in their house●, especially were they are fare from Chirurgeon. All our houses by reason of sin are no better then spiritual hospitals. There's no balm in Gilead that can heal one sore, but this divine balm, Jesus Christ; get your vessels filled with this ointment, and all will be well; pray that God would pour this ointment into your wounded children and servants, else they are but dead men. LUK. 2. 25. Waiting for the consolation of Israel. XXIX. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth. Lon, May 29. 1653. THere are in this Chapter four things observable concerning Jesus Christ. (1) His nativity, ver. 1. to ver. 21. (2) His circumcision, verse 21. (3) The presenting of him in the Temple, ver. 22. to v. 41. (4) A proof of his prophetical office, v. 41. ad finem. In that part which speaks of his presentation in the Temple, we have many things observable. 1. The time of it, ver. 22. which was the fourtieth day after his nativity. 2. The efficient cause of it, his parents, Joseph and Mary. 3. The final cause of it, this is declared, ver. 23, 24. 4. The adjuncts accompanying this work. These are principally two. First, the prophecy of Simeon, verse 25. to verse 36. Secondly, the prophecy of Anna concerning him, v. 36, to 39 In this prophecy of Simeon we have 1. A description of some things concerning his person, v. 25, 26. And then, 2. A declaration of his prophecy, v. 27, etc. His person is described two ways. First, by his piety, v. 25. init. Secondly, by his gift of prophecy, this is expressed generally by the efficient cause of it, v. 25. The holy Ghost was upon him, particularly by the revelation which he received, v. 26. His piety is set down by three graces. 1. His justice or righteousness, He was just. 2. His devotion, he was a devout man. 3. His faith and hope in expecting the fulfilling of Gods promise concerning Christ. This is in the text. He waited for the consolation of Israel. ●n which words we have two things. 1. A description of what Christ is to his people. 2. A 〈◊〉 of what Simeon did in reference to ●●rist, 〈…〉 him. God had revealed 〈…〉 by 〈◊〉 ●oly Ghost, that Jesus Christ 〈…〉 before his soul went out o● the flesh. 〈◊〉 ●he holy man believed this, and 〈…〉 w●it for it. From 〈…〉 two particulars we have this double Observation. 1. That Jesus Christ is the consolation of Israel. 2. That godly men do expect and wait for the accomplishment of divine promises, even of such as are most unlikely to be fulfilled. I begin with the first, viz. Doct. 1. That Jesus Christ is that consolation of the Israel of God. Simeons' expectation was for the coming of Christ in the flesh as is clear from v. 25. He that is there called the Lords Christ, is here called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the consalation of Israel. Christ is the only true consolation of all Gods Israel, the consolation of Israel is a periphrasis of Christ the Messiah, saith Piscator. (1) See the type, Noah was herein a type of Christ, Gen. 5. 29. (2) See it in the prophecies. They that foretold Christ prophesied of him as a comforter, Esay 9 3, 6. Esay 40. 1. Esay 51. 3. Esay 52. 9, 10. (3) See it in the Angels that proclaimed his birth, Luke 2. 10, 11. In opening of this doctrine I shall handle these three particulars. 1. Who are meant by Israel? 2. In what respects Christ is said to be the consolation of Israel. 3. That he is the consolation of Israel only. 1. For the first. By Israel we are to understand true believers the members of the truly invisible Church, so we find them called, Gal. 6. 16. They are called Israel, or the Israel of God in two respects. First, in reference to the people of Israel, believers are like the people of Israel in three respects. 1. In regard of their inward circumcision. It was the badge of an Israelite, and that whereby he was distinguished from all other Nations, that he was circumcised. Other Nations are called uncircumcision, the Israelites are called ordinarily ●he circumcision. Believers, they and they only are spiritually circumcised; the foreskin of their flesh is mortified and cut off, they are circumcised with the circumcision not made with hands. Col. 2. 11. The body of sin is truly mortified in them; Hence they are called in Scripture the circumcision as the Israelites were, Phil. 3. 3. We are the circumcision, saith the Apostle, speaking of believers, which worship God in the Spirit, a true Believer is a true circumcised person. 2. In regard of the Law written in their hearts. It was the great privilege of the people of Israel that they had the Law of God amongst them. The Apostle mentions this, Rom. 2. 2. And the Prophet David long before him, Psalm 147. 19 Believers have this privilege above all people under heaven, that the Law of God is with them, nay the Law of God is in them; not the Law of nature, but the Law of grace; it is not only written amongst them, but it is written in them. The Apostle speaks of this, Heb. 8. 10. 3. In regard of their nearness to God. It was the great dignity of the people of Israel, that they were of all people nearest to God, Deut. 4. 7. They were God's heritage, his peculiar people, separated from all people under heaven. It is the great privilege of believers, that they are nearer to God than all other people. They are near to God in affection, they are near to God in relation. Of this the Apostle speaks, Eph. 2. 13. Thus they are called the Israel of God, in regard of the people of Israel. Secondly, in reference to the 〈…〉 rael. Israel is Jacob, he had that name 〈◊〉 him of God, Gen. 32. 28. Now every 〈◊〉 believer doth very much resemble Jacob; 〈◊〉 that, 1. In regard of their godly simplicity. It was the commendation of Jacob, that he was a plain man, Gen. 25. 27. It relates not so much to his outward condition, as to the inward frame of his heart. Believers are a single hearted generation: That which our Saviour saith of Nathaniel, is true of them, at least in desire and affection; they are not only without gall, but even without guile, John 1. 47. they study plainness rather than greatness, they put away deceit far from their Tabernacles. 2. In regard of their holy zeal. Jacob was a man full of the fire of heavenly zeal. How earnest was he in reforming his family? Gen 35. 2, 3. Here is true zeal, it gins reformation at home; all true believers have sparks of this celestial fire in their bosoms, Tit. 2. 14. They desire that they and theirs may be reform, who ever walk disorderly. They resolve as Joshuah, I and my house will serve the Lord, Joshuah 24. 15. 3. In regard of their wrestle with God. Jacob had the Name of Israel given him, because of his violent wrestle with God by prayer, Gen. 32. 28. The Prophet doth fully interpret what this wrestling was, Hosea 12. 3, 4. His prayers and tears were the two arms by which he wrestled with God. Every true believer is frequent in this exercise. I give myself to prayer▪ saith David, Psal. 109. 4. he that hath true grace loves no exercise better than this of holy wrestling with God. Epaphias is described by his frequency in these holy wrestlings with God, both for himself and others, Col. 4 12. In all holy virtues, true believers are like Israel, and therefore may well be called by his name. 2. For the second. Christ is the consolation of Israel in two respects. By way of purchase. By way of conveyance. First, By way of purchase and merit. Whatsoever is an ingredient or cause of true consolation, is by the purchase and procurement of Jesus Christ. The Scripture makes mention of many grounds of spiritual consolation. To instance some particulars. 1. Reconciliation with God. There can be no true comfort till God and the sinner be made one. Reconciliation is the first bottom of Consolation, Rom. 5. 2. The beginning of his Prodigals joy was the reconciliation of his father to him, Luke 15. latter end. Now the Scripture tells us, that reconciliation is the purchase of Christ's blood; he is the only atonement of the soul, Col. 1. 21, 22. There had never been any pacification between heaven and earth, if Jesus Christ had not interposed himself. He was contented that the Father should make war with him, that his fury towards us might cease. He is our peace-offering, by whom we have peace with God and with ourselves. 2. The work of grace in the heart. Sanctification is one ground of consolation. The Kingdom of God is righteousness, and peace, and joy in the holy Ghost, Rom. 14. 17. That comfort which is true, is builded upon righteousness. The effect of righteousness shall be peace, and the fruit of righteousness, quietness, and assurance for 〈◊〉, Esay 32. 17. Now all our holiness and grace is the purchase of Jesus Christ. The shedding of his blood doth not only procure for us glory hereafter but grace here. The conscience is purified by the streams of his blood, Heb. 9 14. He is as properly our sanctification as our salvation. 3. The pardon of sin. Remission is an inlet of Consolation, Esay 40. 1, 2. Comfort ye, comfort ye my people, tell them that their iniquity is forgiven. Sense of pardon is the true ground of spiritual laughter. Our Saviour's usual receipt for the working of comfort is this, Be of good cheer, thy sins are forgiven. So he saith to the paralytic, Mat. 9 2. the heart may be light in heaviness when sin is once remitted. Now we know Christ's blood is the meritorious cause of the remission of sin. 'Tis he that hath expiated our sins, Col. 2. 13, 14. He that will be forgiven any other way, shall never be forgiven; His blood is the only bath for the washing away of sin, Eph. 1. 7. 4. Right to the promises. The promises of the Gospel are the wells of true Comfort. The Apostle makes mention of the comfort of the Scriptures, Rom. 15. 4. If there be any comfort in the Scriptures, it is in the promises. Precepts are written for direction; threaten for terror; promises chief for consolation. The Prophet mentions the breasts of the Church's consolation, Esay 66. 11. The promises of the Gospel are the breasts of the Church's consolation, by sucking at these breasts the heart is made glad. Now, who but Christ purchased the promises? The Apostle saith, that all the promises of God are in Christ, 2 Cor. 1. 20. They are in him as the procuring and meritorious cause of them all. The Covenant of grace which is nothing else but a bundle of rich promises, is the purchase of Christ's blood. The world had never heard of a promise of any good, if it had not been for Jesus Christ. 5. Hope of salvation. Hope is the door of consolation. We rejoice in the hope of the glory of God, saith the Apostle, Rom. 5. 2. There's more cause of rejoicing in this, then in being able to cast out devils, Luke 10. 20 Now we know that it was none but Jesus Christ that did or could unlock the way to heaven. He is the way to heaven, He is the purchaser ●f heaven. God hath given us eternal life, and this life is in his Son, 1 John 5. 11. He is called the salvation of God in this song, v. ●0. There would have been no entrance for any of Adam's lost seed into glory, if Christ had not set the door open; it is be that opened the Kingdom of heaven to all believers. 6. The gift of the Spirit. The holy Ghost is called the Comforter John 14. 26. His office is to work consolation ●●●he hearts of God's people. Spiritual comfort is therefore called joy in the holy Ghost, Rom. 14. 17. because the holy Ghost doth create it in the soul. Now we know the indwelling of the holy Ghost in us is the purchase of Christ, John 15. 26. When the comforter is come, whom I will send unto you from the Father. The third person had never been our comforter, if the second person had not been our Redeemer. There is nothing can be thought on which hath any causality or efficiency in our consolation, but it is of Christ's procurement. This is the first. Secondly, By way of conveyance. As all our grace is communicated and conveyed unto us from Christ, so is also our consolation. Jesus Christ doth by his Spirit in the Ordinances of grace actually convey comfort unto his people as he sees them stand in need of it. The Apostle speaks of the believers consolation abounding by Christ, 2 Cor. 1. 5. All comfort is in Christ as a fountain; in him God hath put it for all his members, and from him it is communicated to them according to their necessity. As we receive out of his fullness grace for grace, so we receive out of his fullness consolation for consolation; that is one drop, one stream after another in a sweet succession. He that hath purchased our comfort keeps our comfort, and doth seasonably administer to us according to the exigences of our souls. 3. For the third; That he is the consolation of Israel only. As he alone is the consolation of his people, so is he the consolation of his people alone. None but believers have a ground of actual comfort in Christ This may be evinced by a threefold Argument. 1. The Scripture makes consolation to be the privilege only of such. Esay 40. 1. Comfort ye, comfort ye my people, saith their God. The Ministers of Christ in the holding out of comfort, are confined and determined only to the people of God. The whole current of Scripture runs this way. Esay 65. 13, 14. Consolation is proper only to them that are sanctified by grace. 2. None but they have any actual interest either in Christ's merit, or intercession, or any of his benefits. None but the believer can say, Christ died for me; none but the believer can say, Christ intercedes for me; both his satisfaction and intercession are confined to them, John 17. 9 19 'Tis true, the Elect that are unconverted have benefit in Christ's Mediatorship, by virtue of which they shall in time be brought in to God; but as to actual Application, none but the true Israelite hath interest. Christ is actually the portion of none but the believer. 3. Jesus Christ is terror to all unbelievers, not in himself, but because they reject him. He that is the salvation of the believer, is accidentally the damnation of the unbeliever, because he refuseth him. John 3. 18. It will be the greatest condemnation of the wicked another day, that there was a Christ, and they would none of him; he is to the unbeliever a stone of stumbling and rock of offence, 1 Pet. 2 8. They stumble upon him to their own ruin. That is a considerable passage which you have in this song, ver. 34. This child is set for the fall and rising again of many in Israel. Christ that is set for the rising of the true Israel of God, is set also for the falling of the carnal Israelites; the condemnation of the unbeliever would have been more easy if Christ had never been. Thus much for Explication. The Uses of this, are Information. Exhortation. Consolation. 1. For Information. It teacheth us a fourfold lesson. 1. That the state of a believer is not a ●bs●●●late estate. It is the design of Satan and his instruments to cast what od●um and infamy they can upon the ways and children of God. Amongst many other unworthy reports; they raise this, that they are uncomfortable and sorrowful ways. The devil bears men in hand, that if they once become holy, they must for ever bid farewell to all joy and pleasure, and by this means many are affrighted from the ways of God. How false and scandalous th●s is, the Word of God and the experiences of godly men abundantly show. Her ways, saith the holy Ghost, are ways of pleasantness, and all her paths are peace, Prov. 3. 17. And saith the text, Christ came for the consolation of Israel. Believers through their own carelessness do many times droop and go heav●●y, but they are never without a ground of true comfort. Their consolation is a hidden con●●lation, which the eyes of carnal men cannot see, and therefore they think they are without it. God hath made as full and large provision for the believers comfort as for his duty; and let Satan out of the envy of his heart suggest what he will to the contrary; if there be any consolation in Christ, the believer shall have his portion of comfort. Their present mourning and sorrow doth but make way for the filling of their hearts with a greater measure of comfort, Matth. 5. 4. Psal. 9●. 11. ●. That spiritual consolation is not to be tendered promiscuously unto all. Precepts belong to all, but promises are appropriated only to godly m●n. Men are apt to quarrel with the Ministers of Christ, because they do not pour out the comforts of the Gospel upon them. They think that they have as great an interest in the consolations of the Gospel as the best of men. This Text shows the contrary. God hath by positive command bound up his Ministers, and they cannot, without going beyond their commission tender any of the comforts of the Gospel to such as are unconverted, Esay 40. 1. Christ came to be the consolation of none but believers. Penitential mourning must go before Evangelical comfort. This order is observed by the Father in Christ's commission, Esay 61. 1, 2, 3. and this method is observed in Christ's Ministration, Matth. 1●. 28. 'Tis as high a breach of duty in a Minister to tender consolation to an unbeliever, as to preach terror to a true believer. A man must be a true Israelite before he can look on Christ as his consolation. And then, 3. Why the believer is so overwhelmed with sorrow when Christ is withdrawn. That Christ doth sometimes absent himself in his gracious presence from his people: few of the people of God but are able ●o say by their own experience, that upon such withdrawments the soul is exceedingly troubled, ●●ripture examples do fully prove, Cau●. 5 4. the troubling of our bowels notes more than 〈◊〉 ●ouble; it was so great, that her soul fa●●d and sunk within her, ver. 6. Egressa est anima m●●, she was without her soul while she was without her Saviour. Thus it was with David, Psalm 30. 7. The world wonders at such dejection, but there is no cause of wondering, for the withdrawment of Christ is the withdrawment of all comfort. He is the comfort of their souls, and of all other comforts which they enjoy. Every thing looks black when Christ is removed. That which Juda● said to Joseph concerning the affection of his Father to Benjamin, Gen. 44. 30. Is much more true of the believers affection to Christ, his life, and all the comforts of his life are bound up in the enjoyment of Christ. Their health is turned into sickness, their riches into poverty, their comforts into discomfort: when Christ is withdrawn, no wonder if their faces look pale, and their countenance fall. The Disciples were much oppressed with sorrow when Christ told them of the loss of his bodily presence, John 16. 6. joseph and Mary had the sorrow of a travelling woman upon them, when they had lost Christ but for a little time, Luke 2. 48. How much more cause of sorrow is there, when Christ's spiritual presence is taken away? How did Mary weep when she miss the body of Christ in the Sepulchre? joh. 20. 13. It was a ground of comfort to her, & all believers, though she knew it not, that Christ was risen. Had not Christ been alive our comfort had been for ever dead. That speech of the Church in another case is truly applicable to this case, Lam. 1. 16. Jesus Christ is he that is the only Reliever of the soul, and therefore if the believers eyes run do●n with water, when he is withdrawn, there is no cause of wondering, unless at this, that every tear is not an Ocean. 4. That a Christians consolation is a must rich and dear bought consolation. What the Apostle saith of our redemption, we may well say of our consolation, 1 Pet. 1. 18, 19 You that are believers, ye are not comforted with corruptible things, but with Jesus Christ himself. Your consolation is not bottomed upon any outward thing, but upon Jesus Christ himself. Nay consider it. Christ became a man of sorrow, that he might be made to you a God of comfort; He drank up the cup of his Father's wrath, that he might purchase for you a cup of consolation. Jesus Christ did willingly power out his own precious blood, that he might mingle a cup of strong consolation for the reviving of thy soul. The God of consolation hath gone the most costly way infinite wisdom could devise, to provide comfort for his Elect. 2. For Exhortation or Instruction. This commends many duties to the people of God. viz. these six. 1. Take heed of bottoming your consolation on any worldly thing. It is not unlawful to take moderate contentment in outward comforts. God hath given us these things for delight as well as for necessity, and we are allowed to rejoice in them, Eccles. 5 18, 19 But great care is to be taken that we do not place our chief consolation in any worldly enjoyment. Most men build their comfort on riches, honour, pleasure, or some such thing. God's own children are but too apt to offend in this kind. I might say many things to beat off the heart from seeking comfort in these things. As, That they are fading consolations. The best of earthly comforts is a dying comfort; riches, honours, pleasures, friends, children are short-lived comforts, the soul will live when these are not. That they are insufficient consolations. They comfort but the lowest part of man. What joy can the soul, which is a Spirit, take in any sensual comfort? That they are common and ordinary consolations. The bad have as great, nay, many ●●mes a greater portion of all these things than the good. That they are distressing consolations. The bitterness that is in them, is more than the sweet that is in them. jobs bed which he thought should shave been a place of comfort, was a place of terrifying, Chap. 7. 13, 14. There is no comfort in this life, but it may, and many times doth prove a discomfort. Many other things I might say to this purpose, but I shall only say this, God hath made none of these things a Christians main consolation. (1) It's a disparagement to God's wisdom: To bottom thy comfort on any worldly thing, 'Tis as if thou shouldest say the infinitely wise God wanted judgement to choose the fittest consolation. (2) It's an undervaluing of Christ himself. As if he had not enough of all manner of consolations in himself. Are the consolations of God small to thee? job 15. 11. To bottom the great comfort of thy heart on any worldly comfort, is to say, the consolation of Christ is small to thee. (3) It's the way to lose thy worldly comforts. Jesus Christ cannot but in honour either strip thee of that comfort, or else turn it into a cross which thou placest thy consolation more upon, then upon himself. 2. Let the Israel of God live comfortably. It is often commanded in Scripture to the children of God, to live as a comforted people, Psal. 33. 1. Phil. 4. 4. The same God which bids you mourn for sin, bids you glory and rejoice in him. Much might be said to press this duty. 1. It is one end why the Scriptures were written, John 15. 11. As precepts were given for direction, so were promises for consolation. (2) It tends greatly to the honour of Religion. A mournful sad life dispa●●geth godliness as well as a profane life, it makes men think there is nothing but sourness in God's ways. (3) It's a wrong to the Spirit of God. It denies one of his works; He is given for a Comforter as well as for a sanctifier, john 15. 26. (4) It doth much indispose the soul for the duties of godliness. An habitual heaviness of heart makes duties tiresome and unpleasing. A melancholy heart is almost as unfit for the service of God as a frothy heart. (5) It creates m●ny jealousies and sinful surmisings in the soul against God. The soul that is continually clouded with melancholy, cannot so hearty close with G●d, or commend his service to others as he might do. M●ch might be said to press this duty on believers, but ● shall keep to the t●x●, ●hrist i● the consolation of Israel; and i●s some kind●●f disp●●agemen●●o him to walk uncheerfully. ●t makes men t●●k there is not enough in Ch●●st to ●●eer you ●ou are bound to honour Christ as well in this Name, The consolation of Israel, as in his other ●●es. As you h●r● in Christ many foundations o● real comfort, so let it ●e your care to preserve and increase actual comfort. As it is a sin to look for comfort more than grace; so it is unpleasing to Christ to be so covetous after grace as to throw aside comfort. Your comfortable life honours Christ as well as your holy life. 3. Take heed of slighting the consolations of the Gospel. We are very apt to look upon the duties of the Gospel as very hard, and very prone are we to judge the comforts of the Gospel very mean. It was that which Eliphaz charges job withal, chap. 15. 11. It ariseth from the pride of our hearts. We think we deserve great things from God; hence we reckon our comforts and encouragements as low things. Now amongst many other considerations which do exceedingly greaten Gospel comforts, this is one, That they are bottomed upon Christ himself. To slight the comforts of the Gospel, is to slight Christ our consolation. Though others perhaps enjoy a greater portion of consolation than thou, yet thou enjoyest more than thou deservest; yea, the comforts which thou accountest small; cost Jesus Christ as much sweat and s●●row as theirs did, who enjoy the greatest mea●●re of comforts. Saith Moses to Korah and his aff●●●ates, 〈…〉 it a small thing that God ●hath separated 〈◊〉 from the Congregation, &c▪ Numb. 1● 〈…〉 is just God should remove all 〈…〉 as look upon any consolation received from Christ as a small thing. 4. Acknowledge 〈◊〉 the foundation of all your consolation. When an● beam● of comfort is let fall upon the soul how apt are we to neglect the true fountain of it? we look perhaps at our own graces and duties, as if our comfort sprung from thence; Or else we look only at the Ordinance through which it is conveyed; Seldom are our eyes lifted up so high as Christ. We should labour to be better informed for time to come. What ever conduit pipe be used, Christ is the fountain and foundation of every drop of comfort; Christ is the God of all true consolation. It is not in the power of all the Angels of heaven to give any soul one drop of comfort. Nor can all the Ministers on earth give you one dram of comfort. They can speak the words of comfort, but they cannot cause the soul to receive comfort. God comforts by them, 2 Cor. 6. 6. Titus was but an instrument. Comforting is called frequently in Scripture, the speaking to the heart, Hose● 2. 14. Who is able to speak to the heart, but he who is the Lord and Commander of the heart? God hath put all the oil of spiritual joy into the hands of Christ, Esay 61. 3. and none but he can give it out. He that wants comfort, must go to Christ, he that hath received any true comfort, must ascribe it to Christ. All my springs, saith the Church, are in thee, Ps. 87. 7. 5. Let the Israel of God take heed of being a discomfort to Chr●st. We cannot properly be either a comfort or discomfort to Christ by any thing we do. He receives properly no joy from us, nor is he capable of enduring any sorrow from us; yet our sins are said in a figurative sense to be a grief and discomfort to him; If Christ were capable of sorrow, nothing would go nearer his hair, than this, to see his people sin against him. What the Apostle saith of the Spirit, we may in the same sense say of Christ, Ephes. 4. 30. It is but a disingenuous and unfriendly thing to be a grief to him that is a consolation to thee. If Christ be thy comforter, it's an unworthy thing in thee to be his tormentor. The Apostle speaks of some who crucify to themselves afresh the Son of God, Heb. 6. 6. Every sin is in a sort the cruifying of Christ afresh; if there be any dram of thankfulness in our hearts, we shall loathe the thoughts of vexing Jesus Christ. 6. Maintain close communion with Christ. Use 3. Consolation to the people of God. 'Tis better in his hands then in ours: we are cruel to ourselves, foolish, 1. In case of the want of outward comforts. It's often the lo● of God's people to be cut short of outward things. God sees they are apt to surfeit on this sweet fruit, therefore he withholds it. Well, Christ is thy consolation. These things could not comfort thee without Christ, he can comfort thee abundantly without these. 2. In case of spiritual heaviness and trouble of heart. Remember Christ is the consolation of Israel. First, He can comfort in all cases, 2 Corinth. 1. 4. Secondly, He can comfort against all difficulties. He can bring comforts through hell, through an host of temptations to the soul, Hosea 2. 14. Thirdly, He can give the soul ability to receive comforts, Esay 66. 13. Wait on him and on his Ordinances, and you shall have comfort as much as is sufficient. Fourthly, he is full of comfort. Fifthly, ●e is willing to comfort. He hath undertaken to be thy consolation as well as thy salvation. He's anointed to comfort them that mourn Esay 61. 1, 2, 3. Say not, I have been so long without Comfort. Jesus Christ can drop that into thy soul in one moment which shall make thee forget all thy discomfort. Only wait on him, wait patiently, wait beleevingly; Wait on him, at the pipes of comforts, the Ordinances, and desire grace rather than comfort, and thou shalt find heart-revivings before thou die. Use 4. Advice to them that are without Christ Labour to close with him, he is the consolation of Israel. What poor comforts are those which you now feed upon! You feed on ashes, you eat husks, you are jolly and brisk, and full of a frantic joy. If Christ be not yours, no comfort in Scripture is yours. Come and taste of these comforts, They are pure; They are soul-satisfying; They are eternal. All your comforts will be your torments, if Christ be not your comfort. Luk. 2. 25. XXX. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth. Lon● June 6. 1653. Waiting for the consolation of Israel. I Proceed to the second doctrine, which is this, viz. Doct. 2. That true believers do wait for the accomplishment of divine promises, even those that are most unlikely to be fulfilled. No promise which God ever made to man had more improbabilities, and seeming impossibilities to break its way through, than the promise of Christ. He is called a root out of a dry ground, Esay 53. 2. He was to be borne of a Virgin; Aw●-man shall compass a man, Jer. 31. 22. and yet this good man having a Revelation from God, that he should not departed this life till his eyes had seen him, did wait for the fulfilling of this promise. If any should wonder why Simeons waiting for Christ should be noted as an act of such singular faith; when as now the generality of the Jews were big with the same expectation, C●●mnitius gives two good Reasons of it. 1. The common bulk of the Jews did expect Christ only for external advantages. They expected him only as one that should restore their outward liberties, which were now invaded and taken away; but Simeon waited for him as a spiritual Redeemer, that should save their souls from sin and hell. 2. Simeon expected his coming to be near at hand, according to the predictions of the Prophets, whereas the generality of the Jews had but only a lose uncertain expectation of him. Simeon waited for a speedy coming of Christ, therefore doth the holy Ghost take such strict notice of it. Other examples we have in Scripture of the holy waitings of godly men for the fulfilling of Divine promises. Abraham waited for the promise of a Son, when his body was even dead, and his wife unlikely, according to the course of nature, to conceive; the Apostle mentions ●● ●om. 4. chap. 20, 21. 18. 19 David waited many years for the promise which God made to him of succeeding Saul in the throne; Though upon difficulties and cross providences which did arise, he was sometimes put to a stand, yet he did expect the accomplishment of the thing promised. He doth often in the book of Psalms make mention of his waiting, as Psal. 62. 1, 2 5. Daniel waited for the accomplishment of God's promise, for the restoring of the Church from their captivity, though there were many difficulties in the way, the Church being then as d●y bones, Ezek. 37. 3, 4, 5, 6. yet Daniel believed and waited for it, as appears by chap. 9 init. He did count the number of the years, and when they drew near a period, than he stirs up himself to pray with more than ordinary faith. The whole Church waited for the fulfilling of this promise, Micah. 7. 7. I wi●● wait for the God of my salvation, my God will hear me. So in that other sad case, they did wait for deliverance, though God hide his face from them, Esay 8. 17. The people were in great distraction because of Senacherib's Army, and many waited on Rezin, and Remaliahs' son; yet did the true believers wait on God for salvation. This is the duty, this hath been the practice of godly men in all ages. In the handling of this Doctrine I shall open two things. 1. What's meant by waiting for a promise. 2. Why the people of God do wait on God for the fulfilling of his promises. 1. For the first. Waiting on God for the fulfilling of his promises, comprehends these three things. 1. A firm believing that the thing shall com● to pass. Waiting is the acting of hope; and the foundation of hope is faith: Faith is the substance of things hoped for, H●b. 11. 1. 'Tis impossible the soul should wait on God for that which it doth not firmly believe shall be made good by God. Abraham would never have waited for a son of promise, if he had not first believed the promise of a Son. Simeon could not have expected the consolation of Israel, if he had not first believed the promise of God for the birth of him who was the Consolation of Israel. Take away the belief of the promise, and waiting for it ceaseth. 'Tis not an act either of Grace or Reason, but of ●olly and madness to wait for that which is not first believed. This is the first. 2. A patiented tarrying of the Lords leisure. Waiting on God for a promise, is an act of patience as well as faith. He that believeth makes not haste, Esay 28. 26. and he that waiteth, makes not haste. He that would have a promise fulfilled one day before God's time, is not a waiter, but a Commander. The holy Ghost describes waiting on God for a promise, by tarrying till it be made good, Hab. 2. 3. He was a wicked man who said, Why should I wait on God any longer? 2 King. 6 33. True waiting doth not limit the holy One of Israel, either for manner, or time. R●st on the Lord, wait patiently, that's David's counsel, Psal. 37. 7. Daniel waited for the fulfilling of that promise of the Church's deliverance out of Babylon till the set time came, Psal. ●●. 2. 13 which was penned by David. Waiting on God is called by David, a being silent to God, Psal. 62. 1. A quick eye and a silent tongue becomes him that waits on God. He that waits on God may pray for the hastening of the promise, but the conclusion of all might be, not when I will, but when God will. Our Saviour tells his Apostles what it is to wait on God. ●ct. 1 4. Tarry at Jerusalem, saith ●e, and wait for the promise's of the Father. He that sets God a time to fulfil● his promise, doth not wait for a promise, but steal a promise. The Church expresseth well the nature of true waiting upon God, Psalm 123. 2. Our eyes wait upon the Lord until that he have mercy upon us. 3. An earnest desire to have the promise made good. Patient waiting forbids murmuring, but it doth not forbid desire. Waiting for a promise cannot be without hungering after the promise. The Church in Psal. 123. 2. Was contented to stay God's time, yet in the next verse she expresseth her desire, Have mercy upon us O Lord, have mercy upon us. The Apostle expounds waiting by a word signifying desire, 2 Pet. 3. 12. Looking for, and hastening ●●to the coming of th● day of God. There is a two fold hastening of a promised good. The one arising from impatience. The other arising from desire; now though waiters must not hasten any good with a hastening of impatience, yet they may, and must hasten it with a hastening of desire. To hasten any good which God hath promised, out of discontent, argues distrust of God; but not to hasten out of ardent desires, argues some slighting of the good promised. I have longed for thy salvation, O Lord, saith the Prophet, Ps. 119. 174. Longing is the very height and extremity of desire. A waiter may not be a limiter of God, but he may be a petitioner unto God for the fulfilling of his promise. The Scripture expresseth waiting by a word which signifies heat of desire, Rom 8. 19 The earnest expectation of the creature waiteth for the manifestation of the Sons of God. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the word signifies waiting, or looking with a stretched out neck. As a prisoner looks for an expected pardon, or as a man looks for a friend, whom he hath long expected and would gladly see. This vehement desire for the fulfilling of the promise is to be expressed, (1) By frequent muse and meditations. The ●oul must have its thoughts much upon the promise. What David saith of the Precepts of God, that they are always before him, so we must say, and so must we do with the promises of God, they must be ever before us, we must meditate on them all the day long. (2) By ●ervent prayer. Patience in waiting for a promise, and passionate earnestness in praying for the fulfilling of it are not inconsistent. We must daily beg of God that he would give being to his promises. We must say with the Church, Come away my beloved, etc. Cant. 8. ult. (3) By careful use of all lawful means to make good the condition of the promise. We must be as earnest to do what God hath commanded, as to enjoy the good which God hath promised. This is the first particular. 2. For the second. Why godly men do thus wait for the good which God hath promised. I shall name a sevenfold Reason. First, They know their selves to be servants. Servants must wait upon their Masters for the good they expect Psal. 1●3. 2. The people of God know they are but servants, and servants that do depend upon the free will of God for every thing; this makes them willing to wait on God. He that will not wait on God, denies himself to be a servant, and denies God to be his Master● Luke 12. 35, 36. And then, Secondly, They know God hath given the● both faith and hope for this purpose, that they may wait on him. Waiting is nothing else but the acting of hope. A child of God would not have any grace lie idle in his soul. He knows God hath given every grace for exercise. Not to employ and act grace received, is to abuse grace received. A child of God would not abu●e a thing so excedent as hope is. Now he knows that hope is given to enable him to wait for the fulfilling of promises, Ergo. And, Thirdly, They know in some measure what a great sin it is not to wait. To refuse to wait on God for the fulfilling of his promise, is to slight God, to undervalue the promise as if there were nothing in it worth our waiting for. A man cannot lightly disparage either God or his promises more professedly then by refusing to wait on him for his promises. Now a child of God would not willingly cast any reproach either on God or his promises from which he receives so much good, Ergo. And then. Fourthly, They are not unmindful how long, and with how much patience God waited on them for their obedience. They remember God tarried Sermon after Sermon, year after year for their conversion. The Apostle speaks of God's long-suffering in waiting on the old world, 1 Pet. 3. 20. Every one of God's children are sensible of Gods patiented waiting on them when they had no mind to know him. When they slighted grace, when they scorned mercy, God waited; this makes them so ready to wait on God, Esay 30 18. And then. Fifthly, Their own undeserving of the good promised. The children of God know that all God's promises are free as to them. jacob's acknowledgement will be readily assented unto by them, Gon. 32. 10. They know how well they deserve the heaviest threatening, but how unworthy they are of the least mercy. They do with an unfeigned heart, say as David did, when God had promised him to build his house, 2 Sam. 7. 18. Who am I, O Lord God, and what is my house that thou hast brought me hitherto. A child of Gods Mo●to is. L●sse then the least of all the mercies of God. This makes them wait. And, Sixthly, They know how certain the promises of God are. They have had experience how he hath made good the promises that are past, and they know he will show the same unchangeableness in those that are to come. They know his Name is Jehovah. God that hath his own being from himself, and that will give being to all his promises. This encourages them to wait. It was the Apostles Logic in their generation, 2 Cor. 1. 10. It is ignorance of God that causes the heart to distrust. They that know thy Name, saith David, will put their trust in thee, Psal. ●. 10. God's children know his Name, therefore they will wait. And, Seventhly, The satisfaction they expect from the enjoyment of what is promised. They know every promise of God will bring ●ull contentment of heart when it is fulfilled. They cannot now expect so much as they shall then find in the promises of God. They know they are, as the Apostle speaks of them in 2 Pet. 1. 4. Exceeding great and precious promises. They know the harvest will make amends for all their expectation, therefore they wait for it. The Uses are for 1. Information. 2. Reprehension. 3. Exhortation. 1. For information. This teacheth us three lessons. 1. That Godly men have a very good opinion of God. They dare take his Word for that which they love with the dearest affection. They are willing to wait the whole time of their life for the accomplishment of that good which he hath promised. As they dare follow God when they know not whether he will carry them, Heb. 11 8. so they dare wait on God, when they see no reason for their waiting. Did they not bear a singular affection to him, they could never with so much satisfaction wait upon him. 2. The excellency of grace. Grace is a choice thing in itself, and its choice in its effects. This is one excellent effect of grace, that it doth enable the soul to wait on God for things that are most difficult to be brought to pass. Corruption teacheth the heart to wrangle with God, but grace teacheth the heart to wait on God. A gracious spirit is a choice spirit. 3. That faith doth not only look to things present, but to future things. Sense only minds things present, but faith minds things that are a great way off, Heb 11. 1. It is as willing to wait on God for a future good, as it is to receive a present good. Faith hath an eagle's eye, and a Lion's heart. It hath a Lion's heart to bear present evils, and it hath an eagle's eye to see future good. It's said of the Patriarches, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. that they saw the promises, and embraced them afar off, Heb. 11. 13. A believer is as able to live upon good in reversion, as on good in present fruition. This is the first use of the point. 2. For reprehension. To those that will not wait for the fulfilling of God's promises. These are of two sorts. 1. Such as are overhasty, that would have the promise fulfilled before its time. And then, 2. Such as never mind the promises of God, look no more after them then if they had never been made. Simeons' practice blames both these. First, For those that would anticipate God in his promises. They are so eager for the fulfilling of the promises, that they would have them accomplished before their time. I would desire such men to consider these three things. 1. This is a very sinful frame of heart. Whatever may be pretended as an excuse or extenuation, it cannot be denied but the sin is great to be over eager with God to give being to his promise before the time. Consider five particulars. (1) 'Tis an implicit denial of God's right to appoint his own time. The Scripture puts times and seasons, as well as things and persons under the jurisdiction of God. It's his right to determine times. Acts 17. 26. He that made time, hath the sole power to appoint and set times. Our Saviour tells his Disciples, Act● 1. 7. That times and seasons God hath put in his own power. Now, not to be willing to stay God's time, is to divest God, as far as we are able, and to invest ourselves with this great piece of royalty and sovereignty of appointing times. It is interpretatively to say that we will be the Lords of time, and not God. (2) 'Tis a limiting of God. Moses reproves the Jews for this, as a great presumption, that they limited the holy one of Israel, Psal. 78. 41. Men that are free, will not be limited; much more unfit is it that God should be limited. To limit God, is to exalt ourselves above God, as if we were wiser than he. We are not wise enough to improve the times which God hath set, much less are we wise enough to set God ● time. To endeavour to reduce or circumscribe God to our time, is to take away from him his freedom and liberty in working. (3) 'Tis a questioning of God's faithfulness as if we were fearful he would not be as good as his word. When we hurry men too hastily to fulfil their promise before the time, we give them cause to think we suspect their honesty, as if their words were but wind. To be overhasty with God, argues a secret suspicion in the heart, that God will let time slip. 'Tis a sign that we do not esteem God's bond as good as ready payment. Abraham by wishing that Ishmael might live, Gen. 17 18. did argue some inward doubt whether he should have an Isaac or no. Turbat● adb●c & vacillantis animi vox ista est, as Calvin notes. Though he did recover himself, so as to believe without staggering, yet there was at present some kind of vacillation in his heart. He that is overhasty with God, gives occasion to men to think that he doth not receive the promise without some distrust. To suspect God never, so little, is a great sin. (4) It argues much impatience of heart. He that would have a promise before God's time, doth bewray a secret discontent of heart, because the time was not set sooner. It implies dissatisfaction with what God hath done, as if it might have been done in a better time. The soul that would have the promise brought to pass before its time, doth in effect say, God hath not chosen the best time. Now to disparage God's choice, is a great sin. He that saith any thing might have been done after a better manner, or in a better time than that wherein God hath done it, doth deny God to be God only wise. Thus you see the sin is great in being too hasty with God, I might add one thing more. (5) 'Tis a denial of ourselves to be beggars. We say beggars must not be choosers. To be two hasty to have promises made good, is as if we should say Gods promises are not acts of grace, but due debts. This is the first Consideration. 2. 'Tis a weak thing as well as sinful. 'Tis Christian wisdom to pray for the fulfilling of promises, but '●is more than brutish folly to be impatiently eager for the accomplishment of promises. The folly of it appears in these four particulars. (1) We shall obtain it never the sooner for our impatience. No man ever did, no man ever shall wrest a promise out of God's hand by impetuous violence. I the Lord will hasten it in his time, Esay 60. 22. Our willingness to wait for a promise shall not keep us without it one hour longer, our impatience shall not produce it one moment sooner than the set and appointed time. Waiting patiently is the best way to ripen promises, impatient wrangling with God is the way to set back the promises. God loves the force of faith, but he doth exceedingly loathe the force of impatience. (2) If we could through over much eagerness hasten a promise before its time, it would prove hurtful to us. An unripe promise is like unripe fruit, it doth not tend to nourishment, but to diseases. An abortive birth is neither so beautiful, nor so strong as that which is brought forth in its full time. A promise is then sweet, when it's brought to pass in its due season. He hath made every thing beautiful in his time, Eccl. 3. 11. 'Tis as true of promises, as of providences. Grace hath its maturity as well as nature. Promises grow to perfection by tract of time. When the set day is come, then, and not till then it hath full shape and proportion. That which is observed by our Saviour concerning the fruits of the earth, is true concerning the promises, Mark 4. 28. The earth bringeth forth fruit, first the blade, than the ear, after that the full co●n in the ear. God in the producing of promises useth the same method, first the blade springs up, than the ear shoots out, after that, the full corn in the ear, and so in process of time it's fully ripe. If a man should reap his field in the blade, or in the shooting, he might possibly have straw, but he would have no corn. Should God permit the impatient Christian to reap the promises when they are but in the blade, or in the ear, he would lose all the benefit and virtue of them. It's mercy to the believer that God gives him in the promised good in the just season of it. If they should stay never so little beyond the season, if they should be performed never so little before the season, the whole benefit of them would be lost. We shall when we come to heaven bless God as much for the timing of his promises, as for the making of his promises. The foolish child is ●ager for green fruit; the father will not give it him till it be fully ripe, because he knows it would then be prejudicial, when it's ripe than he gives it him. The foolish Christian longs for a promise; when its green, his heavenly Father knows it would be to his disadvantage to have it at that time; he will have him stay till it be ripened, than ●e shall enjoy it. A promise before its time, is like bread half baked, or like meat half roasted, it doth neither feed nor nourish. Our wise Father loves his children too well to feed them with raw mea●. (3) Impatient ●astening of a promise deprives us of much of the comfort of the promise. The promises of God lay a foundation of present comfort. The great comfort of the promise is in the fulfilling of it, but it yields some comfort as soon as ever it is made to the soul. Even to day do I declare, saith God, that I will render double unto thee, Zech. 9 12. It's a promise of return to the captiv●d Jews Now assoon as ever the promise was made, they had a ground of comfort that God would p●t an end to their misery, and restore to them double what they had lost by their long bondage. Assoon as ever God hath made a promise to a soul, that soul is sure. 1. That God will never do it hurt. 2. That God will in due time perform what he hath promised. The husbandman, though he do not reap presently upon the sowing of his ●eed, yet he hath some ground of comfort assoon as the seed is sown, he hath the comfort of hope that harvest will come, when he shall reap what he hath sown. Now a violent and impatient eagerness of spirit drinks up all the comfort which the soul might receive from the promise. The promise is most to such a soul as if it had never been made. His weariness in tarrying breeds more torment, than the promise doth comfort to his soul. (4) It renders the heart less thankful to God for the making of the promise. It is the duty of the children of God to be very thankful for every promise of God. That God that did not owe us any thing, should so strongly bind himself to us by the cords of a promise, this is worthy our heartiest thankfulness. All the good we expect from God is by virtue of his promise. Grace and glory are both wrapped up in promises. He that is not thankful for a promise, deserves justly the edge of the threatening. Now the heart that is too hasty to have the promise fulfilled, will never be so thankful as is meet, that the promise was made. The anguish of his Spirit in being delayed, will weaken, if not quite destroy the thankfulness of his spirit. A tumultuous wrangling Christian can never be a thankful Christian. Discontent of heart in tarrying for a promise, will certainly hinder that thankfulness of heart which should be given to God for making a promise. This is the second. 3. 'Tis an undecent thing. 'Tis a very uncomely thing, that God should be hurried by his creatures to make good his promises before his own time. The undecency of it will appear these ways. As. 1. God is our Superior. He is our King, he is our Master, he is our Father, he is the supreme Lord, as far above the bighest of us as the Creator is above the creature. 'Tis not good manners to be too hasty with a Superior. Woman, saith our Saviour to the Virgin, What have I to do with thee? my hour is not yet come, Joh. 2. 3. It is unsuitable to the highness of the God of glory to stoop so low as to observe the time of the best of creatures, Great men will not be hastened by their servants, its incongruous that the great and mighty God should have his time appointed him by the works of his own hands. The great God is willing to be petitioned by the meanest, but he will not be determined by the greatest of his creatures. Greatness will not be uncivilly hurried by meanness. Luther having once been too bold with God 'bout a business which he thought necessary, telling God, it must be d●●ne, thought he heard this answer, Martin admodum sapis, sed ego non sum Deus sequax. It is not meet that God should either take counsel, or be importunately hurried by his servants. 2. God is a free agent in whatever he doth or promises. All his promises are gracious, and all his gracious promises are free. Nothing b●t his mere will caused him to make any promise. They are called promises of grace, not only because they contain gracious things, but because they are the effects of freegrace. Now it is not meet that a free agent should be determined either for matter or time. When we do with impatience over-eagerly put God on to fulfil what he hath promised, we do forger that he doth all things according to the counsel of his own Will, which is affirmed by the Apostle, Ephes. 1. 11. It's not equal to determine a free agent. 3. God hath waited patiently, and doth still wait patiently on us. Before our conversion he waited long, stretching out his hands with unwearied patience while we did oppose him. Since our conversion he waits still, Cant. 5. 2. Rev. 3. 20. He waits for our rising after falls, for our obedience to duties commanded. 'Tis the most incongruous thing in the world, that a patiented waiting God should be impatiently hastened. This is the first. 2. For those who never look after the promises of God. Many men are so negligent and careless, that they never take any thought about the promises of God, they neither pray for them, nor wait for them. I● God will give them a ●eing, they can be contented, if he never fulfil them, they can bear it. I would have such Christians consider these four things. 1. This is a great slighting of the promises, and of the good which is centained in them. The Apostle, Rom. 2. 4. speaks of some who despise the riches of God's goodness. He that never looks after the promise, is guilty of this sin. He scorns the love of God the Father, the maker of the promise; the blood of God the Son, the purchaser of the promise; the grace of God the holy Ghost, the applyer of the promise, God complains of his people, that they accounted the great things of his Law as strange things. Hos. 8. 12. He that never looks after the fulfilling of the promises of God, accounts the Gospel and the great things thereof mean things. 2. It renders the promise less comfortable when it is fulfilled. The souls consolation in receiving the good of the promise, is according to the souls expectation in waiting for the promise. The Prophet mentions this. Esay 25. 9 He that exerciseth most saith and hope in waiting for a promise, shall find most joy in gathering the promise. We know how it befell that incredulous Lord, who would not believe the promise of plenty which God made by his Prophet, 2 Kings 7. 1●. He saw i● with his eyes, but did not eat of it. He that minds not the good which God hath promised, robs his soul of half of that joy which he might have from the promise. The promise will neither be so fat, nor so sweet as it would have been, if the heart can be more confident in expecting it. 3. This makes the promise wholly uncomfortable till the accomplishment of it. The very blossoms of God's promises yield some comfort to the soul. God hath for this end revealed his promises, that the souls of his people might have some refreshment by them before they be brought forth. The thoughts that such a good shall certainly be ours, bear half as ●uch comfort as if it were already ours. We rejoice in the hope of the glory of God, saith the Apostle, Rom. 5. 2. The present hope of future glorification is not without some joy. Good in reversion yields much joy in possession. The promise made to Christ, that his body should not see corruption, was a foundation of present comfort, Psalm 16. 9, 10. the hope of the body's resurrection makes a child of God die with comfort. All Gods promises lay a foundation of present comfort. But he that never looks after the promise, what joy can he have from the promise? 'Tis the souls believing and studying of the promise, that draws comfort out of the promise. He that minds not what God hath promised hath as little present joy from the promise as if it were not at all. 4. The neglecting of the promises is a real slighting of the Precepts. The same God which hath made the promise, hath commanded the soul to wait for the promise, and no man can disregard the promise, but he doth thereby make himself guilty of disobeying the Precept. This is the second use of the point. 3. For Exhortation. Let all that profess themselves to be of Simeons' religion, wait as he did for the accomplishment of the promises of God. God hath made many promises which are of general concernment to the Church of God; the promise of calling the Jews, of ruining Antichrist; of Establishing the mountain of the Lords house upon the top of the mountains; of settling unity and uniformity of worship in his Church. God hath made many promises of particular good things to believers; the taking away the stony heart, the giving of them victory over their spiritual enemies, etc. be entreated to expect the fulfilling of all these. I shall in this Use, 1. Urge the duty by some Motives. 2. Propound some rules to direct us in the manner of our waiting. 3. Answer some objections which the soul makes against waiting. 1. For Motives. Consider, 1. That all the promises which God hath made, shall have their certain accomplishment in their time. The Apostle saith in 2 Cor. 1. 20. That all the promises of God in Christ Jesus are Yea, and Amen. It is impossible that any promise of God should ●all to the ground. See what comparisons God useth to declare the certainty of his promises, Esay 54. 10. Mountains are the most fixed parts of the earth, yet the promises of God are ●urer than they, and Jer. 33. 20, 21. The Lord compages his promises for the certainty of them, to the constant succession of the day and night. We have Gods ●ow and oath superadded to his promise, to set out t●● certainty of them, Heb. 6. 17. The Lord hath annexed his broad seal of the Sacraments to his Covenant to show the certainty of his promises. H●● b●●e is set in th● cloud, Gen. ●. 13. Yea, consider that the Scripture speaks of things promised, as if they were already accomplished, and all to show the certainty of the promises, Esay 44. 22, 23. ●●s deliverance was not to be accomplished ●● one ●●●dred years after, yet because it w●● promised, God speaks of it as a thing ●o●e. So ●●m. 3. 58. O Lord, thou hast pl●●ded the reproach of my s●ul, etc. The Church was at th●● time in the very depth of affliction, yet she speaks of her deliverance as a thing past, Thou hast redeemed my life. Dobar in the Hebrew signifies both a word and a work, to teach us, that when the Word is gone out God's mouth, the work is as good as done. To press this point a little further, consider these things which discover the certainty of the promises of God. (1) The fidelity of his nature, God is the faithful God, that God that cannot lie, Tit. 1. 2. Men of low degree are vanity, men of high degree are a lie, as David found by experience, Psal. 62. 9 But God is a God of truth. The Scripture ●uilds the certainty of God's promises upon the fidelity of his nature, 1 Thes. 5. 24. So Psal. 89. 33, 34. Sara builded her confidence on this foundation in expecting that great promise, Heb. 11. 11. She judged him faithful that had promised. (2) The immutability of his counsel. God is unchangeable in himself, and in his counsels, James 1. 17. There is nothing in God like change. men's promises fail, because their natures are changeable. They see some inconveniences or mischiefs in their determinations afterward, which they could not foresee before, therefore they reverse and alter: but God foresees from eternity every accident and difficulty which doth fall out in ●very age, therefore he changeth not. Men resolve and determine of things sometimes very rashly; second thoughts with them are often better than the former; God resolves on nothing rashly, but with the deepest deliberation which infinite wisdom can use, therefore he changes not. And because his decree is unchangeable, his promise is certain. The Scripture doth argue certainty of promises from the immutability of divine counsel, Heb. 6. 17. and Rom. 11. 28, 29. God never altars his decrees, therefore he can never change his promises. 3. The infiniteness of his wisdom. God knows how to bring both ends of his promises together. Men break their promises often, because they want wisdom to make them good; but God is a God of knowledge, he knows how to give being to every word of his mouth; he knows how to deliver, 2 Pet. 2. 9 he knows how to defend, how to supply. The fulfilling of his threatening word is builded on his wisdom, Esay 31. 2. He is as wise to fulfi●● his promise as his threatening. (4) His Almighty power. God hath strength to remove all obstructions and impediments which seem to thwart his promises. We find his power mentioned in order to the fulfiling of his promises, Rom. 11. 23. They shall be graffed in, for God is able to graft them in again. Upon this bottom did Abraham strengthen his faith in the promise of God, Rom 4. 19, 20, 21. Men break their promises for want of power. The Apostles confess they were hindered, 1 Thes. 2. 18. But who can hinder God: Esay 43 13. If mountains stand in his way, he can leap over them, Cant. 8. He can melt them, Esay 64. 13. If sins oppose him, he can scatter them; if devils stand in his way, he can rout them: Nothing but his will can oppose his power, and he cannot Will to break his Word. 5. The riches of his goodness a●d mercy. The first ●ize of all Divine promises is Divine mercy. David confesseth it, 2 Sam. 7. 18, 21. All the promises of God are nothing but a fabric of mercy, Psal. 89. 1, 2. Now mercy and goodness which made the promise, will not fail to make it good. David bottoms his faith on this, and so may we, Psal. 23. ult. Surely goodness shall ●ollow me all the days of my life. When mercy and goodness in God fail, then may promises wi●her. (6) The exactness of his justice. Righteousness doth suum cuique tribuere. Not only Grace, but justice pleads for the fulfilling of the promises. If we confess our sins, he is just to forgive us, saith the Apostle, 1 John 1. 9 God hath in Christ received a valuable consideration for all the good he hath promised, therefore it's but justice to make it good. Christ pleads with God in point of Justice, John 17. 25. and the servants of God have expected the best of good things upon this account, 2 Tim. 4. 8. God gives heaven to his Elect as a merciful Father, because 'tis undeserved; and as a just Judge, because 'tis Christ's purchase. Promises are not only acts of grace, but bills of debt. God in justice will make them good. This is the first Motive, promises are certain; upon this ground doth God require his people to wait, Hab. 2. 3. Promises may seem to languish, but they cannot die. And let this be added that the difficulty of the thing doth not in the least hinder the accomplishment of the promise. The things which are hard to us, are easy to God. That which is very marvellous in the ears of men, is not at all marvellous in the eyes of God, Zech. 8. 6. 2. Consider the good of the promises. The promises contain things that are very Excellent. The Apostle ●●lls them exceeding great and precious promises, 2 Pet. 1. 4. The promises are cabinets full of rich treasure. Promises of spiritual things are very excellent, and promises of outward things have much good wrapped up in them. One promise of the least good that is immaginable, yields more comfort than the enjoyment of greater good by common providence. Whatever a man enjoys in a promise, he hath God's love and God's blessing with it. A little coming from the heart of God, is better than a great deal coming only from the hand of God. Better to be an heir of one promise, than the possessor of the whole world by common providence. 3. Consider the excellency of a waiting frame of spirit. A waiting spirit is a choice spirit. Waiting on God is one of the great duties which God requires from his people. To wait on God continually comprehends much of our work and duty to God, Hos. 12. 6. A waiting frame of heart ●. honour's God greatly. A waiting heart, 2. hath as much benefit by good in reversion, as by good in possession, Heb. 11. 1. A waiting heart, 3. can live comfortably under the cr●ssest prov●●●nces; he that can wait on God for the g●od ●e ●ath promised, will not faint because 〈◊〉 ●●●●cted, Mi●●h 7. 7. He that can wait on 〈◊〉 his promises, may 4. conclude hi● 〈◊〉 to be 〈◊〉 from the old Patriarches, 〈…〉 after off, and embraced them, Heb. 11. 13. A ●aiting Christian hath a clear eye, and a ●ong ●rme. He can see things ●t a great distance: he can reach things that are afa● off. 5. A waiting Christian is not much inferior to a comprehending Christian. None but the Saints in heaven live so glorious a life as the Saints that can wait on earth. The sight of faith is the next to the sight of Vision. Thus much for Motives. 2. For Rules to direct the soul in waiting for promises. 1. Waiting for promises is to be accompanied with obedience to precepts. Many talk much of their expectation about divine promises, who make no conscience of the obedience of divine Precepts. Such a waiting is a groundless presumption. Precepts and promises must ●e eyed both of them in their kind. I have waited for thy salvation, saith David, and kept thy Law, P●. 119. 174. and 166. I have hoped for thy salvation, and have done thy Commandments. It's a blessed conjunction when waiting on promises, and doing of Commandments go together. 2. Waiting for promises must be accompanied with prayer for the fulfilling of promises. He that is a true waiter, must be a daily petitioner. The Church puts praying and expecting together, psalm 123. 2, 3. The freeness of promises exclud●s the merit of prayer, they do not exclude the means of prayer. I will be sought unto by the house of Israel to do these things for them, Ezek. 36. 37. Prayer doth not purchase the promise, but it doth help both to sanctify and ripen the promise. He will best hold out waiting that holds on praying. 3. Waiting for the promise must be accompanied with joy in the promise. A waiting heart must be accompanied with a thanksgiving heart. We rejoice in the hope of the glory of God, Rom. 5. 2. While the soul waits for salvation, it must rejoice in salvation. We must not wait with a sour face, nor a discontented heart, but 〈◊〉 cheerfulness of spirit. To ●e admitted to wait, is a privilege, as well as to receive what we wait for. Thus much for Rules. 3. For Objections. Man's foolish heart is ready to pretend many vain excuses against this duty. As Obj. 1. We have waited long, and yet God puts us off; the promise ●s as fare off as ever it was in our thoughts. Sol. 1. The day of the promise dr●ws nearer and nearer still, do not faint at last. Heb. 10. 36, 37. 2. The longer thou 〈◊〉 ●he fuller will the crop be. God's promises will bear their own charges. The longer the ship stays out, the richer will the adventure be. The promise will recompense thee fully for all thy stay. 3. The comfort of thy waiting is more than full wages for thy waiting. God doth bestow some drops on the waiting soul. 4. God doth but stay to ripen the promise for thee, and thee for the promise. It is not forgetfulness, but love that makes God delay. Obj. 2. I see no likelihood of the fulfilling of it, No means appears. Sol. 1. He that made the promise can create means. That, that now seems to obstruct the promise, may be the midwife of the promise. 2. Weak means will serve omnipotency to work by. A broken plant is as good as a whole one, Acts 28. 27. Zech. 13●. 1. In that day there shall be a fountain XXXI. SERM. at Mary Welnoth. Lon. July 10. 1653. opened, etc. IN the former Chapter the Lord promiseth repentance to the Elect Jews, v. 10, 11. This promise was fulfilled partly upon the conversion of those which are mentioned, Acts 2. 37. 41. and Acts 4. 4. and it shall be fully accomplished when the body of the Jews shall be brought home to God. Of which we read, Rom. 11. 25, 26, 27, 28, 29. Note. There are none so fare off from, but God is able to bring them nearer to himself by tr●e conversion. The Jews that lie ●●sti●g and soaking in their sin for many ages together, shall a● last be converted and brought in to Christ. In this text we have a promise of pardoning and cleansing mercy to these penitent Jews. In that day a fountain shall be opened for sin and for ●ncleannesse. In the words we have f●●re particulars. 1. A spiritual bath. A fountain shall be set open. 2. The persons for whom this bath is prepared, The house of David, and the inhabitants of Jerusalem, that is, for all true penitent believers. The house of David, and the inhabitants of Jerusalem are mentioned, because they were the first fruits of the Gospel-Church according to that prophecy, Esay 2. 3. Out of Zion shall go forth the Law, and the Word of the Lord from Jerusalem. 3. The diseases or distempers for which this bath shall be effectual. For sin and f●r uncleanness, or for separation from uncleanness, under these words all spiritual distempers are comprehended. 'Tis by way of ●llusion to the legal impurities. 4. The time of the opening of this fountain. In that day. It refers generally to Gospel times, particularly, and specially, and ultimately to the time of the conversion of the Jews. I might lay down many Observations, but I shall sum up all into this one general doctrine, viz. Doct. That Jesus Christ is a fountain set open in the Gospel to all true penitents for the purging away of sin and spiritual uncleanness. In the handling of this Doctrine I shall open these following particulars. 1. That Christ is the only bath for the purging of spiritual uncleanness. 2. Why Christ is compared to a fountain. 3. That only penitent sinners shall be purged in this fountain. 4. How Christ purgeth away sin and uncleanness from the soul. 5. How Christ is said to be a fountain opened. 1. For the first. That the purging away of spiritual uncleanness is the work of Christ. He can do it and none but he is able to do it. This may be evinced by three arguments. 1. From express texts of Scripture. All purging work is attributed to Christ, and to Christ alone. His blood is the only Scripture-bath, the Word of God mentions this and no other. See the following places, 1 John 1. 7. Rev. 1. 5. and Heb. 1. 3. The holy Ghost tells us, that Christ did by himself purge our sins, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. All the ingredients of this spiritual purgation came out of the hear● of Christ alone. No creature contributed so much as one herb towards this cleansing medicine. That in Prov. 16. 16. where it is said, that by mercy and truth is iniquity purged, is only to be understood as a qualification of the person that is purged, not of the meritorious cause of purging away sin, which the Scripture doth ever ascribe to the alsufficient sacrifice of Christ, who is the only propitiation for sin, 1 John 2. 2. 2. From the legal purifications. Many washings did God appoint in the Law for the purifying of those that were legally unclean. There were two great ways of ceremonial purification. The blood of the sacrifices which were offered to God; this was to be sprinkled by the Priests round about the Altar; so we read, Leu. 1. 5, 11. And the water of separation, of which we read, Numb. 19 init. where you may see how it was to be made, and how used. Now what was typified by both these, but this spiritual purgation of Christ● blood? The Apostle doth clearly and expressly unfold this to us in Heb. 9 15, 14. The Gospel-mystery of all the Levitical washings did amount to this, that the blood of Christ did meritoriously purge away sin. 3. From the baptismal washing. God hath appointed Baptism as the seal of his Covenant under the Gospel. Water is the outward element to be used in the administration of this Ordinance. What is the meaning of this, but that by the application of Christ's blood, sin is purgee away from the soul? Therefore is Baptisms called the washing away of sin, Acts 22. 16. because by the outward washing of the body wi●h water, is the inward washing of the soul from sin shadowed out. This is the first particular. 2. For the second. Why his blood is compared to a fountain. It's called a fountain in five respects. 1. To show the fullness of his merit. Fountains are full of water; there is an abundance, a redundancy of merit in Jesus Christ. The Prophet would distinguish the Gospel washings from the legal. Those lavers were not fountains, but vessels, but Christ's blood ●hich is the spiritual laver is an abounding fountain; the spiritual washing is a rich and plentiful ●ashing. The Scripture doth mention ●●e merit of Christ sometimes by fullness, as John 1. 14. sometimes by the term of abundance, as Rom. 5. 17. The grace of Christ is every way proportionable to the necessity of the soul. The soul may wash itself all over in the blood of Christ. 2. To show the lastingness of his grace. The blood of Christ doth endure for ever. Streams dry up, vessels may be emptied, but fountains have a spring in themselves, and can never be emptied, Christ's blood hath been running for many ages, and yet it runs in as plentiful streams as if it had been but newly opened. It's an ever flowing fountain. 3. To show the purity of it. Streams are sometimes muddy and dirty, but the fountain is clear. There is not the least mixture of any defilement in the blood of Christ. It's compared to crystal for the clearness of it, Rev. 22. 1. The blood of Christ washes away defilement, but itself is not capable of contracting any defilement. 4. To show the freshness and lively efficacy of it. Streams may lose their virtue and efficacy; sometimes water that is sweet in the fountain, is bitter in the streams, especially if those streams be any great distance from the fountain. The nearer the streams are to the fountain, the more virtue they have in them, and the fountain itself hath most virtue of all. Christ's blood is full of efficacy and spiritual vigour. It hath not lost, it cannot lose that liveliness and operativeness which it once had. Thus I have showed you why it's called a fountain. Before I leave this, let me show you how this fountain excels all other fountains, 5. To show the freeness of it. (1) This fountain doth heal all manner of distempers. Other fountains, though they may be of great use for some distempers, yet they are not useful for all. Yea, the best of them are destructive in some cases; but this fountain is as good for every spiritual disease as it is for any. It's set down indefinitely in the text, for sin and for uncleanness, that is for all sin, and for all uncleanness. The pool of Bethesda, of which we read, John 5. 4. did shadow out this; that cured all diseases after the moving of it. Christ's blood is the true pool of Bethesda, which heals all manner of spiritual sores and diseases. (2) One drop of this fountain is as efficacious as the whole fountain. In other fountains, though every drop be of the same nature, yet it is not of the same virtue; but here every drop is of the same virtue with the whole. One drop of Christ's blood applied by faith, will purge away sin and uncleanness, as well as the whole fountain. The same infinite merit that is in all, is in every part. (3) This fountain purgeth the soul in a moment of whatsoe●er filthiness ●● upon it. Things that are very filthy must lie a long time s●aking in other fountains, before they can be made clean. They must be washed again and again before they be made white; but this fountain purgeth immediately. One minute is as good as a thousand years, as to the main & principal work. Let a leper ●●ep into this fountain, and he doth in one moment become a Nazarite as white as snow. Naaman must dip sev●n times in ●ordan, or ever he could be cured of his Leprosy, 2 Kings ●. 14. If a soul do but dip once in this fountain, he is presently cured. (4) That soul that is once made clean in this fountain, is never filthy again. Other fountains cannot give any such power to them that wash in them, as to be preserved from future defilements, but this fountain doth. Not as if a soul should never defile itself at all after its cleansing; for we do gather new filth every day, and have need of new washings; but as to the principal cleansing, the soul is made clean for ever. It can never again return to that extremity of filthiness, under which it was. The old blackness of unregeneracy can never return. Every elect person shall be once born again; but when he is once regenerated, he is regenerated for ever. The foreskin can never overgrow 〈◊〉 soul again as it did before. Thus much for the 〈◊〉 particular. For the third. How, or in what respects 〈◊〉 cleanseth away the uncleanness of the 〈◊〉 ●his he doth in two respects. 1. His blood cleanseth the soul from the guilt of ●●nne. Sin doth lay a person under guilt. O● this ●●●eannesse of guilt the Scripture speaks, Leu. 5. 2. From this uncleanness Christ's blood cleanseth, as it is our justification; for his blood ●● the meritorious cause of our justification. The Prophet speaks of this, Esay 53. 4, 5. God doth for the obedience and sufferings of Christ acquit the soul from sin, and pronounceth it guiltless and innocent. Hence it is that Christ is called our righteousness, Jer. 23. 6. The Apostle speaks of this fully, Rom. 3. 24, 25, 26. He is the lamb of God that taketh away the sins of the world. 2. His blood cleanseth the soul from the filthiness of sin. Sin is a filthy thing in itself, and it doth bring filthiness upon the soul. This filthiness is removed by the sprinklings of Christ's blood in the work of sanctification. He doth by his blood purge the conscience from all dead works, that it may serve the living God. We are said to be sanctified in Christ Jesus, 1 Cor. 1. 2. He is as well the meritorious cause of our Sanctification, as of our justification. Every drop and dram of grace, cost his heart blood. Had not God poured forth upon us the blood of his Son, our black and polluted souls had never been made white. We own our holiness to Christ as well as our righteousness. This is the third. 4. For the fourth. That only penitent sinners are purged in this fountain. This is clear by comparing this Text wi●h v. 10. of the former Chapter. There the prophet decribes the quality of the persons, they are such as look on Christ whom they have pierced, and such as mou●ne for him. The fountain of Christ's blood is a sealed fountain to all impenitent sinners; but to them that mourn and are in bitterness for sin it's a fountain opened. Consider, 1. Impenitent sinners will not prise it. A man must both see and bewail his uncleanness, before he can value the healing fountain. Christ never comes with acceptation till the soul see his need of him, When the Apostle saw that the Jews began to be in sadness, than he shows them the fountain, Acts 2. 37, 38. An impenitent sinner will care no more for the grace of Christ in the Gospel, than an innocent man will for a pardon. When the Scripture holds out Christ, it doth usually mention something of this nature, Esay 55. 1. and Matth. 11. 28. No man will greatly prise either ease or rest, but he that feels his load heavy. 2. Impenitent sinners will abuse and sleight it. A harned sinner will as much despire a Christ, as a full stomach dainty meat. This is the fourth. 5. For the fifth. Why Christ is called a fountain opened. He is called so in three respects. 1. To show how willing he is that sinners should make use of him. He is not a sealed fountain, but a fountain opened. Jesus Christ is marvellous ready and desirous that polluted souls would make use of his blood. All the invitations which he uses in the Gospel, show his readiness, Rev. 22. 17. He hath for this purpose appointed the Ministry of the Gospel, that solemn invitation might therein be made to defiled souls, that they would wash and be clean. All the complaints which he makes of sinner's remissness and backwardness in coming to him, are a proof of his readiness. Take but two places for this, the one is, John 5. 40. The other is in, Luke 13. 24. With how much sadness of heart doth Jesus Christ utter those words, How often would I have gathered thy children as a ●hen gathered her chickens and ye would not: He that commands his doors always to be kept open doth declare, his mind to be, that all that want succour should turn in for relief. Christ keeps open house for all penitent sinners. 2. To show the clearness of the Gospel revelation above the Legal. Non dubito, saith Calvin, etc. I do not doubt, but by this word he notes the difference between the Law and the Gospel. Christ was a fountain for sin and for uncleanness under the Law, but he was a sealed fountain, he was a typified fountain, shadowed out under the blood of bulls and goats, and other legal purifications; but now he is a fountain opened, he is clearly and fully discovered without shadows, or types, or any such thing. The fountain was then covered over with the leaves of many veils and shadows, but now all those are taken away, and the blood of Christ appears plainly; the stone that formerly lay upon the mouth of the fountain, is now removed; the streams run so clear, that all that read the Gospel may perfectly see it. And then, 3. To show the readiness and easiness of access which is afforded to Christ. The Apostle in Rom. 5. 2. makes mention of the access which the believer hath to the grace of Christ. Men pretend many difficulties and obstructions. There is a lion in the ●ay, saith the sluggard, a lion in the streets, Prov. 26, 13. Who shall roll us away the stone, say the women? Mark 16. 3. the same thoughts have men generally in their hearts concerning their coming to Christ. When they are invited to wash in this fountain, they presently reply, who shall roll away the stone, who shall unlock the fountain for us? This objection is fully answered, the fountain is unlocked already, the way is plain, all impediments are taken out of the way when the soul is willing to come; all the straits and hindrances are in your own hearts; do but conquer your own unwillingness, and the passage is easy, the fountain is not sealed, but open. The Uses are for Information. Exhortation. Consolation. 1. For Information. This doctrine may teach us these profitable lessons, viz. 1. Be●old the heinous and abominable filthiness of sin. The Scripture sets out sin as a very filthy thing. It's compared to such things as are of a polluting nature. To the scum of a boiling pot, Ezek. 24. 6. To the filthiness of a removed woman, Ezek. 36. 17. to mire, to the vomit of a dog, 2 Pet. 2. 22. To the plague of pestilence, and the plague of leprosy, 1 Kings 8. 38. Sin is often called a spot, Deut. 32. 5. 'Tis a spot exceeding black, and exceeding broad, and very deep. Many things show the filthiness of sin. The waters of the deluge in the old world; the flames of fire and brimstone sent down upon Sodom and Gomorrah. But above all, this shows it to be a filthy thing, that it could not be washed away without the blood of Christ. That's a foul stain which canno● be taken away without the shedding of man's blood. The stain of that sin of covenant-breaking with the Gibeonites, was very heinous, that could not be done away without the blood of all saul's house, 2 Sam. 21. 1, 2, 6. Sin is such a black spot that it could never have been done away without the blood of Christ. The Son of God must open a fountain of blood in his own heart to expiate sin, or it could never have been expiated. The blood of bulls and goats could not do it, Heb. 9 12. The garment w●s too foul to be cleansed by any such thing. Oh that sinners would lay this to heart! thy lying, thy bloody oaths which thou lookest upon as things so mean, thy cheating and defrauding, thy overreaching and false dealing, thy covetousness, the guilt and filthiness of the least of thy sins could never have been taken away, if Jesus Christ had not opened the fountain of his blood as a laver for sin. When thy heart hath any good thoughts of sin, remember this way of expiation, and it will appear very heinous. 2. Behold the dignity and merit of Christ's blood. The Scripture calls it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, 1 Pet. 1. 19 precious blood. It's precious blood in regard of the dignity of his person, it is the blood of God himself, that is, of that person who is true and very God, Acts 20. 28. And its precious in regard of the virtue and effect of it. By this blood God and man are reconciled; By this blood the Church of God is Redeemed; And, by this blood sin is expiated and perfectly done away. Consider these three things. (1) The multitude of sinners that are cleansed by Christ. An innumerable company, all the Elect of God in all ages. (2) The multitude of sins in every person, not one, but many, every sinner is full of sores, not one free part, either of soul or body. (3) The perfection of the cure. Every sinner is as perfectly healed, as if he had never been wounded. He is said to cleanse from all sin; in 1 Joh. 1. 7. He is said, to take away the sins of the world. He is said for ever to perfect them that are sanctified. Heb. 10. 14. All these expressions show the completeness of the sinners cleansing. Were not his blood of infinite value, it could never have wrought such an effect. The blood of all the men in the world could not expiate one sin, ●ut the blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth multitudes of sinners from millions of sins, and every one of them mortal. 3. Behold the exceeding greatness of the love, both of God the Father, and of Christ to mankind. The Evangelist admires it, John 3. 16. It is admired by the Saints in heaven, Rev. 5. 9, 10. and it may well be admired by the Saints on earth. That God should let out the blood of his own Son to make a spiritual fountain for us to wash in; This argues not only exactness of justice, but abundance of love. It will appear to be love indeed, if we consider what Christ must endure before he could expiate sin: He must drink up the deep fountain of his Father's wrath, before he could be a fountain for us to wash in. He shall drink of the brook in the way, saith the Prophet of Christ, Psal. 110. 7. This brook is the wrath of God; it was a large brook, and a deep brook, the streams of it were very fierce and very muddy. This brook Christ did not only sail over, or swim through, but he drank it up, even the thickest dregs of it. That God should cause his Son, and that the Son should be willing to drink up such a brook of wrath, that he might become a fountain to wash away our sin, this argues love unspeakable, and stupendious in both towards elect men. 4. The Church of God shall never want sufficient means for spiritual purification. Here is a fountain opened, and being once opened, it shall never be shut again, and as it shall never be shut, so it can never be drawn dry. The streams of it shall perpetually flow out in the Gospel whilst the Church hath need of washing. Other fountains may fail through continuance of drought; but this fountain can never fail. God promises to his Church perpetual springs, Esay 5●. 1●. Th●● shalt be as a watered garden, and like aspring of water, whose waters fail not. This continuance of the fountain is intimated in the circumstance of time mentioned in the text, in that day. The whole time of the Church's pilgrimage in this life is comprehended under that expression. The fountain stands open, and runs all the day long in a full and plentiful stream. It is the Church's misery that she contracts defilement continually, but it is her comfort that the purifying fountain doth and shall run continually. 5. How inex●●sable those are that die in their filthiness under the Gospel. Those who live and die with their filthiness upon them where the Gospel is not, shall be without excuse at the day of judgement, because God made them at first clean, and they did wilfully defile themselves. Man's first ●●●●ling in the mire of sin was his own voluntary act, he can blame none but himself, therefore none of man's defiled posterity can be acquitted; but of all men those that live under the Gospel shall be without excuse; For to them a fountain is set wide open, and they are daily invited to wash themselves therein, their sin i● double. They do not only sin in polluting themselves, but they sin in keeping the pollution upon them. They are filthy, no● because they want water, but because they want a heart to make use of water. The streams of Christ's blood run by their doors, and therefore if their guilt abide, nothing can be pleaded by way of excuse. They were told of their 〈◊〉, they were invited to wash, they saw others by washing were cleansed, therefore their guilt remaineth. If N●●●● after the Prophet directed him to wash in Jordan, had returned without washing, who would have pitied him, if he had died a leper? Those that are brought to this spiritual Jordan, if they will not wash, 'tis pity but their sinful lepro●ie should remain upon them. They do shut that fountain against themselves, that God hath graciously opened. Thus much for the first Use of Information. 2. For Exhortation. It commends several duties which we should carefully practise. As, 1. Take heed of despising this fountain. The Prophet foretelling of Christ, did long since by way of complaint, speak of the despising and rejecting of him, Isa. 53. 3. We have cause to join with him in the same complaint; the fountain of Christ's blood is exceedingly despised. 1. The jews they keep open the typical fountain. 2. The Papists despise this fountain in that Heb. 10. 14 they make other expiatory fountains. They, instead of going to the fountain of Christ's blood, 1. They go to the Mass, which they call a propitiatory sacrifice; And, 2. To the merit of their own works, thinking thereby to expiate sin, purchase the favour of God. Jesus Christ may complain against the Papists as God doth against his people of old because of their apostasy, Jer. 2. 13. My people have committed two evils, they have forsaken me the fountain of living waters, and have hewn them out cisterns, broken cisterns that can hold no water. The Scripture makes not good works, but Christ's blood our ransom and propitiation, Tit. 3. 4, 5, 6. Our good works are so fare from cleansing us from the guilt of sin, that they themselves have need of cleansing. Domine lava lachrymas meas was the prayer of that father, and it must be our prayer. Doth not the Scripture attribute filthiness to the best of our works? Esay 64. 6. All our righteousnesses are as filthy r●gs. Thy repentance, thy prayers, thy duties must be sprinkled in this fountain, else God will loathe both thee and them. How unable is that to expiate sin, which doth itself stand in need of expiation? 3. The Popish purgatory is also a direct despising of this fountain, it reproaches Christ's purgatory, as if it were not sufficient, contrary to Heb. 1. 3. 3. The Socinians despise this fountain, in that they deny Christ to be a price for sin. They say Christ did not suffer vice nost●â in our stead, but only commodo nostro for our profit, to be as an example to us. We deny not, but that Christ by his sufferings hath left us an example of patiented sufferings. The Apostle is express for this, 1 Pet. 2. 21. but this was but an inferior and less principal end of his sufferings; We have benefit by Paul's death, and all other Saints, but the principal end was to be a propitiation for sin. Therefore he is called a ransom, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, 1 Tim. 2. 6. A counterprize, because the end of his sufferings was to satisfy the justice of God for our sins. The Apostle saith, That he himself bore our sins in his body on the cross, and by his stripes we are healed, 1 Pet. 2. 24. If Christ did not suffer in our stead as well as in our nature, we must suffer and satisfy for ourselves. God will have satisfaction, but the Scripture saith, and let us for our comfort believe it, That he was wounded for our sins, he was br●●●sed for our offences, the chastisement of our peace was on him, and that God hath laid on him the iniquity of us ●ll, Esay 53. 5, 6. 4. All unbleevers that make no use of this fountain, are guilty of despising it. Though men do not with the Jews, wash in the blood of bulls; or with Papists, make other expiatories, either of the Mass or Purgatory; nor with Socinians, deny the satisfaction of his blood; yet if we reject the ●enders of grace in and through his blood made in the Gospel, we do despise it as much as they. The Prophet makes not believing in Christ, and despising of Christ, equivalent, Esay 53. 1, 3. There is no medium between not believing and despising. I have two things to say to all that despise this fountain. First, It is a great sin. 'Tis a despising of the richest love, the deepest wisdom, the gloriousest grace that ever God did or could manifest to the s●nnes of men. The washing away of sin by Christ's blood is the deepest plot of infinite wisdom, the richest piece of unsearchable grace that ever was manifested to the sons of men. 'Tis that which the Angels do, and shall study for ever. Secondly, The danger is great. He that despiseth Christ, despiseth cleansing. All that hate me love death, Prov. 8. 38. 'Tis a question disputed by Divines, whether God could have forgiven sin without satisfaction. Most conclude God by his absolute power might, but now he hath declared himself that he will not expiate sin any other way, nor by any other means but by Christ, whom he hath set forth to be a propitiation for sin, Rom. 3. 25. Therefore he that refuseth to wash in this fountain, must of necessity perish in his own filthiness. Behold ye despisers, saith the Apostle, and wonder and perish, Acts 13. 41. God himself cannot now save him that rejects Christ's blood. 2. Let the opening of this fountain occasion the opening of other fountain● in all our hearts. Deep calleth unto deep, Psal. 42. 7. There are five fountains which the consideration of the opening of this fountain should open in the heart of every believer. (1) A fountain of love. We should set this fountain wide open both to God and Christ. It was love that set open this fountain, Rev. 1. 7. and it should work love in us towards him again; we are commanded to love Christ. We are threatened with a curse, if we love him not, in 1 Cor. 16. 22. The streams of this fountain, if any thing will cause the springs of love to overflow in our hearts. 2. A fountain of thankfulness. The Apostle speaking of the redemption we have by Christ's blood, gins with Benedictus Deus, Ephes. 1. 3. We are unworthy to wash in this fountain, if we do not daily render praises to God and Christ for it. Ordinary thankfulness will not serve for such an extraordinary fountain. We own much thankfulness to God for the fountains of common water, and much more for this fountain of Grace in the blood of Christ. Sing David's song of praise, Psal. 103. init. Bless the Lord, O my soul, and all that is within me bless his holy Name. Our hearts, if it were possible, and our lips too, should be as full of praises as this fountain is of grace. 3. A fountain of sorrow. This fountain shows our guilt. We should not have wanted a fountain for sin, if we had not fallen into sin. We should never think on this fountain for sin, but we should break forth into sorrow because of sin. 4. A fountain of faith. We can neither wash in this fountain, nor go to it without faith. Christ will be to us still as a fountain sealed, if we do not believe in him. In his Name, through faith in his Name, whosoever believeth in him shall have remission of sins, Acts 10. 43. This is the testimony both of Prophets and Apostles. And then, 5. A fountain of humility and self denial. By nature we have proud thoughts of ourselves. All the good which is wrought in us we arrogate to ourselves. This should teach us to ascribe all our purification to Christ. 'Tis this fountain that hath cleansed us if we be cleansed. The fountain is opened to our hands. We could neither open the fountain, nor come to the fountain, God hath done both. This is the second branch of Exhortation. 3. Make daily use of this fountain. yourselves in it continually. Though once washing be enough to purge away sin as to the main work, yet there will be need of daily purging. Though we need no new sacrifice for sin, yet we need daily applications of the merit of that one sacrifice upon every miscarriage. 4. When ever you see a fountain of water, think on Jesus Christ. Had we spiritual hearts we might think on Christ all the day long; few creatures but have some memorial of him. He bears the names of his people upon his breast. Should not we bear him in our heart by holy thoughts and mediations on him? The more we think on him, the more shall we love him, and the more will he communicate his love to us. This is the second Use. 3. For Consolation. This Doctrine is the foundation of all comfort to believers. 1. Against that bitter fountain which is in our hearts. We have a bloody fountain in our nature, which is always running. The droppings of this fountain defile us, defile our services. Well, oppose this fountain to that fountain. God's fountain is more able to cleanse, than this fountain is to defile. This fountain can drown thy fountain, Christ is a greater cleanser than sin is a defiler, Micah 7. 19 The sea of Christ's blood is deep enough to drown all thy sins; Though thy fountain defile thee daily, yet Christ's fountain can cleanse thee daily. 2. Against their inability to make use of this fountain. They are discouraged because of the obstructions which lie in their way. This text tells you, they are all done away; the fountain is not ●ealed, it stands wide open day and night. FINIS.